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+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75515 ***
+
+
+
+
+
+ BLACKWOOD’S
+ EDINBURGH MAGAZINE.
+ NO. CCCCXV. MAY, 1850. VOL. LXVII.
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS.
+
+
+ FREE-TRADE FINANCE, 513
+ GREECE AGAIN, 526
+ THE MODERN ARGONAUTS, 539
+ MY PENINSULAR MEDAL. BY AN OLD PENINSULAR. PART VI., 542
+ GERMAN POPULAR PROPHECIES, 560
+ THE HISTORY OF A REGIMENT DURING THE RUSSIAN CAMPAIGN, 573
+ THE PENITENT FREE-TRADER, 585
+ TENOR OF THE TRADE CIRCULARS, 589
+ ALISON’S POLITICAL ESSAYS, 605
+ OVID’S SPRING-TIME, 621
+ DIES BOREALES NO. VII. CHRISTOPHER UNDER CANVASS, 622
+ LETTER FROM MAJOR-GENERAL SIR WILLIAM NAPIER, 640
+
+ EDINBURGH:
+ WILLIAM BLACKWOOD & SONS, 45, GEORGE STREET;
+ AND 37, PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON.
+
+ _To whom all communications (post paid) must be addressed._
+
+ SOLD BY ALL THE BOOKSELLERS IN THE UNITED KINGDOM.
+
+ PRINTED BY WILLIAM BLACKWOOD AND SONS, EDINBURGH.
+
+
+
+
+ BLACKWOOD’S
+
+ EDINBURGH MAGAZINE.
+
+ NO. CCCCXV. MAY, 1850. VOL. LXVII.
+
+
+
+
+ FREE-TRADE FINANCE.
+
+
+The Chancellor of the Exchequer has brought forward the Budget, and the
+Financial Measures of Government are before the public. It contains
+matter worthy of the most serious consideration. It is hard to say
+whether the admission it contains, or the measures it proposes, are most
+condemnatory of the system of Class Government which the Reform Bill has
+imposed on the country.
+
+The statement of the Chancellor of the Exchequer, in a few words, is
+this:—“Last year, I calculated upon a small surplus of L.104,000 for the
+year ending 5th April 1850, but that surplus has swelled to L.2,250,000,
+by rise in the produce of the taxes, and reductions of the expenditure.
+Of this sum L.1,500,000 is to be regarded as the real surplus to be
+relied upon for the measures of this year.” Assuming this as the surplus
+to be dealt with, he proposes to apply L.750,000 in reduction of the
+last contracted part of the debt, and L.750,000 in reduction of
+taxation; L.400,000 a-year being applied to the reduction of the duty on
+bricks, and L.350,000 to that of stamps on conveyances. It is thus that
+he proposes to alleviate the agricultural distress which, he admits,
+prevails in the country.
+
+Three things are especially worthy of observation in this statement.
+
+In the first place, it affords another illustration, if another was
+needed, of the present deplorable subjection of Government to the
+pressure from without, which has so often and painfully been exhibited
+since the new system of government began. It is well known that, during
+the three disastrous years that preceded the present one, debt to a
+large amount was contracted. To mention two items only: eight millions
+were borrowed in 1847 to relieve the Irish famine; L.2,000,000 in the
+succeeding year, to carry on the current expenses of the year; and in
+1841 the deficiency had been such, that no less than L.5,000,000 was
+borrowed to meet the ordinary expenses of the year. One would suppose,
+that when a surplus arose in the year 1849, the natural course would
+have been to have applied it, in the first instance, to extinguish, so
+far as it would go, the additional debt so recently contracted. Has this
+been done? Not at all. Only L.750,000 out of a real surplus said to
+amount to L.1,500,000, is to be applied in this way; and L.750,000 is to
+be devoted to reduction of taxes. L.10,000,000 is borrowed during two
+years of distress; L.750,000 only has been devoted to its reduction, in
+a year, we are told, of unparalleled commercial prosperity.
+
+In the next place, to what object is the L.750,000 a-year of surplus
+available to reduced taxation, discovered for the first time after three
+years of deficit, to be applied? Is it to be devoted to remission of
+taxes pressing upon the agricultural interest, whom the measures pursued
+for behoof of towns have reduced to such a state of depression? Not at
+all. It is to be applied to reduction of the duty on _stamps and
+bricks_. The first may be admitted to be desirable, because, as so large
+part of the landed property in the kingdom will soon, to all appearance,
+change hands, it is an object to render the transfer as little costly as
+possible. But of what use is the reduction of the duty on bricks to the
+suffering cultivators? That it is a boon to the master-builders in
+towns, may be conceded; though it may well be doubted whether it will
+ever cause a reduction of price to the purchasers from them. But what
+the better will the farmers and ploughmen, the landlords and yeomen, be
+of the change? Additional houses are not wanted _in the country_; on the
+contrary, there will in all probability not be inmates for those that
+already are there, from the certain and experienced effect of Free-trade
+in diminishing the demand for rural labour. It is in the towns and
+villages that the building is going on; because Free-trade policy is
+daily more and more forcing the rural inhabitants into the towns in
+quest of employment or relief. In London, 200 miles of new streets, and
+66,000 houses, are said to have been constructed, or to be in course of
+construction, during the last two years. Is there any increase of houses
+in the rural districts? Herein, then, lies the injustice of the present
+measures of Government, that, though prefaced with professions of a
+desire to relieve all parties, they in reality benefit one class only;
+and that, introduced at a time when it is admitted the agriculturists
+are in a state of extreme depression, and the manufacturers are asserted
+to be in a state of unexampled prosperity, they are mainly calculated to
+add to the prosperity of the latter, and take nothing from the
+sufferings of the former. It is not difficult to see where the Reform
+Bill has practically lodged the power of Government in the British
+Empire.
+
+In the third place, and what is most material of all, the speech of the
+Chancellor of the Exchequer contains an admission in regard to the
+present state and past direction of our finances, since we have fallen
+under Liberal direction, of such moment, that we regard it as the most
+important statement that has ever yet been given in regard to the effect
+of the new measures on the national fortunes. It must be given in his
+own words, as reported in the _Times_ of March 16:—
+
+
+ “If honourable gentlemen will refer to what has taken place during the
+ last twenty years—the sums which have been borrowed on the one hand,
+ and the amounts which have been applied to the reduction of the debt
+ on the other—I think they will see that there is good reason for not
+ being indifferent on this subject. In 1835 and 1836, a sum of
+ L.20,000,000 was borrowed for the emancipation of the West Indian
+ slave population; to defray the deficiency, in the year 1841,
+ L.5,000,000 were borrowed; I was obliged to borrow L.8,000,000 to meet
+ the necessities of the sister country in 1847; and when the House
+ refused to increase the income-tax in 1848, I was obliged to borrow a
+ further sum of L.2,000,000, to meet the extraordinary expenditure.
+ Since the period I have mentioned, then, a sum of L.35,000,000 has
+ been added to the national debt. When I turn to the other side of the
+ account, I find that all the money which has been applied from surplus
+ income to the reduction of debt, in the course of the last twenty
+ years, amounts to only L.8,000,000; so that, _in a period of profound
+ peace, an increase of debt of no less than L.27,000,000 has taken
+ place_. (Hear, hear.) When, in 1848, the House refused to accede to
+ the proposal I made for an increased tax upon income, I certainly did
+ hope that, when a turn took place in our financial affairs, they would
+ not, the moment there was a surplus of income, instantly press that
+ the whole of that surplus should be devoted to the reduction of
+ taxation. What should we think of a private individual who acted in
+ such a manner (hear, hear)—a man who, whenever he found his income
+ fall short of his expenditure, borrowed the money necessary to meet
+ his liabilities, but who never thought of paying off that debt when,
+ by a fortunate turn of affairs, he happened to be in receipt of an
+ excess of income? (Hear, hear.) I must say that it will be hopeless
+ for us to maintain that character as a nation which we think
+ indispensable in an individual, if, in a time of profound peace,
+ instead of reducing our public debt, we go on adding to it from year
+ to year.”
+
+
+Here it is admitted, by the Whig Chancellor of the Exchequer, that after
+twenty years of profound peace and unbroken Liberal government, (Sir
+Robert Peel was essentially Liberal,) not only has there been no
+reduction of the public debt, but AN INCREASE OF IT TO THE EXTENT OF
+TWENTY-SEVEN MILLIONS. It has been repeatedly demonstrated that, if the
+noble sinking-fund of L.15,000,000 a-year, which Mr Pitt’s policy left
+to the Administration at the close of the war in 1815, had been
+preserved unimpaired by keeping up the indirect taxes from which it
+arose, the whole national debt would have been extinguished in 1845.
+When the ruinous monetary act of 1819, and the increasing concession of
+successive Administrations to urban clamour had rendered that
+impossible, the semi-Liberal semi-Tory Governments from 1815 to 1830
+still contrived to pay off L.82,000,000 of the public debt in fifteen
+years; and when the Duke of Wellington resigned in November 1830, he
+left, by the admission of all parties, a real sinking-fund, arising from
+an excess of income above expenditure, of L.2,900,000 a-year to his
+successors. But since that time, under his Liberal successors, not only
+has that surplus on an average of years disappeared, but during twenty
+years of profound peace L.27,000,000 has been _added_ to the total
+amount of the debt. Well may Sir Charles Wood say, “What should we think
+of a private individual who acted in such a manner?” Such is the rule of
+the urban constituencies, to humour whose fancies, and appease whose
+clamour, the whole efforts of Government for the last twenty years have
+been directed.
+
+The important thing in the statement of the Chancellor of the Exchequer
+is, that it gives us the result of Whig government and Free-trade
+finance during so long a period. Every successive quarter, during these
+twenty years, we have been told by the Liberal press that the finances
+were in the most flourishing condition; that any deficiency that
+appeared was more apparent than real; and at any rate, in the most
+unfavourable view, it was sufficiently explained by temporary causes,
+and afforded no ground whatever for despondency in the future. Every
+successive Session, the Ministers came down to Parliament with the most
+flourishing accounts of the state of the country and of the public
+finances, and demonstrated to the satisfaction of every reasonable man
+in the nation that both never were in more hopeful and prosperous
+circumstances. Even when a deficiency of one or two millions stared the
+Chancellor of the Exchequer in the face, which was not unfrequently the
+case, there was always some temporary or transient cause to which it was
+to be referred. The China tribute had ceased, or some reduction of
+duties had come into operation, or revolutions in Europe had diminished
+our exports to the adjoining states. The Irish potato-rot was a perfect
+godsend to the Liberal financiers. It constituted their stock in trade
+for the next three years. The ruin of L.15,000,000 worth of agricultural
+produce in Ireland, out of at least L.260,000,000 worth in the two
+islands, explained the whole distress of the country and the exchequer
+for the next three years; and, strange to say, the very men who paraded
+so ostentatiously the ruinous effects of this comparatively trifling
+deficiency in a single year, made a boast soon after of their having
+destroyed L.90,000,000 of agricultural remuneration by the importations
+they induced of foreign grain.
+
+But nothing is more certain than that error and delusion cannot, by any
+human effort, be prolonged for a very long period. With the advent of
+the time when the interest to deceive has ceased, or a new generation of
+deceivers has succeeded, the whole fabric falls to pieces. As certainly
+and mercilessly as the vices or follies of preceding monarchs are
+portrayed by those who have succeeded to the inheritance of their
+results, are the ruinous consequences of former delusions in democratic
+Governments exposed by succeeding Administrations who find themselves
+hampered by their effects. Many a popular Nero is cast down from his
+pedestal, almost before the vital warmth has left his body; many a
+republican Necker is exposed by a republican Bailly, when he finds the
+public finances rendered desperate by the measures which had been
+pursued with the cordial approbation of the whole Liberal party in the
+state. It is the same with our present Chancellor of the Exchequer. He
+finds the public finances, in the midst of boasted commercial and
+manufacturing prosperity, in so deplorable a condition, that he is fain
+to lay the whole blame upon his predecessors; and, after deploring the
+extraordinary fact, that during twenty years of profound peace, Liberal
+government, and retrenching Administrations, we have not only made no
+reduction whatever in the public debt, but added twenty-seven millions
+to its amount, he very naturally and justly observes, “What should we
+say to a private individual who should conduct his affairs in this
+manner?”
+
+We have been so accustomed, during twenty years of Liberal and popular
+rule, to see every successive Administration live only from hand to
+mouth, and to be content if they can get over present difficulties,
+without bestowing a thought on the future, that the nation has almost
+forgotten what it was to have a prudent and foreseeing Government at the
+head of affairs: or rather, nearly the whole generations who have risen
+to manhood have come to think that such a system of government is
+impossible, and is to be ranked with the El Dorado of Sir Walter
+Raleigh, or the Utopia of Sir Thomas More. To enlighten their minds on
+this subject, we subjoin two Tables, showing what was done by the
+corrupt old Tory Governments—even during the anxieties and expenditure
+of a most protracted and costly war, or when the national finances were
+slowly recovering from its effects—to put the finances on a good
+footing, and lay, in present fortitude and sacrifice, a solid foundation
+for future relief and prosperity.
+
+ TABLE I., showing the growth of the Money
+ applied to the reduction of the Debt, and
+ the Sums paid off from 1792 to 1815, being
+ twenty-three years of war.
+
+ 1792, £1,558,504
+ 1793, 1,634,972
+ 1794, 1,872,957
+ 1795, 2,143,697
+ 1796, 2,639,956
+ 1797, 3,393,210
+ 1798, 4,093,164
+ 1799, 4,528,568
+ 1800, 4,908,379
+ 1801, 5,528,315
+ 1802, 6,114,033
+ 1803, 6,494,694
+ 1804, 6,436,929
+ 1805, 9,406,865
+ 1806, 9,602,658
+ 1807, 10,125,419
+ 1808, 10,681,579
+ 1809, 11,359,691
+ 1810, 12,095,977
+ 1811, 13,073,577
+ 1812, 14,098,842
+ 1813, 16,064,057
+ 1814, 14,830,957
+ 1815, 14,241,397
+ ————————————
+ £186,928,399
+
+ —PORTER’S _Parl. Tables_, i. 1.
+
+It is a total mistake to allege, as is often done, that this immense and
+growing sinking-fund was obtained entirely by borrowing with the one
+hand what was paid off with another. The _funds_ thus applied to the
+reduction of debt were obtained from the _indirect_ taxes set apart on
+the contraction of each loan, in amount adequate not only to defray its
+annual interest, but also to extinguish, within forty-five years after
+it was contracted, the principal of the loan itself. That part of the
+loan was applied in each year, especially during the latter years of the
+war, to keep up the sinking-fund, is true, but is immaterial. That was
+only because the taxes set apart for its support were absorbed, in great
+part, by the necessities of the contest; and when _the contest and loans
+ceased_, these taxes were amply sufficient to keep up the sinking-fund
+without any extraneous aid. This appears from the following Table, also
+taken from Mr Porter, exhibiting what was actually paid off of the
+public debt during the next fifteen years of Tory peace-government:—
+
+ TABLE showing the Money applied to the
+ reduction of Debt, Funded and Unfunded, from
+ 1815 to 1832.
+
+ 1816, £13,945,117
+ 1817, 14,514,457
+ 1818, 15,339,483
+ 1819, 16,305,590
+ 1820, 17,499,773
+ 1821, 17,219,957
+ 1822, 18,889,319
+ 1823, 7,482,325
+ 1824, 10,625,059
+ 1825, 6,093,475
+ 1826, 5,621,231
+ 1827, 5,704,766
+ 1828, 4,667,965
+ 1829, 2,559,485
+ 1830, 4,545,465
+ 1831, 1,663,093
+ 1832, 5,696
+ ————————————
+ £162,682,256
+
+ —PORTER’S _Parl. Tables_, i. 1.
+
+But the Reform Bill, passed in 1832, has entirely put an end to the
+reduction of the debt. Since that time, as Sir Charles Wood tells us,
+the debt, so far from having diminished, has increased £27,000,000.
+
+That there was a substantial reduction of debt going on during the
+period included in the above table, and not a mere juggle, by
+transferring debt from one denomination to another, though not to the
+amount which these figures would indicate, is decisively proved by the
+following Table, showing the general result of the financial operations
+from 1816 to 1832, when the Whigs introduced the Reform Bill:—
+
+ Funded Debt on 5th Jan. 1816, £816,311,940
+ Unfunded do., 48,510,501
+ ————————————
+ Total, £860,822,441
+
+ Total Debt on 5th Jan. 1832—
+ Funded, £754,100,549
+ Unfunded, 27,752,650
+ ———————————— 781,853,199
+ ————————————
+ Paid off in sixteen years, £82,969,242
+
+ —PORTER’S _Parl. Tables_, ii. 6.
+
+In the next eighteen years, since the Reform Bill changed the
+Constitution, it has been seen the debt was increased by £27,000,000.
+
+So prodigious and fatal a change in our financial system would be wholly
+inexplicable, considering the many able and patriotic men who, since
+that period, have been intrusted with its direction, if we did not
+recollect the vital change made since that time in the constitution of
+the country, and the new class which was brought up in overwhelming
+numbers to return representatives to the House of Commons. That class is
+the borough and shopkeeping interest, with whom the main object is to
+buy cheap and sell dear. Not only has this principle, since that time,
+formed the sole regulator of Government measures in general or
+commercial policy, but it has operated decisively on our finances, and
+is the main cause to which their present hopeless condition is to be
+ascribed. To cheapen everything became the great object; and this was to
+be done, it was thought, most effectually by taking taxes off articles
+of consumption. Under the influence of this principle, indirect taxes to
+the following enormous amount have been repealed since the peace, the
+magnitude of which renders it noways surprising that the sinking-fund
+has disappeared:—
+
+ TABLE showing the Taxes, Direct and Indirect, Repealed and Imposed from
+ 1816 to 1847, both inclusive.
+
+ REPEALED. IMPOSED.
+ Year. Direct. Indirect. Direct. Indirect. Year.
+ 1816, £15,000,000 £2,547,000 £320,058 1816
+ 1817, 36,495 7,991 1817
+ 1818, 9,564 1,336 1818
+ 1819, 705,846 3,094,902 1819
+ 1820, 4,000 119,602 1820
+ 1821, 471,309 43,642 1821
+ 1822, 2,139,101 1822
+ 1823, 1,860,000 2,190,050 18,596 1823
+ 1824, 1,704,724 45,605 1824
+ 1825, 3,639,551 43,000 1825
+ 1826, 1,973,812 188,000 1826
+ 1827, 4,038 21,402 1827
+ 1828, 51,998 1,966 1828
+ 1829, 126,406 1829
+ 1830, 4,093,955 696,004 1830
+ 1831, 1,598,536 627,586 1831
+ 1832, 747,264 44,526 1832
+ 1833, 1,526,914 1833
+ 1834, 1,200,000 891,516 198,394 1834
+ 1835, 165,817 75 1835
+ 1836, 989,786 1836
+ 1837, 234 3,991 1837
+ 1838, 289 100 1838
+ 1839, 66,258 1,783 1839
+ 1840, 18,959 2,155,673 1840
+ 1841, 27,176 1841
+ 1842, 1,596,366 £5,529,989 1842
+ 1843, 1843
+ 1844, 1844
+ 1845, 4,535,561 23,720 1845
+ 1846, 1846
+ 1847, 1847
+ ———————————— ———————————— ———————————— ————————————
+ £18,060,000 £33,523,623 £5,529,989 £7,743,962
+ Imposed, 5,529,989 7,743,962
+ ———————————— ————————————
+ Taxation reduced, £12,431,011 £25,779,661
+
+Thus the balance of indirect taxation, reduced since the Peace, has been
+above £25,000,000—of direct, above £12,000,000 annually; and till 1842,
+it was £15,000,000 yearly. Had the sinking-fund been kept up at its
+amount as it was in 1815—that is, at £15,000,000 sterling out of the
+indirect taxes, there might have been repealed £15,000,000 of direct,
+and £14,000,000 of indirect taxes, and still _every shilling of the
+public debt would have been paid off by 1846_. Why has this most
+desirable, most vital object for the national safety in future times,
+not been gained? Simply because the mania of cheapening everything has
+ruled the State. Successive Administrations, which have succeeded to the
+helm of affairs, have endeavoured to gain a fleeting popularity, by
+bidding against each other in the race for popularity, by the sacrifice
+of the best interests of their country; and because Parliament—composed,
+so far as its majority goes since 1832, of the members for boroughs—have
+shut their eyes entirely to the ultimate consequences of their actions,
+and looked only to the gratifying their buying and selling constituents
+by the incessant reduction of the indirect taxes, and lowering the
+remuneration of industry of every kind throughout the country.
+
+In truth, the chasm made in the finances of the country by this
+incessant, uncalled for, and ruinous reduction of the indirect taxes, in
+pursuance of the mania to cheapen everything, under which the nation has
+been labouring during the last thirty years, has been far greater and
+more disastrous than the preceding figures, formidable as they are,
+would lead us to suppose. The taxes repealed are of course set down at
+the amount they were _at the time of their repeal_. But that is very far
+from what they would have produced if they had been kept up; because, in
+that case, of course they would have shared in the vast increase of
+wealth and population which has since taken place. At the time when a
+large part of these taxes were repealed, the British isles did not
+contain above from 20,000,000 to 24,000,000 of inhabitants—now they
+contain 29,000,000. Our exports and imports have more than doubled in
+amount since the income-tax was taken off in 1816. Beyond all doubt, at
+its original rate of ten per cent, it would now have produced, at the
+very least, £20,000,000 a-year. The duty on spirits, so fatally lowered
+in 1826, would now have produced, not £2,000,000, but £3,000,000 or
+£3,500,000 annually. There cannot be a shadow of doubt that the taxes,
+which in 1815 produced £72,000,000 a-year, would, if continued at the
+same rates, have been now producing 50 per cent more, or £110,000,000.
+There is no man in his senses who would think that the nation either
+could have borne, or ought to have borne, such a load of taxation.
+Relief, on the return of peace, was indispensable. But it is one thing
+to give relief in a reasonable and prudent degree; it is another, and a
+very different thing, to throw away the public revenue with a reckless
+prodigality, without either principle or foresight, and for no other
+reason but to win a temporary popularity for wasteful Administrations.
+
+Indeed, the inevitable effect of the cheapening system, and especially
+of the repeal of the Corn Laws, in rendering the taxes unproductive, and
+payment of the interest even of the public debt ere long impossible, was
+distinctly foreseen and foretold not only by ourselves in this Magazine,
+but by the most decided apostles of the opposite set of opinions. Hear
+Mr Cobbett on the subject, in Vol. LI. of his _Register_, No. 2, July
+10, 1824—a quotation for which we are indebted to that able and
+consistent journal, the _Standard_.
+
+
+ “‘The commercial world’ will, I believe, find it rather difficult to
+ persuade the landlords to ‘modify and alter the Corn-laws,’ much less
+ to ‘do away’ with those laws: but what now is to become of all the
+ pretty doctrine about the inseparable interests of manufacture and
+ agriculture? I trust we shall hear no more of that soft nonsense....
+
+ “Now mind, I do not say that the manufacturers ought not to be
+ permitted to get food from abroad; but I say—and what man in his
+ senses does not say, that in whatever degree this cotton body is
+ supplied with food from abroad, it must and will dispense with food
+ from our own lands....
+
+ “I would fain then see the two-legged animal who is quadruped enough
+ still to contend that the interests of the landlords and those of the
+ cotton-lords are inseparable. They are directly opposed to each other;
+ and opposed to each other they must be as long as this debt shall
+ last.
+
+ “It will be curious enough to observe how ‘the manufacturing mind’
+ will work upon ‘the agricultural mind.’ These two minds will now come
+ into direct contact with each other. It will be the business of the
+ cotton mind to convince the landlords that bringing in foreign corn
+ will not make their English corn sell cheaper; or, failing in this, to
+ convince them that wheat at 4s. a bushel will, ‘in the long run,’ be
+ better for the landlords than wheat at 8s. a bushel. A very long run,
+ I believe, indeed! In short, it is a question of rents or no rents.
+ With the present debt and taxes, and with wheat at 4s. a bushel, there
+ can be no rents; so that, when the cotton mind comes forward to get a
+ repeal of the Corn Bill, it comes in fact to pray that there shall no
+ longer be rents in England.
+
+ “The cotton-lords, and indeed all the lords of the loom and anvil, are
+ bestirring themselves, and collecting all their forces for a desperate
+ assault upon the jolterheads (the landlords) who cry aloud for
+ national faith. I wish them success. I will not absolutely join them;
+ but I wish them success; because that success would destroy the _whole
+ system_ (the system of paper-money, national debt, and oppressive
+ taxation) root and branch. The Corn Bill, the Small-Note Bill, the
+ laying out of public money in Ireland, the lending of money
+ occasionally to manufacturers and merchants, the Bank advancing money
+ upon big estates—all these shifts and tricks just keep the thing
+ agoing; but come a war, or repeal the Corn Bill, and you will soon see
+ what is to become of the system. Everything seems strained to its
+ utmost: and when that is the case, something must soon give way.”
+
+
+The alleged advantage which the Free-trade party oppose to the obviously
+calamitous effects of this incessant surrender of the public revenue,
+and the now admitted abandonment of all attempts to pay off the public
+debt, is, that commodities have been cheapened thereby, and the weight
+which oppressed them taken off the springs of industry. We utterly deny
+this advantage. What is the good of this constant cheapening, when
+confessedly you cannot cheapen our debts and obligations? Is it anything
+else but diminishing the funds from which the interest of these debts
+and obligations is to be discharged, and running the nation into the
+most imminent hazard of incurring a general bankruptcy, public and
+private? Do not salaries and incomes fall, from the highest to the
+lowest, in consequence; and if so, what good does the fall of prices do,
+even to the individuals who apparently profit by it? Suppose we gained
+our object, and rendered everything as cheap here as it is in Poland or
+Norway—what should we gain by it, but that we should speedily become _as
+poor as them_, and that the realised wealth of this nation, now for the
+most part invested in situations where its interest is paid by the
+industry of the people, would be lost by that industry having ceased to
+receive a sufficient remuneration? And is that an object for which the
+national security should be endangered, and the means of maintaining our
+independence destroyed?
+
+In truth,—with the exception of some manufactured articles, such as
+cotton and calicoes, in which the fall of prices has been prodigious,
+owing to the successive improvement of the machinery employed in their
+formation,—we are at a loss to see that this immense remission of
+indirect taxes, which has evidently been fatal to the national finances,
+has been attended with the slightest benefit to the country generally.
+We say the country generally—because there can be no doubt that it has
+been a very great advantage to the _master-manufacturers engaged in the
+trades affected by the taxes_, who have, in most cases, contrived to put
+the whole tax lost to the public into their own pockets. That is the
+real secret of the remission. Individual selfishness, the thirst for
+gain, was in most cases the moving spring. The parties interested
+besieged the Chancellor of the Exchequer with memorials, setting forth
+the hardships they sustained from the tax affecting their branch of
+industry, and the immense benefit the _public_ would derive from its
+abolition; but the public was the very last thing they were really
+thinking of. It was their own profits to which they were looking; and
+but for that, they never would have stirred in the matter. The immense
+fortunes made in many branches of manufactures, during the last quarter
+of a century, have been in great part owing to the tax remitted having
+been wholly gained to the master-manufacturers engaged in them. We pay
+the same now for our shoes and beer as we did thirty years ago, though,
+since its termination, the whole tax on leather and the war tax on malt
+have been repealed.
+
+There is no doubt that prices have declined in most articles of
+consumption to a great degree during the last twenty-five years, and in
+some to a most extraordinary extent. But where the decline has been
+great—as, for example, in cottons or calicoes, which are now selling for
+a fifth of what they cost during the war—it is not owing to the
+remission of taxation, so much as to the extraordinary perfection to
+which machinery and the division of labour have been brought. The proof
+of this is decisive. The fall of price has been fully as great in
+branches of manufactures in regard to which no remission has taken
+place, or in a very slight degree, as in those in which it has been most
+considerable. And in regard to all commodities, the effect of the
+monetary bills of 1819, 1826, and 1844, must be taken into
+consideration. Those bills, by contracting the currency to _one half_ of
+what it previously had been in proportion to the industry and population
+of the country, have effected a revolution of prices so great, that
+nearly the whole reduction of the cost of articles prior to the last
+year is to be ascribed to it. The great organ of the money interest, the
+_Times_, boasts that recent legislation has doubled the value of the
+sovereign. Unquestionably it has; and of course it has also doubled the
+whole debt of the country, public and private. It has turned the
+national debt of £800,000,000 into £1,600,000,000; it has made the
+annual taxation of £52,000,000 as burdensome as £100,000,000 would have
+been during the war. Prices have generally fallen; but it is the
+contraction of the currency which has done that. As to the remission of
+taxation, with the exception of a few articles, such as salt and
+spirits, in which the remission, being very large, was immediately felt
+by the consumer, the reduction of prices has not been greater than
+necessarily flowed from the artificial scarcity of money, and would have
+been the same though no reduction of public duties had taken place.
+Generally speaking, the tax, lost to the public, has been entirely
+gained by the master-manufacturer.
+
+Had the system of cheapening, carried into effect by the contraction of
+the currency on the one hand, and the extensive remission of duties on
+the other, been attended by beneficial consequences to the people, and
+resulted in general happiness and prosperity, there would at least have
+been some set-off against the ruin of our financial prospects which it
+has occasioned; and we might have consoled ourselves for the evident
+imposition of the public debt as a hopeless burden upon the nation, by
+the reflection that at least temporary wellbeing had resulted from the
+change. Has this been the case? Alas! the fact is just the reverse; and
+among the many mournful reflections which the present hopeless condition
+of our finances awakens, it is perhaps the most mournful, that the price
+paid for it has been, not public happiness, but general and
+unprecedented misery. In the long and varied annals of English history,
+there is beyond all question no period which has been marked by such
+repeated and widespread suffering as the thirty years which have elapsed
+since the cheapening system was begun, by the contraction of the
+currency in 1819, and the present time, when it has been carried into
+full effect by Sir R. Peel’s Free-trade policy in 1846. The three
+dreadful monetary crises of 1825, 1839, and 1847, followed, as each of
+them was, by several years of devastation and ruin to the trading
+classes; the repeated recurrence of agricultural distress, especially
+from 1832 to 1836, and in 1849; the unheard-of agonies of the Irish
+famine of 1846, perpetuated by the fall of prices, which rendered
+agriculture unremunerative over great part of that country,—are some of
+the leading features of an epoch which will ever be regarded as at once
+the most momentous and the most disastrous which the British Empire has
+ever known.
+
+It has left its traces deeply furrowed and for ever marked in English
+annals. It has produced consequences which will never be forgotten, and
+to which the historians of future times will point as the turning-point
+of British story, an eternal warning to future ages. It has produced the
+Revolution of 1832; disfranchised our whole Colonies; displaced the
+government of property, talent, and intelligence in the ruling island,
+and installed that of buying and selling in its stead. It has severed
+the public policy from the protection of the Land and Native Industry,
+the real inheritance and only sure patrimony of the nation, and anchored
+it instead on the shifting quicksands of Commercial Prosperity. It has
+destroyed the West Indies beyond the possibility of redemption, and
+spread discontent so widely through our other Colonies, that it is
+universally known they are all only waiting for some serious disaster to
+the parent state, or the advent of a protracted and hazardous war, to
+declare themselves independent. It has rendered every seventh man in
+Great Britain and Ireland, taken together, a pauper. It has driven from
+250,000 to 300,000 industrious citizens, for the last three years,
+annually into exile from their native land. It has raised the poor-rate
+in both islands to an unprecedented height, and, when measured by its
+true standard, the price of subsistence to double what it ever was
+before. It has implanted the seeds of ruin in our Mercantile Navy, by
+the rapid growth of foreign shipping as compared with British in
+carrying on our own trade. It has rendered our shores defenceless as
+they were in the days of the Saxon Heptarchy; and made one of our first
+admirals, Sir Charles Napier, thankful when the winter frosts closed the
+Baltic harbours, and secured our capital from the insulting visits of
+the successors of the sea-kings of the north. It has rendered our means
+of raising a revenue so hopeless, that the “greatest bill-broker in the
+world,” Mr Gurney, has declared that we must end in national bankruptcy;
+and the leader of the Free-traders himself, Mr Cobden, has publicly said
+that there is no resource but to disband our troops, sell our ships of
+war, and trust the national security to the justice and moderation of
+our enemies, and the total absence of envy in our rivals. Such, and not
+public and passing felicity, is the price which the nation has paid for
+the ruin of its finances, the abandonment of the sinking-fund, and the
+imposing of the public debt _for ever_, as a burden, hopeless of
+redemption, on the country.
+
+The destruction of property which has taken place in the British Empire
+during the thirty years that this cheapening process was going on,
+exceeds probably anything recorded during a similar period in the annals
+of mankind. It has much exceeded all that was produced by the
+confiscations of the Convention, or the devastation of the wars of
+Napoleon. Each of the three great monetary crises of 1825, 1839, and
+1847, occasioned the destruction at once of two or three hundred
+millions worth of mercantile property, and halved the fortunes of
+persons to double that extent. The intervals between them were, with the
+exception of a few brief gleams of perilous prosperity, periods of
+anxiety, gloom, and depression, during which all persons engaged in
+business, with the exception of the great capitalists, who were daily
+getting richer, found their property melting away under the ceaseless
+and progressive fall of prices. It was exactly the obverse of the vast
+impulse given to industry over the whole world by the discovery of the
+mines of Mexico and Peru, and the consequent rise of prices which
+everywhere ensued. One class, and one only, flourished amidst the
+general distress; but, unfortunately, in that class the government of
+the nation for the time was vested, viz., the _moneyed interest_. So
+immensely had this interest grown under the protective policy of the
+preceding hundred and fifty years, that it was able to set all other
+interests in the State at defiance, and to pursue the system of making
+the sovereign worth two sovereigns, despite the evident ruin which that
+system was bringing on all the industrious classes in the state. Future
+ages will ask what were the devastating wars, the stunning calamities,
+the loss of provinces, the severance of colonies, which inflicted such
+deep and irremediable wounds on the British nation during these
+memorable periods? and they will be answered, it was thirty years of
+unbroken peace at home, a series of brilliant colonial conquests abroad,
+and ONE SYSTEM.
+
+But that one system was amply sufficient to break down the most
+wisely-conceived system of finance, to ruin the most flourishing
+revenue, to render beggarly the richest nation, to destroy the greatest
+empire. It is the system, originating with the Roman empire, as a
+necessary and just consequence of its universal conquest, of universal
+free-trade—a system which ruined the empire. It is the more dangerous
+that it recommends itself to the people in the first instance by the
+alluring prospect of cheapening everything, of making money daily go
+farther, rendering every one apparently richer and more comfortable than
+he was before. It is readily adopted by the shopkeeping and trading
+class, because it enables them, in the first instance, to purchase the
+goods at a less cost; forgetting that if they buy cheap they must also
+sell cheap, and that their customers’ means of payment are melting away
+from the effects of that very cheapness. It is long, however, before
+this truth, how obvious soever, is generally understood. It is by slow
+degrees, and after much suffering only, that it is discovered that this
+system of general cheapening does not stop short with people’s
+_expenditure_; that it speedily comes to affect their _incomes_ also,
+and that in a still greater degree; that, if shopkeepers buy cheap, they
+must sell little or sell cheap also; that wages must fall with the
+decline in the price of commodities; and that the last condition of the
+people is worse than the first. But while this great and eternal truth
+is in the course of being brought home to the nation by suffering, the
+national pre-eminence is lost, the national security is endangered, the
+national spirit is weakened. Multitudes become desperate in regard to
+their own and their country’s fortunes, from the scenes of suffering and
+distress which they perpetually see around them; the selfish feelings
+acquire a fatal preponderance, from the general experienced
+impossibility of indulging in the generous. Meanwhile the national
+income melts away under the effects of the general cheapening of the
+remuneration of industry—all steady or foreseeing system of finance is
+abandoned, and every successive Government, like a needy spendthrift,
+deems itself happy if it can get through the year without a financial
+crisis, never bestowing a thought on the future, either as regards the
+national security, its finances, or its means of defence.
+
+One memorable instance of the way in which, under the cheapening system,
+the public revenue has been recklessly and needlessly thrown away, is to
+be found in the Penny Postage. It is well known that, prior to the
+change, the Post-office income, after paying _the whole charges of the
+Packet Service_, yielded a clear surplus revenue to the nation of
+£1,500,000 or £1,600,000 a-year. The postage of letters, however, was
+decidedly too high; a reduction was loudly called for by the public;
+and, if cautiously and judiciously applied, the increase of letters
+might have compensated the reduction of rates of postage, and a boon
+have been conceded to the community, without any detriment to the public
+service. A uniform 2d. or 3d., or even 4d., postage would have been
+hailed with unmixed satisfaction by the people, who had been paying 10d.
+or 1s. for their letters, and no material diminution of that important
+branch of the revenue experienced. Instead of this, what did the
+Government, urged on by the cheapening party, actually do? Why, they
+reduced the postage at once to a penny for all letters, from all
+distances within the two islands. We were told, that not only would
+there be no loss, but a certain gain, after a few years had elapsed,
+from the vast and certain increase in the number of letters that would
+be transmitted. How have these expectations been realised? The revenue
+set down as coming from the Post-office, immediately after the change,
+was only £500,000 or £600,000 a-year; and, after having been nine years
+in operation, it has only risen, in the year ending 5th April 1850, to
+£803,000; much less than half of what it would have been under the
+former system, when the increased population and transactions of the
+country are taken into consideration, if either the old rates had been
+continued, or a reasonable reduction to 2d. or 3d. had taken place. It
+is to the embarrassment produced by this great defalcation that we are
+mainly indebted for the renewal of the income-tax.
+
+But this defalcation, great and serious as it thus appears on the face
+of the public accounts, was little more than _a half_ of what really
+occurred in consequence of the change. To conceal the effects of this
+great innovation, the Free-trading party, who had now got entire
+possession of the Government, had the address both to get the expense of
+the Packet Service, _previously borne by the Post-office, thrown upon
+the Navy_, and to keep that important change a secret among the
+Government officials. In this way a double object was gained. The
+disastrous effect of the reduction was kept out of view, and the
+increased charges of the Navy afforded a plausible ground for demagogues
+to assail the Government for alleged extravagance in that department.
+But that which one demagogue had done, another demagogue brought to
+light. Mr Cobden made so violent a clamour about the increase of
+expenditure in the Navy since 1835, when it had been reduced, under the
+pressure of the Reform mania, to its lowest point, that the Admiralty,
+in their own defence, let out the important fact, that, since the
+penny-postage system began, they had been saddled with the whole cost of
+the Packet Service, which they never had been before; and, in the debate
+on the Estimates, Lord John Russell stated that this cost now amounted
+to £737,000 a-year. Thus the real Post-office accounts stand thus:—
+
+ Apparent surplus for year ending 5th April 1850, £803,000
+ Deduct cost of Packet Service, thrown on Navy, 737,000
+ ————————
+ Real Post-office revenue, £66,000
+
+And it has been raised to this level only during a year of extraordinary
+manufacturing activity, when our exports turned £60,000,000. On the
+whole, since the postage was reduced in 1841, the Post-office has not
+yielded a farthing to the country, but, on the contrary, has occasioned
+a loss of some hundred thousand pounds.
+
+We have heard enough from the Free-traders of the disasters which
+accumulated on the year 1848, and commencement of 1849, when a monetary
+crisis, the Irish famine, the European revolution, the Irish rebellion,
+and the Chartist sedition, combined to reduce the revenue to an
+unprecedented degree. We have heard enough, also, of the unexampled
+prosperity of the year 1849, when these extraneous disasters had ceased,
+and the blessings of Free-trade and the cheapening system were still in
+undiminished lustre. Be it so. Let us compare the public revenue of this
+year of unprecedented disaster with that obtained in the next year of
+unexampled prosperity, as appearing from the finance accounts of April
+5, 1850:—
+
+ Year ending Year ending
+ 5th April 1849. 5th April 1850.
+ Ordinary revenue, £48,490,002 £48,643,042
+ China money, 84,284
+ Imprest and other monies, 665,293 656,855
+ Repayment of advances, 427,761 553,349
+ ——————————— ———————————
+ £49,667,430 £49,853,246
+ 49,853,246
+ ———————————
+ Increase in 1849, £185,816
+ —_Times_, April 1850.
+
+So that the increase in a year of extraordinary and unprecedented
+prosperity, as we are told, over one of unexampled and overwhelming
+suffering, is _only_ £185,000, for £128,000 of which we are indebted to
+an excess in the repayment of advances in 1849 over 1848. We care not to
+what this extraordinary fact is to be ascribed, whether reduction of
+duties, the continuance of distress, or any other cause. We rest on the
+fact that Free-trade finance and the cheapening system have brought the
+revenue of the country, _in a year of what the Free-traders call its
+highest prosperity, to a level with what it had been in a year of its
+greatest adversity_. History cannot, and will not, overlook these facts.
+The leaders of the Free-traders say they live for posthumous fame. Let
+them not be afraid. Posterity will do them full justice.
+
+The financial problem of the Free-traders is—“Given a cheapened nation,
+to extract an adequate revenue out of their unremunerated industry.” We
+recommend this problem to the study of the Free-trading Chancellor of
+the Exchequer. If he solve it, we shall assign him a place superior to
+Archimedes in physical—to Bacon in political science.
+
+What a contrast to this mournful decay of the national resources, and
+ruin of the national strength, from the effects of a theory acted upon
+by the Legislature under the influence of a class majority in
+Parliament, would a truly catholic and national policy, protective alike
+to all interests, have afforded! An adequate but not redundant currency,
+cautiously administered, and relieved from the fatal liability to
+abstraction from a great increase of imports in any particular year,
+would at once have afforded free scope to national industry, and avoided
+the frightful vicissitudes in the demand for labour, which the opposite
+system of making the currency entirely dependent on the most evanescent
+of earthly things—gold—of necessity occasioned. The terrible monetary
+crises of 1825, 1839, and 1847, would have been unfelt. They would have
+been surmounted, as that of 1810 had been, by an extended issue of paper
+when the gold was for a time abstracted, without their existence being
+known to the nation. Industry, protected in every department by adequate
+but not oppressive fiscal duties, would have generally and steadily
+flourished. Periods of extravagant speculation and exorbitant wages,
+followed by commercial depression and general suffering, would have been
+unknown. The national revenues, sustained by an adequate currency and
+unbroken industry, would have afforded an ample surplus to Government,
+both for the public service and the promotion of objects of general
+utility, after providing for the maintenance of the sinking-fund.
+Emigration, supported, so far as the destitute are concerned, by the
+Government resources, and conducted in Government vessels, would have
+poured a ceaseless and prolific stream into the Colonies, at once
+vivifying their industry, and converting the paupers of England and
+Ireland into consumers of our manufactures, at the rate of six or seven
+pounds a-head per annum. Pauperism at home, relieved in the classes
+where it originates by this wise and paternal policy, would have been
+arrested. Crime itself would have been made to minister to the general
+good: the jails of Great Britain would have been converted into
+industrial academies for behoof of the Colonies. The industry of the
+Colonies, encouraged by the protective policy of the mother country, and
+supported by the ceaseless streams of its emigration, would have
+advanced with rapid strides, and afforded a rising and inexhaustible
+mart for domestic manufactures. The ocean would have become a British
+lake: the navy of England, the floating bridge which at once united and
+protected its distant dependencies.
+
+Colonial discontent would have been unknown. The West Indies, Canada,
+and Australia, would have been the most loyal and contented, because the
+most flourishing and justly governed parts of the Empire. The foreign
+trade of the world would have been to the British Empire what Adam Smith
+justly called the most profitable of all trades, a home trade. We should
+have raised the raw material for all our staple branches of industry
+within ourselves; wool from Australia, cotton from the East and West
+Indies, grain from the British isles and Canada. Agriculture at home and
+abroad would have advanced abreast of manufactures; commerce and
+shipping would have risen with the increase of their productions; the
+Navy, fed by an ample and protected commercial marine, and sustained at
+an adequate amount by a well-filled treasury, would have secured our
+independence, and enabled us to attend to the interests and anticipate
+the wants of our remotest dependencies. We should have been alike
+independent of foreign nations for the materials of pacific industry,
+and superior to them in warlike resources. Great Britain, though grey in
+years of renown, would have retained for centuries the vigour of youth,
+because she would have been continually renovated by the energy of her
+descendants. The paternal hall would have been constantly cheerful and
+happy, because it would have been always filled with children and
+grandchildren, or enlivened by their exploits. Amidst general prosperity
+and unceasing progress, the National Debt—constantly encroached on by a
+sustained sinking-fund—would have disappeared. Before this time it would
+have been all extinguished; and the taxation of the Empire, reduced to
+£30,000,000 or £35,000,000 a-year, would have enabled us for ever to
+maintain the national armaments on such a scale as would have qualified
+us to bid defiance alike to the covert encroachments of our rivals, or
+the open hostility of our enemies. Under the opposite or cheapening
+system, the public debt has, on the admission of its ablest supporters,
+been virtually doubled; the sinking-fund has, amidst general and almost
+constant distress, disappeared; Colonial discontent threatens the Empire
+with dismemberment; agricultural distress will speedily render it
+dependent for its daily bread on its enemies; and the maintenance of the
+national independence, if the present system is persisted in, has been
+rendered, for any length of time, impossible.
+
+
+
+
+ GREECE AGAIN.
+
+ “If, Cassandra-like, amidst the din
+ Of conflict none will hear, or, hearing, heed
+ This voice from out the wilderness, the sin
+ Be theirs, and my own feelings be my meed.”
+ _Prophecy of Dante._
+
+
+Greece is a most unfortunate country. She has only escaped the Turks to
+be plundered by her rulers and ruined by her protectors. Seventeen years
+ago, Lord Palmerston placed King Otho on his throne; he has since been
+occupied in making that throne an uneasy seat. King Otho refuses to
+answer Lord Palmerston’s letters; in revenge, Great Britain ruins a
+number of Greek shipowners, and leaves the Greek ministers unpunished.
+The Duke of Wellington has said that he never bombarded a town, and
+never saw the necessity for committing such an act of cruelty; and the
+saying does him even more honour than his long career of victory. We had
+hoped that no Englishman would ever have forgotten this saying; yet Lord
+Palmerston bombards the merchants of Greece for the faults of King
+Otho’s ministers. We are irresistibly reminded, by this last display of
+our Foreign Secretary’s warlike propensities, of Mr Winkle’s fight with
+the small boy.
+
+Though much has been written on the subject of this quarrel, both at
+home and on the Continent, no clear statement of the exact relations
+between England and Greece has been published; nor can it be gathered
+even from the papers recently laid before Parliament.[1] We believe,
+therefore, that our readers will thank us for devoting a few pages to a
+serious examination of the political relations between the two
+countries, which will tend to place the recent coercive measures in
+their true light. This is the more necessary, because Ministers, both in
+debates and Parliamentary papers, have it in their power to conceal
+everything relating to the past; and the Opposition must hunt long
+before they can spring a single truth in the thickets of official
+deception. A view of the subject, under the guidance of truth and common
+sense, free both from party views and national prejudices, has been
+rendered necessary by the speech of Mr Piscatory, the late French
+Minister in Greece. The spoken pamphlet of Mr Piscatory was prepared
+with considerable skill; but it communicates hardly a single fact that
+has not been perverted by being removed from its true context, or by
+having only half its concomitant circumstances narrated. Indeed, Mr
+Piscatory having been bellows-blower in the disputes between Sir E.
+Lyons, the English envoy at Athens, and King Otho’s ministers, for four
+years, is not a famous witness; he has his own secrets to conceal. His
+oratorical display did not impose on the good sense of General
+Cavaignac, who parodied Sylla’s speech to a wordy Athenian ambassador,
+by hinting to the French ex-minister plenipotentiary, “that it seemed
+France had sent him to Athens to study rhetoric, not to collect
+information.”
+
+The papers laid before Parliament prove the worthlessness of Mr
+Piscatory’s diplomacy; but the conduct of Lord Palmerston cannot be
+correctly appreciated, unless we trace the connexion of England and
+Greece since the convention of 1832, appointing Prince Otho of Bavaria
+King of Greece, under the protection and guarantee of England, France,
+and Russia. That treaty, it must be recollected, was the work of Lord
+Palmerston. King Otho was selected by Lord Palmerston; he was conveyed
+to Greece by Lord Palmerston’s favourite diplomatist, Sir E. Lyons; and
+it was under Lord Palmerston’s special protection that the
+Anglo-Bavarian Regency was furnished with £2,400,000, and allowed to
+destroy the institutions of the Greek nation. These facts embrace the
+history of British connexion with Greece from 1832 to 1837. Great
+Britain, or, to speak more correctly, our Foreign Secretary, is morally
+responsible for the government of the Greek kingdom by Count Armansperg,
+who ruled far more absolutely than King Otho has ever done, for the
+simple reason that he had a better filled purse. Sir E. Lyons supported
+him with vigour alike against Russian and French opposition, Greek
+patriotism, and constitutional principles, as may be seen by a reference
+to the papers laid before Parliament in July 1836.
+
+In 1837, Armansperg was dismissed from office; but Greece is still
+suffering from the loss of the institutions he destroyed, and the
+political corruption he introduced. Coletti, it is true, imitated his
+political system in the internal government with singular aptitude, but
+with diminished funds and resources for corruption. Where Armansperg
+could appoint an amnestied brigand a captain of infantry, Coletti could
+only make some old friend a policeman, or peradventure a consul.
+
+In 1837 the Government of Greece broke off its intimate connexion with
+England, and the English Minister at Athens became involved in a
+succession of quarrels with the court. It is not necessary for us to
+prove that the Bavarian Administration from 1837 to 1843 was bad. All
+parties agree that it was intolerable; and the Greeks were universally
+applauded when they expelled the whole tribe of Bavarian officials. King
+Otho had fallen into an error that might have been expected from a
+Whig-created king; he had neglected all the real duties of royalty, and
+transacted the business of his under-secretaries of state.
+
+The circumstances that have determined the position of our relations
+with Greece, since the Constitution of 1844, occurred in the preceding
+period. Lord Palmerston’s first quarrel with the Greek court dates from
+1837, and originated in the dissatisfaction then felt, because the
+British Minister at Athens did not possess as much influence with King
+Otho’s Government as he had possessed with Count Armansperg’s. The
+avowed object of British diplomacy, at that period, was to force the
+adherents of the English party into office; and King Otho incurred the
+enmity of England for preferring the counsels of France and Russia. The
+first pitched battle between Greece and England was fought about the
+waistcoat of the British Minister’s groom. The question was, whether the
+waistcoat worn by Sir E. Lyons’ groom in his stable dress, and in which
+he had been carried off to prison for squirting water on a policeman,
+was or was not a livery waistcoat. After several weeks’ deliberation,
+the Greek court decided, that, although they did not consider the
+waistcoat in question to be a livery waistcoat, yet, in consideration of
+the fact that the British Minister called it his livery, the Government
+of Greece was ready to make every concession that could be required to
+heal the wounded honour of Great Britain. Parliament had a narrow escape
+of seeing the waistcoat laid before both Houses. Now this is very silly.
+Yet there is no doubt that the arrest of the groom was an intentional
+insult.
+
+This affair was enacted to lower the English minister in the eyes of the
+populace, and compel the English Government to change him. Everybody in
+Greece knew that the groom was sent to prison; few Greeks believed that
+the Government had apologised for the insult; indeed, nothing but the
+sight of a policeman chained before the British legation for twenty-four
+hours could have reintegrated the name of England at Athens, so stoutly
+did all Government officials declare that no apology was ever made.
+Another scene was exhibited for the satisfaction of the court and the
+_corps diplomatique_. At a private theatrical representation in King
+Otho’s palace, the British minister was left without a chair in the
+circle, and remained standing during a long comedy. Some ambassadors
+would have been sorely distressed by this species of physical torture;
+but the ambassador in question is said to have consoled himself, during
+this public exhibition of the feelings of protected Greece to protecting
+England, by the reflection that his turn came next.
+
+A blow was shortly after inflicted on the royalty of Greece, from which
+it can never recover; but Lord Palmerston is accused of tolerating the
+use of forbidden weapons by some of his adherents, in his eagerness to
+make the Greek monarch sensible of the impolicy of the conduct of the
+Hellenic court. Attacks on the person of King Otho, more bold and
+unsparing than the most malignant vituperation of Junius, appeared in a
+London morning paper, then supposed to be allowed to imbibe some of its
+inspiration from Downing Street. These communications pretended to come
+from an anonymous correspondent in Athens, but it was evident the
+unknown writer was aware of many things that could hardly be known
+beyond the Bavarian court and the sanctuaries of Downing Street. At
+least, King Otho drew this conclusion, and apparently on good grounds.
+This correspondent informed the world, that his Hellenic Majesty, who
+had been selected by Lord Palmerston, and supported with a loan of
+£2,400,000, was nevertheless unfit to govern his kingdom; and that a
+certificate to this effect had been signed by several officers, civil,
+military, and medical, who were then at Athens in the service of King
+Otho, and that this certificate had been placed in the hands of King
+Louis of Bavaria. This strange communication would have passed unnoticed
+in Greece, had it not been made the subject of conversation by all the
+English officials, and the attention of Greek statesmen called to it by
+the British legation and consulates. At last, it was publicly noticed by
+the Greek press, and an outcry produced. Three of the Bavarians named as
+having signed the certificate, published a declaration contradicting the
+statement, in a document bearing date the 11th-23d June 1839, which was
+printed in the Greek newspapers. The medical and military officers who
+signed this counter-certificate were dismissed from all their places,
+and immediately quitted Greece. Very little has been said on this
+subject since. All parties seem heartily ashamed of their share in the
+transaction, and the public never discovered the key of the mystery. It
+is certain, however, that King Otho has given Lord Palmerston and Sir E.
+Lyons good proof of the falsity of the certificate, if they were ever
+led into the belief that such a document really existed; for, during ten
+years, he baffled them both in every diplomatic move, and made their
+vaunted constitutional policy tend more to the injury of their own
+reputation than to the diminution of his power.
+
+This episode of the certificate, whether its existence be a fact or a
+fable, placed an impassable barrier between Lord Palmerston and King
+Otho. Right or wrong, his Hellenic Majesty held the English foreign
+secretary responsible for the publication, for he believed that the
+English Government possessed the power of dragging the calumniator to
+light, and that it would have used the power had the anonymous
+correspondent not been protected by a powerful patron. Besides, the King
+of Greece might well ask, who in England could have acquired the
+knowledge which enabled this correspondent to attack the person of a
+monarch under the special protection of Great Britain, without fear of
+investigation or reply, unless the information came directly from some
+high diplomatic authority. We need not wonder, therefore, when we find
+that, from June 1839, hatred to England was the prominent feeling
+displayed by the Greek court in all its relations with the British
+cabinet. Lord Palmerston, finding all hope of acquiring influence in the
+Greek court vain, changed his policy, and became the advocate of
+constitutional government.
+
+The revolution in 1843 afforded the British cabinet an opportunity of
+putting our relations with Greece on a proper footing; but the
+opportunity was lost. Instead of English influence being employed to
+restore the national institutions destroyed by the Bavarians, it
+supported the establishment of what is called the constitutional form of
+government. One of those compilations of political commonplace which the
+lawgivers of our age are ready, at a week’s notice, to prepare either
+for Greenland or China, was translated from French pamphlets, and
+entitled the _Constitution of Greece_. Lord Aberdeen, who was then
+foreign secretary, committed as great a blunder in engaging Great
+Britain to stand godfather to this constitution, as Lord Palmerston had
+done in making Old England guardian to King Otho. The following are the
+words in which the British Government thought fit to record its
+approbation of this inane waste of time and paper,—“Her Majesty’s
+Government have viewed with no less satisfaction the admirable temper
+which appears to have generally prevailed in the Constituent Assembly,
+throughout the whole of her deliberations on the deeply interesting and
+important act on which they have been engaged. Such self-command in a
+popular Assembly, convoked under very exciting and critical
+circumstances, is highly creditable to the Greek nation. Nor is the
+result of their labours, as a whole, less entitled to credit for the
+general soundness of the constitutional principles therein established.”
+
+This, being the deliberate opinion of a British statesman of high
+character, not supposed to be infatuated by a blind love of
+revolutionary doctrines, demands serious examination. Let us see,
+therefore, what are the principles which received the sanction of the
+British Government on this occasion. In our opinion, they are precisely
+those principles that lead with certainty to political anarchy and
+national demoralisation. This vaunted constitution revived no local
+habits of business, re-established no parochial usages, improved no
+provincial institutions, corrected no political immoralities, restored
+no religious authority, and insured no education to the clergy. It
+proclaimed universal suffrage to an armed people, and vote by ballot to
+a mob that cannot write; and these are the principles held up to public
+approbation for their _general soundness_! While, as to the proofs of
+admirable temper and self-command displayed by this assembly, these
+feelings were surely not expressed in the decree by which this
+good-tempered assembly excluded all their countrymen, who had immigrated
+to the Greek territory since the year 1828, from official employments.
+There are, perhaps, some who may feel inclined to observe to us, as Rob
+Roy did to his kinsman, Bailie Nicol Jarvie, when they met in the
+Tolbooth of Glasgow, “Hout, tout! man, let that flee stick in the wa’;
+when the dirt’s dry it will rub out.” Be it so; but there are political
+blunders that leave a stain, which neither time nor repentance can
+efface.
+
+We believe that the source of Lord Aberdeen’s error arose from his wish
+to treat Greece as an independent state. But Greece under the protection
+of the three powers, and loaded with debt, could not be an independent
+power. False appearances always produce evil consequences. Lord
+Palmerston had been in too great a hurry to make the bantling monarchy
+of the treaty of 1832 walk without a baby-jumper, and his rivalry with
+Warwick the king-maker was not more glorious than his emulation of Mr
+Winkle. He ought to have perceived that sundry Klephtopiratic
+excrescences, like the protuberances on the body of a young bear,
+required to be carefully licked into shape. Our Foreign Secretary
+delayed the operation too long; and, when he perceived the dangers that
+had resulted from his negligence, he erroneously fancied that a licking
+of a different kind, applied by Admiral Parker to King Otho’s
+Government, would set all right.
+
+When the Greek monarchy was founded in 1832, it was the duty of Lord
+Palmerston to have laid before Parliament detailed answers to the
+following questions, as a justification of the course he had pursued in
+engaging Great Britain to protect the new state, and furnish it with a
+loan of £2,400,000. The questions, in perfect ignorance of which the
+character of England was compromised, and the money wasted, were:—
+
+1. What were the actual means of government in the country, and the
+nature of the parochial, communal, borough, provincial and central
+administrative institutions, which had enabled the Greeks to maintain a
+war against Sultaun Mahmoud and Mahommed Ali for seven years? Enthusiasm
+and patriotism are good words in a debate, and may explain the events of
+a single campaign; but common sense tells every one that a people must
+possess some administrative institutions, in order to persist in a
+desperate struggle for many successive years. If Greece had no
+institutions in 1832, she was clearly unfit to receive a king; and the
+duty of the Three Protecting Powers was to frame a system of
+administration, not to choose a monarch. But on the other hand, if the
+foundations of political government already existed, it was especially
+the duty of Great Britain to see that these foundations or local
+institutions were improved, and not destroyed, by the new Government.
+
+2. What were the land and sea forces necessary to maintain order on
+shore, and guard the Grecian seas from piracy; and how could these
+forces be immediately subjected to the system of discipline, which the
+protecting powers might consider indispensable?
+
+3. What measures were requisite, in order to enable the mass of the
+population to turn their attention to profitable branches of industry
+without loss of time?
+
+And 4. What were the financial resources of the country? What was the
+amount of the debts contracted by the Government during the
+revolutionary war? What sum would be required to supply the deficit in
+the annual expenditure for the first year of the new monarch’s reign;
+and what sum would be required to be set apart annually for paying the
+interest of the debts of the Greek state, now converted into a European
+kingdom?
+
+Strange as it may seem, there is not the slightest information on these
+important questions in the papers laid before Parliament in 1832; and we
+believe that, had Lord Palmerston taken the trouble to collect even the
+limited information we have specified, before he involved Great Britain
+in a guarantee of King Otho’s throne, he would have perceived that it
+was not necessary to burden Greece either with a new debt or the
+presence of a foreign army. Great Britain would then have prevented the
+regency from destroying the existing institutions, and saved the country
+from the administrative corruption that ruined the despotic royalty of
+King Otho, and promises very soon to annihilate his constitutional
+monarchy.
+
+One advantage might have been obtained for Greece by the constitution of
+1844, if either the Greeks or their sovereign had known how to profit by
+it. The direct influence of the protecting powers in the internal
+affairs of the country was greatly diminished. Unfortunately, Mr Coletti
+did not avail himself of this circumstance to lead the Greeks to make
+one single improvement in the interior. Not a road was made, or a packet
+established. Coletti was, nevertheless, a favourite minister with King
+Otho, for he fomented the King’s aversion to England, and carried on an
+active warfare with Sir E. Lyons.
+
+When Mr Wyse arrived at Athens last year, as British minister, he found
+the train laid to the mine Lord Palmerston was about to spring. He tried
+in vain to persuade the Greek ministers to make such concessions as
+would prevent an open rupture. His conciliatory conduct misled the Greek
+court into a belief that Lord Palmerston was afraid to come to blows,
+and, in an evil hour, it deemed itself secure of victory. The only
+alternative left to Great Britain, in King Otho’s opinion, was to
+withdraw the English minister from Athens. But, even if Lord
+Palmerston’s disposition had made him inclined to take this course, King
+Otho ought to have remembered that the convention of 1832, which created
+the Greek kingdom, bound England to watch over it. So infatuated was the
+court of Athens at this time, that the modifications which it would be
+possible to make in the Greek constitution, after the departure of the
+English minister, became a subject of conversation. Yet when the hour
+arrived, and Lord Palmerston’s demands were communicated, the Greek
+ministers felt the folly of resistance; and they would have capitulated,
+had the minister of the French Republic not availed himself of the
+conjuncture to flatter King Otho’s private prejudices, and assumed the
+direction of affairs. The Greek minister of foreign affairs, Mr Londos,
+was a man utterly unfit for the place. His communications to the
+Chambers, on the subject of the quarrel, are a tissue of erroneous
+statements. M. Thouvenel persuaded this unlucky minister to brave Lord
+Palmerston, and trust to the protection of France and the European
+press. The French minister knew that he would gain for himself the star
+and the broad blue ribbon of King Otho’s Order of the Redeemer, and he
+knew equally well that he would inflict a serious injury on the commerce
+and revenues of Greece, and that he would cause the ruin of many Greek
+merchants. There can be no doubt, that ambassadors ought never to be
+allowed to receive Orders from the sovereigns to whose court they are
+accredited. The interests of nations are often sacrificed by honourable
+men for stars and ribbons. In finally coming to an open rupture with
+Greece, Lord Palmerston probably only did what any other minister who
+had placed himself in a similar position must have done. But though we
+believe that it was King Otho who made the cup run over, we have shown
+our readers that Lord Palmerston had already filled it pretty full; and
+we are far from approving of the measures he adopted for the coercion of
+the Greek Government. In our opinion, it was cruel to punish the Greek
+people for the faults of their rulers, since those rulers were selected
+and protected by the Three Powers, of which England is one. The coercion
+ought to have been confined to measures that would have directly
+affected the King and the Government.
+
+We have now laid before our readers the history of all the causes,
+supposed and real, of Lord Palmerston’s war with Greece. It was neither
+the livery waistcoat of Sir E. Lyon’s groom, the missing chair at the
+royal comedy, Mr Pacifico’s furniture, Mr Finlay’s garden, no, nor the
+constitutional policy of the English Government, that brought our fleet
+to Salamis. It was the anonymous correspondent of the _Morning
+Chronicle_ in 1839, be that individual who he may. Lord Palmerston’s
+conduct to Greece since that period, it is true, has been generally
+unwise, and often unjust; but that correspondence having been once
+placed to the account of the British Cabinet by the King of Greece, he
+consequently acted in such a spirit towards England, that we acknowledge
+a collision became unavoidable, without a sacrifice of the dignity of
+the British Crown. The papers laid before Parliament show, that the
+communications of the English Government were left unanswered for years.
+
+We are bound also to observe, that the conduct of King Otho has so
+completely disorganised the finances of Greece, that his throne is in
+imminent danger, and a great change in the government of Greece must
+take place in the present year. In the year 1848, a serious rebellion
+took place in Greece. The diplomacy of England was accused of
+encouraging the insurgents, and, for some days, the flight of King Otho
+from Athens was an event hourly expected. When the full extent of the
+evil, and the anarchy which threatened the country in consequence of the
+insane conduct of the Greek Opposition, was known in England, Lord
+Palmerston frankly changed his policy, and sent our ablest and best
+English diplomatist, Sir Stratford Canning, to save King Otho’s throne.
+If a throne be of any value, the King of Greece owed some thanks to
+England for the great services of Sir Stratford Canning, who had to
+encounter a virulent and unfair opposition from the English officials at
+Athens during his exertions to save Greece from anarchy.
+
+We have no time to point out the connexion of the events we have noticed
+with the general movement of European diplomacy since 1833. Our space
+compels us to confine our observations to Greece; and we must now
+hastily examine the state of society in the country, in order to enable
+our readers to judge of the manner in which the civilisation of the
+people affects the administration of public affairs. The Greeks
+themselves think that their great political want is a good systematic
+central administration. We believe, on the contrary, that their great
+political deficiency is the want of municipal institutions, that would
+admit of their making some exertions to improve their own condition.
+Every one who has travelled much in Greece must have seen, that every
+little town and island contains two or three individuals capable of
+fulfilling the duties of a local magistracy with honour to their
+country; while everybody who has had anything to do with the ministers
+of King Otho, or with the members of his council of state, knows that
+there is not a statesman in Greece capable of filling a ministerial
+post, in a period of political difficulty, without disgracing his
+country. It would be invidious to name respectable men as instances of
+incapacity; but every one, who has followed the political history of
+Greece, is aware that every Greek statesman has had opportunities of
+disgracing it, and repeating the same blunders several times. The
+despotic government of King Otho failed from the utter incapacity of his
+ministers; the constitutional monarchy is hastening to ruin from the
+same cause. In the present state of Greece, it is not possible to find
+men capable of conducting the King’s Government with the necessary
+ability. The people are greatly in advance of their rulers.
+
+The conclusion of the revolutionary war left the nation divided into
+several classes of society, as different in their ideas and habits of
+life as if they had formed parts of different nations. These classes
+were, first, the peasantry—for so the cultivators of the soil are
+generally called, though a large portion of them are landed proprietors,
+and often the only persons of substance in the provinces. Second, the
+primates, or proprietors, who did not cultivate their own lands. These
+men managed public business, and acted as collectors of the revenue
+under the Turks: they frequent coffee-houses, and form political
+societies under the centralised constitutional system of government.
+This class, however, possesses some education, but its moral character
+is vitiated by a firm conviction that it is entitled to be maintained in
+a state of idleness at the public expense. It has gained considerable
+political influence by means of the election law of 1844. Coletti, by
+intimidating the weak, bribing the active, and creating innumerable
+places, purchased this class wholesale, and rendered himself master of
+nearly all the electoral districts in Greece. The third class is
+composed of that numerous body of Greeks who have emigrated to the
+Hellenic territory from different provinces of Turkey. This class
+includes the greater part of the ablest and best educated men in the
+country; but the abject principles of the Phanariotes, or Greeks
+educated for the public service in Turkey, and the base avidity
+displayed by this class in place-hunting, which is their principal means
+of life, rendered them very unpopular, and enabled their rivals, the
+primates, to exclude them from official employments by a decree of the
+national assembly of 1844. The fourth class is the military. This class
+is very numerous, as its ranks are swelled by crowds of individuals who
+never served in a military capacity, but who have received military rank
+as a payment for political services. King Otho makes generals of
+secretaries, and colonels of commissaries; while farmers of the revenue,
+muleteers, and officers’ servants, form about one half of the unattached
+officers of an army which counts an officer for every two privates and a
+quarter, if we can trust the Greek Budget and the Greek newspapers.
+
+There is also a remarkable difference between the social condition of
+the inhabitants of the country and of the towns; and this difference
+must be taken into consideration in estimating the political state of
+Greece. The principal towns contain as many persons of education, and as
+high a degree of mental cultivation, as can be found in any towns of a
+similar size in other countries; but in the rural districts, on the
+contrary, there is a want of material civilisation, a degree of rudeness
+in every process of industry, which places the agricultural population
+far below the people of every other European country, even including the
+Greek population in Turkey. The Hellenic peasant cultivates his
+_zevgari_, or yoke of land, in a manner that only enables him to live,
+to rear a family to replace his own, and to pay his taxes. No
+improvements take place on his farm—nor, indeed, can any take place
+under the system of taxation and administration actually in force. Fruit
+trees are annually destroyed, and forests are burnt down, but none are
+ever planted. The depopulation caused by the war of the revolution may
+still admit of the location of some additional families on uncultivated
+land; but no improvement has yet been commenced in agricultural industry
+or transport, that will give one family the means or the time to
+cultivate more land than its predecessors have cultivated, or that will
+make the same extent of land to yield any additional produce.
+
+Here, then, we find precisely the state of things which produced the
+stationary condition of European society during the middle ages, and
+which still keeps the greater part of the East in its immutable
+condition. The land under the windows of King Otho’s palace, and the
+fields around the university of Athens, are more rudely cultivated than
+any other portion of the soil of Europe; yet neither king, senators,
+deputies, nor professors, appear to have perceived that the turning
+point of national civilisation is not marked by the splendour of court
+balls, the regularity of the payment of official salaries, or the number
+and quality of scholastic lectures, but by the creation of a state of
+things in which capital is advantageously employed in augmenting the
+produce of the soil. When this is not the case, generations of
+agriculturists succeed one another for ages, treading in the footsteps
+of their predecessors in the same numbers, and in the same state of
+barbarism.
+
+Coexistent with this rude peasantry, there is an educated class whose
+numbers are also limited by the fixed amount of rent and taxes, on which
+they depend for their support, and by means of which they perpetuate
+themselves by the side of the rude agriculturists, giving the towns all
+the appearance of civilisation. This unfortunate state of society is not
+new in the history of the Greek nation: it has now existed for more than
+1000 years, and it forms the prominent feature in the internal
+organisation of the Byzantine empire. Judging from the records of that
+government, it is a state of society that presents greater obstacles to
+change than any social combinations which the history of the human race
+reveals to the west of China. The cultivators of the soil cannot improve
+their condition or increase in number; the educated classes are
+interested in opposing change, and have influence enough to prevent it:
+poverty in the country, and meanness in the towns, render the universal
+moral degradation an element of stability in the political condition of
+a nation whose social state is such as we have described.
+
+There remains an important class of society in Greece, which we have not
+yet mentioned, because it has been excluded from all political influence
+since the formation of the Hellenic monarchy. This is the mercantile
+class. Before the revolutionary war, and during the contest with the
+Turks, it was the Greek merchants and shipowners who formed the
+aristocracy of the nation; but this class is now almost null in the
+movement of political affairs at Athens. The greater part of the able,
+respectable, and wealthy merchants have quitted the country, and are to
+be found at Odessa, Trieste, Marseilles, London, and Manchester, not in
+King Otho’s dominions. A small fraction of shipowners remain, but the
+small schooners that now compose the mercantile navy of Greece cannot be
+compared with the fine ships that Hydra, Spetzia, and Psara formerly
+sent out to engage the Turkish fleet; and the comparative increase of
+the tonnage of the trading vessels of large size in Greece and Turkey,
+since 1840, shows that the trade of the Levant is extending more rapidly
+under the Turkish than under the Greek flag.
+
+We have now described the state of society with sufficient accuracy to
+enable us to examine the value of the measures adopted for founding a
+monarchy in Greece. From what we have said, it must be evident that
+constitutional government, as the Continental liberals and English
+political lecturers understand the term, could not be an object of much
+interest to those classes that were called upon to exercise universal
+suffrage. It probably never engaged their attention more seriously than
+the laws of gravitation or the number of the fixed stars. They felt that
+they wanted permanent and systematic administration, in place of the
+inconstant and arbitrary measures from which they suffered; they
+demanded security of property, liquidation of the public debt, and
+employment for labour, but they knew not how to arrive at the
+consummation of their wishes. Instead of attending to these commonplace
+matters, the British Government and its allies gave the Greeks a king, a
+court, a regency less united than their own Capitani, civil wars,
+additional debts, and an order of knighthood to corrupt foreign
+diplomatists; but not a road, a bridge, or a ferry-boat, was introduced
+into a country full of mountains and dangerous torrent-beds, and
+consisting, in great part, of peninsulas and islands. King Otho, who has
+spent £3,000,000 sterling on civil wars, and £1,000,000 on palaces, does
+not possess fifty miles of road practicable for a donkey-cart, in his
+whole dominions. There is not a carriage-road from Athens to Corinth,
+nor a ferry-boat to the islands of the Archipelago. Need we wonder,
+then, if the Greeks despise their own Government, and suspect the
+intentions of the three protecting powers that support it in its evil
+conduct? The consequence is, that fifteen thousand military and police
+officials fail to preserve order in a population of nine hundred and
+twenty thousand souls. The result of this political experiment, in the
+foundation of monarchies, certainly reflects little credit on the
+statesmen of England, France, and Russia.
+
+We must examine the error that was committed, in giving the countenance
+of Great Britain, as a protecting power, to the absurd constitution
+established in 1844; and while we blame what was then badly done, we
+shall point out what common sense, when not warped by party interests,
+dictated ought to have been done. Of course, we can only offer the
+suggestions urged by a wise minority at Athens. The nation, in making
+the revolution in 1843, did not want a constitution, for they possessed
+institutions which a written constitution is only valuable as a means of
+attaining. The Greeks, as we have said before, sought to reform the
+system of administration. The method of carrying on the executive
+government, under the hourly control of an elective chamber, called
+constitutional government, was forced upon them by accident, as France
+lately became a republic. Without the assistance of this _pons asinorum_
+of French politicians, the Greeks had saved the liberty of the press
+from the attacks of Count Armansperg, and established trial by jury in
+spite of Austria and Russia.
+
+The constitutional system of government, as it has laid hold of the
+public mind on the Continent, is a very imperfect political contrivance:
+practically, it has proved a delusion—a mere form, figured in empty
+space by a mass of thick clouds, impelled hither and thither by unseen
+currents of wind, the precursor of an approaching storm, not the source
+of beneficial showers. When examined in detail, with its tribunes; its
+orators, pamphlet in hand; its galleries, and its ministers playing at
+see-saw between social democracy and court corruption, what hope does it
+hold out of establishing a sense of moral responsibility and firmness of
+purpose in individual statesmen, or the deep conviction that creates
+patriotic feeling, and the power of self-sacrifice, in a whole people?
+What collection of men, chosen by a mob which can never hear the names
+of the wisest and best in their immediate vicinity, can, in the actual
+state of education, morality, and religion, either possess the
+qualifications necessary to make laws, or the experience required to
+control and direct the executive government? English institutions, or
+what we call, in conversation, the English constitution, is even now
+something totally different from this spawn of modern political
+quackery. Yet even among men of education, at home as well as among
+demagogues and itinerant orators, we now find some who pretend that our
+political system would be improved by allowing Gregory the poacher, and
+Herman the tinker, to take an active share in legislation, by the
+adoption of universal suffrage, annual Parliaments, and the vote by
+ballot. We doubt whether a British _Codex Gregorianus_ or
+_Hermogenianus_, so framed, would do our country much honour. Things are
+bad enough as they are. We already make laws faster than lawyers can
+read them; and the electors care very little about the legislative
+labours of the elected. They seem contented to know that the work has
+been done in such a hurry, that half of it must be done over again next
+year. The people of England, like the Continental constitutionalists,
+are beginning to fancy that the proper function of our legislators is to
+make themselves the real executive. A true constitutional chamber,
+according to the modern theory of government, ought to use the king’s
+ministers as its own head-clerks. The evil is manifest. Ministers know
+that their masters, the chambers, have no administrative plans, and a
+very defective memory, so they themselves remain without any settled
+policy. This state of things is a vice of our age. It is as apparent in
+the embryo constitutionalism of Greece, as in the premature decrepitude
+of Liberalism in France.
+
+Constitutional government, where no educated and independent class
+exists in the provinces, must always turn out, as it has done in Greece,
+to be injurious to the cause of liberty, unless it be neutralised by
+powerful municipal institutions, and an able and disinterested monarch.
+The prominent vices of the Greek constitution are, universal suffrage,
+vote by ballot, and a servile, ignorant, and useless Senate, as a satire
+on a House of Peers. Without entering into any general examination of
+the value of similar measures in other countries, we shall show that
+they are unsuited to the actual state of society in Greece. Universal
+suffrage evidently supposes that the people intrusted with it is
+entitled to self-government; yet the constitution of Greece, which gives
+the people universal suffrage, does not allow them any practical
+influence even in the affairs of their smallest towns and rural
+districts. Every person in Greece is supposed to be capable of choosing
+legislators, but not mayors, aldermen, and provincial councillors. The
+Greeks possessed great power in the local administration under the
+Turks. This power contributed in a high degree to the preservation of
+their national existence, but it alarmed the weak-minded Bavarians; and,
+under the shield of the three protecting powers, the Greeks were robbed
+of their municipal institutions by the Regency. A system of local
+oligarchies was introduced, which prevails at present.
+
+The election of the mayor and aldermen is vested in an electoral
+college, one half of which is composed of the persons who pay the
+greatest amount of taxes. Here is an element of respectability; but in
+order to dilute it with one of servility, a certain number of
+individuals, decorated with crosses, is admitted. Even this respectably
+servile body is not allowed to elect the mayor; it is only empowered to
+name three candidates, from which the King chooses the individual who is
+to direct the interests of the little community. The mayor so chosen
+enjoys his office for three years, and receives a good salary from the
+municipal funds. Let us now examine how this system is worked, in
+conformity with constitutional principles, in the capital of the
+Hellenic kingdom. Attica, it must be observed, sends four deputies to
+the Legislative Chamber; and as these deputies receive two hundred and
+fifty drachmas a-month, and have succeeded in making the sittings of the
+Greek Chambers perpetual, the place of deputy is worth as much as the
+best estates in Greece. Now, as these interminable sitters are chosen by
+universal suffrage, but are required to support the minister, it became
+absolutely necessary to job the elections, by means of the oligarchy
+holding office in the municipalities. This was not very difficult, for
+the number of persons who can read and write among the Albanian
+population of Attica, which outnumbers the Greek, is very small. Even
+among the Greek population of the city of Athens, the proportion of
+government officials and street porters, who pay no taxes, exceeds the
+number of the independent citizens. The middle classes, and the friends
+of order, are excluded from all local influence, by being excluded from
+any share in the municipal government. A town-council party is formed,
+and this party is allowed to employ the whole local revenues of Attica,
+amounting to between three and four hundred thousand drachmas annually,
+in jobbing, on condition that they support the ministerial candidates at
+the elections.
+
+The constitutional system of political corruption, to make universal
+suffrage profitable to the court, runs thus: The mayors are selected
+from men without character or local influence. This is brought about by
+naming the third candidate mayor, he being generally some insignificant
+person, whom both the leading parties agree to admit on the list. This
+individual, when appointed, is nothing more than a creature of the
+prefect or of the court, which alone possesses the power of protecting
+him in office, and in the receipt of a good salary for three years. The
+duty of the mayor is to bribe the aldermen, by allowing them to arrange
+with the municipal councillors how to divert the revenues of the city
+into their own pockets, or that of their relations, by the creation of
+places. The extent to which the court have brought jobbing, is testified
+by the shifts and tergiversation employed to prevent the publication of
+any regular accounts of the receipts and expenditure of the
+municipalities; and the municipal revenues exceed the sum of two
+millions of drachmas. Athens, with a revenue of three hundred thousand
+drachmas a-year, would be the filthiest town in Europe, were nature not
+kinder to it than its magistrates.
+
+A single instance of how matters are carried on in the provinces, is
+sufficient to describe the whole system. A rural commune, placed on an
+important line of communication, wished to make a good mule road over a
+mountain pass. It voted the sum of six hundred drachmas in its budget,
+hoping, by its example, to produce similar votes in the neighbouring
+communes. The central government was then invited to send an engineer,
+to trace the best line of road. The deputy of the province was a
+creature of the court; he and the minister of the interior put their
+heads together, and sent down an inspector of the road, before it was
+surveyed or commenced, with an order on the commune which had put six
+hundred drachmas in its budget, to pay him a salary of fifty drachmas
+monthly for a year. This ministerial exploit put an end to all projects
+of road-making on the part of the municipalities.
+
+The vote by ballot is converted into a constitutional method of
+counteracting any evil effects that might otherwise arise to ministerial
+candidates from the use of universal suffrage; for man is fallible, and
+the Greeks felt inclined, in some places, to oppose the system of
+Coletti. We recommend the plan adopted to the attention of an eminent
+historian of ancient Greece, who has more faith in the wood of the
+ballot-box than in the moral responsibility of the elector. When the
+number of electors in a district was about five thousand, and it was
+feared that three thousand might vote against the government candidates,
+and only two thousand in their favour, the ballot-boxes were doctored
+beforehand, by having one thousand votes placed in them before the
+process of the public ballot commenced. Intimidation was resorted to, to
+prevent at least one thousand of the real voters from attending, and it
+was generally successful with the middle classes; but, in one unlucky
+district, which contained only about four thousand voters, six thousand
+tickets were found in the ballot-box. At times, the success of the
+opposition was so great, that nothing could be done at the time of
+voting. The persons charged to convey the ballot-box to the place
+appointed for the scrutiny, were, in such cases, waylaid by armed bands,
+and the ballot-boxes were destroyed. These scenes were enacted even in
+Attica. We believe that, in order to secure free institutions to any
+people, it is more necessary to create a feeling of moral
+responsibility, than to protect the electors from the effects of
+intimidation and fraud merely when they exercise the franchise. National
+liberty cannot be protected by a wooden box; it must be fought for
+boldly before the face of all mankind. The vote by ballot injures the
+nation more than it protects the individual; and it can only cease to do
+harm in a state of society where perfect equality reigns among the
+electors themselves, and between the electors and the elected.
+
+With regard to the Greek Senate, we have little to say. In a country
+where not one single element of an aristocracy exists, and where it was
+impossible to secure superior education in the members of a chamber
+appointed for life, it was evident that one chamber would afford a
+better guarantee against bribery and corruption than two. No nobles, no
+independent gentlemen, no dignified clergy, no learned lawyers, can
+enter the Greek Senate. The qualification of a senator is a certain
+period of service in official appointments, which have been generally
+held by men who can neither read nor write. The consequence is, that the
+Senate is utterly useless as a legislative body, from the ignorance of
+its members; while the nature of the materials from which it is
+composed, render it a more servile instrument, in the hands of every
+minister, than the elective chamber. It was yesterday a tool in the
+hands of Coletti—to-morrow it may become one in those of Mavrocordatos.
+It would be an object of contempt, were it not an expensive instrument
+of oppression.
+
+We have now shown what the constitution has effected; let us turn to
+consider what measures Great Britain ought to have recommended to the
+attention of the national assembly, when it was occupied in framing this
+constitution. The first great national question was municipal reform.
+Unless the people could be intrusted with the direction of the affairs
+of their own districts, it was unwise to entrust them with a direct
+control over the national legislation and expenditure. Men take a more
+lively interest in the trifling details of their own households, and in
+affairs that pass under their own eyes, and with which they are
+perfectly cognisant, than they do about more distant though more
+important matters. Had the people in Greece been allowed to administer
+their local affairs, they would have drawn much of their attention from
+party struggles about which they knew very little, to devote it to
+business they perfectly understood. No guarantee for the permanent
+existence of Greece, as an independent and free state, can exist, until
+the present oligarchical constitution of the municipalities throughout
+the country is destroyed. The mayors must be annually elected by the
+people, and not removable by the minister of the interior. The accounts
+of the municipal expenditure must be published quarterly.
+
+The next step towards giving Greece some practical liberty is to abolish
+universal suffrage. In a country where the election of provincial
+councillors is regulated by a census, surely the same guarantee ought to
+be required in the election of legislators. In Greece, everybody is
+expected to know how to read and write except the national legislators
+and the King’s ministers. Oligarchy prevails in the municipal
+institutions, aristocracy in the provincial, democracy in the
+legislative, and ignorance in the executive; and British statesmen,
+under whose protection matters have arrived at this condition, express
+surprise at the anarchy they have themselves nourished, instead of
+blushing at their own negligence or political incapacity. The vote by
+ballot had better be abolished, and the senate replaced by a
+deliberative council of state, composed of men of education capable of
+preparing laws. The actual representative chamber must only be allowed
+to sit for two months annually, in order to put an end to the jobbing in
+which its members have acquired an alarming degree of experience.
+
+The question arises, How are the changes necessary to save Greece to be
+effected? We believe that there is not moral force in the country to
+produce the necessary reforms. Greece is now very much in the situation
+in which England was during the reign of Charles II.; she is exhausted
+with civil war and party struggles. Besides, she does not possess a body
+of statesmen, or any statesman, of superior abilities or commanding
+character. In the present state of things, any ministry that attempted
+to clean the Augean stable of the administration, would create a degree
+of opposition, on the part of the court and of the officials in Athens,
+that would drive him or them from office in less than six months.
+
+If Lord Palmerston desire to save Greece, and secure her a place among
+independent states, he must lose no time in convoking a conference of
+England, France, and Russia; and this conference must decide on a
+practical scheme of administration for the Greek government, and impose
+a budget on the ministers. The army must be reduced; a navy of packets
+must be created; roads must be made; the taxes in kind must be gradually
+commuted; and a field must be opened for the improvement of agriculture.
+If this is not done, the first great convulsion in the East will put an
+end to the monarchy created by Lord Palmerston in 1832, and Greece will
+separate into a number of small cantons, like ancient Hellas and modern
+Switzerland, or fall under the domination, direct or indirect, of some
+foreign power. The reputation of Great Britain for political wisdom is,
+throughout the East, connected with the growth and prosperity of the
+monarchy she founded: hitherto she has gained very little honour by the
+share she has taken in the affairs of Greece.
+
+We cannot conclude without making a few observations on Lord
+Palmerston’s attempt to conquer the islets of Cervi and Sapienza for the
+Ionian republic. We never knew Lord Palmerston undertake a worse case,
+nor conduct one in a worse manner. Whether the islands in question
+belong to King Otho or Sir H. Ward, is a matter about which neither can
+feel very positive, as it turns on the interpretation of obscure
+treaties that make no mention of the thing in dispute; and these
+treaties were in part framed before either of the states now appearing
+as claimants had an existence.
+
+The facts are, Greece is in possession of two islands. The Ionian
+republic advances a claim to them. Greece takes no notice of this claim,
+even when backed by the powerful intervention of England. Lord
+Palmerston, considering the British Government is not treated with
+proper courtesy by King Otho, gives orders to seize the islands and
+deliver them to Sir H. Ward; but, before these orders are executed, he
+receives an answer from the Greek Government, and recalls his orders.
+Still he boldly tells the world that he had given these orders, as may
+be seen in the last despatch printed in the Parliamentary papers. Now
+this announcement was quite uncalled for, and has very naturally given
+great offence to the Russian Government, for it was a gratuitous
+violation of the diplomatic courtesy due to our allies, the joint
+protectors of Greece. When England found that Greece was withholding
+property supposed to belong to the Ionian republic, it was clearly her
+duty, as protector of the Ionian republic, to lay the case before
+Russia, France, and England, the three protectors of Greece. No want of
+courtesy on the part of Greece, in leaving the communications of England
+unanswered, could ever warrant England forgetting what was due to Russia
+and France, and even to herself. England alone could not pretend to
+decide whether Cervi and Sapienza belong to Greece or to the Ionian
+republic. Russia, from her earlier connexion with the Ionian islands,
+and her more intimate knowledge of Greek and Turkish affairs, was the
+power best qualified to decide the question; and both Russia and France
+had a right to take part in deciding it. Had the imprudent order of Lord
+Palmerston been unfortunately carried into execution, it might have
+seriously troubled our relations with Russia; even as it is, the
+unnecessary publicity given to the fact that such an order had been
+issued, has been viewed as an intentional slight.
+
+These two islands, it must be remembered, have been in the possession of
+the Greek Government ever since its formation. King Otho found them a
+part of the Greek territory when it was delivered over to him by the
+protecting powers in 1833; and as they are within cannon-shot of the
+shores of Greece, he could hardly doubt that he was their lawful
+sovereign. But, at all events, we cannot understand what object could be
+gained by Great Britain taking forcible possession of these paltry
+little islands, when it was evident that the final decision concerning
+their property could only be given by Russia and France.
+
+We hope Lord Palmerston has some better argument to plead before these
+two powers than he has communicated to Greece in his despatch of the 9th
+February last, as given in the correspondence presented to Parliament.
+If not, his case is lost. The geography and the logic of this document
+are equally defective. As a proof that these islands belong to the
+Ionian state, he cites an act of the Ionian legislature dated in the
+year 1804, in which they are enumerated as portions of the territory of
+the republic. This act, however, does not even prove that they were ever
+occupied by the Ionian government. The legislature of Great Britain,
+when Lord Palmerston was a young man, was in the habit of enumerating
+France as an appendage of the crown of England; the King of France used
+to boast of himself as King of Navarre, without Europe attaching much
+importance to the enumeration of territory in the possession of others.
+The Sultan does not trouble his head about the pretensions of the Kings
+of Sardinia and Naples to the kingdom of Jerusalem; so that King Otho
+may be excused for not paying more attention to the Ionian claim to
+Cervi and Sapienza, than he does to the Spanish claim to the Duchy of
+Athens and New Patras.
+
+Nor does Lord Palmerston strengthen his argument when he declares, that
+no island belongs to Greece except those expressly enumerated in the
+protocol of the 3d of February 1830. If this dictum of his lordship be
+correct, neither Hydra, Spetzia, Poros, Ægina, nor Salamis, would belong
+to Greece, which is manifestly absurd; unless, indeed, Lord Palmerston
+supposes these islands are included under the name of Cyclades, which
+would be still more absurd, for it is wiser to quarrel with King Otho
+than with Strabo.
+
+This imprudent attack on Greece lays the despatch open to reply; for
+though Lord Palmerston is proved to be wrong when he says that no
+island, except those expressly enumerated in the protocol of 3d February
+1830, can belong to Greece, he is right in maintaining that the
+legislative act of the Ionian republic in 1804 cannot advance a claim to
+any island not enumerated in it. Now only one island of Cervi is
+mentioned in that act, and that island will be found laid down on the
+west side of Cerigo, with the Greek name of Elaphonisi, which is
+identical with the Italian name Cervi, in the map of Greece published by
+Arrowsmith, which we believe was the one used at the conference on the
+3d February 1830. It corresponds in size, form, and value, with the
+island of Dragonera, situated on the east side of Cerigo, which is
+enumerated immediately before it in the legislative act of 1804. The
+island of Cervi on the coast of Greece does not, therefore, belong to
+the Ionian republic.
+
+
+
+
+ THE MODERN ARGONAUTS.
+
+
+ I.
+
+ You have heard the ancient story,
+ How the gallant sons of Greece,
+ Long ago, with Jason ventured
+ For the fated Golden Fleece;
+ How they traversed distant regions,
+ How they trod on hostile shores;
+ How they vexed the hoary Ocean
+ With the smiting of their oars;—
+ Listen, then, and you shall hear another wondrous tale,
+ Of a second Argo steering before a prosperous gale!
+
+
+ II.
+
+ From the southward came a rumour,
+ Over sea and over land;
+ From the blue Ionian islands,
+ And the old Hellenic strand;
+ That the sons of Agamemnon,
+ To their faith no longer true,
+ Had confiscated the carpets
+ Of a black and bearded Jew!
+ Helen’s rape, compared to this, was but an idle toy,
+ Deeper guilt was that of Athens than the crime of haughty Troy.
+
+
+ III.
+
+ And the rumour, winged by Ate,
+ To the lofty chamber ran,
+ Where great Palmerston was sitting
+ In the midst of his Divan:
+ Like Saturnius triumphant,
+ In his high Olympian hall,
+ Unregarded by the mighty,
+ But detested by the small;
+ Overturning constitutions—setting nations by the ears,
+ With divers sapient plenipos, like Minto and his peers.
+
+
+
+ IV.
+
+ With his fist the proud dictator
+ Smote the table that it rang—
+ From the crystal vase before him
+ The blood-red wine upsprang!
+ “Is my sword a wreath of rushes,
+ Or an idle plume my pen,
+ That they dare to lay a finger
+ On the meanest of my men?
+ No amount of circumcision can annul the Briton’s right—
+ Are they mad, these lords of Athens, for I know they cannot fight?
+
+
+ V.
+
+ “Had the wrong been done by others,
+ By the cold and haughty Czar,
+ I had trembled ere I opened
+ All the thunders of my war.
+ But I care not for the yelping
+ Of these fangless curs of Greece—
+ Soon and sorely will I tax them
+ For the merchant’s plundered Fleece.
+ From the earth his furniture for wrath and vengeance cries—
+ Ho, Eddisbury! take thy pen, and straightway write to Wyse!”
+
+
+ VI.
+
+ Joyfully the bells are ringing
+ In the old Athenian town,
+ Gaily to Piræus harbour
+ Stream the merry people down;
+ For they see the fleet of Britain
+ Proudly steering to their shore,
+ Underneath the Christian banner
+ That they knew so well of yore,
+ When the guns at Navarino thundered o’er the sea,
+ And the Angel of the North proclaimed that Greece again was free.
+
+
+ VII.
+
+ Hark!—a signal gun—another!
+ On the deck a man appears
+ Stately as the Ocean-shaker—
+ “Ye Athenians, lend your ears!
+ Thomas Wyse am I, a herald
+ Come to parley with the Greek;
+ Palmerston hath sent me hither,
+ In his awful name I speak—
+ Ye have done a deed of folly—one that ye shall sorely rue!
+ Wherefore did ye lay a finger on the carpets of the Jew?
+
+
+ VIII.
+
+ “Don Pacifico of Malta!
+ Dull, indeed, were Britain’s ear,
+ If the wrongs of such a hero
+ Tamely she could choose to hear!
+ Don Pacifico of Malta!
+ Knight-commander of the Fleece—
+ For his sake I hurl defiance
+ At the haughty towns of Greece.
+ Look to it—For by my head! since Xerxes crossed the strait,
+ Ye never saw an enemy so vengeful at your gate.
+
+
+ IX.
+
+ “Therefore now, restore the carpets,
+ With a forfeit twenty-fold;
+ And a goodly tribute offer
+ Of your treasure and your gold:
+ Sapienza, and the islet
+ Cervi, ye shall likewise cede;
+ So the mighty gods have spoken,
+ Thus hath Palmerston decreed!
+ Ere the sunset, let an answer issue from your monarch’s lips;
+ In the meantime, I have orders to arrest your merchant ships.”
+
+
+ X.
+
+ Thus he spake, and snatched a trumpet
+ Swiftly from a soldier’s hand,
+ And therein he blew so shrilly,
+ That along the rocky strand
+ Rang the war-note, till the echoes
+ From the distant hills replied;
+ Hundred trumpets wildly wailing,
+ Poured their blast on every side;
+ And the loud and hearty shout of Britain rent the skies,
+ “Three cheers for noble Palmerston!—another cheer for Wyse!”
+
+
+ XI.
+
+ Gentles! I am very sorry
+ That I cannot yet relate,
+ Of this gallant expedition,
+ What has been the final fate.
+ Whether Athens was bombarded
+ For her Jew-coercing crimes,
+ Hath not been as yet reported
+ In the columns of the _Times_.
+ But the last accounts assure us of some valuable spoil:
+ Various coasting vessels, laden with tobacco, fruit, and oil.
+
+
+ XII.
+
+ Ancient chiefs! that sailed with Jason
+ O’er the wild and stormy waves—
+ Let not sounds of later triumphs
+ Stir you in your quiet graves!
+ Other Argonauts have ventured
+ To your old Hellenic shore,
+ But they will not live in story,
+ Like the valiant men of yore.
+ O! ’tis more than shame and sorrow thus to jest upon a theme
+ That, for Britain’s fame and glory, all would wish to be a dream!
+
+
+
+
+ MY PENINSULAR MEDAL.
+ BY AN OLD PENINSULAR.
+
+
+ PART VI.—CHAPTER XV.
+
+Early in the morning I was surprised by a visit from Mr Chesterfield. He
+had received information, which he wished to communicate. From other
+British officers, then in the town, he had learned that the state of the
+country through which we had to pass was far from satisfactory; and one
+or two had even told him that, in the course of this day’s march, we
+should certainly be attacked. Mr Chesterfield added that he had
+attempted, under the circumstances, to obtain an addition to our escort,
+but without success; there were but few troops in the place, and none
+could be spared. He wished, therefore, to know what course I thought
+preferable; whether to wait till fresh parties bound to headquarters
+came up, or to proceed at once.
+
+I was quite for proceeding. Begged to ask, Did he know what was the
+character of the road we should have to travel?
+
+Mr Chesterfield had inquired. It was for the most part through an open
+country. “Any villages?”—If there were, no doubt parties of troops were
+stationed in them, and their presence would be a check on the
+population.
+
+These replies confirmed my previous views; and, as my orders were to
+conform to the written route, not only with regard to places, but with
+regard to time, I gave my voice decidedly in favour of going on. If
+plans against us were in process of concoction, delay on our part would
+both give encouragement, and afford time for the mischief to come to a
+head. With a convoy like ours, holding out so many temptations to
+irregular enterprise, it seemed far better to pass quickly on, ere
+reports could spread, and an attack be organised. Admitting that there
+was danger if we proceeded, there was also danger if we remained
+stationary. If we incurred any disaster by remaining, we incurred it by
+a breach of orders; if by proceeding, we met it in the path of duty.
+
+Fully concurring in these views, and agreeing that we should proceed, Mr
+Chesterfield then suggested—might it not be proper to adopt some
+precautions? He thought, as soon as we were out of the town, the men
+should load.
+
+This I fully concurred in, not only as a defence, but as likely to keep
+the men steadier, by letting them see that we were preparing for
+business in earnest. Here were two inexperienced youths, the one raw
+from college, the other from school, thrown on their own resources, and
+laying their heads together to meet an emergency, by the most prudent
+measures their united stock of wisdom could suggest. Suffice it to say,
+we both spoke with oracular gravity; and gave dignified evidence of our
+perfect self-possession, by blowing copious puffs of fragrant smoke.
+
+The conference between our two high mightinesses, though, was suddenly
+interrupted. Enter Corporal Fraser, evidently in a little bit of a
+flurry. The sight of Mr Chesterfield brought him at once to a halt. He
+saluted, and seemed to check himself in something that he was going to
+say. In short, he looked flushed and anxious—not altogether
+himself—breathed hard between his clenched teeth—stood silent. The visit
+being to me, Mr Chesterfield gave me a look; so I asked the corporal
+what he wanted.
+
+“I am sorry, sir,” said he, “to be the bearer of disagreeable
+intelligence.”
+
+“Well, corporal, out with it.”
+
+“The men, sir, I regret to say, are in a state of beastly intoxication.”
+
+The corporal, it was clear, wishing to shield the men, had come to my
+billet, intending the information for my ears only. But finding Mr
+Chesterfield with me, and not being at the time in the absolute
+possession of his faculties, (for, though quite unconscious of the fact,
+he was himself partially under the influence of liquor,) he had no
+resource but to tell out all, though not by any means one of those petty
+officers “as likes to get poor fellers into trouble.”
+
+Beastly intoxication? What! at this early hour of the day? It was a
+strange circumstance, and excited ugly apprehensions. How could they
+have become so? Who made them drunk? Under other circumstances, I should
+have applied to the corporal for an explanation forthwith; but I saw
+indications, in the corporal’s eye, that it would not be kind to
+question him at the moment before an officer—so proposed, instead, that
+we should go and look for ourselves. We went. The case was much as
+Fraser had stated it. We reached a large old house with a _porte
+cochère_, within which was a court. On entering this court we found the
+men—happily the infantry only, for the cavalry had quarters just by—all,
+with one exception, more or less in a state of intoxication. Some were
+laughing; others were wrangling; one or two were crying—maudlin drunk.
+Some were making a show of cleaning arms and accoutrements, with
+profound bows and sagacious nods. All tried, on our arrival, to look as
+sober as they could. On any morning this would have been a serious state
+of things, at the hour of mustering to start; but now, when we expected
+hostility, it was worse than ever. Neither did I like the look of the
+inhabitants. There was no exact throng, indeed; but parties were
+standing near in groups, evidently cognisant of our present fix,
+watching, and making their remarks among themselves. In that old house,
+guarded by those drunken soldiers, were sixty mule-loads of silver and
+gold! Things looked still worse, though, when we entered the quarters.
+Three or four men, who were most overcome, had deliberately laid
+themselves down again for a snooze. There they were, wrapped up in their
+blankets, stretched and snoring on the floor; while Corporal Fraser,
+himself a little “disguised,” flushed in the face, and in a high state
+of indignation and excitement, was storming and kicking them up; and a
+fellow, who found it easier to lean against the wainscot than to stand
+upright, was expostulating—“You haven’t no business to kick a poor soger
+in that ’ere way.”
+
+To this general boskiness, I have said, there was one exception. It was
+Jones. In fact, with all his faults, I never, on any one occasion, saw
+Jones overcome with liquor; which was the more remarkable, because he
+got more than any other soldier of the detachment. His own ration—all
+that he could appropriate of mine—occasional contributions from
+Coosey—all he could get from every quarter, (and he never missed an
+opportunity,) all went down his throat without visible effect. In short,
+he seemed brandy-proof. I never saw him affected, nor had he the
+appearance of a hard drinker. Observing that he looked much as usual,
+while all around were looking so different, I applied to him for an
+explanation. “Why, Jones, what’s the cause of this disgraceful scene?
+How did the men get it?”
+
+“Please, sir, the fellers is very sorry for it, sir. Hadn’t no
+intentions to get drunk _now_, sir.”
+
+“Well, but how did it happen, man?”
+
+“Please, sir, the jeddleham stood treat, sir; treated ’em all, sir.”
+
+“What gentleman?”
+
+“Please, sir, the same as treated me the night before last, sir: give me
+a tumbler of hot punch what was all a-fire, sir; brought it out into the
+inn-yard all of a blaze, sir. Told me the French soldiers got that twice
+a day, sir. Said, if the Hinglish soldiers had their rights, they’d get
+the same, sir.”
+
+“The night before last? What gentleman treated you the night before
+last?”
+
+“Please, sir, it was the same jeddleham as aast to speak to you, sir;
+the jeddleham what you went into the house to speak to him, sir.”
+
+“Oh, that fellow! Why, you might have seen him again yesterday. Didn’t
+you notice him among the people at the ferry?”
+
+“Please, sir, when we come to the ferry, I was in the rear, sir; halted
+there, and remained till we turned the hinnimy over the ford, sir.
+Didn’t git a sight on him, sir. Only wish I had, sir.”
+
+“Well, but how comes it some of the other men didn’t know him again?
+They must have seen him yesterday, if you didn’t.”
+
+“Please, sir, I s’pose it’s ’cause this morning he was dressed
+different, sir. Had a large hat pulled over his eyes, sir; and muffled
+up in a long cloak, sir. Shouldn’t not have knowed him myself, sir, only
+if it hadn’t not a-been for his nose, sir.”
+
+“Stood treat, though? How?—did he treat the whole party?”
+
+“Please, sir, I won’t tell you no lie, sir. Jest after the fellers
+turned out in the morning, sir—jest as I was a-washing my face in this
+’ere horse trough, sir—there come along a man with a couple of barrils,
+sir; which the barrils was slung on a-top of a donkey, sir. So he took
+and stopped the donkey close to that ’ere gateway, sir, which some of
+the fellers was standing at it, sir. So they knowed at once it was wine,
+sir—in course they did, by the look on it, sir—so they got a-bargaining
+with him for a drink, sir. So, jest as they was a-bargaining come along
+that ’ere Nosey, sir; which, as soon as he see the fellers a-talking to
+the man what belonged to the donkey, sir, he looked very pleasant, and
+stopped and spoke to him, sir. Then he spoke to the fellers, sir, and
+told ’em they might drink as much as they pleased, sir; might drink it
+all, if they liked, sir; and he’d stand it, sir.”
+
+“Did he speak English, then?”
+
+“Yes, he did, sir; sitch Hinglish as they speaks here, sir; not sitch as
+you and I speaks, sir. I won’t tell you no lie, sir.”
+
+The case was too clear. Hookey was still on our traces. Disappointed in
+his two previous attempts to turn us from our route, he meant to keep
+near us, watch his opportunity, and act accordingly. Making the men
+drunk just when we were about to start on a dangerous part of the road,
+was as unquestionably part of some more extensive plot as it was
+palpably Hookey’s doing. I briefly stated the matter to Mr Chesterfield,
+adding, “We shall see that fellow again to-day.”
+
+“If he comes once more within the range of a firelock,” said Mr
+Chesterfield, “we must not let him get off so easily.”
+
+Meanwhile, the immediate question was a practical one: What course was
+best, under existing circumstances? In spite of the state of the men, I
+was still for proceeding.
+
+“Very well,” said Mr Chesterfield; “then let the packing commence. We
+will take all the infantry who are fit to march when the mules are
+loaded, and go on with them and the cavalry. Such as are too bad must
+remain behind, and come up afterwards with other parties, as they can.”
+
+Mr Chesterfield then went to see after his own men; the mules arrived,
+and the muleteers began loading. Jones stepped up to me: he had
+apparently overheard our conversation.
+
+“Please, sir, none of the fellers won’t not stay behind, sir.”
+
+“How do you know?”
+
+“’Cause, sir, when the mules is ready, they’ll be ready, sir.”
+
+“Ready? How ready, if they ’re beastly drunk?”
+
+“Please, sir, they won’t be beastly by that time, sir.”
+
+“How can you tell that?”
+
+“Please, sir, ’cause I knows they won’t, sir; ’cause it’s only that ’ere
+wine, sir. Please, sir, that ’ere hasn’t not got no varchy in it, like
+the sperrits has, sir. ’Cause, please, sir, when a feller gets drunk on
+sperrits, sir, they makes him rale drunk, sir; but that ’ere wine only
+jest makes him drunkish-like, sir; ’cause it’s only jest for a time,
+sir, and then it goes off again, sir; ’cause there’s no good in it, sir,
+if you drink a butt of it, sir. Hope no offence, sir.”
+
+“Common country wine, was it?”
+
+“Please, sir, it was new wine, sweetish-like, sir. That’s what did it,
+sir. Sitch new wine gits into a feller’s headpiece at once, sir; makes
+him silly drunk directly instant, sir; but then he soon gits sober agin,
+sir. Consickvent, I considers the fellers will all be sober agin in an
+hour or two, sir; and then they’ll be able to fall in, sir. ’Cause I
+knowed it was new, sir; ’cause it sparkled like cider do when it’s
+drawed frish from the barril, sir.”
+
+Jones’s prognosis, though not very clearly expressed, was verified by
+the result. Ere the loading was completed, all the men had become either
+sober or nearly so. Even those who had been most affected fell in, and
+mustered with the rest; and though our rank and file displayed some set
+and gummy eyes, only two or three of the worst betrayed the disaster by
+their gait. Hookey had thus outwitted himself. By dosing the men with
+new wine, (which, as all persons acquainted with the wine countries are
+well aware, flies at once to the head, even if taken moderately,) he
+had, indeed, succeeded in making them drunk at once; but not in making
+them drunk for a continuance. “Let alone it’s new,” said Jones, “it
+isn’t no wine, sitch as the fellers gits, as would make ’em rale drunk;
+nayther Spanish wine, nor yit Frinch wine, except it’s the jinny-wine.”
+
+The men having somehow discovered that they were likely to be put on
+their mettle during the day’s march, were all, in appearance, truly
+sorry for what had occurred. They became aware, through Jones, of
+Hookey’s real character; saw through his contrivance to make them all
+drunk; and, feeling that they had been in a measure his dupes, were
+savage at the artifice, and burned for an opportunity to retrieve their
+character in the course of the day. Mr Chesterfield now returned: he
+glanced at the men, and afterwards took an opportunity of speaking to
+me.
+
+“That fellow with the nose,” said he, “according to your account of him,
+must be a dangerous character. Should not steps be taken for his
+apprehension?”
+
+“If you like, I will go to the Mairie, and make inquiries about him.”
+
+“I fear,” said he, “you will not be very cordially seconded in that
+quarter, judging, at least, from my own last night’s experience, when I
+applied for billets. However, it can do no harm.”
+
+“Well, then, the sooner I go the better. I will take with me the Spanish
+Capataz. As soon as we have gone in, be so kind as to keep an eye on the
+entrance. If Señor Roque puts his head out, send me three or four
+dismounted dragoons. We must see if we can’t teach those fellows good
+manners.”
+
+I took with me Señor Roque, and explained to him, by the way, what I
+wished him to do. If, after we entered the bureau of the Mairie, I gave
+him a look, he was to go down to the door, and bring up the dragoons.
+
+We entered; and, as at a previous interview the night before, found
+three gentlemen busily employed in writing, each at his desk. The
+interval had wrought no improvement in their manners. When I saluted
+them, neither of the three took the least notice—all went on writing. I
+addressed the head man of the party.
+
+“I have the honour of waiting on you, Monsieur, for the purpose of
+soliciting your co-operation.”—Still he writes. Wait awhile. Try again.
+
+“I must soon be leaving this place, Monsieur, and have duties which will
+occupy me in the interval. May I claim a moment’s attention?”—Scribble,
+scribble, scribble.
+
+One or two similar attempts were similarly met. I then gave friend Roque
+the concerted look; and he, nothing loath, went off to fetch the
+dragoons. Meanwhile, no seat having been offered me, I took one, and
+remained quiet. The three official gentlemen, though so dreadfully busy,
+just before, that they could not notice my application, now began
+jabbering amongst themselves upon some indifferent topic, as if no one
+else had been in the room. When a Frenchman really wishes to treat you
+with insolence, I must say he has a neat, quiet way of doing it, which
+no other people on earth can equal. An Englishman, I admit, can beat him
+in vulgarity; but for _elegance_ of execution, there is no intentional
+rudeness like the rudeness of a Frenchman.
+
+Presently was heard on the stairs a stumping—ha!—a hoof-like tread!—the
+tramp of heavy feet! With it ascended the clatter of accoutrements! Four
+scabbards were mounting the stairs, each scabbard marking each step by a
+bang! The three officials started—exchanged looks—wrote on in silence
+with redoubled energy, while their faces twitched.
+
+The door opened! Four big fellows entered the bureau, with clattering
+accoutrements and resounding steps. Señor Roque, his face burnished with
+exultation—for he hated the French—followed, and closed the door. The
+bold dragoons ranged themselves in line, with their backs to the wall.
+Nay, more: their four right hands, probably by a hint from the Capataz,
+moved simultaneously towards their left sides; four enormous swords
+leaped from their scabbards, flashed in the air, and slumbered on the
+bearers’ shoulders. The writing was now intense.
+
+The display of arms in such a place, though, might compromise us with
+our own authorities. I made a sign, and the swords were sheathed.
+
+Having so often spoken in vain, I was determined that the civic
+dignities should speak first. I therefore quietly took out a cigar.
+Quick as lightning, my friend the Capataz whipped out his smoking gear,
+and went to work with flint, steel, and junk. At the first click, my
+three polite entertainers almost jumped from their stools. The twinkle
+of the jolly old Spaniard’s eye, as he handed me a light, was worth a
+dollar any day. The four dragoons, much to their credit, maintained the
+most perfect gravity throughout. I lit, and blew a cloud.
+
+The panic of the three writers increased. They were evidently
+telegraphing. At length the chief turned round on his seat, and, with
+alarm and courtesy comically mingled in his visage, begged to be
+informed in what way he could be of service to me.
+
+“I interrupt you, Monsieur. Pray, finish the business you have in hand.”
+
+“Monsieur, I have no business so cherished as to expedite yours.”
+
+I then told my object—that there had been in the place a suspicious
+_sujet_, whom I described. Should he again make his appearance, he must
+be apprehended _tout-de-suite_, and kept in safe custody, till he was
+surrendered to the normal authorities. “Messieurs, has he presented
+himself here?”
+
+Three voices answered simultaneously—“Yes”—“No”—“Yes.”
+
+“Do you know anything of him?”
+
+“He is an Englishman—a courier from Madrid.”—“He bears despatches to the
+British headquarters.”—“Nothing whatever.”
+
+“He is neither an Englishman nor a courier; consequently, he must be
+provided with a passport. Has he presented it HERE?”
+
+“Viewing him as attached to the British service, we did not consider it
+our affair.”
+
+“Where is he now?”
+
+“He is not here.”—“He didn’t state his intended route.”—“He has left
+this place.”
+
+“By what route?”
+
+“We don’t know.”—“He went, within the last hour, towards St Sever.”
+
+“Is that an ascertained fact?”
+
+“Yes, Monsieur, yes,” they all answered; “he is gone in the direction of
+St Sever.”
+
+“If, Messieurs, what you have now stated should prove correct, and if I
+find that you have told me all you know, I trust I shall not feel it
+necessary to report the matter to our commander-in-chief.”
+
+These gentlemen, I felt, could have told me more, had they chosen; and
+I, with time at my command, could have extracted more. But in our case
+it was touch and go. We could not, with such a charge, stop to pursue
+investigations. So I took my leave, deeming it, at any rate, something
+to have ascertained that friend Hookey, in accordance with my
+anticipations, though not in accordance with his own statements, had
+preceded us by the route which we were so soon to follow.
+
+The civic trio were as courteous at my departure as they were rude at my
+entry. First stumped out the cavalry—who had really done the business;
+then followed the old unctuous Capataz; and I, with a horizontal
+tripartite bow, closed up the rear. Ere I had fairly quitted the room,
+the three were all at work again, intently scribbling. The “dressing” of
+a _procèsverbal_, with formal and full details of the whole transaction,
+was probably their occupation for the rest of the morning. I was sorry
+that we had compromised ourselves by the exhibition of cold steel. But,
+under all the circumstances, I felt little apprehension, to borrow an
+expression from Jones, of their “telling that ’ere to my Lord
+Valentine.”
+
+The mules were loaded, the men fell in; and, though some of them were
+still a little the worse for the disaster of the morning, we were quite
+in a condition to lick any Frenchmen that might come across us, and made
+a very respectable march of it to the outskirts of the town. There we
+were again joined by Pledget and Gingham; and shortly after, Fraser, by
+Mr Chesterfield’s direction, made the infantry load, and saw that each
+had a supply of cartridges—a process which caused the muleteers to look
+a little queer. We then proceeded on our march.
+
+Passing through an open country, Mr Pledget and Mr Chesterfield rode on
+side by side in conversation, at the head of the line; while Gingham and
+I followed close, in similar guise. Suddenly was heard, in the rear, the
+crack of a musket! A ball whistled close over our heads, and struck the
+road, a few yards before us. Mr Chesterfield immediately called a halt
+of the whole party; and he and I proceeded to the rear. As we were
+riding back, Corporal Fraser came running forward to meet us, and soon
+explained. Our Yorkshire lad, it appeared, had been larking with another
+soldier, one of those whose early sobriety the wine had most disturbed,
+and had got him into a scrape. The result was, that the musket of the
+half-tipsy soldier had gone off, and had so nearly done execution
+amongst us in front. It was evident our infantry were not yet in a state
+to be trusted with loaded arms; it wouldn’t do. Mr Chesterfield gave
+directions at once, that they should all draw their charges. And as our
+route for some distance appeared perfectly level and open, so as to
+afford no cover for a sudden attack, (it was that sort of country so
+common in France, cultivated to the road-side, but totally bare of
+hedges, copse, or trees,) it was settled that they should not load again
+till circumstances rendered it necessary. The man whose musket had
+caused the alarm looked stupid and bewildered—could give no explanation,
+but that “it went off.” I observed, however, that Mr Chesterfield
+quietly spoke a few words to the Yorkshireman. What they were, I did not
+hear; but they certainly had the effect of making that worthy a
+better-behaved, though not a merrier man, during the rest of our march.
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVI.
+
+Finding no foe to fight withal, we began to suspect that Mr
+Chesterfield, as a new-comer, had been hoaxed, in our last
+halting-place, by some military wag; and Gingham and I fell into a long
+conversation, which he commenced by reminding me of our arrangement to
+campaign together, entered into a year before, at Falmouth. All
+obstacles, he said, were removed; he hoped, therefore, the plan would
+now be carried out. To this I readily consented; the advantages, indeed,
+were all on my side. Gingham then, in his own way, introduced a
+discussion respecting his plans and mine. Be it however premised, we had
+dined together the night before; and I had shown him some methods—more
+expeditious than those in common use, which were the only ones he
+knew—of reducing one denomination of coin to another: _e. g._, dollars
+to pounds sterling, pounds sterling to francs, &c. He expressed, as
+before, his high gratification; and begged my MS. calculations “in the
+strictest confidence,” depositing them in the recesses of his
+writing-desk. He now, as we were riding along, commenced an important,
+and, on his part, highly diplomatic conference, by a friendly
+examination as to the nature of my official duties at Lisbon. I
+described them, as I have described them to the reader a few chapters
+back.
+
+“Then, in fact,” said Gingham, “your last year has been employed to as
+good purpose as it could have been in any London counting-house.” (That
+was Gingham’s standard.) “You have had the keeping of a distinct
+account, and that in all its parts, from the items to the account
+current. Of course, it occupied your whole time.”
+
+“Not the whole,” said I. “There was some to spare, for which I had other
+employment.”
+
+“Indeed!” said Gingham, with interest. “Will you, Mr Y—, as a particular
+favour, permit me—confidentially of course—to make an inquiry?”
+
+“Make any inquiry you like: I shall feel pleasure in answering it.”
+
+“Would you, then,” said Gingham, “have the kindness to inform me—that
+is, unless you feel it a violation of official confidence—what were your
+other duties?”
+
+“No violation whatever. I kept the letter-books; managed the
+correspondence: not the whole correspondence of the department, but that
+of the branch I belonged to—the account office.”
+
+“Your duty, then,” said he, “was to arrange and enter all letters
+received, and to keep copies of all letters sent?”
+
+“Sometimes to copy, sometimes to make the draughts. A man soon gets into
+the way, you know.”
+
+“One entire account,” said Gingham, speaking to himself, “and one whole
+branch of correspondence! What an excellent introduction!”
+
+Not understanding in what sense he used the word “introduction,” I made
+no reply.
+
+“Of course,” he proceeded, “the correspondence was in English?”
+
+“Almost exclusively. I should scarcely feel equal to any other, except
+perhaps Portuguese.”
+
+“Might I not,” said Gingham, “add Spanish and French?”
+
+“Well, if I get a little polishing, perhaps you might. Italian I hope to
+be able to add ere long; and, in due time, German.”
+
+Gingham now turned half round in his saddle, and addressed me with great
+gravity. “Mr Y—, my dear sir, I venture, as a friend, to offer one
+suggestion. If a person, not older than yourself, applied for an
+engagement in the corresponding line, I would say to him—that is, in the
+strictest confidence, speaking as a friend—‘Say only three languages;
+wouldn’t advise you to say more.’ The principal, however unjustly, might
+suspect—excuse me, I speak candidly—might suspect a little romancing. In
+short, if a person under eight-and-twenty or thirty said five languages,
+it might prevent an engagement.”
+
+Gingham, I should observe, talked just as he always did. There was still
+the touch of mannerism, the quiet earnestness blended with courtesy. I
+never viewed any man with more unfeigned respect and esteem; and yet
+there were moments, in the course of our present conversation, when I
+could scarcely refrain from laughing in his face. True, I was one year
+farther removed from boyhood than when our acquaintance commenced; and
+more than one incident had taught me, in the interval, the necessity of
+respecting “time, place, and circumstances.” But the trial was great; a
+gravity that even Liston could not shake, would have been shaken by
+Gingham. Still there was his comical solemnity. Still there was his
+politeness, touched off with formality. Still there were his green
+barnacles, and his two little winky-pinky eyes. Still, still there was
+his irresistible nose. Stand everything else, I would defy you to stand
+that. Great, please to observe, was the difference between Gingham’s
+nose and Hookey’s, though both arrested the beholder. When Hookey and
+Gingham met on board the packet, each observed of the other that he had
+a very odd nose. The first meeting of the two noses, and the look
+exchanged by the two wearers, beat anything in Molière—so much more
+comical is nature than fancy. Hookey’s, unquestionably the most marked
+feature of a very marked countenance, did nevertheless so far maintain
+the unities, that it perfectly harmonised with the rest of his
+physiognomy. It was an eagle’s beak, and his whole face was aquiline.
+Gingham’s, on the contrary, was conspicuous by contrast. It had no
+appearance of belonging to his face. You might fancy him one of the
+triumphs of Talicotius—a man (on which subject see Lavater) with a false
+nose. Neither broad nor massive, yet prominent and conspicuous, it was
+slightly crooked, flattened on one side; as if, when a baby, he had
+slept too much on his right cheek, and his nose, from its thinness, had
+got bent towards his left. This nose, I say, from its peculiar
+expression, or rather want of expression, appeared no part or parcel of
+the face in which it stood. And, what was unfortunate, its extraneous
+appearance was most marked when Gingham was most in earnest; so that it
+provoked you to laugh just at the time when a man is least disposed to
+be laughed at.
+
+Well, Gingham having thus accomplished his first object, by ascertaining
+all that he wished to ascertain concerning myself, now went on, in the
+second place, to develop his own plans.
+
+“You are, I believe,” said he, “to a certain extent aware of the scheme
+which brought me out from England. By the public prints, and still more
+by my private correspondence, I am now led to conclude that Napoleon’s
+day is near its close, and that the war will soon be terminated. In that
+event, my plan falls to the ground. But should we carry on the war here
+another twelvemonth, I shall have time to try it; and, if we go on
+permanently, I mean to carry it out.”
+
+“I have some general idea of your plan, and that is all. You wish to
+meet the monetary difficulties connected with the operations of our
+army, by a method which you have concocted; and which you intend to
+start, for self and friends, as a private speculation. Don’t see how you
+can make a beginning: where’s the opening?”
+
+“An opening is afforded by the necessity of the case,” replied he;
+“which necessity my plan will meet.”
+
+“Don’t see how. Look here; the difficulty is just this: Here are certain
+headquarters transactions, which require ready money; and that ready
+money must be current coin. Credit will not do; bank notes will not
+answer the purpose; no, nor yet bills, nor any kind of available
+security. It must be specie, minted gold and silver, hard cash. For
+example, the troops have hitherto been usually paid in dollars. When we
+have got dollars in the military chest, the troops can be paid; when our
+dollars are gone, they must wait till we get more. And though we had
+power to draw at will on the British treasury, for three months’ pay to
+the whole army, not a stiver can the army receive till we have more
+dollars.”
+
+“That’s just it,” said Gingham; “and I beg to ask, is such a state of
+things desirable? The efficiency of our army depends, not on the
+solvency of our Government, but upon the activity of money-dealers in
+raking up specie in the four quarters of the globe. That is the state of
+things which my plan proposes to remedy.”
+
+“Do that, and you will effect a great object. The mode, though, is quite
+beyond me.”
+
+“I mean to do it, sir,” said Gingham, almost sternly, (for the little
+man, as he sat on his splendid horse, swelled with the grandeur of his
+conceptions)—“I mean to do it, sir, by a twofold method: not by two
+independent methods, operating simultaneously; but by the united
+operation of two systems combined in one.” His eyes looked full in mine;
+but his nose pointed at Pledget, who was riding before. I didn’t
+laugh—in face at least I didn’t—though suddenly seized with a dreadful
+twitching of the intercostal muscles. “I shall effect my object, sir,
+partly by paper, partly by hard cash. I shall issue notes payable at
+sight; and I shall get all the dollars I can into my own keeping. You,
+when you want dollars to pay the troops, come to me. I, on receiving
+what I deem an equivalent, let you have them. What will be the result?
+Instead of requiring a fresh supply of dollars from the coast every time
+you give the soldiers their pay, you will pay them with the same dollars
+twice over, nay, over and over again.”
+
+“Why, that’s a bank! You will be banker to the British army!”
+
+“Exactly,” said Gingham, subsiding all at once into his ordinary style
+of speech: “I mean to establish a headquarters bank. Suggest a title.”
+
+“Suppose,” said I, “as of course you will move with the army, you borrow
+a suggestion from the military hospitals of the French, and call it “The
+Ambulatory Bank.” No, that title doesn’t go well. Let me see. A good
+title requires time and consideration.”
+
+“To be candid, sir,” said Gingham, “you need not trouble yourself: the
+title is already decided. I won’t tell it, I’ll show it you. Have the
+kindness to draw up by the road-side.”
+
+We halted, the convoy passed, the cart came on in the rear, and was
+stopped by Gingham. He then dismounted, gave the bridle to Coosey,
+stepped up into the cart, opened the tarpaulin at its back, raised a
+lid, and exhibited a green baize frame fitting into the top of a box,
+which frame contained a large and splendid brass plate.
+
+“It wouldn’t exactly do,” said Gingham, “to borrow this title at home.
+Here, though, I mean to make free with it.”
+
+In bold, broad letters, excavated in the burnished brass, I read
+
+ “THE BANK OF ENGLAND.”
+
+Really the largeness of Gingham’s plans was too much for my limited
+capacities. We rode forward again to the head of the column; and I, for
+a while, rode on in silence, digesting. At length, one idea leading to
+another, I ventured to say something about “authority—concurrence.”
+
+Gingham, big with his scheme, was now like a gladiator prepared for
+every thrust. “At home,” said he, “I have all the concurrence, all the
+authority I need, with many good wishes to boot; and, as to pecuniary
+support, I can have whatever amount is required. All that I settled
+before I left Falmouth, or have since arranged by correspondence. Here I
+ask for countenance only so far as my plan is found, on trial, to aid
+the public service. Let that once become manifest, and I doubt not we
+shall find all the favour we want.”
+
+“Only sorry your plan was not thought of before. It might have spared
+our Commander much anxiety, and our soldiers many privations.”
+
+Swelling with the plenitude of his anticipations, Gingham began to
+dogmatise. “In London,” said he, “credit is equivalent to cash. Here, at
+headquarters, the case is different. In London, so long as my banker
+will honour my cheques, I have cash at command. Here, I may possess
+unlimited power to draw bills, yet not be able to raise a rap. What
+makes the difference?”
+
+“Here, your resource is at a distance; there, your banker is close at
+hand.” I was more disposed, though, to chew upon Gingham’s ideas than to
+discuss them, and we again rode on in silence. At length I bolted out a
+difficulty.
+
+“Well, we make an issue in cash—say a hundred thousand dollars, for the
+pay of the troops. These dollars are distributed, and spent; the whole
+sum evaporates. How do you get them together again, for a second
+payment?”
+
+“I don’t expect to get them all,” said Gingham, scornfully. “But suppose
+I can get a part of them, say half. That, I think, I shall manage; for,
+observe, ten dollars are quite as many as you can carry about your
+person without annoyance. Undoubtedly, then, many individuals, receiving
+a payment in dollars, will be glad enough to lodge them in a bank, when
+there’s a bank at hand. And when I have issued my paper, payable at
+demand, many, I make no question, will much rather take it, than burden
+themselves with a load of specie.”
+
+The reasonableness of Gingham’s expectations was fully borne out, by
+scenes which I afterwards witnessed, when accompanying the military
+chest, as it moved from place to place with the headquarters of the
+British army. A gentleman, say a Frenchman or a Spaniard, has a claim
+for payment, on account of provisions, forage, or other necessaries,
+supplied for the service of the troops—the amount, suppose, ten thousand
+dollars. After long following headquarters from place to place, till he
+is far distant from his own home, he has at length established his
+claim: it’s all right, he has got a written order for payment, and
+enters our office elated, bearing it between his finger and thumb, eager
+to receive the cash. The cashier takes the bill, points to five deal
+boxes, each containing two thousand dollars, and tells him, “There’s the
+money.” I have seen a man, under such circumstances, knocked down in a
+moment, perfectly dumfounded. He has not brought a horse and cart, and
+every available conveyance has been impressed by the troops. One of the
+five boxes is as much as a man can carry; two are a load for a mule. If
+he has a lodging in the place, he possesses no means even of taken them
+there; but probably he has none—the whole town is full of soldiers. But
+to-morrow it will be worse: the army will have swept on; headquarters
+will be three or four leagues in advance; and the troops will be
+succeeded by stragglers, camp-followers, marauders, and all the lawless
+tribe that close up the rear of an advancing host. Poor man! what an
+alteration in his looks! He sees, in an instant, the full amount of his
+difficulties. Two minutes ago, he was dying to realise; now, he has got
+the cash, and doesn’t know what to do with it. I remember an instance
+when an acquaintance of mine, a Frenchman, came to receive five thousand
+dollars, which, with the aid of an attendant, he removed from the
+office. Presently he reappeared at the door, caught my eye, intimated by
+bows and simpers his request for a private interview. It was easy to
+guess the subject of his communication, but I followed him out. He had
+got his five bags in a cowhouse. His home was distant a two days’
+journey. How was he to get them there? Could he have gold instead of
+silver? Would gladly make any sacrifice in the way of _agio_. Couldn’t I
+_arrange_ it?—How he managed at last, I never learned—whether he got his
+dollars to a place of safety, or was robbed and murdered on the road.
+Sometimes the claimants would come eagerly demanding their money, and,
+the next moment, would most earnestly entreat permission to leave it in
+our keeping. If a man so circumstanced, instead of hard dollars, could
+have had paper securing him cash at demand, at a time more convenient
+for receiving it—in short, Gingham’s plan just meets a case like this.
+And Gingham, who knew headquarters well, especially in respect to
+financial details and the attendant difficulties, had devised his scheme
+as a practical remedy. The claimant gives his bill to Gingham, and takes
+Gingham’s bank notes, or, if he prefers it, part notes and part specie.
+Gingham, at his own convenience, gets the official dollars on the bill.
+Then comes the other advantage. So much hard cash as has not been paid
+away to the claimant remains at headquarters, available, by monetary
+arrangements with the authorities, for the payment of the troops, or for
+any other headquarters purposes. What an improvement from the state of
+things when cash was so low, that, the commander-in-chief wishing to
+communicate with a distant point, it was necessary to raise a private
+loan for the expenses of the courier!
+
+In short, twenty practical difficulties occurred to my mind, all which
+Gingham took off, as fast as I started them. “After all,” said he, “the
+only real difficulty will be this: that whereas now, at headquarters,
+there sometimes is not a dollar disposable for public purposes, we shall
+then, especially if the army is on the move, have more dollars than we
+know what to do with.” His plan, indeed, contemplated a large concern,
+for the cash transactions of headquarters were immense; but it was clear
+he had viewed the scheme in every light, and was prepared to carry it
+out. No question, Gingham would have made a good thing of it, both for
+himself and for his backers in London. Yet it was a concern which
+Government could not undertake; and which, if Government had undertaken
+it, would have infallibly broken down. Private enterprise alone could
+prosperously conduct the scheme.
+
+Gingham had laid out our conference in three parts, and two were now
+disposed of. First, he had ascertained the progress of my financial
+education in the past year; secondly, he had developed his own plans;
+but there yet remained the third topic of discussion, into which he now
+led with all his usual elegance, straightforwardness, and good feeling.
+The long and the short of it was this,—he had two gentlemen in London,
+ready to come out to Bordeaux whenever he commenced operations; they
+would arrive, like a letter, by return of post; but there was a question
+respecting myself. Did I feel so far interested in his plan that I might
+be willing, on due reflection, to relinquish my actual appointment, and
+work with him? He asked it “in the strictest confidence,” and begged me
+to consider all that now passed “as merely conversation.”
+
+“Have the kindness to excuse me for a few moments. I’ll presently tell
+you just exactly my own prospects and plans, and then we’ll talk the
+matter over. In the mean time, accept my best thanks for this proof of
+confidence.”
+
+While listening with the profoundest attention to Gingham, I had, it
+must be confessed, been taking a look, from time to time, at the country
+round. Hitherto our route had been across an open level, and we had
+always seen the road before us. Now, first, we reached a spot were we
+could not discern what was in front. The table-land, over which we had
+been marching, terminated in a brow or declivity. The road dipped, and
+disappeared; where it led us there was no perceiving. The road itself
+also became hollow—that is, it descended between two high banks, and
+these were covered with underwood. This was the part of our way on which
+we were now about to enter.
+
+Just at this moment, while I was debating with myself whether we ought
+to go on without a little exploration, Jones stepped up to me rather
+hastily. “Please, sir,” said he, “I’m a-thinking Nanny siz something
+as we doesn’t see.” I should mention that, in the course of our march,
+when we approached any eminence that afforded a view of the road and
+country in front, Nanny would trot off from the party, run to the
+summit, and make her observations—in short, see all that was to be
+seen. Goats, if you observe, never, unless compelled, venture on new
+ground, till they have first halted, and taken a view of it. Even
+sheep, if not over-driven, will not turn down a lane, till they have
+stopped and turned their heads, for the purpose of taking a look with
+_both_ eyes. Cows, on the contrary, look and advance at the same time;
+and your nag, contenting himself with a _one-eyed_ view, appears to
+advance without looking at all. Your dog, who has more sense than all
+the others put together, when you come to a place where the road
+forks—dear old Burruff!—_looks up in your face_. Well, Nanny, in the
+present instance, had done as she always did. The ground rose to our
+left, and the elevation _commanded_ the valley in front. On that
+elevation Nanny was now standing, and Jones’s observation was
+evidently correct. She saw something, or somebody, unseen by us. There
+she stood—not, though, as on previous occasions, quietly taking a
+survey of the road before us: her tail, the “upward curl” of which was
+more than perpendicular—_retroussé_—from time to time vibrated
+rapidly. She uttered, at intervals, a sharp, anxious bleat, and ever
+and anon stamped with a movement so quick, the eye could scarce
+discern it. “What d’ye think, then, she sees down there?” said I to
+Jones—“other goats?”
+
+“Please, sir,” said Jones, “I’m a-thinking it’s not goats, sir; ’cause
+then she wouldn’t stop up there, sir. Please, sir, she’d come back at
+once, and keep close, sir; ’cause she knows as how I’d protect her
+varchy, sir; ’cause for fear the Billies should make too free, sir;
+’cause, when the Nannies is in milk, sir, they doesn’t not pemit
+hinnersint libbities, sir.”
+
+Nanny now adopted a new style of attitude—rearing, as when at play, with
+arched neck and combative front, still, at times, subsiding into the
+quadruped; now bleating, now stamping, now wagging her tail with intense
+vivacity; then walking back, stamping again, advancing; gazing all the
+while on the low ground in front. “If Nanny takes a view, why shouldn’t
+Sancho?” I cantered up, and speedily cantered down again. “Mr
+Chesterfield, I think, sir, we had better halt.”
+
+Indeed there was reason. In front was the enemy, drawn up to receive us,
+in military array. The road, I must explain, led down to a lower level.
+Just at the bottom, another road crossed it; and, where the two roads
+cut, they spread out round a large pond. About this pond, but
+principally in advance of it, appeared a large concourse of the rural
+population. “_Tout Français est soldat._” I never felt the force of the
+phrase as I did at that moment. They were armed, and stood in line;
+their number formidable, their aspect decidedly pugnacious. Oh, you
+plucky villains! won’t we be down upon you presently? I stated to Mr
+Chesterfield what I had seen, and he immediately halted our whole party.
+“If you will ride up with me,” said I, “you may see the whole lot of
+them.”
+
+I returned to Nanny’s look-out post, but Mr Chesterfield did not follow.
+Had I known what he was about to do, I should certainly have
+remonstrated. He chose to take a nearer look at the enemy, and for that
+purpose rode forward alone. On the eminence on which I stood, I heard
+the rattle of his horse’s hoofs in the hollow way; and presently I saw
+him emerge below, at its further extremity. He then reined in his horse,
+and sat viewing the foe, who greeted his appearance with shouts and
+yells. Having quietly made his observations, he turned, and began to
+come back at a walk. As he withdrew, three or four shots were fired
+after him from below, but without effect. After he again disappeared in
+the hollow road, though, on his way to rejoin us, I heard, with great
+uneasiness, other shots fired—the report much nearer. They were
+evidently from rascals ambushed in the underwood of the two banks,
+between which he was passing. I rejoined the convoy just as he rode up.
+His look was perfectly calm and self-possessed, but pale as ashes. He
+held the bridle in his right hand, while his left hung helpless at his
+side. Pledget at once tumbled off his mule, stepped up, and addressed
+him with a tone and aspect of unfeigned concern—“Not serious, sir, I
+hope?”
+
+“Oh, nothing,” said he, his manner a little hurried; “a mere
+graze—nothing. Corporal Fraser, the infantry must load immediately. Let
+them fix bayonets, though. We must begin by clearing those two banks.”
+
+Scarcely were the words out of his lips, when his face became ghastly
+like death, his eyes half closed, his mouth half opened. His head
+drooped; and speechless, almost fainting, he sank down gradually from
+his saddle into Fraser’s arms. The corporal carried him to the
+road-side—why, he was but a boy—and seated, or rather laid him upon the
+bank. Pledget was promptly in attendance, got off the patient’s coat,
+and examined the wounded arm, amidst the clatter of fixing bayonets and
+ramming down cartridges. “Oh, ain’t we going at it in yarnest, though?”
+said Jones.
+
+“The system,” said Pledget, with all his usual deliberation—“the system
+has received a severe shock; that is the cause of these alarming
+symptoms—they will not last. So it often happens with gunshot wounds.
+The wound itself is not dangerous. The ball has gone clean through the
+arm, and at short distance too, but without fracturing the bone or
+injuring any important vessel.”
+
+Oh, had you seen that lad languishing on the sod, with the black blood
+trickling from two holes at once, and joining in a sluggish stream which
+went rippling down his arm, and dripped into the grass! I don’t know
+what he thought of; I thought of his mother. Enough: the foe is in
+front.
+
+But affairs now assumed a new phase. While I was anxiously surveying our
+wounded commander, Corporal Eraser stepped up to me, saluting in due
+form, _à la militaire_! He stood waiting and looking at me, as if he
+expected to receive directions.
+
+The nature of the position in which I was so unexpectedly placed, broke
+upon me in a moment. I’ll tell you just everything, exactly as it
+occurred. Mr Chesterfield was _hors de combat_. Pledget, in discharge of
+his professional duty, was wholly occupied in attending upon him. The
+corporal, and, it was clear, the men also, looked to me for direction in
+our present fix. Gingham, when the corporal approached me, backed his
+horse. From many persons such an action might have gone for nothing. But
+Gingham had a reason for all he did; and, from him, it seemed to say,
+“Now, Mr Y—, take the management of this little business, and go through
+with it. Don’t you see, my dear sir? It has devolved upon you.”
+
+“The men are ready, sir,” said Corporal Fraser; “shall we now proceed to
+clear the banks?”
+
+It was evident I must direct, or nothing could be done. “Wait a minute,
+Fraser.”
+
+I beckoned to the cavalry sergeant, and desired him to place a few of
+his men, with swords drawn, in the rear of the convoy, giving them
+strict directions to suffer no one to fall behind, mule or muleteer. He
+was then to divide the rest of our mounted force into two equal parties,
+under his two corporals, who, when the infantry advanced, were to
+descend along the top of the banks, and halt at its extremity. I then
+gave the word to Corporal Fraser to move forward at once with the
+infantry, and clear the underwood, but to halt where the cavalry halted,
+and by no means to go beyond.
+
+“Then, to prevent that,” said the corporal, “I will go first myself,
+sir.”
+
+He dashed forward, and the infantry followed, with a shout. Thus we
+moved down to the extremity of the hollow road. The infantry led the
+way, gallantly headed by General Fraser, and dislodged some ten or a
+dozen fellows from the banks, who bolted successively, and cut away,
+making good their retreat to their own party below. This movement was
+not effected without some firing on both sides, but nobody was hurt on
+either. The cavalry, supporting the infantry, walked quietly down the
+two edges of the cutting: and I put the convoy in motion to follow. Mr
+Chesterfield now rallied for a few moments, and was eager to remount.
+But the faintness returned; it was evident he could neither ride nor
+walk; so he was brought down in Gingham’s cart, with every attention
+both from Gingham and Pledget.
+
+While we were thus moving down through the hollow, I heard, close
+behind, an angry shout from our dragoons on the banks above. Then
+followed three shots in quick succession, one from the underwood, on the
+side, two from the summit. A bullet whizzed by my head, and spat into
+the opposite bank. A rustling was then distinguishable among the bushes,
+and presently a peasant, in a blue gabardine, slid down stiff into the
+road, and there doubled up. Eluding Fraser and the foot soldiers, he had
+remained in ambush till we came along, when he had selected me for a
+passing compliment, as the head of the party, intending no doubt to
+climb up the bank, if pursued, and escape above. Just as he was taking
+aim, though, he was seen by the dragoons, who, unheard by him, were
+quietly moving down at a walk over the ploughed ground. Two of them
+fired their carbines, and one or both of their shots taking effect,
+prevented the effect of his.
+
+Too green to know that it was unmilitary, I returned a few paces to take
+a view of the dying foe. A Frenchman to the last, he must needs find
+something to say, though life was now ebbing apace. Slowly, and with
+apparent difficulty, he raised his eyes till they were fixed full on
+mine; and then, with quivering features, and a strange snapping of the
+jaw, began to speak. “_Ah, Monsieur —— j’ai pensé—vous._”——He was dead!
+
+We now gained the extremity of the hollow way, and stood looking down on
+the enemy ranged in order of battle at the pond. Fraser had drawn up the
+infantry across the road, and the cavalry, with the exception of the
+rearguard, formed on our two flanks. Our first movement was thus
+effected. All our men were perfectly steady, but burning to fall to, and
+savage on account of Mr Chesterfield’s casualty.
+
+Gingham now suggested, as the enemy were so numerous—two hundred and
+fifty at least, if not three hundred—that it might be prudent to wait a
+while, in the hope that other parties, bound to headquarters, might come
+up. But I happened to know that none were coming that day; and Gingham,
+on hearing this, withdrew his motion. What, then, was our course? How
+were we to deal with these Mounseers? No doubt we could lick them; and,
+had fighting been our object, nothing would have given our men greater
+satisfaction. But we had dollars in charge, and our first care must be
+to get safe through, and deliver them safe at headquarters. My decision,
+then, was taken. We must advance—we must continue our march—and we
+mustn’t let those fellows hinder us; but we must, if possible, effect
+our purpose, without coming to close quarters. A mêlée we must shun;
+for, though the issue would be glorious—no doubt of that—yet, if once
+mixed up with our convoy, the enemy, when they took to flight, might
+persuade some of our mules to go with them. Our object, then, reduced
+itself to this: we must disperse the foe, without coming to close
+quarters with them. Gingham quite adopted this view of the subject, and
+now prepared for further operations by drawing his pistols from the
+holsters, and examining their priming. He next called to Coosey to get
+him his sword out of the cart, girded it on, and drew it forth from the
+scabbard—a formidable Andrea Ferrara, equally available for cut and
+thrust. He bore it bolt upright, with great gravity, and with an air
+half military, half civic, which, on his showy Spanish horse, would have
+rendered him a highly ornamental addition to a Lord Mayor’s procession.
+
+We were now immediately in front of the enemy; and I rode a few yards
+forward, to take a full view of their position, previous to our advance.
+They favoured me with a great deal of noise, and, on my turning, with a
+few shots, which I acknowledged by taking off my hat. Many of them
+returned the compliment; while others expressed their civility by a
+courteous gesture, vernacular in most civilised countries.
+
+The enemy, it was clear, had no idea that we marched with a Nanny-goat
+in company, and had intended that we should walk into them unawares. In
+that case, we should probably have come off second best. As matters
+stood, our position was far more favourable: and theirs, less
+advantageous in the same degree. The worst of it was, though, that to
+the left of the main road—that is, on the enemy’s right—a wood came down
+to within two hundred yards of them; which same wood, further on,
+extended close up to the road we were to proceed by, and seemed to skirt
+it for some distance. The danger was that, when we attacked the enemy,
+and drove them before us, some of them, perhaps the greater number,
+might escape into this wood; in which case we might afterwards find it
+difficult to get rid of their agreeable company. These considerations,
+then, indicated the plan of our attack. I desired the sergeant of
+cavalry to select seven or eight of his steadiest men, and gain at once
+the skirts of the wood, at the point nearest the enemy. He was to
+advance at first as if intending to attack their right; but, when he got
+nearer, was to quicken his pace, and make at once for the wood.
+Immediately after, when he saw the general attack commence, his party,
+also, were to advance and fire; but not to advance so far that
+fugitives, escaping from the enemy’s rear, might be able to enter the
+wood. The infantry were to advance, firing, down the road; and the
+remainder of the cavalry was to spread out on our flanks, and act in
+concert with us: our whole party pressing more on the enemy’s right than
+left, in order that their retreat might be from the wood, not to it.
+These matters I explained distinctly. One other point remained.
+
+“Corporal Fraser, step this way. Your duty is the most responsible of
+any.” I knew it would be a bitter pill for the corporal, so endeavoured
+to gild it.
+
+“I am ready for any duty you may assign me, sir,” said the corporal,
+whose blood was up.
+
+“You must take two or three of the infantry to the rear—we shall want
+all the cavalry—and see that no muleteer loiters behind, or falls
+out—bring all up.”
+
+“As you please, sir,” said Fraser; “but in action, the rear is not the
+place to which I have been most accustomed.” The poor fellow looked so
+dismally blank, I really felt for him.
+
+“Never mind that, corporal. Remember you have had your turn already, and
+have done well. Depend upon this,” I added, with a consolatory wink,
+“should there be any real business in front, though I don’t expect it,
+you, if possible, shall have your share.” The clouds were now dispelled
+from the corporal’s face, and he retired to his station in the rear.
+
+Our preparations being thus completed, I forthwith sent forward the
+cavalry sergeant with his party, to gain the wood. The movement was well
+executed. They advanced steadily down upon the enemy’s right, without
+answering his fire; then turned suddenly to the left, and trotted off to
+the trees. Having reached the point assigned them, they pulled up, faced
+round, and formed in line. Immediately upon this commenced our general
+movement in advance, Fraser following the train of mules and muleteers,
+and “keeping them up behind.” Infantry and cavalry marched down to the
+attack; while both the contending armies maintained a brisk fusillade.
+As far as I then discovered, none of the enemy’s shots took effect,
+while some of ours appeared to tell. The foe stood his ground manfully
+at first; but, as we got closer, some of them began to run from the
+rear, and all soon joined in the flight. The retreat was as rapid as it
+was general; and we, as the convoy could not be left, abstained from
+pursuit. The cavalry advancing from the wood, though, got a little too
+forward. The consequence was that a few of the fugitives, running down
+the main road, attempted to escape into the wood. But a few carbine
+shots soon turned them back on the main body; and the whole mass then
+made their escape down the road to our right, which was just what I
+wanted. Long after we had ceased to fire, they continued to run, without
+stopping to look behind, alarmed probably by the apprehension of a
+cavalry pursuit. Half a mile off, in remarkably short time for the
+distance, I saw some of them, like a scattered flock of sheep,
+scampering up a hill, and disappearing over its summit. What execution
+was done by our fire, did not immediately appear. Some decamped slower
+than others; one or two were carried. Some made their escape through the
+pond; and of these, some fell over in the water, as if they had been
+hit. One fell, the men said, and didn’t get up again. A few of the enemy
+halted awhile to take a look, in their run down the cross-road, as if
+they would like to make an attempt on the extremity of our convoy, which
+probably appeared to them unprotected. But, receiving the fire of our
+rearguard, they again took to flight. We assembled at the pond, and
+there halted in a body, convoy and escort.
+
+Mr Chesterfield had not yet recovered from the first shock of his wound;
+and was obliged to remain in the cart, unable to sit up. Gingham
+administered some brandy, with good effect. We had, however, one other
+wounded man. I noticed several of our fellows, horse and foot, assembled
+in a group, from which proceeded loud jeers, and shouts of laughter.
+There was something in the midst of them, the occasion of their mirth,
+which I could not see. Presently, however, I caught a sight of poor
+Jones, the picture of woe. He was standing in a posture very far from
+upright, and leaning with his elbows on the back of a spare mule—his
+aspect cadaverous. Advancing, I heard the talk.
+
+“Why, Taffy, old feller, how come ye to get hit there?” A roar of
+laughter drowned Jones’s indignant reply.
+
+“Taffy, my lad, why, I didn’t think you vos the chap as vould turn
+tail.”
+
+“It’s a lie,” roared Jones, in a voice of extreme agony and
+exasperation. “I didn’t turn tail; nor I haven’t not never turned tail.
+Only jest turned round to load, and felt all at wance jest as if
+somebody had bin and give me a kick——” A universal roar drowned the
+conclusion of the sentence.
+
+“Mr Pledget,” said I, “there seems to be here another case, soliciting
+your attention.”
+
+The men made way. Pledget advanced with great seriousness; and the
+laughter, though less vociferous, became tenfold in intensity, at the
+rich idea of Pledget’s investigating and doctoring Jones’s wound. Jones,
+at the sight of the doctor, in his alarm and anguish set up a regular
+hullabaloo, almost running into a cry. The doctor, regardless of Jones’s
+fears and lacerated feelings, began gravely to question him—made serious
+attempts and approaches to ascertain particulars. Two or three of the
+fellows, positively overcome with the scene, threw themselves down by
+the road-side in an agony. One, I really thought, would have laughed
+himself into a fit. He turned red, crimson, purple, almost black in the
+face; still, in his bursts, casting his eyes, from time to time, towards
+Jones and the doctor. Jones, leaning on the mule’s back, screwing and
+twisting first this way then that, evaded and defeated all the doctor’s
+approaches; while the men, taking a little extra freedom after our
+glorious victory, renewed their vociferous merriment. Pledget, at
+length, began to lose his patience. “Come, my good fellow,” said he;
+“this won’t do, you know.”
+
+He then looked round at the soldiers, and made a sign. Four of them
+stepped forward, seized Jones by the arms and legs, and bore him off to
+the road-side—struggling, fighting, kicking, roaring, screeching, his
+agony increasing as he saw the moment at hand when he must be doctored.
+Pledget humanely pointed to some bushes close by, and the men carried
+Jones behind them. There the bullet was extracted at once. But how
+Pledget proceeded, or what was the precise character of the wound, of
+course we, who remained in the road, had no opportunity of perceiving.
+The progress of the operation, however, was marked by occasional shouts
+and yells from Jones; and in five minutes he hobbled forth with a rueful
+aspect, but looking “as well as could be expected.” Pledget almost
+immediately followed, and handed the bullet to Jones. “There, my man,”
+said he; “put that in your pocket.”
+
+There still was something, though, upon Jones’s mind. He limped down to
+the edge of the pond with an eager, anxious look; and began prowling
+about, examining among the reeds and bushes, right and left.
+
+“Jones, hadn’t you better keep yourself quiet? Sit down, man.”
+
+“Please, sir, if you’ve no objections, sir, I’m noways inclined to sit
+down jest at present, sir, ’cause it would be rayther ill-colvelielt,
+sir; rayther be excused, sir. Hope no offence, sir.” He continued on the
+prowl.
+
+“What are you looking for, Jones? Lost any part of your kit?”
+
+“Please, sir, I’m a-looking for that ’ere Nosey, sir.”
+
+“What! the man that stood treat this morning? You don’t expect to find
+him here.”
+
+“Please, sir, I see him here, sir; and I marked him too, sir. See him
+drop somewhere hereabouts, sir.”
+
+This intelligence was “important, if true;” and I also began to look.
+
+There was nothing, however, on this part of the field of combat, to
+indicate that a wounded man had fallen. Jones, though, was positive.
+
+“Sure you were not mistaken, Jones?”
+
+“No, sir; it wasn’t no mistake, I’m sartain, sir. I’m sartain as I see
+him, and I’m sartain as I marked him, sir. Knowed him by his——Oh, there
+he is, sir.”
+
+Jones pointed to something in the pond that looked like a package or
+bundle, half immersed in the water, at the edge of the reeds, a little
+out from the side.
+
+A soldier stepped in, and examined more closely. “It’s a dead man, sir.”
+
+“Dead! Get him out, that’s a good fellow. Perhaps he’s only wounded, and
+not past recovery.”
+
+“He’s past that, sir,” said the soldier, as he turned him, face upwards,
+on the bank.
+
+The face had a mask of mud. The soldier knelt down, felt in the dead
+man’s pockets, brought out a white handkerchief of French cambric—wiped
+away the mud. Yes, it was Hookey! The features retained their general
+expression—harsh by temperament, but composed to blandness. Oh, what a
+look was that! Hookey shot through the neck! The brow was slightly knit;
+the lips were parted; the teeth clenched. His perpetual smile had set
+his face, at last, in a fixed, unmeaning smirk—the dead man’s simper!
+The two corners of his semicircular mouth, drawn up high on the cheeks,
+were flanked by two furrows, rigid and profound! It was the sort of look
+which, seen but for a moment, stamps on the memory an impression that we
+can recall at will, and that sometimes comes unbidden!
+
+“Just hold up that handkerchief, my man. Spread it out, will you? Oh,
+there’s the mark—_Christophe_.”
+
+“Any papers?” said I to Jones, who was rummaging in the dead man’s
+pockets.
+
+“Only this here, sir,” said Jones, holding up an envelope, which had
+been emptied of its contents. It was the cover of my letter, which
+Hookey had undertaken to deliver at headquarters. The letter itself he
+had probably sent in a different direction.
+
+Jones, meanwhile, had found a leathern purse, which, without any
+remarks, he was quietly secreting about his own person. The soldier,
+though, who had landed the dead man, detected this act of conveyance,
+and demanded “snacks.” A discussion arose, and a squabble seemed
+inevitable. “Corporal Fraser,” said I, “just see all fair here.” I then
+turned Sancho’s head, and withdrew from the scene. Sancho had more than
+once brought down his nose, slowly and cautiously, into close proximity
+with the object that lay stretched out before him. He now, ere he obeyed
+the bridle, pawed, tossed his head, and snorted; as though fain to get
+rid of the very air that he had just been inhaling, and to blow out of
+his nostrils the smell of blood!
+
+Mr Chesterfield, now considerably recovered, stood by the cart, with his
+arm slung in a silk handkerchief. He thought he was able to sit his
+horse—at any rate, wished to try. Pledget objected—wanted him to come on
+in the cart. A discussion arose; and it was settled at last, that
+Pledget should mount the horse, while Mr Chesterfield rode Pledget’s
+mule. Gingham then gave directions to Coosey and Joaquim, who helped
+Jones into the cart. Coosey had already been won upon by Jones. But now,
+when Jones came out fresh from the field, with a memorial of the combat
+that would follow him to the day of his death, Coosey’s admiration knew
+no bounds. I saw him pass something to Joaquim, who took an early
+opportunity of passing it to Jones. “You don’t think,” said I to
+Gingham, “Coosey will give him more than will do him good?”—“No, no,”
+said Gingham; “you may depend on Coosey’s discretion.”
+
+It was time to be getting on again. First, however, Mr Chesterfield
+deemed it advisable to see all right respecting the wood. For this
+purpose, he sent forward Corporal Fraser with part of the infantry.
+After they entered the wood, we heard a single shot. In about ten
+minutes the whole party returned, the Corporal riding a clumsy French
+cart-horse, with a rope bridle. They had found a horse and cart. The
+shot was fired to bring up the driver, who had, however, got off. The
+object of the horse and cart was pretty evident. It no doubt had
+occurred to Hookey that, in case of his making a successful foray, and
+securing part of our dollars, such a conveyance might do good service in
+carrying off the “swag.” There was no convenient way of getting the cart
+to us out of the wood; it appeared to have been brought from another
+direction; so Fraser had taken out the horse, which he considered his
+own lawful prize. All being now arranged, we proceeded on our march.
+
+Jones rode on in the cart. He lay along at full length; not on his back,
+though, but in the opposite position, which he preferred under existing
+circumstances. I observed him—like a recumbent bull-terrier, with muzzle
+protruding from his kennel—keenly watching as we proceeded—now forwards,
+now right, now left, looking out for the _hinnimy_, and eager to have
+another slap at a Frenchman.
+
+With regard to the enemy’s position, it will probably occur to the
+military reader, that they might have chosen a better. A more skilful
+opponent, probably, would have concealed himself in the forest, and
+attacked us in flank; and a bolder one might have ventured to occupy the
+hollow way with all his forces—a plan which, if detected, would have
+been attended with greater risk to himself, but, if successful, with
+greater damage to us. As it was, the ambuscade was too far in front of
+the main body, and we were able to deal with it before we were further
+engaged. Still, I think, it must be admitted, on the whole, the
+arrangements of the enemy were not badly made. Had we not kept a good
+look-out—or rather, had not our four-legged attendant providentially put
+us on our guard—we might not have discovered our opponents till it was
+too late to avoid a conflict at close quarters, the probable consequence
+of which would have been the loss of some of our mules; while the
+crossroads afforded facilities for driving them off, with the choice of
+four directions. And, some of their party being concealed in the two
+banks between which we had to pass, we might have discovered an enemy at
+hand only by finding ourselves under fire. On the whole, we had reason
+to be thankful that our loss was so small.
+
+With regard to our fallen opponent, Hookey or Christophe, in lately
+turning over Colonel Gurwood’s volumes, I met with something which
+appears, curiously enough, to identify him. In a letter from our
+Commander-in-Chief, bearing date 2d January 1814, that is, two or three
+months before our rencontre, I find that a person, calling himself
+Christophe, had been arrested and sent to General Freyre, to be
+forwarded to Madrid; that, in the November previous, this Christophe was
+at Bilbao; that he had letters from King Ferdinand; that he showed a
+draft or order on the Biscayan Provinces to pay him seventy thousand
+dollars; that he was advised to present himself to the Government; and
+that, as the opinion entertained of him was not very favourable, and he
+remained at St Jean de Luz, he was at length arrested, and sent off.
+
+Now, I am not prepared to assert that this was the same individual with
+my Christophe or Hookey; but, supposing it so, we may give some such
+sketch of his services as the following. In the early part of 1813, the
+period of my voyage from Falmouth to Lisbon, the French authorities in
+Spain, civil and military, were not a little perplexed as to our
+Commander’s plans for the ensuing campaign. This mystery he solved ere
+long, by breaking forth from the north of Portugal, advancing on the
+line of the Douro, marching across the north of Spain, winning the
+battle of Vittoria, investing San Sebastian and Pampeluna, liberating
+the Peninsula, crowning the Pyrenees, completing the great circle that
+was closing round Napoleon, and menacing the south of France. Precisely
+when we may suppose the curiosity of the Gallic leaders to have been
+most intense, that is, in the early spring of 1813, just previous to
+Lord Wellington’s advance, Hookey—Christophe, said his cambric
+handkerchief—came off to us in the Oporto boat, and, under the assumed
+character of a courier, obtained a passage by the Falmouth packet from
+Oporto to Lisbon—in other words, from the left to the right of the
+position then occupied by the British troops. Subsequently, a Christophe
+makes his appearance at Bilbao, in the November of the same year; and,
+on account of his suspicious conduct there, and afterwards at
+headquarters, is arrested, and delivered over to the Spaniards, for
+transmission to Madrid. The Spaniards, of course, let him escape; and he
+then returns to his old trade. He cannot, however, appear again at
+headquarters, therefore hangs about the line of march on the look-out
+for a job; falls in with a greenhorn in charge of treasure; gets out of
+him all the information he can; tries to divert him from his route;
+tampers with his personal attendant; opposes his passage of a river;
+makes his escort drunk; and musters a rural force, with the aid of which
+he hopes to realise more by ready cash, than he did by his cheque on the
+“Biscayan provinces.” Thus he went on, prying, plotting, and meddling,
+till he found his end.
+
+We proceeded quietly on our march, Gingham and I riding side by side,
+while Pledget and Mr Chesterfield preceded us.
+
+“Yes,” said Gingham, resuming the thread of our conversation where our
+rencontre with the enemy had broken it off; “I know that you have formed
+schemes connected with military service; and those, I presume, are the
+plans you allude to.”
+
+I really did not understand, at the moment, what Gingham meant; and,
+fancying he referred to our recent operations in the presence of the
+foe, answered wide of the mark.
+
+“No, no,” said he; “I was not speaking, sir, with regard to the little
+affair which has just come off; though, give me leave to say, Mr Y—, you
+acquitted yourself in a way that does you credit. I allude to what fell
+from you within the last hour, when you mentioned some plans that you
+had formed, and which, you were kind enough to say, you would
+communicate for my information.”
+
+We now resumed the conversation, which the “little affair” had
+interrupted. I stated my plans, hopes, difficulties, without reserve;
+and Gingham, in reply, from his own knowledge and observations, drew,
+with equal force and feeling, a not very agreeable picture of the
+discouragements, disappointments, toils, hardships, sufferings,
+privations, wrongs, and snubbings, incidental to the life of a marching
+officer on actual service. He was still eloquently descanting on these
+topics, when we reached the termination of our day’s journey.
+
+
+
+
+ GERMAN POPULAR PROPHECIES.
+
+
+LETTER FROM PROFESSOR GREGORY TO THE EDITOR.
+
+
+ DEAR SIR,—The following notice of certain popular prophetic
+ traditions, widely current in the country to which they refer, may
+ perhaps prove interesting to your numerous readers.
+
+ All widely-spread opinions, however apparently absurd, have, or have
+ had at some time, a foundation in nature or in historical fact; and it
+ cannot be uninteresting, with a view to the history of popular
+ traditions, to place on record those which I have here collected, even
+ although we cannot at present trace them satisfactorily to their
+ origin. The whole subject of trances, and the various phenomena
+ connected with them, including the second sight, is one hitherto very
+ imperfectly studied, and for that reason I have not entered into
+ detail on that part of the question; but I may possibly do so at a
+ future period.—Believe me, very truly yours,
+
+ WILLIAM GREGORY.
+
+ EDINBURGH, _April 16, 1850_.
+
+
+It is well known that in all ages, and in most countries, prophetic
+traditions have been said to exist; and although it may often have
+happened that such traditions have arisen from spurious prophecies,
+written after the event, and falsely said to have existed before it, yet
+it would also appear that genuine prophecies have from time to time
+appeared, and become traditions before the events took place. Of course,
+we do not here allude to the Scriptural prophecies, but to such as have
+no pretensions to a divine origin. There can be little doubt that the
+Sybilline Books contained prophecies of the future fate of Rome; and
+although we cannot now ascertain, even if this were the case, whether
+they were accurate predictions, or merely sagacious guesses, nor whether
+the event confirmed them, yet the tradition of their existence is in
+itself curious. We cannot here enter into an enumeration of the various
+prophecies which are said to have existed, in ancient or modern times,
+before the events occurred, but on some future occasion we may return to
+that subject: in the mean time we may allude, as a modern example of
+popular prophecy in our own country, to the prediction of the extinction
+of the male line of the house of Seaforth, in the person of a deaf
+Caberfae—a prediction which Mr Morritt of Rokeby, the friend of Scott,
+heard quoted in Ross-shire at a time when the last Lord Seaforth, who
+became quite deaf, had several sons in perfect health. We have no doubt
+our Highland readers are acquainted with many analogous cases.
+
+Our present object is to direct attention to the fact, that in Germany,
+more especially on the Rhine and in Westphalia, there exist many
+remarkable popular prophecies concerning public events, of various
+dates, and originating in various quarters, but exhibiting a remarkable
+coincidence in many of the chief points. Many of these have been printed
+at various times; others exist as traditions among the peasantry;
+others, again, are said upon good evidence to have been in modern times
+taken down from the lips of the prophets themselves, all or most of whom
+are now dead. Yet they generally predict, and often with strange
+minuteness of detail, events which were to occur about this time,—viz.
+in 1848, 1849, and 1850. Political and religious convulsions, wars, and
+finally peace and prosperity, form the burden of them; and we shall see
+that the events of 1848 and 1849 supply apparently strong confirmation
+of their truth, their previous existence being admitted.
+
+Having spent some months in Rhenish Prussia during the summer of 1849,
+we made many inquiries on the subject, and found everywhere, and among
+all classes, a firm conviction of the _genuineness_ of many of the
+popular prophecies; while it was admitted that they had long been known
+and believed by the people. As the matter, considered under any point of
+view, is a curious and interesting one, we procured the latest work on
+the subject, which in fact appeared while we were in Germany. It is
+entitled, “Prophetic Voices, with Explanations. A collection as perfect
+as possible, of all Prophecies, of Ancient and Modern date, concerning
+the Present and Future Times, with an explanation of the obscure parts,”
+by Th. Beykirch, licentiate in Theology, and (R.C.) curate in Dortmund.
+The worthy Curate is often too brief in his accounts of the prophecies
+themselves, and very diffuse in his explanations, which, for the most
+part, tend to extract from the predictions the comfortable assurance of
+the complete reestablishment of the Roman Catholic religion, and the
+utter discomfiture of Protestantism. He even treats his readers to a
+disquisition, altogether out of place, on Scriptural prophecies, and an
+interpretation, by Holzhaüser, of the Apocalypse, in which he applies to
+Protestantism the same passages which Protestants apply to the Papacy,
+and does so, apparently, very much to his own satisfaction. We shall not
+touch on these parts of his work, but use it as a storehouse, from which
+we may draw the predictions themselves, without regarding them through
+the theological medium of the reverend author.
+
+The first we shall mention is of an ancient date. It is the vaticination
+of Brother Herrmann, a monk of the monastery of Lehnin, who flourished
+circa A.D. 1270, and died in the odour of sanctity. It is written in a
+hundred leonine hexameters, rhyming in the middle and end of each verse,
+and was printed in 1723 by Professor Lilienthal, from what was said to
+be an old MS. His prophecies chiefly concerned the future fate of his
+own monastery of Lehnin in Brandenburg, and of the monastery of Chorin
+in the Uckermark, a part of Brandenburg. But as that fate depended on
+public events, more especially on the history of the princes of that
+country, his vaticination assumes the form of a brief prophetic history
+of the house of Hohenzollern, that is, the now royal house of Prussia.
+Our readers will probably readily dispense with the whole of the
+original hexameters of the good monk, but we shall give a few specimens:
+he begins—
+
+
+ 1. “Nunc tibi, cum cura, Lehnin! cano fata futura,
+
+ 2. Quæ mihi monstravit Dominus, qui cuncta creavit,” &c.
+
+ “Now, oh Lehnin! I sing with sorrow to thee thy future fates,
+
+ Which the Lord, the creator of all, has shown to me.”
+
+
+He proceeds to describe the prosperity of Lehnin under the race of Otto
+I., and its decay after the extinction of this family, which took place
+in the person of Henry III., 1320. These princes were from Anhalt, of
+the race called the Askanier in German history.
+
+At verses 14 _et seq._, he describes Brandenburg as becoming a den of
+lions, while the true heir is excluded. After Margrave Henry III., the
+Dukes of Pomerania, Mecklenburg, Brunswick, Anhalt, Electoral Saxony,
+and Bohemia attacked the Mark, (Brandenburg,) and committed horrible
+devastations. The Emperor Louis of Bavaria seized it for himself,
+excluding the princes of Saxony, the nearest heirs to the former
+princes.
+
+After various details concerning the fate of Brandenburg, plundered by
+robber knights and barons, who were to be put down by a strong emperor,
+as happened under Charles IV. who died in 1378,—he comes to the
+accession of the Hohenzollerns, and describes the first prince of that
+family as rising to distinction by holding two castles or Burgen. The
+Emperor Sigismund sold Brandenburg to Frederick, Burggraf of Nuremberg,
+of the house of Hohenzollern. He belonged to the lower nobility, but now
+became more important by the possession of two castles—those of
+Nuremberg and Brandenburg. These examples are sufficient to give an idea
+of that part of Brother Herrmann’s prophecy, concerning events which
+preceded the printing of it in 1723, and in which he describes
+_seriatim_, without giving the names, and very briefly, but in striking
+language, the fate and character of the successive Margraves, Electors,
+and Kings, till he comes to Frederick William I., who died in 1740,
+seventeen years after the prophecy was printed, and whose character and
+death he describes. Then follows Frederick the Great, whose career, with
+its vicissitudes, is indicated with tolerable clearness. One line is
+curious,
+
+
+ 84. “Flantibus hinc Austris, vitam vult credere claustris.”
+
+ “When the south wind blows, he trusts his life to the cloisters.”
+
+
+In fact, Frederick, when hard pressed by the Austrians, was once
+compelled to conceal himself in a monastery.
+
+_Auster_ signifies south wind, but is probably here used for Austria.
+
+After his successor, Frederick William II., whom the good monk truly
+describes as vicious, sensual, and oppressive, but not warlike, comes
+this line—
+
+
+ 89. “Natus florebit; quod non sperasset habebit.”
+
+ “The son shall flourish; he shall possess what he did not hope for.”
+
+
+The application of this to the late king, Frederick William III., is
+obvious. Under him, Prussia, after having been reduced to the lowest ebb
+by Napoleon, became, unexpectedly, far more powerful than it had ever
+been.
+
+
+ 90. “Sed populus tristis flebit temporibus istis.
+
+ 92. “Et princeps nescit quod nova potentia crescit.”
+
+ “But the sad people shall mourn in these times;
+
+ “And the King knows not that a new power is arising.”
+
+
+These lines also apply well to Frederick William III.
+
+
+ 93. “Tandem sceptra gerit, qui ultimus stemmatis erit.”
+
+ “At length he bears the sceptres, who shall be the last of his race.”
+
+
+Now this is very remarkable. In line 49, he had said—
+
+
+ 49. “Hoc ad undenum durabit stemma venenum.”
+
+ “This poison[2] shall last to the eleventh generation.”
+
+
+The present king, Frederick William IV., is the eleventh from Joachim
+III., the first Protestant prince of Brandenburg, in reference to whom
+the above line is written. But why did the writer (even supposing the
+prophecy not to have existed earlier than 1723, when it was printed)
+stop at this point? We shall see that other prophecies coincide with
+this one in predicting that the present will be the last King of
+Prussia.
+
+Then comes the remarkable line—
+
+
+ 95. “Et pastor gregem recipit, Germania regem.”
+
+ “And the shepherd receives his flock, Germany a king.”
+
+
+The worthy curate of Dortmund explains this as pointing out the
+submission of Europe to the Pope, and of Germany to one sovereign.
+Brother Herrmann goes on to predict peaceful times, and the restoration
+of Chorin and Lehnin to their pristine splendour.
+
+We have omitted many curious lines, but the reader will probably feel
+satisfied that the brief and obscure vaticinations of Brother Herrmann
+are worthy of notice, especially that part of them relating to the last
+hundred and twenty years, bearing in mind that they were printed in
+1723.
+
+The next prophet mentioned by our author is Joseph von Görres, who died
+in January 1848—that is, before the last revolution in France, which
+shook the thrones of Europe. On his deathbed he lamented the misfortunes
+about to come on Poland, described Hungary as appearing to him one huge
+field of carnage, and wept over the approaching downfall of the European
+monarchies. The events of February and March 1848, the insurrection in
+Posen, the devastations committed by the Prussians in suppressing it,
+and the war in Hungary, would appear to be the events to which he
+referred. But he was a man deeply read in history, and there are some of
+those prophetic hints which may possibly have occurred to him as
+reflections on probable events, and have assumed a certain degree of
+vividness in his mind.
+
+We now come to a peasant prophet, namely Jaspers, a Westphalian
+shepherd, of Deininghausen, near the ancestral seat of the Lord of
+Bodelschwing. He was a simple-minded pious man. In 1830, soon after
+which time he died, he publicly predicted as follows:—
+
+
+ “A great road (said he) will be carried through our country, from west
+ to east, which will pass through the forests of Bodelschwing. On this
+ road, carriages will run _without horses_, and cause a dreadful noise.
+ At the commencement of this work, a great scarcity will here prevail;
+ pigs will become very dear, and a new religion will arise, in which
+ wickedness will be regarded as prudence and politeness. Before this
+ road is quite completed, a frightful war will break out.”
+
+
+These words, to the astonishment of the natives, have nearly all been
+fulfilled. The railway from Cologne to Minden has, since his death, been
+carried through the very district he mentioned in 1830, before the first
+English railway had been opened, and when the primitive shepherds of
+Westphalia were little likely to know anything about railways. The
+scarcity took place at the time specified; and his remark as to a new
+religion is supposed to apply to a deterioration of manners among the
+simple natives, consequent on the opening up of their district. A
+personal friend of Jaspers collected the following sayings, which the
+author, after minute inquiry on the spot, considers as genuine.
+
+
+ 1. “Before the great road is _quite finished_, a dreadful war will
+ break out.”
+
+
+The railway has for a year or two been in operation; but, up to the end
+of 1849, as we saw by advertisements, the second line of rails was not
+laid down. It is probably still only in progress. Now in 1848 and 1849,
+we have seen war in Schleswig-Holstein, Hungary, Italy, Posen, and
+Baden.
+
+
+ 2. “A small northern power will be conqueror.”
+
+
+Probably the Danish war, and the success of Denmark, is here meant.
+
+
+ 3. “After this another war will break out—not a religious war among
+ Christians, but between those who believe in Christ and those who do
+ not believe.”
+
+
+Here we must remember that the simple and ignorant peasants of
+Westphalia have strong religious feelings and prejudices, and are apt,
+like some nearer home, to apply the term Infidel somewhat rashly.
+Possibly Russia and the Greek church may be here alluded to.
+
+
+ 4. “This war comes from the East. I dread the East.
+
+ 5. “This war will break out very suddenly. In the evening they will
+ cry ‘Peace, peace!’ and yet peace is not; and in the morning the enemy
+ will be at the door. Yet it shall soon pass, and he who knows of a
+ good hiding-place, for a a few days only, is secure.”
+
+
+The probability of a war, in which Russia shall take an active share,
+cannot escape any observer of the signs of the times; and, with the aid
+of railways, which were not known at the date of Jaspers’ death, the
+sudden outbreak is quite possible, even in Westphalia.
+
+
+ 6. “The defeated enemy will have to fly in extreme haste. Let the
+ people cast cart and wheels into the water, otherwise the flying foe
+ will take all carriages with them.
+
+ 7. “Before this war, a general faithlessness will prevail. Men will
+ give out vice for virtue and honour, deceit for politeness.
+
+ 8. “In the year in which the great war shall break out, there shall be
+ so fine a spring, that in April the cows will be feeding in the
+ meadows on luxuriant grass. In the same year, wheat may be harvested,
+ (in his district,) but not oats.” (This appears to be likely to apply
+ to 1850.—W. G.)
+
+
+He seems here to hint that the harvest of oats will be interrupted by
+the war; if so, the war occurs in autumn.
+
+
+ 9. “The great battle will be fought _at the birch-tree_, between Unna,
+ Hamm, and Werl. The people of half the world will there be opposed to
+ each other. God will terrify the enemy by a dreadful storm. Of the
+ _Russians_, but few shall return home to tell of their defeat. Jaspers
+ described this battle as terrific.”
+
+
+We shall by and by hear more of this birch-tree.
+
+
+ 10. “The war will be over in 1850, and in 1852 all will be again in
+ order.
+
+ 11. “The Poles are at first put down; but they will, along with other
+ nations, fight against their oppressors, and at last obtain a king of
+ their own.
+
+ 12. “France will be divided internally into three parts.”
+
+
+It is curious to notice, that at present, although the state of matters
+in 1830 was very different, there are three parties in France, all of
+them powerful: namely, the Buonapartists, (with at least a part of the
+Orleanists,) and the moderate as well as the _pro tempore_ Republicans,
+headed by Louis Napoleon; the party of the old Bourbons and the priests,
+led by Falloux and the old nobility, such as Larochejaquelein and
+Montalembert; and lastly the Red Republicans, Socialists, and
+Communists. These three parties hold each other in check, and no one of
+them can at this moment do much.
+
+
+ 13. “Spain will not join in the war. But the Spaniards shall come
+ after it is over, and take possession of the churches.
+
+ 14. “Austria will be fortunate, provided she do not wait too long.
+
+ 15. “The papal chair will be vacant for a time.
+
+ 16. “The nobility is much depressed, but in 1852 again rises to some
+ extent.
+
+ 17. “When asked as to the future of Prussia, he maintained an
+ obstinate silence, saying only that King Frederick William IV. would
+ be the last.”
+
+
+This agrees with Brother Herrmann, as formerly stated. A man named
+Pottgiesser, in Dortmund, long since dead, drew up a genealogical tree
+of the royal house, in which he says of the present king—to whom he
+gives no successor—“He disappears.”
+
+
+ 18. “There will be one religion. On the Rhine stands a church which
+ all people shall aid in building. From thence, after the war, shall
+ proceed the rule of faith. All sects shall be united; only the Jews
+ shall retain their old obstinacy.”
+
+
+The dome at Cologne is obviously alluded to. We shall see, hereafter,
+that Cologne is expected to become the seat of ecclesiastical rule by
+other prophets.
+
+
+ 19. “In our district priests shall become so rare, that, after the
+ war, people will have to walk seven leagues in order to attend divine
+ service.
+
+ 20. “Our country will be so much depopulated, that women will have to
+ cultivate the soil; and seven girls shall fight for a pair of
+ inexpressibles.
+
+ 21. “The house of Ikern shall be set on fire by shells.
+
+ 22. “The soldiers shall march to battle (or to war) first, then
+ return, decked with the cherry blossoms. And only after that shall the
+ great war break out.”
+
+
+In spring 1848, troops marched to Baden, at the time of the first
+insurrection there, in which war General von Gagern was killed; and they
+returned home decked with cherry blossoms.
+
+
+ 23. “Germany shall have one king, and then shall come happy times.
+
+ 24. “He spoke also of an approaching religious change, and warned his
+ children, when that time should come, to go to Mengede.”
+
+
+When jeered on his prophetic powers, Jaspers often said—
+
+
+ “When I have long been in the grave, you will then often remember what
+ I have said.”
+
+
+There is a prophet in Dortmund, who, among other curious things, said,
+in 1840, “When the Prussian soldiers shall be dressed like those who
+crucified our Lord, then war shall break out with great violence.” It is
+worthy of notice that, since that time, the whole Prussian army, with
+the exception of the Hussars, have been armed with helmets of Roman
+form. Their new Waffenrock, or military coat, is also a short plain
+surtout, buttoned to the throat, and probably not unlike a Roman tunic.
+
+The predictions of Jaspers are curious—first, on account of their
+minuteness; secondly, because they specify dates yet future. We shall
+see that they coincide, in many of the chief points, with other popular
+prophecies.
+
+The next prophet is Spielbähn, a Rhenish peasant. “Spielbähn” signifies,
+in the dialect of his countrymen, “the fiddler;” and this name was given
+to him on account of his skill as a rustic performer on the violin. He
+was employed as messenger and servant in the convents of Siegburg and
+Heisterbach. His predictions have been published by Schrattenholz, and
+widely circulated; but, as we could not procure this work, we can only
+give such extracts as our author has selected.
+
+Spielbähn died in 1783 in Cologne. He is said to have been rather
+addicted to the wine-flask, and to have occasionally indulged in
+predictions of doubtful authenticity, possibly from interested motives.
+But he is thought, in the main, to have uttered what he really believed
+to be true predictions, and he gave them out as visions. He predicted
+the imprisonment of the Archbishop of Cologne, which took place a few
+years ago, with many less interesting local occurrences, which our
+author passes over. Speaking of the present time, (1848–50,) and of what
+should follow, he said—
+
+
+ 1. “In that time it will be hardly possible to distinguish the peasant
+ from the noble.”
+
+
+In Rhenish Prussia, where the Code Napoleon prevails, there is hardly a
+trace of the splendour of the old aristocracy to be found. The nobles of
+old family who remain have lost all exclusive privileges, and are poor.
+
+
+ 2. “Courtly manners and worldly vanity will reach to a height hitherto
+ unequalled. Yea, things will go so far, that men will no longer thank
+ God for their daily bread.
+
+ 3. “Human intellect will do wonders, (or miracles,) and on this
+ account men will more and more forget God. They will mock at God,
+ thinking themselves omnipotent, because of the carriages, which shall
+ run through the whole world, (or everywhere,) without being drawn by
+ animals.
+
+ 4. “And because courtly vices, sensuality, and sumptuousness of
+ apparel, are then so great, God will punish the world. A poison shall
+ fall on the fields, and a great famine shall afflict the country.”
+
+
+In Nos. 3 and 4, railways and the potato blight seem meant.
+
+
+ 5. “When a bridge shall be thrown across the Rhine at Mondorf, then it
+ will be advisable to cross, as soon as possible, to the opposite
+ shore. But it will only be necessary to remain there so long as a man
+ will take to consume a 7 lb. loaf of bread; after which (that is, in
+ less than a week,) it will be time to return.”
+
+
+This coincides with Jaspers’ prediction of the shortness of the last
+great struggle.
+
+
+ 6. “Thousands shall conceal themselves in a meadow among the seven
+ mountains, (opposite Bonn.)
+
+ 7. “I see the destruction of the heretics, with dreadful punishments;
+ of those who dared to think their puny minds could penetrate the
+ councils of God. But the long-suffering of God is at an end, and a
+ limit is put to their wickedness.”
+
+
+The worthy curate dwells with peculiar satisfaction on this prediction.
+
+
+ 8. “Observe well, thou land of Berg! Thy reigning family, which
+ proceeds from a Margraviate, shall suddenly fall from its high
+ station, and become less than the smallest Margraviate.”
+
+
+The grand-duchy of Berg, on the Lower Rhine, of which Düsseldorf is the
+chief town, was given by Napoleon to Murat, and was afterwards part of
+the kingdom of Westphalia, but, since the peace, has formed part of
+Prussia, the royal family of which, as we have seen, descends from the
+Margraves of Brandenburg; but in 1783 all this was as yet in the womb of
+time. See also Jaspers, No. 17, and Brother Herrmann, verse 93.
+
+
+ 9. “The false prophets (heretic clergy?) shall be killed with wife and
+ child.
+
+ 10. “The holy city of Cologne shall then see a fearful battle. Many,
+ of foreign nations, shall here be killed, and men and women shall
+ fight for their faith. And it will be impossible to avert from
+ Cologne, up to that time spared by war, all the cruel extremities of
+ war. Men will then wade in blood to the ankles.
+
+ 11. “But at last a foreign king shall arise, and gain the victory for
+ the good cause. The survivors of the defeated enemy fly to the
+ _birch-tree_; and here shall the last battle be fought for the good
+ cause.”
+
+
+See Nos. 9 and 33 of Jaspers’ sayings, as to the birch-tree and the
+German king; also verse 95 of Brother Herrmann.
+
+
+ 12. “The foreign armies have brought the ‘black death’ into the land.
+ What the sword spares the pestilence shall devour. Berg shall be
+ depopulated, and the fields without owners; so that one may plough
+ from the river Sieg up to the hills without being (Scoticè)
+ challenged. Those who have hid themselves among the hills shall again
+ cultivate the land.”
+
+
+See No. 20 of Jaspers’ predictions.
+
+
+ 13. “About this time France will be divided internally.”
+
+
+See Jaspers, No. 12.
+
+
+ 14. “The German Empire shall choose a peasant for Emperor. He shall
+ govern Germany a year and a day.”
+
+
+The Archduke John, late regent of the empire, had long lived, banished
+from court, as a Styrian peasant, adopting the costume and manners of
+the peasantry. He also married a peasant girl. His regency lasted little
+more than a year, and, indeed, after the year had expired, he only
+returned to Frankfort in order to resign his power to the present
+commission.
+
+
+ 15. “But he who after him shall wear the imperial crown, he will be
+ the man for whom the world has long looked with hope. He shall be
+ called Roman Emperor, and shall give peace to the world. He shall
+ restore Siegburg and Heisterbach, (two convents, above mentioned.)
+
+ 16. “Then shall there be no more Jews in Germany, and the heretics
+ shall beat their own breasts.
+
+ 17. “And after that shall be a good happy time. The praise of God
+ shall dwell on earth; and there shall be no war, except beyond the
+ seas. Then shall the fugitive brethren return, and dwell in their
+ homes in peace for ever and ever.
+
+ “Men should heed well what I have said, for much evil may be averted
+ by prayer; and although people jeer me, saying I am a simple fiddler,
+ yet the time will come when they shall find my words true.”
+
+
+See Jaspers’ predictions, Nos. 18 and 23. Brother Herrman, also, in
+verses 96–100, prophesies happy times, and the restoration of the
+convents of Chorin and Lehnin.
+
+The next seer is Anton (Anthony), called the Youth of Elsen, a village
+near Paderborn, in Westphalia. He had the gift of the “second
+sight”—that is, he saw visions—and has a great reputation in that
+country as a true seer. His predictions were first collected by Dr
+Kutscheit, from whose work the author extracts as follows. The date is
+not given by our curate.
+
+
+ 1. “When the convent of Abdinghof is occupied by soldiers, armed with
+ long poles, to which little flags are attached, and when these troops
+ leave the convent, then is the time near.”
+
+
+At this time (1849) Prussian lancers occupy the convent, which has been
+converted into a barrack. This was not the case when the prediction was
+made.
+
+
+ 2. “From Neuhaus, houses may be seen on the Bock, (Buck,) and a
+ village is founded between Paderborn and Elsen. Then is the time
+ near.”
+
+
+The Bock is a wooded eminence near Paderborn, where an inn was built. To
+obtain a fine view from the inn, the wood was lately cut through, and
+thus the buildings have become visible from Neuhaus. The village or
+_dorf_ is a newly-founded country house, or rather farm-house, with its
+appurtenances—_Scoticè_, a town.
+
+
+ 3. “When people see, in the Roman field, houses with large windows;
+ when a broad road is made through that field, which shall not be
+ finished till the good times come, then shall come heavy times.”
+
+
+In the Roman field, on the high road to Erwitte, the Thuringian Railway
+was begun in 1847, and a terminus, the buildings of which have very
+large windows, has been laid down on the spot. The works have been, from
+the necessity of the times, suspended for the present. See Jaspers, No.
+1, and Spielbähn, No. 3.
+
+
+ 4. “When barley is sown on the Bock, then is the time close at hand.
+ Then shall the enemy be in the land, and kill and devastate
+ everything. Men will have to go seven leagues to find an acquaintance.
+ The town of Paderborn shall have eight heavy days, during which the
+ enemy lies there. On the last day, the enemy shall give up the town to
+ plunder. But let every man carry his most valuable property from the
+ ground floor to the garret; for the enemy will not have time, even to
+ untie his shoestrings, so near will succour be.”
+
+
+In the summer of 1848, the first attempt was made to grow barley on the
+Bock, a cold, high-lying district.
+
+
+ 5. “The enemy will try to bombard the town from the Liboriberg, (a
+ hill close to Paderborn); but only one ball (or shell) shall hit, and
+ set on fire a house in the Kampe. The fire, however, shall soon be
+ extinguished.
+
+ 6. “The French shall come as friends. French cavalry with shining
+ breastplates (cuirassiers) shall ride in at the Westergate, and tie
+ their horses to the trees in the Cathedral close. At the Giersthor,
+ (another gate) soldiers with gray uniforms, faced with light blue,
+ shall come in. But they will only look into the town, and then
+ immediately withdraw. On the Bock stands a great army, with double
+ insignia, (or marks—possibly the two cockades, Imperial German and
+ Prussian, now worn by the Prussians,) whose muskets are piled in
+ heaps.
+
+ 7. “The enemy shall fly towards Salzkotten, and towards the heath. In
+ both places a great battle shall be fought, so that people shall wade
+ in blood to the ankles. The pursuers from the town must take care not
+ to cross the Alme bridge; for not one of those who cross it shall
+ return alive.
+
+ 8. “The victorious prince shall enter, in solemn procession, the
+ castle of Neuhaus, which shall be repaired (for the occasion?)
+ accompanied by many people with green boughs in their hats. On the
+ Johannes Bridge, before Neuhaus, there shall be such a crowd that a
+ child shall be crushed to death. While this goes on a great assembly
+ shall be held in and before the Rathhaus (Town House.) They shall
+ hurry (or drag) a man down from the Rathhaus, and hang him on a
+ lamp-post before it.
+
+ 9. “When all these things shall have come to pass, then shall there be
+ a good time in the land. The convent (of Abdinghof) shall be restored;
+ and it will be better to be a swineherd here, in our land, than a
+ noble yonder in Prussia (proper).”
+
+
+Next comes an old traditionary prophecy concerning Münster.
+
+
+ “Woe to thee, Münster! Woe to you, priests, doctors, and lawyers! How
+ shall it be with you in the days of sorrow?
+
+ “For three days they shall go up and down thy streets. Three times
+ shall the city be taken and lost.
+
+ “Let every man keep in the garret; thus shall he be safe. A dreadful
+ fire shall break out in and destroy Ueberwasser, so that it may be
+ seen from the cathedral place to the castle.
+
+ “The enemy shall be beaten, and shall fly through Kinderhaus so fast
+ that they leave their cannon on the street. All this shall happen in
+ the same year in which an illustrious person dies in the castle.
+
+ “The conquering prince shall make his entry through the Servatii-Thor,
+ (a gate).”
+
+
+Part of this prophecy has been spread over the district of Münster for
+sixty years; part of it comes from the tailor at Kinderhaus, who also
+prophesied much to Blucher. He was one of the seers, or, as they are
+called in that country, “Spoikenkikers.” “Spoikenkikers,” in high
+German, signifies ghost or spirit; “Spoikenkikers” is our Scotch word
+“Keeker,”—in high German, “Spoikenkikers.”
+
+The next is an old prophecy concerning Osnabrück.
+
+
+ “Osnabrück shall suffer much for fourteen days, and see a bloody
+ contest in her streets.
+
+ “Even the service of the Greek Church shall be performed in the
+ churches of Osnabrück.”
+
+
+This is quite possible, should Russians enter Westphalia. See Jaspers,
+No. 9.
+
+
+ “A violent contest shall arise between Catholics and Protestants. All
+ the churches shall be again taken possession of by the Catholics.
+
+ “A priest, in the act of carrying the most Holy (the Host) into the
+ Lutheran Church, shall be killed by a ball at the church door.”
+
+
+The three preceding prophecies are very remarkable, from the minute
+details which they contain, and which seem to indicate that the seers
+described _what they saw_ in visions or in dreams. Of course, most of
+these visions, referring to events yet future, cannot be at present
+verified. But the signs given by Anton, to know when the time
+approaches, have come to pass.
+
+The following traditionary prophecy about Cologne, was found by Magister
+Heinrich von Judden, pastor of the small church of St Martin, in the
+convent of the brethren of the Holy Virgin of Carmel, (in Cologne?):—
+
+
+ “O happy Cologne! when thou art well paved, thou shalt perish in thine
+ own blood. O, Cologne! thou shalt perish like Sodom and Gomorrha; thy
+ streets shall flow with blood, and thy relics shall be taken away. Woe
+ to thee, Cologne! because strangers suck thy breasts and the breasts
+ of thy poor,—of thy poor, who therefore languish in poverty and
+ misery.”
+
+
+Old tradition concerning Coblenz:—
+
+
+ “Woe! woe! Where Rhine and Moselle meet, a battle shall be fought
+ against Turks and Baschkirs, (Russians?) so bloody, that the Rhine
+ shall be dyed red for twenty-five leagues.”
+
+
+Traditions of battles in Westphalia:—
+
+
+ “A prodigious number of people shall come from the east towards the
+ west.
+
+ “The whole west and south shall rise against them.
+
+ “The armies shall meet in the middle of Westphalia.
+
+ “A dreadful battle shall take place on the Strönheide, (a heath,) near
+ Ahaus.
+
+ “At Riesenbeck, a bloody combat shall be fought.
+
+ “At Lüdinghausen,” said a seer, “I saw whole hosts of white-clad
+ soldiers. (Austrians?)
+
+ “Ottmarsbocholt will have much to suffer.
+
+ “On the Lipperheide (a heath) a bloody battle is fought.
+
+ “Also in Rittberg, and the whole country round, a battle shall be
+ fought.
+
+ “But the chief engagement shall be _at the Birch-Tree_.”
+
+
+Every one, says the author, who takes the trouble, can hear all this
+from the mouths of the peasantry. In many places, the seers have even
+described the positions of the troops, and the direction in which the
+cannon are pointed.
+
+Prophecy of a Capuchin monk in Düsseldorf, of date 1672:—
+
+
+ “After a dreadful war (Napoleon’s wars?) shall there be peace; yet
+ there shall be no peace, because the contest of the poor against the
+ rich, and of the rich against the poor, shall break out.
+
+ “After this peace shall come a heavy time. The people shall have no
+ longer truth nor faith.
+
+ “When women know not, from pride and luxuriousness, what clothes they
+ shall wear—sometimes short, sometimes long, sometimes narrow,
+ sometimes wide; when men also change their dress, and wear everywhere
+ the beards of the Capuchins,[3] then will God chastise the world. A
+ dreadful war shall break out in the south (Hungary?) and spread
+ eastward and northward. The kings shall be killed. Savage hordes shall
+ overflow Germany, and come to the Rhine. They shall take delight in
+ murdering and burning, so that mothers, in despair, seeing death
+ everywhere before their eyes, shall cast themselves and their
+ sucklings into the water. When the need is greatest, a preserver shall
+ come from the south. He shall defeat the hordes of the enemy, and make
+ Germany prosperous. But, in those days, many parts shall be so
+ depopulated, that it will be necessary to climb a tree to look for
+ people afar off.”
+
+
+An old prophecy concerning the battle of the _Birch-Tree_:—
+
+
+ “A time shall come when the world shall be godless. The people will
+ strive to be independent of king or magistrate, subjects will be
+ unfaithful to their princes. Neither truth nor faith prevails more. It
+ will then come to a general insurrection, in which father shall fight
+ against son, and son against father. In that time, men shall try to
+ pervert the articles of faith, and shall introduce new books. The
+ Catholic religion shall be hard pressed, and men will try with cunning
+ to abolish it. Men shall love play and jest, and pleasure of all
+ kinds, at that time. But then it shall not be long before a change
+ occurs. A frightful war shall break out. On one side shall stand
+ Russia, Sweden, and the whole north; on the other, France, Spain,
+ Italy, and the whole south, under a powerful prince. This prince shall
+ come from the south. He wears a white coat, with buttons all the way
+ down. He has a cross on his breast, rides a gray horse, which he
+ mounts from his left side, because he is lame of one foot. He will
+ bring peace. Great is his severity, for he will put down all
+ dance-music and rich attire. He will hear morning mass in the church
+ at Bremen. (According to some traditions, he will read mass.) From
+ Bremen he rides to the Haar, (a height near Werl;) from thence he
+ looks with his spyglass towards the country of the Birch-Tree, and
+ observes the enemy. Next, he rides past Holtum, (a village near Werl.)
+ At Holtum stands a crucifix between two lime-trees; before this, he
+ kneels and prays with outstretched arms, for some time. Then he leads
+ his soldiers, clad in white, into the battle, and, after a bloody
+ contest, he remains victorious.
+
+ “The chief slaughter will take place at a brook which runs from west
+ to east. Woe! woe! to Budberg and Söndern in those days! The
+ victorious leader shall assemble the people after the battle, and
+ address to them a speech in the church.”
+
+
+So runs the above prophecy, according to the concurring testimony of
+many peasants of that country. It was long ago printed in a small
+pamphlet, in the convent at Werl. But, at the removal of the convent,
+all its books were lost or destroyed. The tradition, however, remained
+among the peasantry, and has even penetrated into France; for when
+French (troops?) came to Werl, they inquired for the Birch-Tree. In
+Pomerania also, natives of Westphalia, when quartered there, have been
+questioned about its position. It stood long between Holtum and
+Kirch-Hemmerde, villages lying between Unna and Werl. When it withered,
+a new one was, by royal order, planted on the spot. This proves that the
+Government knew of the prophecy or tradition, and felt an interest in
+it. The people believe so firmly in the prophecy, that the peasantry
+near Werl even opposed the introduction of new hymn-books, under the
+impression that they were the predicted _new books_. Bremen, Holtum,
+Budberg, and Söndern are villages near Werl. A crucifix stands at Holtum
+between two young lime-trees; and a brook there flows from west to east.
+
+Another old prophecy of the battle of the Birch-Tree. This prophecy was
+printed at Cologne in 1701, in Latin. The title, translated, is as
+follows:—
+
+
+ “A prophecy concerning the frightful contest between South and North,
+ and a terrific battle on the borders of the duchy of Westphalia, near
+ Bodberg, (Budberg.) From a book, entitled, A treatise on the heavenly
+ regeneration (or restoration,) by an anonymous author, illuminated (or
+ enlightened,) by visions. With permission of the Officialate at Werl.
+ Cologne, 1701.”
+
+
+It was translated and printed in German by the monks of Werl, but, as
+already stated, their library was destroyed or dispersed.
+
+
+ “After these days shall dawn the sad unhappy time, predicted by our
+ Lord. Men, in terror on the earth, shall faint for expectation of the
+ coming events. The father shall be against the son and the brother
+ against the brother. Truth and faith shall no longer be found. After
+ the nations, singly, have long warred against each other, after
+ thrones have crumbled, and kingdoms been overthrown, shall the entire
+ South take arms against the North. (Auster contra Aquilonem.) Then
+ country, language, and faith shall not be contended for, but they
+ shall fight for the rule of the world.”
+
+ “They shall meet in the middle of Germany, destroy towns and villages,
+ after the inhabitants have been compelled to fly to the hills and the
+ woods. This dreadful contest shall be decided in Lower Germany. There
+ the armies shall pitch camps, such as the world has not yet seen. This
+ fearful engagement shall begin _at the Birch-Tree_ near Bodberg. Woe!
+ woe! poor Fatherland! They shall fight three whole days. Even when
+ covered with wounds, they shall mangle each other, and wade in blood
+ to the ankles. The bearded people of the seven stars (?) shall finally
+ conquer, and their enemies shall fly; they shall turn at the bank of
+ the river, and again fight with the extremity of despair. But there
+ shall that power be annihilated, and its strength broken, so that
+ hardly a few will be left, to tell of this unheard-of defeat. The
+ inhabitants of the allied places shall mourn, but the Lord shall
+ comfort them, and they shall say, It is the Lord’s doing.”
+
+
+The two preceding prophecies, both old, and printed long since, have
+probably a common origin, whatever that may be. The tradition has
+probably come to the people from the monks of Werl.
+
+Some predictions or visions, connected with the prophecy of Werl:—
+
+A seer, named Rölink, of Steinen, who has been dead some time,
+prophesied of three processions in Kirch-Hemmerde.
+
+
+ “The first shall be a funeral procession. The names of several men
+ shall be hung up on the church.”
+
+
+This happened when, in the war of 1813–15, some brave men of this
+district fell in battle.
+
+
+ “The second procession shall go from the old church to the new one.”
+
+
+This took place when the Catholics of Kirch-Hemmerde built a new church;
+and the Host was carried from the Simultankirche into the new edifice.
+
+
+ “The third shall be after a dreadful war. Then shall Catholics and
+ Protestants again go together in procession into the old church, and
+ have one religion.”
+
+
+He said further,—
+
+
+ “When two towers are built between Söndern and Werl, then shall a
+ frightful war soon break out.”
+
+
+The towers are now there, having been lately built. One is a chimney for
+the Salt-Works; the other a Bohrthurm, (a tower over the pit whence the
+salt spring is pumped up.)
+
+Another seer, named Ludolf, saw the whole order of battle of both
+armies, and pointed out in a corn-field near Kirch-Hemmerde the spot,
+near the _Birch-Tree_, where he saw in his vision a colonel fall from
+his horse, struck by a ball. The horse, he said, would run to a sheaf of
+oats, (therefore late in autumn,) snap at it, and in the same moment
+fall, also pierced by a shot.
+
+A third seer, Hermann Kappelmann, of Scheidingen, near Werl, prophesied
+as follows, thirty years ago (1819,) before a whole company.
+
+
+ “The times are yet good, but they shall change much. After many years
+ a frightful war shall break out. The signs shall be: When in Spring
+ the cowslips appear early in the hedges, and disturbances prevail
+ everywhere; in that year the explosion does not take place. But when,
+ after a short winter, the cowslips bloom very early, and all appears
+ quiet, let no man believe in peace.
+
+ “When great wisps of straw stand on the Bärenwiese, (Bear’s meadow,)
+ then shall the war break out.”
+
+
+The Bärenwiese is a large common meadow at Scheidingen. Soon after the
+French and Polish revolutions of 1830 it was divided, and on that
+account wisps of straw were set up. The people believed the great war
+was then at hand. Now there are once more wisps of straw set up, to mark
+the line of the railway to Cassel, which is in progress.
+
+
+ “When you then hear cannon from the side of Münster, then hasten to
+ cross the Ruhr, and take bread (a loaf) with you sufficient for three
+ days. He who only puts his foot in the water shall be safe from harm.
+ Then you may return, but whether you shall find your posts (or poles)
+ again, I cannot say. (Probably marks of agricultural subdivisions.)
+ After a short contest shall follow peace and quiet. The peace shall be
+ announced at Christmas from all the pulpits.”
+
+
+Numberless traditions speak of the burning of the town of Unna, round
+which, and not through it, the armies will march, on account of the
+conflagration. Others speak of the burning of Dortmund, on the east
+side. Others, again, describe how the remains of the enemy fly to
+Erwitte and Salzkotten, and are there totally cut to pieces. All the
+towns and villages from Paderborn to the Rhine have similar traditions.
+There is a very old one concerning the Marienheide, (a heath,)—namely,
+that there the Whites shall drive the Blues before them, and through the
+Lippe, in which many shall be drowned.
+
+Traditions concerning the years 1846–1850:—
+
+
+ “1846, I would not be a vine.”
+
+ “1847, I would not be an apple-tree.”
+
+ “1848, I would not be a king.”
+
+ “1849, I would not be a hare, a soldier, or a gravedigger.”
+
+ “1850, I would not be a priest.”
+
+
+In 1846, the crop of grapes was too heavy for the vines.
+
+In 1847, the apple-trees broke under the weight of their fruit.
+
+In 1848, as we know, kings were at a discount.
+
+In 1849, the hares suffered from the suspension or abolition of the game
+laws in Germany; the soldiers had much to suffer; and the gravediggers,
+in consequence of war and cholera, were overwhelmed with work in many
+places.
+
+As to the priests in 1850, we heard from several quarters, of an old
+prophecy that there shall be a fearful massacre of priests, against whom
+the people shall be much embittered. One seer declares, that such will
+be the hatred of the peasantry towards the priests, that a peasant,
+sitting down to dinner with his family, and having just stuck a fork
+into the fowl, shall, on seeing a priest pass by the house, lay down his
+fork, rush out, beat out the priest’s brains with his club, and then
+return to his meal with satisfaction.
+
+Another tradition, of which we heard from several well-informed persons,
+states that a pope shall come as a fugitive to reside at Cologne, with
+four cardinals, and there exercise his ecclesiastical functions.
+
+A prophecy, of date 1622, concerning certain months of a year not named.
+
+
+ “The month of May shall earnestly prepare for war. But it is not yet
+ time. June shall also invite to war, but still it is not time. July
+ will prove so cruel, that many must part from wife and child. In
+ August, men shall everywhere hear of war. September and October shall
+ bring great bloodshed. Wonders shall be seen in November. At this time
+ the child is twenty-eight years old, (the powerful monarch) whose wet
+ nurse shall be from the east. He shall do great things.”
+
+
+Prophecies of the “Powerful Monarch:”—
+
+
+ One prophet says,—“He shall be of an ancient noble house, and descend
+ from the top of the rocks. His mother shall be a twin. He will be
+ Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, (the German Empire.) Holzhaüser
+ says, ‘He shall be born in the bosom of the Catholic Church;’ his name
+ shall be, ‘The Help of God.’”
+
+
+See the preceding prophecies, _passim_.
+
+We have now given a sufficient sketch of some of the more curious and
+definite popular German prophecies. The curate of Dortmund adds a
+considerable number of others, more vague, mystical, and in some cases
+theological, which we omit, as not adapted to our present purpose; and
+others not bearing on Germany, of some interest—especially a long one
+concerning Italy, by the Franciscan monk, Bartolomeo da Saluzzi—which
+want of space prevents us from discussing at this time.
+
+Let us now consider the foregoing prophecies in general. We must admit,
+as it seems to us, that there exist in Germany unfulfilled popular
+prophecies, the authenticity of which is respectably attested and
+generally admitted.
+
+We further observe, that, taking the whole of them, as far as known to
+us, we can trace the following points pervading the entire series, more
+or less:—
+
+1. A great war after a peace, about this time.
+
+2. It is preceded by political convulsions, and lesser wars.
+
+3. The East and North fight against the South and West.
+
+4. The latter finally prevail, under a powerful prince, who unexpectedly
+rises up.
+
+5. The great struggle is short, and occurs late in the year.
+
+6. It is decided by the battle of the Birch-Tree, near Werl.
+
+7. After horrible devastations, and murders, and burnings, caused by
+this war, peace and prosperity return.
+
+8. Priests are massacred and become very rare; but
+
+9. One religion unites all men.
+
+10. All this takes place soon after the introduction of railways into
+Germany.
+
+11. The present King of Prussia is the last.
+
+12. The “powerful prince” from the South becomes Emperor of Germany.
+
+13. France is, about this time, inwardly divided.
+
+14. The Russians come as enemies to the Rhine, the French enter Germany
+as friends—without entering into further details.
+
+We see moreover, that, admitting the genuineness of the prophecies,
+partial fulfilment has in several cases taken place. Here it must be
+noted, that our curate has chiefly confined himself to the unfulfilled
+parts, and has avowedly omitted many fulfilled predictions. While we
+attach considerable importance to the general impression among the
+people of the truth of these prophecies, which in part depends on their
+partial fulfilment in past times, our chief object has been to put on
+record the more remarkable of the unfulfilled predictions, in order that
+they may be compared with future events.
+
+If we seek to form any idea of the origin of these prophecies, we find
+that there are three sources, from which the people may have derived the
+traditions.
+
+1. They may possibly be, in some cases at least, derived from the
+reflections of sagacious men. Even Napoleon predicted dreadful wars, and
+that Europe must become either Cossack or Republican. But although some
+things may thus be explained, we do not see how the minute details, in
+other cases, can be thus accounted for.
+
+2. Scriptural prophecies may have been applied to modern events, which,
+indeed, are no doubt foretold in them, in a general way. We cannot avoid
+observing the tolerably frequent occurrence of Scripture language in the
+predictions; but this also does not account for all the details.
+
+3. The seers or prophets may have had genuine visions, or dreams, in
+which they saw what they describe; it has been seen that various
+prophets use language implying this. And, while the general resemblance
+of the different visions naturally leads us to suspect that the popular
+traditions have a common origin; we can at most conclude from this, that
+the original seer or seers lived long ago, which only increases the
+difficulty. They were probably, like Brother Herrmann, monks and
+ascetics, their imaginations exalted by religious fervour: in other
+words they were nervous and excitable, and predisposed to visions.
+Supposing their visions known to the people, the feeling of the
+marvellous, if excited along with religious sentiments, may have led to
+visions or second sight among the peasantry, and thus visions may have
+been multiplied and expanded in details.
+
+If we reflect on the many known instances of prophetic dreams, and on
+the alleged and respectably attested cases of somnambulistic prevision,
+we shall see reason to hesitate before we deny the possibility of the
+occurrence, in certain individuals, of prophetic visions. We are far
+from imagining that, if such have been the case with our German seers,
+they have enjoyed direct communications from Heaven; on the contrary,
+were we satisfied of the fact, we should regard it as a phenomenon
+depending on some obscure physical cause, which may in time be
+discovered and traced; and which, at all events, exists by Divine
+permission.
+
+Here we may allude to the remarkable prophecy of Monsieur de Cazotte,
+who, some years previous to 1787, predicted to a large company of
+persons of rank, science, and literature, with much detail, the
+atrocities of the Reign of Terror. He likewise told many of those
+present, both male and female, that they should perish on the
+guillotine. To Condorcet he said, that he should die in prison, of the
+effects of a poison which he should long, with the view of escaping a
+public execution, have carried about his person—which happened. He also
+predicted the fate of Louis XVI. and his Queen. This prophecy caused
+much amazement, and soon became known. Persons are yet alive, both in
+France and England, who heard it detailed before 1789. We have seen one
+of them. Now, it might be said, that Cazotte merely exercised a rare
+sagacity, in judging of the course of events, at a time when all France
+was enthusiastically looking forward to the blessings of liberty, and
+while yet no one dreamed of violence or bloodshed. But this would hardly
+account for the details he gave. On the other hand, he often uttered
+predictions; and it is very remarkable, although it has been too much
+overlooked, that those who report his prophecies, including the above
+one, always state that, when about to predict, he fell into a peculiar
+state, _as if asleep_—yet not ordinary sleep. It can hardly be doubted
+that this was a trance, in which he saw visions. That they were
+fulfilled to the letter is surely, if only a coincidence, a most
+wonderful one. If, again, it was merely the result of sagacious
+reflection, how came it that Cazotte alone, of all the able thinkers
+then in Paris, made these reflections, and was laughed at for his pains?
+
+The laborious, minute, and conscientious researches of the Baron von
+Reichenbach have proved, beyond a doubt, that we are far from being
+acquainted with all the physical influences which surround us; and he
+has even referred to a physical cause—_one_ source of the belief in
+ghosts—by proving that luminous appearances are visible, to sensitive
+persons, over recent graves. No one can fail to see the resemblance
+between the Sensitives of Baron von Reichenbach, who are far from rare,
+and the Spoikenkiker, or ghost seers, of the curate of Dortmund.
+
+We consider it probable, therefore, that at different periods seers have
+had visions, more or less distinct and detailed, of what appeared to
+their minds likely to happen; that these visions have occurred in a
+state of trance; that among ascetic monks, who may be regarded as liable
+to such trances, it may often have happened that extensive knowledge of
+history and of mankind has enabled them to foresee the probable course
+of events; that their predictions, becoming known to the peasantry, have
+given a tone to _their_ visions, in which the events are generally
+localised in the immediate vicinity of the seer; and that thus, by
+degrees, more detailed predictions have arisen. Considering the general
+ignorance and superstition of the peasantry in all countries, it is not
+wonderful that such predictions, generally bearing on violent political
+convulsions, war, and religion, the subjects most interesting to their
+minds, should acquire a hold over them such as is found to exist in many
+parts of Germany, in reference to the prophecies above described. It is
+even probable that the existence of the predictions may have had a
+considerable influence in preparing the people for such sudden outbreaks
+as those of 1848, and may thus, in some measure, have contributed to
+their own fulfilment.
+
+We must admit that these remarks do not much assist in explaining the
+occurrence of minute details in these predictions, many of which are
+said, on good authority, to have been fulfilled. But we do not feel
+ourselves in possession of sufficient evidence to justify us in arguing
+on the alleged fulfilment as certain; and we have therefore satisfied
+ourselves with laying before the reader a brief sketch of these
+predictions, the existence of which, as an article of belief with many
+thousands of people at this day, is, under whatever point of view it may
+be considered, very interesting.
+
+ W. G.
+
+
+
+
+ THE HISTORY OF A REGIMENT DURING THE RUSSIAN CAMPAIGN.[4]
+
+
+The Russian Campaign of Napoleon is unquestionably the most wonderful
+episode in the history of war. We are not only interested, but
+astounded, by its study. It comprises a series of events gigantic and
+unparalleled in the annals of human strife. From the note of preparation
+to the final wail of despair, the reader’s imagination is continually on
+the stretch to realise and comprehend the prodigious scale of its
+circumstances. At the word of the great military magician,
+half-a-million of men, levied from half Europe, mustered in arms for
+aggression. From France they came, from Italy and Poland: Austria and
+Prussia dared not refuse their contingents; Illyria and Dalmatia sent
+forth their infantry; to their astonishment and dismay, Spanish and
+Portuguese battalions were marched into the dreary north under the
+banners of the man against whose generals their brothers and fathers
+were at that moment contending on the mountains of their native
+peninsula. The West was arrayed against the East. Since the birth of
+discipline and civilisation, such an army had never been seen. The
+events of its first and only campaign were in proportion to its
+unprecedented magnitude. In six months the mighty armament returned, a
+shattered wreck, having fought the most desperate battle the world ever
+saw, having witnessed the self-destruction of a vast and wealthy
+capital—suicide for the country’s salvation—and having endured
+sufferings which may have been equalled on a smaller scale, but which
+certainly never before or since fell to the lot of so numerous and
+powerful a host.
+
+After reading that delightful work of Count Ségur, which combines the
+fascination of a romance with the value of history, few persons much
+care to consult any other French account of the great campaign. It was
+with something of this feeling, and with slender expectation of
+interest, that we opened General de Fezensac’s recently-published
+Journal. But its perusal agreeably disappointed us. Narratives of
+personal adventure have a peculiar charm; and the unadorned tale of a
+soldier’s hazards will often rivet the attention of those who would not
+persevere through the more copious and important history of a great war.
+M. de Fezensac has not attempted the history of the campaign. He
+confines himself to his own adventures and those of the regiment he
+commanded. At most does he include in his delineations the exploits of
+the 3d (Ney’s) corps, (to which his regiment belonged,) at the time when
+cold, famine, fatigue, and the sword had reduced it to little more than
+the ordinary strength of a brigade, and, subsequently, to a mere handful
+of jaded, frost-bitten warriors. By a few lines here and there, he
+supplies, with true military brevity, that outline of the operations
+necessary to connect and complete the interest of his journal. He avoids
+controversy; he is slow to censure acts or impute motives; his style is
+remarkably free from that fanfarronade into which many French writers
+unconsciously run when recording the military achievements of their
+countrymen. He tells only what he himself saw, and he tells it modestly
+and well, without attempt at rhetorical adornment; rightly believing
+that the events he witnessed and shared in are sufficiently remarkable
+to need no factitious colouring.
+
+M. de Fezensac commenced the campaign upon the staff. In the capacity of
+aide-de-camp to Berthier, he joined the headquarters of the Grand Army
+at Posen, and marched with them to Wilna. It was in the month of June.
+Already, although the campaign had been opened but a few days, during
+which the Russians had everywhere receded before the invaders, certain
+ominous circumstances contradicted, to observant eyes and reflecting
+minds, those anticipations of triumphant success so confidently and
+universally entertained, a few short weeks before, at Dresden. The
+fervent heat was succeeded by torrents of rain; mortality amongst the
+horses commenced; the army, living upon the country, suffered from want
+of food and forage; already the number of stragglers was great, and acts
+of pillage and violence were frequent. As an instance of these, when the
+Poles, with Napoleon’s approval, organised a civil government of
+Lithuania, one of the sub-prefects, repairing to his post, was plundered
+by the French soldiers, and arrived almost naked in the town he was sent
+to preside over. The French Emperor’s seventeen days’ halt at Wilna, so
+severely censured by historians, gave M. de Fezensac opportunity to
+observe the details and composition of the monstrous staff and retinue
+that attended Napoleon, of which he furnishes the following curious
+account:—
+
+“The Emperor had around him the grand marshal, (Duroc,) the master
+of the horse, (Caulaincourt,) his aides-de-camp, his orderly
+officers, the aides-de-camp of his aides-de-camp, and several
+secretaries attached to his cabinet. The major-general (Berthier)
+had eight or ten aides-de-camp, and the number of clerks necessary
+for the great amount of work occasioned by such an army; the general
+staff, composed of a vast number of officers of all grades, was
+commanded by General Monthion. The administration, directed by Count
+Dumas, intendant-general, was subdivided into the administrative
+service properly so called, comprising directors, inspectors of
+reviews, and commissaries; the service of health, including
+physicians, surgeons, and apothecaries; the service of provisions in
+all its branches, and workmen of every kind. When the Prince of
+Neuchatel passed it in review at Wilna, it looked, from a distance,
+like a body of troops ranged in order of battle, and, by an
+unfortunate fatality, notwithstanding the zeal and talents of the
+intendant-general, this immense administration was almost useless
+from the very commencement of the campaign, and became noxious at
+its close. Let the reader now picture to himself the assemblage, at
+one point, of the whole of this staff; let him fancy the prodigious
+number of servants, of led horses, of baggage of all kinds that it
+dragged along with it, and he will have some idea of the spectacle
+presented by the headquarters of the army. Also, when a movement was
+made, the Emperor took with him but a very small number of officers;
+all the rest set out beforehand, or followed behind. At a bivouac,
+the only tents were for the Emperor and the Prince of Neuchatel; the
+generals and other officers slept in the open air, like the rest of
+the army.
+
+“There was nothing irksome in our duty as aides-de-camp to the
+major-general.... In his personal intercourse with us, the Prince of
+Neuchatel exhibited that mixture of goodness and roughness which
+composed his character. Often he appeared to pay no attention to us,
+but, upon occasion, we were sure to find his sympathy; and during the
+whole of his long military career, he neglected the advancement of none
+of the officers employed under his orders. The best house in the town,
+after that taken for the Emperor, was allotted for his accommodation;
+and as he himself always lodged with the Emperor, the house belonged to
+his aides-de-camp. One of these was charged with the household details,
+whose regularity was a pattern; the Prince of Neuchatel himself, in the
+midst of all his occupations, found time to give his thoughts to these
+matters; he wished his aides-de-camp to want for nothing, and had often
+the goodness to inquire whether such was the case.... We saw little of
+him, having no duty to do under his immediate eye; he passed almost the
+whole day in his cabinet, dispatching orders agreeably with the
+Emperor’s instructions. Never was there seen greater exactness, more
+complete submission, more absolute devotion. It was by writing during
+the night that he reposed from the fatigues of the day; often he was
+roused from his sleep to alter all that he had done on the previous day,
+and sometimes his sole recompense was an unjust, or, at least, a very
+severe reprimand. But nothing slackened his zeal; no amount of bodily
+fatigue, or of assiduity in the cabinet, exceeded his powers; no trials
+wearied his patience. In short, if the Prince of Neuchatel’s position
+never gave him an opportunity to develop the talents essential to the
+commander-in-chief of great armies, it is at least impossible to unite,
+in a higher degree, the physical and moral qualities adapted to the post
+he filled near such a man as the Emperor.”
+
+The peculiar talents of Berthier, his patience, industry, and wonderful
+habit of order, have been often admitted, but we do not remember to have
+seen his character placed in so amiable a light as here by his former
+aide-de-camp. M. de Fezensac continued upon his staff until after the
+battle of Borodino, when he was promoted by the Emperor, on Berthier’s
+recommendation, to the command of the 4th regiment of the line, vacant
+by its colonel’s death in that murderous fight. He was doubly grateful
+for this promotion, because it placed him under the orders of Marshal
+Ney, with whom he had served some years previously. As to the regiment
+itself, it was in no very flourishing state. Of 2800 men who had crossed
+the Rhine, 900 remained, so that the four battalions formed but two upon
+parade. The equipments, and especially the shoes, were in bad repair;
+supplies of provisions were irregular; and constant change of place was
+indispensable, for the troops ravaged within twenty-four hours the
+country they traversed. The majority of the officers were raw youths
+from the military schools, or old sergeants, whose want of education
+should have retained them in the ranks, but who had been promoted to
+sustain emulation, and to fill the enormous gaps occasioned by
+destructive campaigns. For the 4th was an old regiment, formed in the
+first years of the Revolution, and had fought through all the German
+wars, and numbered Joseph Buonaparte amongst its colonels. Its present
+shattered and unprosperous condition extended to the whole of Ney’s
+corps, which was reduced to a third of its original numbers. The losses
+were unparalleled, and so was the depression of the soldiers. Their
+gaiety had disappeared; a mournful silence replaced the songs and
+pleasant tales with which they formerly beguiled the fatigues of the
+march. The officers themselves were uneasy; they served for duty and for
+honour’s sake, but without ardour or pleasure. After a victory that
+opened the road to Moscow, this universal discouragement was strangely
+ominous.
+
+With his regimental command commences the interesting portion of M. de
+Fezensac’s journal, of which his staff experience occupies but a couple
+of chapters. Often as it has been described, he yet contrives to give
+freshness to his details of Moscow’s appearance after the terrible
+conflagration, at whose flame was sealed the doom of the Grand Army.
+
+“It was both a strange and a horrible spectacle. Some houses appeared to
+have been razed; of others, fragments of smoke-blackened walls remained;
+ruins of all kinds encumbered the streets; everywhere was a horrible
+smell of burning. Here and there a cottage, a church, a palace, stood
+erect amidst the general destruction. The churches especially, by their
+many-coloured domes, by the richness and variety of their construction,
+recalled the former opulence of Moscow. In them had taken refuge most of
+the inhabitants, driven by our soldiers from the houses the fire had
+spared. The unhappy wretches, clothed in rags, and wandering like ghosts
+amid the ruins, had recourse to the saddest expedients to prolong their
+miserable existence. They sought and devoured the scanty vegetables
+remaining in the gardens; they tore the flesh from the animals that lay
+dead in the streets; some even plunged into the river for corn the
+Russians had thrown there, and which was now in a state of
+fermentation.... It was with the greatest difficulty we procured black
+bread and beer; meat began to be very scarce. We had to send strong
+detachments to seize oxen in the woods where the peasants had taken
+refuge, and often the detachments returned empty-handed. Such was the
+pretended abundance procured us by the pillage of the city. We had
+liquors, sugar, sweatmeats, and we wanted for meat and bread. We covered
+ourselves with furs, but were almost without clothes and shoes. With
+great store of diamonds, jewels, and every possible object of luxury, we
+were on the eve of dying of hunger. A large number of Russian soldiers
+wandered in the streets of Moscow. I had fifty of them seized; and a
+general, to whom I reported the capture, told me I might have had them
+shot, and that on all future occasions he authorised me to do so. I did
+not abuse the authorisation. It will be easily understood how many
+mishaps, how much disorder, characterised our stay in Moscow. Not an
+officer, not a soldier, but could tell strange anecdotes on this head.
+One of the most striking is that of a Russian whom a French officer
+found concealed in the ruins of a house; by signs he assured him of
+protection, and the Russian accompanied him. Soon, being obliged to
+carry an order, and seeing another officer pass at the head of a
+detachment, he transferred the individual to his charge, saying
+hastily—‘I recommend this gentleman to you.’ The second officer,
+misunderstanding the intention of the words and the tone in which they
+were pronounced, took the unfortunate Russian for an incendiary, and had
+him shot.”
+
+The retreat commenced. After the affair of Wiazma, Ney’s corps relieved
+the 1st corps as rearguard, and the 4th regiment, rearmost of Ney’s
+corps, had to repel the repeated attacks of the Russian van and of the
+swarming Cossacks. They were hard pressed; but still the Emperor’s order
+was to march slowly and preserve the baggage. In vain Ney wrote to him
+there was no time to lose, and that he risked being anticipated by the
+Russians at Smolensko or Orcha. At Dorogobuje the marshal formed the
+design of arresting the progress of the Russians for a whole day; but
+the attempt was unsuccessful, and the French rearguard was driven
+onwards. The cold had set in, and the sufferings of the troops were
+terrible. Famine was superadded to their other miseries. The road
+resembled a battle-field. Some, with frozen limbs, lay dying on the
+snow; others fell asleep in the villages, and perished in the flames
+lighted by their comrades.
+
+“At Dorogobuje I saw a soldier of my regiment, in whom hunger had
+produced the effect of intoxication. He stood close to us without
+recognising us, inquiring for his regiment, naming the soldiers of his
+company, and at the same time speaking to them as to strangers; his gait
+was tottering, his look wild. He disappeared at the commencement of the
+affair, and I saw him no more. In two days from Dorogobuje, we reached
+Slobpnowa, on the bank of the Dnieper. The road was so slippery that the
+ill-shod horses could hardly keep their legs. At night we bivouacked
+amidst the snow in the woods. Each regiment in turn formed the extreme
+rearguard, which the enemy unceasingly followed and harassed. The army
+continued to march so slowly, that we were on the point of overtaking
+the 1st corps, which immediately preceded us. The encumbrance on the
+bridge over the Dnieper was extreme: for a quarter of a league beyond,
+the road was still covered with abandoned carriages and
+ammunition-waggons. On the morning of the 10th November, before crossing
+the river, measures were taken to clear the bridge and burn all these
+vehicles. In them were found a few bottles of rum, which were of great
+service. I was on the rearguard, and during the whole morning my
+regiment defended the road leading to the bridge. The wood through which
+this road passes was full of wounded whom we were obliged to leave to
+their fate, and whom the Cossacks massacred almost by our sides. M.
+Rouchat, sub-lieutenant, having imprudently approached an
+ammunition-cart that was to be blown up, was shattered to pieces by the
+explosion. Towards night the troops passed the Dnieper; the bridge was
+destroyed.”
+
+It was important to delay the enemy’s passage of the river, and Ney
+prepared to do so.
+
+“That night he walked for a long time in front of my regiment with
+General Joubert and myself. He pointed out to us the unfortunate results
+of the failure at Dorogobuje. The enemy had gained a day’s march; had
+forced us to abandon ammunition, baggage, wounded: all these misfortunes
+would have been avoided had we held Dorogobuje for twenty-four hours.
+General Joubert spoke of the weakness of the troops, of their
+discouragement. The marshal replied quickly, that the worst that could
+have happened was to be killed, and that a glorious death was too fine a
+thing to be shunned. For my part, I contented myself with remarking that
+I had not left the heights of Dorogobuje till I had twice received the
+order.”
+
+The “bravest of the brave” could see no terrors in death. His own
+insensibility to it made him slow to sympathise with others. A few days
+later, M. de Fezensac learned the death of M. Alfred de Noailles, who
+had been one of his brother aides-de-camp to Berthier.
+
+“He was the first friend I had lost in this campaign, and it caused me
+very deep sorrow. Marshal Ney, to whom I spoke on the subject, told me,
+for sole consolation, _that apparently it was his turn; and that at any
+rate it was better we should have to regret him than if he had to regret
+us_. In similar circumstances he always showed the same insensibility:
+on another occasion I heard him reply to an unfortunate wounded man, who
+begged to be carried away—‘_What would you have me do? You are a victim
+of war_;’ and he passed on. Most assuredly he was neither cruel nor
+devoid of feeling; but the frequency of the misfortunes of war had
+hardened his heart. Penetrated with the idea that the fate of all
+soldiers is to die upon the field of battle, he thought it quite natural
+they should fulfil their destiny; and it has been seen in this narrative
+that he prized not his own life more highly than the lives of others.”
+
+The passage of the river was defended for twenty-four hours. Two days
+later, those of the weary rearguard who were not prevented by frozen
+limbs or the cold hand of death from rising from their ice-bound
+bivouac, joyfully beheld, at half a league’s distance, the towers of
+Smolensko. Joyfully, because they had long looked for that town as the
+term of their misery. Repose and food, so greatly needed, were there
+anticipated. But there, as on every occasion during the retreat where
+alleviation was hoped for, disappointment ensued. Wittgenstein was
+pressing southwards from the Dwina, Tchitchagoff northwards to Minsk,
+the Austrians had retreated behind the Bug, and the French were in
+imminent danger of being intercepted at the Beresina. A halt at
+Smolensko was impossible, and orders were given to continue the march.
+Smolensko contained large stores of provisions; but these availed little
+to the famished troops, for the general disorganisation had extended to
+the commissariat, and waste was the result. The Guard, which arrived
+first with Napoleon, received abundant supplies of all kinds; but then
+came pouring in stragglers and undisciplined bodies; the warehouses were
+broken open and plundered, and rations for several months were
+squandered in a day. When the 3d corps, after defending the approaches
+to the town, entered in its turn, the work of destruction was at an end,
+and Colonel de Fezensac could find nothing either for his regiment or
+himself. But though they had nothing to eat, they were expected to
+fight; for Ney, the indefatigable, prepared obstinately to defend the
+town. On the 15th November, a severe combat occurred in the suburb, in
+which the 4th regiment was alone engaged, and during which its colonel
+received from Ney the order that daring leader was most rarely known to
+give—namely, not to advance too far. M. de Fezensac records this order
+with as much honest pride as he does the warm eulogium which his
+regiment’s conduct elicited from the marshal. For three days Smolensko
+was held, and then the 3d corps resumed its march. Meanwhile the
+Emperor, Eugene, and Davoust, with the Guard, the 4th and 1st corps,
+were hard pressed at Krasnoi, the two latter, especially, suffering most
+severely.
+
+“The Emperor, having not a moment to lose to reach the Beresina, saw
+himself compelled to abandon the 3d corps, and precipitated his march to
+Orcha. During the three days’ fighting (at and near Krasnoi,) no
+information was sent to Marshal Ney of the danger about to menace
+him.... On the morning of the 18th November, we set out from Koritnya,
+and marched upon Krasnoi: on approaching that town, a few squadrons of
+Cossacks harassed the 2d division, which headed the column. We attached
+no importance to this; we were accustomed to the Cossacks, and a few
+musket-shots sufficed to drive them away. But soon the advanced guard
+fell in with General Ricard’s division, belonging to the 1st corps,
+which had remained behind, and had just been routed. The marshal rallied
+the remains of this division, and under cover of a fog, which favoured
+our march by concealing the smallness of our numbers, he approached the
+enemy until their cannon compelled him to pause. The Russian army, drawn
+up in order of battle, barred our further passage; then only did we
+learn that we were cut off from the rest of the army, and that our sole
+chance of salvation was in our despair.”
+
+We know not whence M. de Fezensac derives his statements of numbers, but
+they frequently require correction. At Borodino, for instance, he gives,
+as an exact detail of the French loss, 6547 killed, and 21,453
+wounded—making a total of about 28,000. Alison and other historians rate
+it nearly twenty thousand higher; and certainly nothing in the events of
+the battle argues it as much less than that of the Russians, which M. de
+Fezensac estimates at about 50,000—figures confirmed by other
+authorities. In like manner, he states the entire strength of the 3d
+corps, when it first entered the fire of the Russian batteries at
+Krasnoi, as barely 6000 combatants, with six guns, and a mere picket of
+cavalry. This is extraordinarily discrepant with other accounts, which
+make Ney’s loss, in the immediately ensuing engagement, to be nearly as
+great as the whole number of bayonets allotted to him by M. de Fezensac.
+Doubtless it was most difficult to ascertain numbers correctly during
+that confused retreat, where there can have been little question of
+muster-rolls and morning-states, and many seeming contradictions may be
+explained, by some writers estimating only the effective fighting men,
+and others including the unarmed and stragglers who dragged themselves
+along with the columns. But we attach no importance to differences of
+this kind as regards the _Journal_, which we here notice, not as a work
+of historical value—a character to which it makes no pretensions—but as
+the interesting memoir of a brave gentleman and soldier, who has written
+down, modestly and unaffectedly, his own and his regiment’s share in a
+most extraordinary campaign.
+
+“Hardly had Marshal Ney withdrawn his advanced guard from under the
+enemy’s guns, when a flag of truce, sent by General Miloradowitsch,
+summoned him to lay down his arms. All who ever knew him will understand
+with what disdain the proposal was received.... For sole reply, the
+marshal made the messenger prisoner; a few cannon-shot, fired during
+this species of negotiation, serving as a pretext; and then, without
+considering the masses of the enemy and the small number of his own
+followers, he ordered the attack. The 2d division, formed in columns by
+regiments, marched straight to the enemy. Let me here be allowed to pay
+homage to the devotedness of those brave soldiers, and to congratulate
+myself on the honour of having marched at their head. The Russians
+beheld them, with admiration, marching towards them in the most perfect
+order, and with a steady step. Every cannon-ball carried away whole
+files—every step rendered death more inevitable; but the pace was not
+for an instant slackened. At last we got so near to the enemy’s line,
+that the first division of my regiment, crushed by the grape-shot, was
+thrown back upon that which followed, and disordered its array. Then the
+Russian infantry charged us in its turn, and the cavalry, falling on our
+flanks, completely routed us. Some sharpshooters, advantageously posted,
+checked for an instant the enemy’s pursuit; the division of Ledru
+deployed into line, and six guns replied to the numerous artillery of
+the Russians. During this time, I rallied the remains of my regiment
+upon the high road, where the cannon still reached us. Our attack had
+not lasted a quarter of an hour, but the 2d division no longer existed:
+my regiment lost several officers, and was reduced to two hundred men;
+the regiment of Illyria, and the 18th, which lost its eagle, were still
+worse treated; General Razout was wounded, and General Lenchantain made
+prisoner. The marshal now made the 2d division retire on Smolensko; at
+the end of half a league, he turned it to the left, across country, at
+right angles with the road. The first division, having long exhausted
+its strength by sustaining the shock of the whole hostile army, followed
+this movement with the guns and some of the baggage; those of the
+wounded who could still walk dragged themselves after us. The Russians
+cantoned themselves in the villages, sending a column of cavalry to
+observe us.
+
+“The day declined: the 3d corps marched in silence; none knew what was
+to become of us. But Marshal Ney’s presence sufficed to reassure us.
+Without knowing what he would or could do, we knew he would do
+something. His self-confidence equalled his courage. The greater the
+danger, the more prompt was his determination; and when once he had made
+up his mind, he never doubted of success. Thus, in that terrible hour,
+his countenance expressed neither indecision nor uneasiness; all eyes
+were fixed upon him, but none dared question him. At last, seeing near
+him an officer of his staff, he said to him in a low voice: _We are not
+well._—_What shall you do?_ replied the officer.—_Pass the
+Dnieper._—_Where is the road?_—_We shall find it._—_And if the river is
+not frozen?_—_It will be._—_So be it_, said the officer. This singular
+dialogue, which I here set down word for word, revealed the marshal’s
+project of reaching Orcha by the right bank of the river, and so rapidly
+as still to find there the army, which was making its movement by the
+left bank. The plan was bold and ably conceived; it will be seen with
+what vigour it was executed.
+
+“We marched across the fields, without a guide, and the inexactness of
+the maps contributed to mislead us. Marshal Ney, endowed with that
+peculiar talent of the great soldier which teaches how to take advantage
+of the slightest indications, observed some ice in the direction we were
+following, and had it broken, thinking it must be a rivulet that would
+lead us to the Dnieper. It really was a rivulet; we followed it, and
+reached a village, where the Marshal feigned to establish himself for
+the night. Fires were lighted and pickets thrown out. The enemy left us
+quiet, expecting to have us cheap the next day. Under cover of this
+stratagem, the Marshal followed up his plan. A guide was wanted, and the
+village was deserted; at last the soldiers discovered a lame peasant;
+they asked him where was the Dnieper, and if frozen. He replied, that at
+a league off was the village of Sirokowietz, and that the Dnieper must
+there be frozen. We set out, conducted by this peasant, and soon reached
+the village. The Dnieper was sufficiently frozen to be traversed on
+foot. Whilst they sought a place to cross, the houses rapidly filled
+with officers and soldiers, wounded that morning, who had dragged
+themselves thus far, and to whose hurts the surgeons could hardly apply
+the first dressings; those who were not wounded busied themselves in
+seeking provisions. Marshal Ney, forgetful alike of the day’s and the
+morrow’s dangers, was buried in a profound sleep.
+
+“Towards the middle of the night we crossed the Dnieper, abandoning to
+the enemy artillery, baggage, vehicles of every kind, and those wounded
+who could not walk. M. de Briqueville, (aide-de-camp of the Duke of
+Placentia,) dangerously wounded the day before, passed the river on his
+hands and knees; I gave him in charge to two sappers, who succeeded in
+saving him. The ice was so thin that very few horses could pass; the
+troops re-formed on the other side of the stream. Thus far success had
+attended the marshal’s plan; the Dnieper was crossed, but we were still
+fifteen leagues from Orcha. It was essential to reach it before the
+French army left; we had to traverse a strange country, and to repel the
+attacks of the enemy with a handful of exhausted infantry, unsupported
+by cavalry or artillery. The march began under favourable auspices, with
+the capture of some Cossacks, surprised asleep in a village. At dawn on
+the 19th we were following the road to Liubavitschi. We were scarcely
+delayed for a moment by the passage of a torrent, and by some Cossack
+detachments which retired on our approach. At noon we reached two
+villages situated on a height, and whose inhabitants had scarcely time
+to escape, leaving us their provisions. The soldiers were giving
+themselves up to the joy occasioned by a moment of abundance, when there
+was a sudden call to arms. The enemy was advancing, and had already
+driven in our pickets. We left the villages, formed column, and resumed
+our march. But we had no longer to deal, as heretofore, with detached
+parties of Cossacks; here were whole squadrons, manœuvring in regular
+order, and commanded by General Platow himself. Our skirmishers made
+head against them; the columns accelerated their march, making their
+arrangements to receive cavalry. Numerous as these horsemen were, we
+feared them little, for the Cossacks never ventured to charge home a
+square of infantry; but soon a battery of several guns opened fire upon
+us. This artillery followed the movements of the cavalry, upon sledges,
+wherever it could be of use. Until nightfall, Marshal Ney never ceased
+to struggle against all these obstacles, skilfully availing himself of
+the least advantages the nature of the ground afforded. Amidst the balls
+which fell in our ranks, and in spite of the Cossacks’ yells and feigned
+attacks, we marched at the same pace. Darkness approached; the enemy
+redoubled his efforts. We had to quit the road, and to throw ourselves
+to the left into the woods fringing the Dnieper. But the Cossacks
+already held these woods; the 4th and 18th regiments, under command of
+General d’Henin, were directed to drive them thence. Meanwhile the
+hostile artillery took position on the further brink of a ravine we had
+to pass. There General Platow reckoned on exterminating us.
+
+“I entered the wood with my regiment. The Cossacks retired; but the wood
+was deep, and tolerably dense, and we had to face every way to guard
+against surprise. Night came, we no longer heard anything around us; it
+was more than probable that Marshal Ney was continuing his advance. I
+advised General d’Henin to follow his movement; he refused, lest he
+should incur reproach from the marshal for quitting, without orders, the
+post assigned to him. At this moment loud shouts, announcing a charge,
+were heard at some distance in our front; giving us the certainty that
+the column was continuing its march, and that we were about to be cut
+off from it. I redoubled my entreaties, assuring General d’Henin that
+the marshal, with whose way of serving I was well acquainted, would send
+him no order, because he expected commanding officers, thus detached, to
+act according to circumstances; besides which, he was too far off to be
+able to communicate with us, and the 18th regiment had assuredly moved
+on long ago. The general persisted in his refusal; all I obtained from
+him was to move us on to the place where the 18th ought to be, and unite
+the two regiments. The 18th had marched, and in its place we found a
+squadron of Cossacks. Tardily convinced of the justice of my remarks,
+General d’Henin determined to rejoin the column; but we had traversed
+the wood in so many directions, that we no longer knew our way. The
+officers of my regiment were consulted, and we took the direction the
+majority thought the right one. I will not undertake to describe all we
+had to endure during that cruel night. I had but one hundred men left,
+and we were more than a league in rear of our main body, which we must
+overtake through a host of enemies. It was necessary to march quick
+enough to make up for lost time, and in sufficient order to resist the
+attacks of the Cossacks. The darkness, the uncertainty of our road, the
+difficulty of making way through the wood, all augmented our
+embarrassment. The Cossacks called to us to surrender, and fired
+pointblank into the midst of us: those who were hit remained behind. A
+sergeant had his leg broken by a carbine ball. He fell at my side,
+saying coolly to his comrades—_Another man done for; take my havresack,
+you will profit by it._ They took his havresack, and we moved on in
+silence. Two wounded officers had the same fate. I observed with
+uneasiness the impression our position made upon the soldiers, and even
+upon the officers, of my regiment. Men who had shown themselves heroes
+in the battle-field, now appeared anxious and troubled; so true is it
+that the circumstances of danger have often greater terrors than the
+danger itself. Very few preserved the presence of mind that was then
+more necessary than ever. I needed all my authority to maintain order
+and prevent straggling. An officer even ventured to say, that we should
+perhaps be obliged to surrender. I reprimanded him aloud, and the more
+severely that he was an officer of merit, which made the lesson more
+striking. At last, after more than an hour, we emerged from the wood and
+found the Dnieper on our left. We were in the right track, therefore;
+and this discovery gave the men a moment’s joy, of which I took
+advantage to cheer them up, and inculcate coolness, which alone could
+save us. General d’Henin moved us along the river’s bank to prevent the
+enemy from turning us. We were far from out of our difficulties; we knew
+our way, but the plain over which we marched permitted the enemy to fall
+on us in a large body, and to use their artillery. Fortunately it was
+dark, and the guns were fired rather at random. From time to time the
+Cossacks approached with loud cries; we stopped to drive them away with
+musketry, and then set off again. This march lasted two hours over the
+most difficult ground, across ravines so abrupt, that it required the
+utmost efforts to ascend the opposite side, and through half-frozen
+rivulets, where we had water to our knees. Nothing could shake the
+constancy of the soldiers; the utmost order was preserved; not a man
+left his rank. General d’Henin, wounded by a fragment of shell,
+concealed his hurt in order not to discourage the soldiers, and
+continued to command with unabated zeal. Doubtless he may be reproached
+with too obstinate a defence of the wood, but in such difficult
+circumstances error is pardonable; and what cannot be disputed, is the
+bravery and intelligence with which he led us during the whole of this
+perilous march. At last the enemy’s pursuit slackened, and on an
+eminence in our front fires were seen. It was Marshal Ney’s rearguard,
+which had halted there, and was now resuming its march: we joined it,
+and learned that upon the previous evening the marshal had advanced
+against the Cossack artillery, and forced it to yield him passage.
+
+“Thus did the 4th regiment extricate itself from a position seemingly
+desperate. The march lasted another hour. The exhausted soldiers
+required repose, and we halted in a village where we found some
+provisions. But we were still eight leagues from Orcha, and General
+Platow would doubtless redouble his efforts for our destruction. The
+moments were precious; at one in the morning the assembly sounded, and
+we set out.... We marched unmolested till the dawn. With the first
+sunrays came the Cossacks, and soon our road led us over a plain.
+General Platow, desirous of profiting by this advantage, advanced that
+sledge-artillery which we could neither avoid nor overtake; and when he
+thought he had disordered our ranks, he commanded a charge. Marshal Ney
+rapidly formed each of his two divisions into a square; the 2d, under
+General d’Henin, being the rearmost, was first exposed. We forced all
+stragglers who still had a musket to join our ranks; severe threats were
+required to do this. The Cossacks, but feebly restrained by our
+skirmishers, and driving before them a crowd of unarmed fugitives,
+strove to reach the square. On their approach, and under fire of the
+artillery, our soldiers hastened their march. Twenty times I beheld them
+on the point of disbanding and flying in all directions, leaving us at
+the mercy of the Cossacks; but the presence of Marshal Ney, the
+confidence he inspired, his calmness in the moment of such great danger,
+kept them to their duty. We reached an eminence. The marshal ordered
+General d’Henin to hold it; adding, that we must know how to die there
+for the honour of France. Meanwhile, General Ledru marched to Jokubow, a
+village on the edge of a wood. When he had established himself there, we
+marched to join him: the two divisions took up a position, mutually
+flanking each other. It was not yet noon, and Marshal Ney declared he
+would defend this village till nine at night. General Platow made twenty
+attempts to take it from us; his attacks were constantly repulsed, and
+at last, fatigued by such a tenacious resistance, he himself took
+position opposite to us.
+
+“Early in the morning the marshal had sent off a Polish officer, who
+reached Orcha and described our condition. The Emperor had left the town
+the day before: the Viceroy and Marshal Davoust still occupied it. At
+nine that night we resumed our march in profound silence. The Cossack
+pickets, distributed along the road, retired at our approach. The march
+continued with much order. At a league from Orcha, our vanguard fell in
+with an advanced post, which challenged in French. It was a division of
+the 4th corps coming to our assistance with the Viceroy. One must have
+passed three days between life and death to judge of the joy this
+meeting gave us. The Viceroy received us with lively emotion, and warmly
+expressed to Marshal Ney his admiration of his conduct. He congratulated
+the generals and the two remaining colonels. His aides-de-camp
+surrounded us, and overwhelmed us with questions on the details of this
+great drama, and the part that each of us had played in it. But time
+pressed; after a few minutes we again moved on. The Viceroy formed our
+rearguard: at three in the morning we entered Orcha. Thus terminated
+this bold march, one of the most curious episodes of the campaign. It
+covered Marshal Ney with glory, and to him the 3d corps owed its
+salvation; if, indeed, the term of _corps d’ armée_ may be applied to
+the 800 or 900 men who reached Orcha, remnant of the 6000 who had fought
+at Krasnoi.”
+
+For eighteen days, over a distance of sixty leagues, the 3d corps had
+formed the rearguard. Diminished as its numbers now were, it was no
+longer available for that dangerous duty, and it joined the main body.
+Scarcely had it taken three hours’ repose in some wretched houses of the
+faubourg of Orcha, when the Russians, from the other side of the
+Dnieper, set fire to the town with shells, which were more particularly
+aimed at some conspicuous buildings, serving as provision-stores. It was
+impossible to serve out rations; at the risk of their lives, a few
+soldiers brought off some brandy and flour; but Davoust, now in command
+of the rearguard, hurried the troops’ departure, and by eight o’clock
+the unfortunate 3d corps was on the march to Borisow. A broad, good road
+facilitated their progress, and Colonel de Fezensac, no longer occupied
+in repelling the enemy, was able to investigate the state of his
+regiment. Eighty men remained, out of the 2800 that began the campaign;
+eighty tattered, famine-stricken, desponding wretches. They lived from
+hand to mouth, almost by a miracle; sometimes on flour steeped in water;
+at others, with a morsel of honeycomb or fragment of horseflesh; their
+sole drink the melted snow. “At some distance from Orcha, I fell in with
+M. Lanusse, a captain of my regiment, who had lost his sight by a shot,
+at the taking of Smolensko; a sutler belonging to his company was
+leading and taking the greatest care of him. He told me that after
+having been taken and plundered by the Cossacks at Krasnoi, he had
+contrived to escape, and that he and his guide would do their utmost to
+keep up with us. Soon afterwards they were found dead and stripped upon
+the road.”
+
+Bad as the state of things already was, it became worse after the
+passage of the Beresina; for the cold, abated for a while, resumed all
+its severity, and heavy snow almost stifled the scanty fires kindled by
+the unhappy fugitives. “I myself was at the end of my resources. I had
+but a horse left; my last portmanteau had been lost at the Beresina; I
+had nothing but what I stood in, and we were still fifty leagues from
+Wilna, eighty from the Niemen; but, amidst so many misfortunes, I took
+little account of my personal sufferings and privations. Like us,
+Marshal Ney had lost everything; his aides-de-camp were dying of hunger,
+and I gratefully remember that more than once they shared with me the
+scanty food they managed to procure.” On the 29th November, during a
+brief halt of the 3d corps, a confused stream of stragglers poured by,
+all of whom had to tell of a miraculous escape at the Beresina. “I
+remarked an Italian officer, who scarcely breathed, borne by two
+soldiers, and accompanied by his wife. Greatly touched by this woman’s
+grief, and by the care she lavished on her husband, I yielded her my
+place at a fire the men had lighted. It needed all the illusion of her
+affection to blind her to the inutility of her care. Her husband had
+ceased to live, and still she called and spoke to him; until at last, no
+longer able to doubt her misfortune, she fell fainting upon his corpse.”
+
+“There would be no end to the task,” continues M. de Fezensac, “if one
+attempted to relate all the horrible, affecting, and often incredible
+anecdotes that signalised that terrible time. A general, exhausted with
+fatigue, had fallen upon the road. A passing soldier began to pull off
+his boots; the general, raising himself with difficulty, begged him to
+wait till he was dead before stripping him. ‘General,’ replied the
+soldier, ‘I would willingly do so; but another would take them; I may as
+well have the benefit.’ And he continued to take off the boots.
+
+“One soldier was being plundered by another; he entreated to be allowed
+to die in peace. ‘Pardon me, comrade,’ was the reply, ‘I thought you
+were dead;’ and he passed on. For the consolation of humanity, a few
+traits of sublime devotion contrasted with the innumerable ones of
+egotism and insensibility. That of a drummer of the 7th regiment of
+light infantry has been particularly cited. His wife, sutler to the
+regiment, fell ill at the beginning of the retreat. The drummer brought
+her to Smolensko in her cart. At Smolensko the horse died; then the
+husband harnessed himself to the cart, and dragged his wife to Wilna. At
+that town she was too ill to go any farther, and her husband remained
+prisoner with her.
+
+“A sutler of the 33d regiment had been brought to bed in Prussia, before
+the beginning of the campaign. She followed her regiment to Moscow, with
+her little daughter, who was six months old when the army left that
+city. During the retreat this child lived by a miracle: her sole
+nourishment was black pudding made of horses’ blood: she was wrapped in
+a fur taken at Moscow, and often her head was bare. Twice she was lost;
+and they found her again, first in a field, then in a burnt village,
+lying on a mattress. Her mother crossed the Beresina on horseback, with
+water to her neck, holding the bridle in one hand, and with the other
+her child upon her head. Thus, by a succession of marvellous
+circumstances, this little girl got through the retreat without
+accident, and did not even take cold.”
+
+For many many leagues before reaching the Niemen, the harassed remnant
+of the great French army had looked forward to that river as the term of
+pursuit. The idea that the Russians would not pass the Niemen had taken
+a strong hold of the imaginations of both officers and soldiers. At
+Kowno, a stand was made by the rearguard; no very steadfast one,
+certainly; but then, as ever, Ney proved equal to the emergency. An
+earthen work, hastily thrown up, seemed to him sufficient to check the
+foe for a whole day. Here were posted two pieces of cannon, and some
+Bavarian infantry; and the marshal sought a moment’s repose in his
+quarters. But the very first discharge of the Russian artillery
+dismounted a French gun; the infantry took to flight—the gunners were
+about to follow. Another minute, and the Cossacks might enter the
+streets unopposed. Just then Ney appeared upon the ramparts, musket in
+hand. His absence had been nearly fatal; his presence restored the
+fight. The troops rallied, and the position was held till night, when
+the retreat recommenced. The bridge was crossed, and each man, as he set
+foot south of the Niemen, deemed himself safe. Great then was the
+consternation of all, when, at the foot of a lofty hill, over which
+winds the road to Königsberg, an alarm was given, and, at the same
+moment, a cannon-ball plunged into their ranks. The Cossacks had crossed
+the river on the ice, and had established themselves on the summit of
+the mountain. This fresh danger, so totally unexpected, completed the
+demoralisation of the troops. Brave spirits, which, till then, had
+steadfastly held out, lost their firmness in face of this new calamity.
+There is something very affecting in the following passage:—
+
+“Generals Marchand and Ledru succeeded in forming a sort of battalion by
+uniting the stragglers to the 3d corps, (again on rearguard.) But it was
+in vain to attempt to force a passage; the muskets were unserviceable,
+and the soldiers dared not advance. There was nothing for it but to
+remain under fire of the artillery, without daring to take a step
+backwards, for that would have exposed us to a charge, and our
+destruction was then certain. This position drove to despair two
+officers, who had been a pattern to my regiment during the whole
+retreat, but whose courage at last gave way under long physical
+exhaustion. They came to me and said, that as they were no longer able
+either to march or to fight, they should fall into the hands of the
+Cossacks, who would massacre them, and that, to avoid this, they must
+return to Kowno and yield themselves prisoners. I made useless efforts
+to dissuade them, appealing to their feelings of honour, to the courage
+of which they had given so many proofs, to their attachment to the
+regiment they now proposed abandoning; and I conjured them, if death was
+inevitable, at least to die in our company. For sole reply they embraced
+me with tears, and returned into Kowno. Two other officers had the same
+fate; one was intoxicated with rum, and could not follow us; the other,
+whom I particularly loved, disappeared soon afterwards. My heart was
+torn: I waited for death to come and reunite me to my unhappy comrades,
+and I should perhaps have wished for it but for all the ties which, at
+that time, still bound me to life.”
+
+Once more Ney came to the rescue. No accumulation of difficulties could
+cloud his brow with uneasiness. Once more his promptness and energy
+saved his shattered corps. A flank march was the means resorted to. On
+the 20th December, the 3d corps reached Königsberg. It then consisted of
+about one hundred men on foot, about as many cripples on sledges, and a
+handful of officers.
+
+“Monsieur le duc,” wrote Marshal Ney to the Duke of Feltre, Minister of
+War, from Berlin, on the 23d January 1813, “I avail myself of the moment
+when the campaign is, if not terminated, at least suspended, to express
+to you all the satisfaction I have received from M. de Fezensac’s manner
+of serving. That young man has been placed in very critical
+circumstances, and has always shown himself superior to them. I commend
+him to you as a true French chevalier, (_veritable chevalier Français_,)
+whom you may henceforth consider as a veteran colonel.”
+
+M. de Fezensac almost apologises for subjoining to his journal this
+extract from a letter now in his possession. He has no need to do so. He
+may well and honestly exult in such a testimonial from such a man.
+
+
+
+
+ THE PENITENT FREE-TRADER.
+
+
+ Tufnell! For the love of mercy,
+ Let me go for half an hour—
+ I’ll be back before that proser
+ Hath discussed the price of flour.
+ Don’t you hear, he’s just beginning
+ To investigate the rate
+ Of the Mecklenburg quotations,
+ Metage, lighterage, and freight?
+ Next, I know, he’ll pass to Dantzic,
+ With a glimpse at Rostock wheat—
+ I have seen the whole already
+ In his Economic sheet.
+ See! upon the backward benches
+ There reposes stealthy Peel—
+ Dreaming, doubtless, that he’s smothered
+ In an atmosphere of meal.
+ Palmerston’s recumbent yonder—
+ Hawes is sleeping by the door;
+ Even Russell’s tiny nostril
+ Quivers with a nascent snore.
+ Let me go—nay, do not hold me
+ So intensely by the coat;
+ I assure you, on my honour,
+ I’ll be back in time to vote.
+
+ Oh, the night-winds wander sweetly
+ O’er my hot and throbbing brow!
+ What a contrast is the moonlight
+ To the scene I left just now!
+ Let me walk a little onward
+ Underneath the budding trees,
+ Where the faint perfume is wafted
+ On the pinions of the breeze:
+ Overhead a thousand starlets
+ Glisten in the robe of night,
+ And the earth is wrapped in slumber
+ With a pure and calm delight.
+ By your leave, good Master Tufnell,
+ I shall stay a little here;
+ You have plenty noodles yonder
+ Who are safe enough to cheer
+ Wilson’s dunderhead discourses,
+ Or the cant of Labouchere!
+
+ What a dolt was I to credit
+ All these wild free-trading schemes!
+ Cobden’s calico predictions,
+ Porter’s importation dreams!
+ For I loathed the mean alliance,
+ Even when I chose to wheel
+ In the wake of him who led us,
+ Pinning foolish faith to Peel.
+ Was I mad, to place my honour
+ In this most disgusting fix?
+ Half the world was rather crazy
+ In the days of Forty-six.
+ O the happy times of premiums!
+ O the balmy touch of scrip!
+ Would that I had sold my bargains
+ Ere they had me on the hip!
+ Every day a new allotment
+ Promised shining heaps of gold;
+ Every day the mounting market
+ Swelled my hopes a hundredfold.
+ I remember old Sir Robert,
+ With his shirt-sleeves rolled on high,
+ Lust of speculation gleaming
+ In his gray and greedy eye;
+ Turning sods with silver shovel,
+ Celebrating that event
+ With a speech on competition
+ At the opening of the Trent.
+ I have dined with royal Hudson,
+ And may dine again, perhaps,
+ Should another exaltation
+ Follow on this drear collapse.
+ All had drunk the wine of gambling,
+ All had quaffed the share champagne,
+ Wisdom’s warnings were rejected,
+ Prudence preached to us in vain.
+ Madness, frenzy, lust of riches,
+ Reigned within the minds of all,
+ That, we thought, must answer Peter
+ Which had served the turn of Paul.
+ If, by scorning honest labour,
+ Men made fortunes in a trice,
+ What might be the luck of Britain,
+ Casting with Free-traders’ dice?
+
+ I am strongly of opinion—
+ Looking to my country’s good—
+ That I’ve stuck by him of Tamworth
+ Rather longer than I should.
+ As concerning next election,
+ I’ve received some pregnant hints,
+ Both from country correspondents,
+ And the leading public prints.
+ Cultivation’s at a discount,
+ Rents are very slowly paid:
+ Some aver that sly Sir Robert
+ Has contrived to coin his spade;
+ Neither is there much progression
+ In the wool and cotton trade.
+
+ What the deuce would men be after?
+ If those fellows had their will,
+ England would be straight converted
+ To a monstrous cotton-mill.
+ Everywhere would ghastly chimneys
+ Vomit forth their odious mist,
+ Settling, like the breath of Satan,
+ O’er this island of the blest;
+ When the only occupation
+ Would be spinning yarn and twist!
+ Spin away, my brave compatriots!
+ Spin as largely as you can;
+ Who shall dare to set a limit
+ To the sale of shirts for man?
+ Whilst the raw material’s granted,
+ Spin away with might and main;
+ Use the time that’s still vouchsafed you,
+ For it may not come again.
+ There’s a smartish kind of notion
+ Running in the Yankees’ head,
+ That they need not be indebted
+ To your kindness for their thread.
+ In the meanwhile go for cheapness,
+ Smite the farmers hip and thigh—
+ Making honest people bankrupt
+ Is the way to make them buy.
+ Starve the masses of the nation,
+ Drive them all into the mills;
+ Clear the plains and sweep the valleys,
+ Desolate the Highland hills.
+ Let the rough hard-fisted yeoman,
+ All too clumsy for the loom,
+ Migrate to the western prairies,
+ Where for labour still there’s room.
+ Let the peasant and the cottar
+ Quit the useless plough and spade—
+ Built for them are costly mansions,
+ Raised for them are rates in aid.
+ To the workhouse let them gather,
+ Or by theft attain the jail;
+ Honesty has bread and water,
+ Crime is fed on beef and ale.
+ O the glorious consummation
+ Of this truly Christian scheme,
+ Such as never saint or prophet
+ Witnessed in ecstatic dream!
+ Wasted fields and crowded cities,
+ Swarming streets and desert downs,
+ All the light of life concentred
+ In the focus of the towns!
+ Yea, exult, ye foes of England!
+ In the downfall of the race
+ That of yore, in fiery combat,
+ Met your fathers face to face:
+ For the pride of lusty manhood,
+ And the giant Saxon frame,
+ Never more shall be embattled
+ In the coming fields of fame;
+ Shrunken sinews, sallow faces,
+ Twisted limbs, and factory scars—
+ These shall mark your next opponents
+ In the European wars.
+ Not such yeomen as with Alfred
+ Won their freedom long ago—
+ Such as on the plain of Crecy
+ Triumphed o’er a worthy foe—
+ Such as drove invasion backward,
+ Have their homes in Britain now!
+
+ This at least our sons may utter,
+ Blushing for their fathers’ shame—
+ Brain me with a billy-roller,
+ If I longer play this game,
+ Either for the crimp of Tamworth,
+ Or his first lieutenant, Graham!
+ No, by Jove! I will not suffer
+ Degradation of the kind—
+ What care I for Johnny Russell,
+ With his hungry host behind?
+ Let them blunder on insanely,
+ Digging holes within the sand,
+ Thinking, like the stupid ostrich,
+ To escape the hunter’s hand.
+ Let them shirk the facts before them,
+ Comforting themselves the while,
+ That their Economic asses
+ Can the public ear beguile.
+ Lord! to hear the blockheads braying,
+ Spite of proof before their eyes—
+ “I assure the house,” quoth Wilson,
+ “Wheat must very shortly rise.
+ It was so-and-so at Dantzic
+ More than twenty years ago;
+ Therefore wait a little longer—
+ ’Twill be up again, I know.”
+ Jolly Villiers, on the other
+ Hand, with exultation vows,
+ More than one-and-ninety millions
+ Have been plundered from the ploughs;
+ And he hopes before another
+ Year shall run its destined course,
+ To congratulate the public
+ That affairs are worse and worse.
+ I, for one, am sick and weary
+ Of these everlasting prigs;
+ Quite disgusted with the shuffling
+ Of the miserable Whigs;
+ With their impudent averments,
+ And their flagrant thimblerigs!
+
+ Hark, the midnight chimes! I fancy
+ The palaver’s nearly over:
+ For to-night let Johnny Russell
+ And his colleagues rest in clover.
+ But, upon the next occasion,
+ When there’s talk about a tax,
+ Whether it shall weigh on foreign
+ Or on native British backs,
+ Master Tufnell must excuse me,
+ If I seek another lobby
+ Than the one that’s now frequented
+ By my former chief, Sir Bobby!
+
+
+
+
+ TENOR OF THE TRADE CIRCULARS.
+
+
+ _Liverpool, April 19, 1850._
+
+ TO THE EDITOR OF BLACKWOOD’S MAGAZINE.
+
+Sir,—That a period of severe commercial suffering is approaching us, in
+which the ruinous condition of the agricultural classes will recoil
+disastrously, not only upon the selfish Free-trade agitators in the
+manufacturing districts, but also upon the importers of foreign produce,
+the broker, the factor, the shopkeeper, and the labourers in our towns,
+has for some months been patent to all who have dispassionately watched
+the current of events, and been able to draw correct conclusions from
+what is going on before their eyes. It is not to official tables of
+exports and imports that such men look as the indices of the nation’s
+prosperity. They turn rather to _the results_ of these operations, as
+disclosed in our commercial circulars; to the degree of confidence
+displayed by bankers in their dealings with their customers, and by
+merchants in their transactions with each other; to the movements of
+produce in our leading markets, and to the amount of activity which
+characterises the internal trade and the consumption of the country.
+They are guided, too, very materially, by the general feeling of
+merchants and traders, expressed in their daily communications with each
+other, on ‘Change, or in the intercourse of private life. Such a mode I
+propose to employ, in investigating the real condition of the cotton
+manufacturing districts of the north of England; and the result of this
+investigation, which I shall now proceed to lay before your readers,
+will, I fear, dissipate somewhat rudely the dream of prosperity in which
+her Majesty’s Ministers, and their supporters in Parliament and
+throughout the country, are just now indulging.
+
+In pursuing such an inquiry, the condition of the port of Liverpool, the
+great mart of this portion of the kingdom, naturally suggests itself as
+of prominent interest. In this port, by the result of our vast
+operations in imported foreign and colonial produce, the actual results
+of our export trade in manufactures, and the consuming power of the
+large population which draw their supplies from it, can be tested with
+considerable fairness. In an article in your last Number, I find a
+quotation from the monthly circular of Messrs T. and H. Littledale &
+Co., whom you truly designate as perhaps the greatest brokers in the
+world. A portion of this I must re-quote, in order to enable your
+readers the better to appreciate some later observations of these
+gentlemen. On the 4th of March, Messrs Littledale wrote:—
+
+
+ “_Great complaints are made of the bad state of the country
+ shopkeepers in the agricultural districts. We have closely questioned
+ some of our wholesale grocers and tea-dealers, who assure us that
+ there is no disguising the fact, that such is the case, and that the
+ general answer received from their travellers is, that ‘they can get
+ neither money nor orders.’_ The serious falling off in the deliveries
+ of sugar, coffee, tea, and cocoa, for the two months of this year,
+ compared with those of the last, but too truly confirms these
+ complaints, and are perhaps the most alarming features in our present
+ prospects. As given in Prince’s public prices current of the 1st
+ inst., they stand as follows:—
+
+
+ 1850. 1849. 1848.
+ Sugar, 37,006 43,408 42,368 tons
+ Coffee, 3,795,712 4,907,691 pounds
+ Cocoa, 450,774 558,888
+ Tea, 5,375,648 5,502,931
+
+The circular of this house, dated the 4th of April, has since been
+published, in which they confirm their previous statement; and indeed
+show that the condition of the country, as tested by its consumption of
+imported produce, is retrograding. We quote the following as their
+summary:—
+
+
+ “_General Remarks._—Another month of dull spiritless trade, as well in
+ our produce markets as in the manufacturing districts of Lancashire.
+ The demand for consumption has somewhat improved from exhaustion of
+ stocks in the hands of dealers; but we regret to find the deficiency
+ in deliveries of the principal articles noticed in our circular of
+ last month (tea excepted) has still further increased, which speaks
+ ill for the internal state of the country; in fact, _we believe the
+ small tradesmen and shopkeepers in the rural districts were seldom or
+ never in a worse position than at the present_.
+
+ “Corn has fallen so low in value, that _the farmers, anxious to secure
+ their rents, are not in a position to pay their tradesmen’s bills; and
+ we have been assured that, in numberless instances, their Christmas
+ accounts for last year are still unpaid_. This falls immediately on
+ the wholesale dealers, from them on the importing merchants, and
+ eventually, if no revival take place, must act with double force on
+ the manufacturers in a diminished home trade and in crippled exports,
+ which latter must ever depend on our power to take the products of
+ other countries as returns for our manufactures. To what class, then,
+ are the present ruinous low prices of grain a blessing? We
+ emphatically say _to none_; indeed it is quite impossible for so large
+ a portion of the community as that connected with agriculture to be
+ depressed, and the other portions long to continue prosperous; and
+ probably the best impulse we could receive, in the present inactive
+ state of our colonial markets, would be an advance of 5s., to 10s. per
+ qr., in the price of wheat. There is no doubt, also, that the fearful
+ depreciation of railway property, which appears a bottomless abyss of
+ mismanagement and ruin, tells cruelly on the available resources of a
+ very large proportion of the people, and adds seriously to the
+ embarrassment of trade.”
+
+
+In glancing over this circular in detail, we find opposite nearly every
+important item the words, “has moved off at easier prices,” “is less
+inquired for,” “is dull,” or some other phrase significant of commercial
+depression; yet, during the preceding month, the stocks on hand, owing
+to the prevalence of easterly winds, which had kept a large number of
+vessels windbound outside the Channel, had received very little
+augmentation. It must be borne in mind that the dealings of this firm
+extend over nearly every description of foreign produce—certainly every
+large one, timber and iron excepted;—and that the money amount of their
+annual transactions may be reckoned by many millions sterling. Further
+inquiries amongst other houses enable me to state confidently that, with
+the exception of a few trifling articles, the mass of the produce, which
+is pouring into Liverpool, arrives at an unprofitable market. In cotton
+alone, amongst the leading imports, a small margin of profit may at
+present be secured, the abundance of unemployed money in the hands of
+the banks allowing the speculators, for a short crop, to inflate prices.
+Such a case, however, tells nothing in favour of a sound state of
+things. The question of most material import is, whether either the
+foreign demand, or the home consumption, is so urgently requiring
+supply, as to enable the manufacturer of cotton goods to concede the
+advanced rates demanded for the staple, by the American grower, or the
+speculator at home. Present appearances scarcely warrant such an
+expectation. The following opinion upon the subject, given by a leading
+firm in the trade, Messrs George Holt & Co., in their circular of the
+12th April, expresses the opinion of all except the most sanguine:—
+
+
+ “We can hardly account for this tendency of prices,”—(they had
+ slightly advanced during the week)—“or lay before our readers any new
+ circumstances affecting the value of the staple. No doubt confidence
+ in the shortness of the American crop remains, and probably is on the
+ increase. We may add also that stocks in spinners’ hands are at a low
+ ebb. Still _we have, from day to day, discouraging reports from
+ Manchester as to the state and prospects of a very large part of the
+ spinning and manufacturing trade. This depression, which has been so
+ long in existence, must be got rid of, or modified, before we can have
+ any permanent well-doing in the raw material._”
+
+
+“Depression so long in existence!” A great majority of the public, with
+the speech from the Throne, and the prosperity-speeches of movers and
+seconders of the Address before them, imagined that the cotton
+districts, at all events, were flourishing!
+
+A later circular of the produce market, published upon the authority of
+the entire brokers of the port, exhibits the state of the general
+produce market in even a worse light than that of Messrs Littledale,
+quoted above. I append it here:—
+
+
+ “LIVERPOOL PRICES CURRENT, IMPORTS, &c. for the week ending _April
+ 12, 1850_. Arranged by a Committee of Brokers.—T. M. MYERS,
+ _Secretary_.
+
+ “SUGAR.—Holders continuing to offer freely, there has been a fair
+ amount of business, but at rather lower prices; 450 hhds. B. P., of
+ which 300 were new Barbadoes, sold at 34s. 6d. to 41s., 3500 bags
+ Bengal at 34s. to 40s., 1600 bags Khaur at 28s. 6d., and 3500 bags
+ Mauritius at 36s. to 36s. 6d., being a decline of 6d. to 1s. per
+ cwt.—_Foreign._—180 hhds. Porto Rico, of the new crop, sold at 40s.
+ per cwt. duty paid; the export demand continues slack, and sales are
+ only 24 cases, 150 bags and brls. Brazil and 100 boxes
+ Havanna.—MOLASSES.—The new arrivals coming in have induced holders of
+ last year’s crop to take much lower prices than have been hitherto
+ accepted; the sales are 500 puns. Porto Rico at 15s. 6d., 400 Cuba at
+ 15s. 6d. to 16s., and 300 Barbadoes at 15s. per cwt.; the two cargoes
+ of new Porto Rico, just arrived, have been sent to store, the
+ importers not being willing to accept the low price offered by the
+ Trade; the quotations are reduced accordingly.—COFFEE.—The recent
+ import of Jamaica has been freely offered, and the slight improvement
+ that existed ten days ago is entirely lost, prices being now as low as
+ ever. 80 tierces have been sold, at 46s. 9d. to 54s. for low to fine
+ ordinary, and 62s. to 100s. for low to fine middling—the latter
+ quotation being 15s. below the rates of January. 100 bags native
+ Ceylon were sold early in the week at 52s. 6d., but that price is not
+ now obtainable, the nominal value being about 48s. per cwt.—A small
+ parcel of Bahia Cocoa sold at 33s. per cwt.—Nothing done in GINGER or
+ PEPPER, but a small lot of PIMENTO brought 6⅛d. per lb., being an
+ extreme price.—RICE.—No sales of Carolina; 13,000 bags East brought
+ 7s. 6d. for broken, and 8s. 6d. to 9s. 9d. for low to good white,
+ being a decline of fully 6d. per cwt.—RUM is difficult of sale, except
+ at lower prices; the business consists of 200 puns. Demerara, 32 to 37
+ per cent O. P. at 2s. 2d. to 2s. 4½d. per gallon.”
+
+
+There is a further decline, it will be seen, in every important article;
+and the most experienced houses, I find, are at a loss to tell at what
+point it will stop. It is generally admitted that, but for the
+accommodation which the large holders can command, there must have been
+a general crash long ere this, which would have overwhelmed half the
+mercantile community in ruin. This would have reacted fearfully upon the
+shopkeepers in the interior of the country, whose credits would have
+been suddenly stopped, whilst their overdue accounts would necessarily
+have been sternly exacted. In fact the bulk of this class at present
+stand upon the verge of an abyss, into which a sudden panic may hurry
+them at any moment.
+
+It will doubtless be urged that this state of the produce market is only
+temporary; that importations, having become profitless, will be
+discontinued, and the supply thus become equal to the demand. This would
+be the natural course of things under a sound system; but no sign of
+cessation of imports is at present to be seen; and it is much to be
+questioned whether any such cessation can take place, without throwing a
+large portion of our manufacturing population into very serious
+distress, if not into anarchy and outbreak. If importation of produce is
+restricted, exportation must be restricted in proportion. The
+manufacturer has thrown himself into almost total dependence upon the
+foreign buyer of his wares. With a flourishing home market for
+manufactures, a glut of produce might be got rid of without difficulty.
+But the same cause—an inability of the masses to consume—which depresses
+the prices of produce, now exists equally with respect to the home
+market for manufactured goods; and to stop production and exports, with
+a view to enhance the value of the stocks of produce already received in
+remittance from the foreigner, would add another element to the
+perplexity in which the nation is plunged. This portion of the subject,
+however, it is not for me to discuss here. I only refer to it in order
+to express the opinions which are beginning to be mooted in influential
+commercial circles.
+
+In order to be enabled to state, as much as possible upon my own
+knowledge, the extent to which the internal markets of the country are
+depressed, and the consumption of produce is declining, I have
+instituted inquiries among some of the leading houses in Liverpool, who
+send travellers into the country, and the reports given are fully as
+discouraging as those given by Messrs Littledale, as to the difficulty
+both of making sales and collecting accounts. From a gentleman connected
+with a leading firm in the tea trade, I learn that in the country over
+which their travellers prosecute their business, the orders which they
+receive are for very limited quantities, and are, in fact, demonstrative
+of what, in mercantile parlance, is styled “a hand to mouth” business.
+Excessive caution and want of spirit characterise the feelings of the
+retail trade everywhere.
+
+Some of these parties, he suggests, may have locked up a portion of
+their capital in railway investments, or perhaps lost it. Still, hand to
+mouth orders—orders for a week’s instead of a month’s consumption, would
+tell in the long run, if they served to make up the aggregate of past
+years. But they do not. The consumption of this necessary article is
+found to be declining; and the objection of the retail dealer to order
+as largely as usual is accounted for, in the majority of cases, by the
+inability of the farming and middle classes to pay their accounts as
+punctually as heretofore. It must be borne in mind, in treating of the
+consumption of such an article as tea—and I may include coffee, sugar,
+&c.—that they frequently form the substitute for the poor man’s meal.
+When the consumption of tea declines, in times acknowledged to be bad,
+it is the worst sign of the condition of the community.
+
+Another gentleman connected with an extensive firm in the grocery trade,
+gives still more discouraging accounts. The travellers of this firm
+extend their operations over the whole of the Midland Counties and the
+North of England. Their reports to their employers are most lugubrious.
+For example, one of them, a few weeks ago, remitted home £120, whereas
+his accounts due were about £1500. As to sales, these are most difficult
+to make. Consumption is gradually and rapidly declining. Retail dealers
+in the country towns complain that the farmers no longer expend the
+money they have been accustomed to do, when visiting markets; but
+confine their consumption of food more and more to the products raised
+upon their own lands. One of the travellers of this firm journeys
+through the counties of Cumberland and Westmoreland, in which for many
+years an extensive trade has been carried on in the curing of bacon and
+hams. This trade he represents as now almost extinct, or rapidly
+becoming so—the parties engaged in it being unable to compete with the
+importers of the low-priced hams and bacon of America. Of this class are
+the farmers of the country which owns Sir James Graham as their feudal
+lord, and of whom that distinguished statesman asserted, in the debate
+on the Address, that they must be in a state of plethoric prosperity,
+inasmuch as he had never had his rents better paid than at his last
+rent-day. The worthy baronet forgot to say that rent is the last debt
+that a tenant farmer will omit to pay, the landlord having a power which
+overrides the claims of all other creditors. If he could have added that
+his farmers’ tradesmen’s bills had been equally well paid, he would have
+imparted some information most gratifying to the community. Neither this
+house, nor any other that I have conversed with, can see any termination
+to the present declining state of things. It is becoming admitted,
+amongst the circles with which their travellers mix, that reductions of
+rent are wholly unequal to meet the emergency of the present crisis.
+
+It is proper that I should refer to one trade in Liverpool which is most
+prosperous—in fact, the only prosperous one. This is the trade of the
+merchants engaged in, and others connected with, the emigration of our
+fellow-countrymen, to seek a home in foreign lands. The following are
+the statistics of this trade, kindly furnished me by a gentleman
+officially connected with the shipping of emigrants from Liverpool:—
+
+ Ships. Emigrants.
+ Emigration in 1847 514 128,447
+ Do. 1848 519 124,522
+ Do. 1849 565 146,162
+
+During the present year the emigration has been—
+
+ January, 6943 Persons.
+ February, 8779 „
+ March, 16,783 „
+ Cabin emigrants, 705 „
+
+At the present moment, notwithstanding the large increase in the
+shipping—principally American—provided for the trade, berths, and these
+at very high prices, are most difficult to be got, unless detention is
+submitted to. Moreover, a great change has taken place in the kind of
+persons emigrating. Last year, the same gentleman informs me,
+four-fifths of the parties emigrating consisted of substantial small
+farmers from Ireland and elsewhere, and skilled artisans from this
+country. This year, a very superior class of English farmers are leaving
+a land which no longer affords them a living in exchange for their
+honest industry. The quays of Liverpool daily present a scene, which few
+thinking men can rejoice in, and which the country will have to regret.
+The aged as well as the mature, mothers with infants at the breast, and
+stalwart youths and maidens, going from vessel to vessel, to select that
+particular one whose departure from our shores will cut for ever their
+connexion with the country which they have loved, and in which they
+leave behind the graves of their fathers. It is melancholy to think upon
+the misery there must be amidst all this activity, with the momentary
+absence of regret for old scenes, and enjoyment of the new ones, into
+which these poor people find themselves thrown. Yet we cannot but feel
+satisfied that they are about to be bettered in condition by the change.
+
+The depression complained of, as existing in Liverpool, is by no means
+confined to the classes immediately connected with the staple commerce
+of the port, but pervades all classes of the community without
+exception. The produce of half a world is stored in the warehouses of
+Liverpool, or floating in her magnificent docks. The capital of her
+merchants is embarked in every clime, and her shipping crowds every
+foreign port; yet her industrious population are plunged in suffering
+and embarrassment, and a portion of them—her labouring classes, pressed
+down by the influx of pauper competition from the hordes of immigrants
+from ruined Ireland—are continually upon the verge of actual starvation.
+It is distressing to witness the shifts to which tradesmen are compelled
+to resort, from time to time, in order to meet engagements, and to stave
+off, by sacrifices of their goods, the day of ruin. “Selling off”
+announcements, under all kinds of pretexts, meet the eye in every
+direction, and yet tempt in vain. The whole community appear to be
+economising; and tardily paid bills, and reduced expenditure in the
+comforts, and even in some of the necessities of life, is the rule, not
+the exception. The extent to which this is carried, and the suffering
+existing amongst the middle classes, may be judged of by the fact that
+it has already affected the incomes of many of the clergy of the town,
+by diminishing the numbers of their congregations and the yield of
+pew-rents. In one instance which has been mentioned to me, the income of
+a clergyman, universally beloved, has been thus cut down from £600
+a-year, to little more than half; and this is far from being a solitary
+case.
+
+The result of this state of things is already being felt in a strong
+reaction, amongst those once the loudest in its advocacy, against the
+system of Free Trade. Doubts are freely hazarded with respect to the
+soundness of a policy which has produced such fruit; and the question is
+upon the lips of numbers,—“Where is the prosperity which was promised to
+us?” If Mr Cobden or Sir Robert Peel were to present themselves in
+Liverpool at the present moment, they would have to answer this
+question, not to the uninquiring crowds who would have cheered their
+fallacies three years ago, but to men who have reflected deeply, and had
+deep cause for such reflection. The Right Hon. Baronet, in particular,
+would perhaps have to reply to another question, and to go a little back
+in the history of his political life. He would be asked not only, Who
+had benefited by his Free-trade measures?—a difficult one enough to
+answer—but what class of the community had been aggrandised _by his
+currency measures of 1819 and 1844_. To this vital subject the minds of
+the intelligent mercantile community of Liverpool, of all shades of
+politics, are being rapidly directed. The Free-trader sees, in the
+operation of our monetary laws, one leading source of the evil brought
+upon the country by the carrying out of his favourite measure. He is
+prepared to acknowledge that Free-trade and a Restricted Currency are
+incompatible things. And the mercantile body of all political parties
+still remember the disasters of 1847 and 1848; and the insulting manner
+in which their prayer, in the October of the previous year, for relief
+from the unexampled money pressure, which was then prostrating the most
+extensive and solvent firms, was denied by a flippant and shallow
+Chancellor of the Exchequer, although at that moment the nation was
+within a few days of bankruptcy. These things are not forgotten; and,
+from the impressions which I have been able to form, from a close
+examination of popular opinion, I should not be surprised to see the
+influential community of Liverpool throwing politics and party to the
+winds, and uniting their efforts to procure a relief from the monstrous
+system which at present withers and strangles in its grasp the industry
+of England—which tempts us one day, by its lavish kindness, to erect
+vast structures of commercial enterprise and usefulness; and the next
+day dashes them into wrecks before our eyes, to be scrambled for by
+greedy extortioners and selfish usurers.
+
+It is the fear of this power which, to a great extent, is at the present
+moment paralysing the enterprise of the commercial communities, which
+would otherwise have succeeded in neutralising a portion at least, but
+certainly only a portion, of the ruinous effects of Free-trade. A few
+years ago, no community embarked more largely in those railway
+investments, so strongly recommended to them by the fosterer of the
+system, Sir Robert Peel, than the mercantile people of Liverpool. The
+extent to which such investments were encouraged by the lavish offer of
+banking facilities to merchants and others, may be judged of by the
+fact, that the Directors of one Liverpool Bank were, a few weeks ago,
+compelled to acknowledge to their shareholders, that nearly the whole of
+their subscribed capital was advanced upon railway stock; and that their
+Rest, amounting to £100,000, had entirely disappeared. This species of
+security is now, by the caution with which capitalists act, rendered
+totally unavailable for the purpose of raising money, when required for
+legitimate commercial purposes. Hence the timid apprehension with which
+men, thus situated, regard the accumulation of stocks of produce, for
+which no remunerative market at present offers itself; and the
+consumption of which is so obviously on the decline. Hence also the
+pressure to sell, when they see cargo after cargo pouring in to augment
+those stocks; the unwillingness to part with funds, for which the
+shopkeeper and the tradesman are eagerly longing, to enable them to
+sustain their tottering credit; and that total suspension of all
+internal enterprise and improvement, which is driving so many thousands
+of our skilled workmen to other countries, and the labourer to that
+desolate resort for the very poor—the Union Workhouse. To the attempt to
+carry out a Free-trade, involving the holding of large stocks of produce
+and extended operations in foreign markets, with a currency artificially
+restricted by the last Banking Act of Sir Robert Peel, and further
+restricted by the caution with which bankers are now conducting their
+business, since the severe warning inflicted upon them in 1847, is
+attributable not only the commercial depression already noticed, but
+also that fearful sacrifice of realised capital, which has taken place
+from the decline in the saleable value of railway shares, and which, in
+Liverpool alone, has rendered hundreds of once wealthy men comparatively
+poor ones, and brought many, in the decline of their days, to a
+condition lower than that even in which they began the world.
+
+Such is the condition generally of the mercantile community of
+Liverpool—that port of all others in the kingdom which was most largely
+to be benefited by the advent of the Free-trade system. From the apex to
+the base of the social fabric all is uncertainty, fear, and suffering,
+too intense any longer to be concealed from the most superficial
+observer; and the crisis has not yet been reached. The reaction has
+still to come from the manufacturing districts, which, up to within the
+past few months, in the enjoyment of a moderate amount of activity,
+caused by a temporary revival of the export demand, are only now
+beginning to feel the results of the system which, in their selfishness,
+they invented for their own aggrandisement, at the expense of the
+industry of the whole empire.
+
+The avowed object of the Free-trader was to stimulate the export trade
+in cotton goods, which it was always boasted was the most valuable to
+the manufacturer. So far as regards the quantity of the raw material
+consumed for the export trade, this is an undisputed fact; but that the
+amount of skill and labour employed in it is equal to that expended upon
+goods consumed in the home market is not true. In order to arrive at an
+idea of the relative value of the two trades, it will be necessary for
+me to bring before the reader a few figures and authorities. In the
+excellent _Commercial Glance_, compiled for many years by the late Mr
+John Burn of Manchester, and now continued by his son, the following
+statement was given, as the mode in which the cotton spun in 1845 was
+disposed of. I take that year as being one of great prosperity in the
+home market, and as showing the state of things antecedent to the
+introduction of free trade in corn.
+
+ STATEMENT OF THE COTTON SPUN IN ENGLAND AND SCOTLAND IN 1845, AND OF
+ THE QUANTITY OF YARN PRODUCED, SHOWING ALSO HOW THE QUANTITY SPUN IN
+ ENGLAND WAS DISPOSED OF.
+ Lbs.
+ Total cotton consumed, in lbs., 555,527,283
+ Allowed for loss in spinning, 1¾ oz. per lb., 60,760,796
+ ———————————
+ Total yarn produced in England and Scotland, 494,766,487
+ Deduct spun in Scotland in 1845, 27,737,022
+ ———————————
+ Total spun in England in 1845, 467,029,465
+
+ Lbs.
+ Exported in yarn during the year, 131,937,935
+ Exported in thread do., 2,567,705
+ Exported in manufactured cotton goods, 302,360,687
+ Estimated quantity of yarn sent to Scotland and
+ Ireland, 10,734,859
+ Exported in mixed manufactures, consumed in
+ cotton banding, healds, candle and lamp wick,
+ waddings, socks, calender bowls, paper,
+ umbrellas, hats, and loss in manufacturing
+ goods, 31,655,230
+ Balance left for home consumption and stock,
+ 1st January 87,773,049
+ ————————————
+ 467,029,465
+ ===========
+
+I have the most perfect confidence in the correctness of Mr Burn’s
+calculations, being personally acquainted with that gentleman, and
+knowing the excellent sources from which he derives his information, and
+the care which he devotes to the accuracy of all his facts. The result
+to which the above statement leads is, that the consumption of raw
+cotton in goods sold in our home markets is 18·36 per cent only, upon
+the total quantity of yarn spun in England. This, a superficial observer
+will say, is a very trivial quantity for our boasted home consumption.
+Let us see, however, in what stage of manufacture, and in what
+description of goods, the cotton taken off by foreign markets
+principally consists. In the first place, 131,937,935 lbs., or 28 per
+cent of the total cotton spun, was exported, as shown in the table
+above, in the shape of yarn, an article but one remove from the raw
+material, and the manufacture of which employs machinery principally,
+and leaves only a small margin of profit to the country. With respect to
+the description of goods, in the manufacture of which for the foreign
+market the remainder of the raw material is consumed, little difficulty
+is felt by persons acquainted practically with the subject. Mr
+M‘Culloch, in his _Dictionary of Commerce_, page 456 of the edition of
+1847—the latest I have before me—remarks upon the facts as striking,
+that, notwithstanding the superiority of our machinery, and this branch
+thus being one in which we most greatly excel our foreign rivals, the
+proportion of fine to coarse yarns spun has materially decreased; and
+that, in fact, the actual quantity of fine yarns has decreased, whilst
+the total consumption of cotton has quadrupled during the last
+twenty-five years. That the quantity has decreased to this extreme
+extent may well be doubted, although the cheapening which has taken
+place in silk and other fabrics during this period has, we know, to a
+great extent caused the disuse, for home consumption, of many once
+highly prized articles of the cotton manufacture. We may accept,
+however, the admission of Mr M‘Culloch, as bearing upon the quality of
+those goods which are taken off by the foreign trade, and of which the
+great increase in the manufacture must consist. These are, confessedly,
+the coarse, heavy fabrics, into the manufacture of which the _minimum_
+amount of skill and labour enters. We approach then, from this point, to
+a view of the comparative value to the country of the home and the
+export trade in cotton goods. In the same work, Mr M‘Culloch estimates
+the total annual value of the cotton manufacture of the kingdom at
+£36,000,000 sterling, of which £10,000,000 is put down for the cost of
+the raw material, £17,000,000 for wages, and £9,000,000 for profits,
+wages of superintendence, and cost of machinery, coals, &c. I am a
+little inclined to believe that this calculation is underdrawn, the
+leaning of the author being to exaggerate the importance of the export
+trade, the declared value of which in 1845 was £26,119,231, leaving a
+little under £10,000,000 as the consumption of the home market, or about
+two-fifths of the consumption of the foreign. In estimating the value to
+the country, however, of the home trade, we have a right to take into
+consideration the fact that the great component material of the goods
+which we consume at home consists of labour; for, whilst the proportion
+of the raw material consumed in the home trade was little over one-fifth
+of that consumed in the foreign, the value of the goods was two-fifths.
+
+Admitting, however, Mr M‘Culloch’s version of the case to be correct,
+but at the same time bearing in mind the fact of his being a somewhat
+prejudiced authority, let us apply the figures given to the present
+condition of the manufacturing interest. The average quantity of cotton
+taken weekly from Liverpool for consumers’ use, was, from 1st of January
+to 12th of April 1849, 29,475 bales. It has been this year, up to the
+same date, 23,176 bales—a falling off of 6299 bales weekly, or a little
+above a fifth of the preceding year’s importations. Perhaps a portion of
+this decline in apparent consumption may be accounted for by the fact
+that the stock in the hands of spinners has, to a considerable extent,
+been allowed by them to become exhausted, through their unwillingness to
+pay the advanced prices recently demanded for the raw material. With
+respect to the prudence of this policy, and its probable effect in still
+further increasing the embarrassment of affairs, I shall have something
+to say by and by; at present, the question which presses is—In what
+market has this decreased consumption occurred? The answer must be—In
+that market which pays for the greatest amount of labour expended upon
+the manufacture of cotton goods—in the home market. I have not within my
+reach the most authentic record of the Cotton Trade, for the period up
+to which I should desire to extend my inquiries—viz., _Burn’s Commercial
+Glance_, which is only made up half yearly. I have, however, before me
+this gentleman’s _Monthly Colonial Circular_, dated March the 18th, in
+which I observe a considerable increase in the exports of plain
+calicoes, printed and dyed calicoes, and cotton yarn to the following
+markets, with a few exceptions, for the first two months of the present
+year:—Calcutta, Bombay (increase in printed and dyed and in yarn, and
+small decrease in plain only); Madras (considerable increase in plain
+and printed and dyed, and small decrease in yarn); Singapore and Manilla
+(small decrease in printed and dyed and in yarn only); Batavia (large
+increase in all kinds); Hong Kong and Canton (large increase in plain,
+and small decline in printed); Shanghae (trade removed to other Chinese
+ports in which there is a large increase): Australian Colonies (increase
+in all kinds); Mauritius (stationary); Cape of Good Hope (increase in
+all); Coast of Africa (decline in all); Jamaica (decrease in plain and
+increase in printed); Honduras (increase); other West Indian ports
+(decrease); Cuba and St Thomas (both increase); French West Indies
+(increase in printed and small decline in plain); Brazils (large
+increase); Chili and Peru (large decrease); Colombia (decrease); River
+Plata (considerable decrease); Mexico (increase in plain, and decrease
+in printed); British North America (season for shipments not commenced);
+and United States (increase in both printed and plain, and a large
+business done, the shipments for the two months being upwards of half of
+the entire quantity exported in 1849.) Compared with the average of the
+same period of the preceding three years, there is an increase to nearly
+every market. With respect to the shipments to European markets, I
+cannot speak with precision as to quantities, from the circumstance,
+which I have named, of the accounts not having been yet made up. From
+the monthly return from the Board of Trade, however, it appears that a
+general increase has taken place in the declared value of cotton
+manufactures to all markets, the amount being in 1850, £3,264,350 for
+the two months, against £2,837,300 last year. There is a very trifling
+decline in the export of yarns. From my own observation, I should augur
+that the increase has extended over March, to the United States and the
+markets of the Pacific especially—an unusual stimulus having been given
+to the consumption of these markets by the Californian discoveries. By
+the bye, I ought to mention, in connexion with the increase in the
+declared value of our exports this year, the fact that, owing to the
+advance in the price of the raw material, the value of goods exported
+will be rated higher than last year. To some extent, however, the severe
+winter of this year preventing the early opening of the navigation of
+the rivers of the north of Europe, as compared with the mild season last
+year, may be a set-off. The Mediterranean trade, and the operations of
+the Greek houses, have also been limited by our petty quarrel in this
+part of Europe.
+
+Assuming, however, the actual quantity of cotton consumed by the Export
+Trade to have been equal to that consumed last year up to this period,
+and allowing for 40,000 bales, alleged by spinners to have been drawn
+from their own stocks instead of the Liverpool market, _there will
+remain a deficiency, as compared with last year, of 5000 bales per week,
+or 70,000 bales, in the consumption of the raw material manufactured
+into goods for the Home market_. When it is considered that these goods
+consist of the finer fabrics, in which the greatest amount of labour is
+employed, and upon which the largest percentage of profit is realised,
+whilst those consumed in the foreign markets are sold at the lowest
+margin of profit, and when exported frequently result in heavy losses to
+the shipper, the extent of the sacrifice made by the manufacturing
+community, in their mad adoption of a policy which has destroyed the
+Home market, may readily be seen.
+
+The correctness of these calculations has been borne out by the general
+character of the Home Trade during the past four months, in which
+stagnation, and difficulty in accomplishing sales to consumers and
+retailers throughout the country, early manifested themselves. In the
+month of January, strong hopes were entertained, by the majority of the
+houses engaged in this branch of the business, that the worst of the
+embarrassment which had so long hung over the cotton manufacturing
+districts had passed over; and that a wholesome and active trade was
+before them. The circulars of the month of February, and the reports
+given week by week in the local journals published in the manufacturing
+districts, resumed their gloomy statements; and the home demand, it
+became clear, had returned to its previous lethargic state. From
+communications entered into with some of the country houses, I have
+derived intelligence respecting the result of their operations, almost
+precisely similar to those sent home by the representatives of produce
+houses as given above. The country buyers who come to the market display
+an entire want of their accustomed spirit, and buy sparingly an inferior
+class of goods to those which they have been, in former years, in the
+habit of consuming. The universal complaint of these parties, and of
+commercial travellers engaged in the Home Trade, is of declining
+consumption and ill-paid accounts, especially throughout the purely
+agricultural districts. One circumstance has tended in some measure to
+prevent the trade becoming absolutely ruinous—viz., the fact that cotton
+fabrics are now resorted to by many classes from motives of economy. The
+farmer’s and the tradesman’s wife and daughters make a fashion of
+necessity, and substitute printed cotton dresses for more expensive
+articles. A cotton shirt supplies moderately well the place of a linen
+one. Articles of elegance and luxury, however, even of this material,
+are complained of as most difficult of sale. In some of the large towns,
+a few houses are doing a fair business in heavy fabrics, such as
+fustians, moleskins, and other articles worn by the artisans and other
+working classes; and in some fancy goods of the same description for the
+middle classes. This fact, however, is in a great measure an _exemplar_
+of the declining condition of the country generally, the articles in
+question being worn, in a majority of cases, as substitutes for the more
+costly woollen fabrics. Moreover, no profit accrues to the manufacturer
+from these goods, their production at existing rates of the raw material
+being, on the contrary, attended with absolute loss.
+
+The retail trade in the manufacturing towns themselves, represented as
+being in such a satisfactory condition, is anything but good, a
+considerable portion of the population being employed only two or three
+days in the week, and the whole having been compelled during the past
+two or three years to submit to reduction of wages, as the price of
+their boasted boon of Free-trade. This is particularly the case in the
+districts of Rochdale, (John Bright’s district,) Heywood, Bury,
+Middleton, &c. The effect of preceding years’ short-time working is
+still severely felt, last year having been the only one since 1846—when
+we had the boasted measure of Sir Robert Peel, and the “heavy blow and
+great discouragement” was inflicted upon British agriculture and our
+sugar-growing colonies—that the manufacturing population have been fully
+employed.
+
+Such being the acknowledged condition of the home market for
+manufactured goods, the question naturally presents itself—what has been
+the result, so far as profit is concerned, of the operations generally
+of the manufacturing community during the past four months? In reply to
+this question, it will be very easy to prove that thus far, in the
+present year, they have been the reverse of remunerative. The following
+extract from the circular of Messrs M‘Nair, Greenhow, and Irving, of
+Manchester—one of the best published, although putting rather the best
+face upon things—dated the 31st of December last year, will show the
+prospects with which manufacturers entered upon the present year:—
+
+
+ “MANCHESTER, _Dec. 31, 1849_.
+
+ “Exactly twelve months ago we represented the transactions of the
+ closing month as having been almost unprecedented in extent,
+ considering the season of the year; and to-day we are happy to have in
+ our power to communicate a pretty similar statement with regard to the
+ present month, repeating what we have often remarked, that _December_
+ in ordinary years is generally marked by dulness and inactivity.
+
+ “The position of the market, as indicated in our last (monthly)
+ circular, continued for about ten days afterwards gradually acquiring
+ greater force and depression, and accompanied with a decline in the
+ value of many descriptions of cloth and twist. At that period, from a
+ very prevalent belief that the commencement of the new year would be
+ characterised by improvement, an active and vigorous demand for export
+ and the home trade ensued, which has, notwithstanding the interruption
+ of the holiday season, continued up to the present time, rendering the
+ stocks of all kinds of light goods, as well as of some numbers of mule
+ twist, exceedingly light, and placing many manufacturers and spinners
+ under contract for some time hence.”
+
+
+Another authority, Messrs Hollinshead, Tetley, & Co., an old-established
+cotton firm of Liverpool, who are generally in the possession of the
+best information, remarked upon the prospects of the district in their
+circular of the first of January as follows:—
+
+
+ “Prospects for the general trade of the country, at least as regards
+ the principal articles of export, more particularly cotton fabrics,
+ were perhaps never more promising; and it is evident that the late
+ disturbing causes, political and social, in Europe and India, with the
+ effects produced upon other countries, reducing the consumption of
+ cotton to 22,230 weekly in 1847, and 27,602 in 1848, (previously
+ upwards of 30,000 bales weekly,) created a vacuum which has not been
+ filled up by the increased consumption of 30,512 bales weekly in the
+ present year; indeed it would seem that this large quantity (and it
+ has been proportionately great in other cotton manufacturing
+ countries) has only been sufficient to supply the increasing wants of
+ the world, as we no longer hear of glutted markets, but the report is
+ of light stocks almost everywhere. And when we take into consideration
+ the low price of all articles of food, corn particularly, (a
+ questionable advantage, perhaps, when unnaturally low, if the home
+ market is to be considered of any value,) the great abundance of
+ money, its low value, not exceeding, perhaps, 2½ per cent per annum in
+ the London market, with a larger amount of gold, &c. (£17,000,000) in
+ the Bank of England than was ever known before, it is evident that a
+ great stimulus may be given to the trade of the country, and that with
+ the disfavour shown to railway property it is most likely the usual
+ effects will follow—viz., extensive speculation and greatly enhanced
+ prices of all articles of import, and of cotton in particular.”
+
+
+The whole of the trade circulars, indeed, both from Liverpool and
+Manchester houses, expressed similar views with respect to the prospects
+of the present year; and seemed to expect an increase in the aggregate
+manufactures of the country. In reviewing the actual state of things
+which has taken place, I would direct your attention particularly to the
+fact of spinners and manufacturers being “under contract” at this
+period, as stated in the first circular from which I have quoted. Such
+contracts could only have been entered upon, consistently with prudence
+at least, in the anticipation of a continuance of the then existing
+prices of the raw material, or upon the assurance of a stock already in
+hand. To a considerable extent spinners did hold stock sufficient for
+the fulfilment, profitably, of a portion of their contracts, as is shown
+by the circumstance that they have, since the commencement of the year,
+worked up about 40,000 bales of cotton more than they have drawn from
+the Liverpool market. That in the majority of cases, however, the stocks
+held were only sufficient to complete a portion of the contracts entered
+into is a fact which is quite beyond dispute; and these parties have
+consequently been driven into the market to purchase the raw material at
+the ruling prices of the day. In order to ascertain their position, it
+will be necessary to trace the relative prices of cotton and of goods
+during the interval between December 1849 and the present time. Up to
+the commencement of that month, the prices of the raw material had been
+gradually rising; and the almost universal complaint of spinners and
+manufacturers had been of the unwillingness of buyers to pay a
+proportionate advance upon goods. Thus, on the 1st of June last year,
+the price of fair bowed cotton was 4¼d. per lb., from which it advanced
+gradually, owing to reports of a short yield of the crop in America,
+until on the 1st of January this year it stood at 6⅜d., being an advance
+of 2⅛d. per lb. The price of best seconds water twist, No. 20 was on the
+1st of June 6¾d., and on the 1st of January 8¼d. The price of best
+second mule, No. 40, was at the same dates respectively 8½d. and 10½d.
+We had therefore—
+
+ Advance upon cotton, . 2⅛d. per lb.
+ Do. upon yarn, No. 20, 1½d. „
+ Do. upon yarn, No. 40, 2d. „
+
+This was obviously a losing trade; and it is acknowledged that, during
+the whole of this period business was only profitably carried on by the
+fortunate few who had laid in stocks at the low prices. On the 1st of
+February the highest price was attained, fair bowed cotton being quoted
+at 6⅞d., with No. 20 yarn at 8¾d., and No. 40 at 11¼d.—being an advance
+of ½ on the raw material, ½d. on the No. 20 yarn, and ¾d. on No. 40. To
+counteract the upward tendency of the market, a resort to the working of
+short time was resolved upon, principally by the spinners of coarse
+numbers; and the consumption was thus materially reduced, spinners and
+manufacturers drawing upon their stocks on hand, and thus keeping out of
+the markets for the raw material. A gradual decline in the price of
+cotton was the result—goods, however, sharing in the depression; and on
+the 1st of April fair bowed was quoted at 6⅛d., or ¾d. per lb. lower
+than in February. No. 20 yarn, the stocks having been reduced by
+short-time working, had declined only ½d. per lb.; No. 40, however, had
+fallen to the same extent as cotton. There was therefore no increase of
+prosperity brought about thus far by the short-time movement, the price
+of goods remaining at the same unsatisfactory point as compared with the
+raw material.
+
+At this date, Messrs Robert Barbour and Brother of Manchester, in their
+monthly circular, speak as follows with respect to the general trade of
+the cotton manufacturing districts:—
+
+
+ “We have to report a very dull and unsatisfactory state of business in
+ this district during the month. There has been a gradual decline in
+ prices varying from 2½ to 7½ per cent, so that some kinds of goods can
+ now be bought fully 10 to 12 per cent under the rates which were
+ demanded in January. These reduced quotations have induced some
+ parties to enter the market, but still the demand has been much under
+ the average of what is usually experienced at this season of the year.
+ The working of ‘short time’ is now generally adopted by the producers
+ of coarse yarn and heavy goods, and several large mills continue
+ closed. The drooping tendency of some descriptions of the finer
+ fabrics has been slightly counteracted during the last week by more
+ favourable intelligence from Calcutta and China; still, however, our
+ market is unsteady, and it is more than usually difficult to form any
+ idea of what is likely to be the future course of prices.
+
+ “In the goods market a general quietness has prevailed throughout the
+ month, buyers acting with extreme caution, purchasing only in small
+ parcels for the supply of their more pressing wants: prices,
+ consequently, have been irregular, and some considerable sales have
+ been made by needy manufacturers at very low rates.”
+
+
+The dulness here spoken of is particularly observable in the staple
+articles consumed by the home trade. Messrs Barbour and Brother state
+that—
+
+
+ “36-inch shirtings have participated in the general depression, and
+ stocks are beginning to accumulate. 66-reeds, 7¾ lb., have receded in
+ value 6d. to 9d. per piece, having been sold in February at 8s. to 8s.
+ 4½d., whilst now they are worth only 7s. 6d. to 7s. 9d.”
+
+
+Again:—
+
+
+ “Domestics T cloths and stout long cloths continue neglected,
+ notwithstanding the curtailed production, and can now be bought on
+ easier terms. Average qualities of domestics have been sold at 9d. per
+ lb., which is by no means remunerative to the maker.”
+
+
+The concluding paragraph of the circular is very decisive as to the
+comparatively profitless nature of the manufacture:—
+
+
+ “Cotton has now declined about 1d. per lb. during the last three
+ months. It is still, however, much higher than is warranted by the
+ prices which can be obtained for the manufactured article. Indeed, _at
+ several periods during the last few years, prices of yarns and goods
+ have been quite as high as those now current, with cotton at 1d. to
+ 2d. per lb. lower than at present_.”
+
+
+Since the date of the circular containing these gloomy accounts, an
+important change has taken place, and the tide has set in strongly
+against the manufacturing community. Immediately subsequent to its
+publication, the arrival of the American mail-steamer brought news
+confirmatory of the anticipations of a short crop of cotton, and prices
+immediately advanced, leaving the spinners and manufacturers to recruit
+their exhausted stocks at a further loss, as compared with the prices of
+goods. On the 5th of April, the receipts of cotton at the ports of
+America were shown to be 310,000 bales less than at the same period of
+the preceding year; whilst the stock computed to be held in Liverpool
+was 511,000 bales, as compared with 447,300 bales held at the same date
+in 1849, or only 63,700 bales more than last year, although spinners had
+decreased their consumption by 6300 bales per week, and taken 40,000
+bales from their own stocks. The total crop of the United States, which
+had been estimated in the beginning of the year at from 2,250,000 to
+2,300,000 bales, was only estimated in the advices by the steamer at
+2,100,000 bales.
+
+I fear that, to some readers, these statistics may be rather tedious.
+They are necessary, however, to enable us fully to understand the
+position in which this important branch of the manufactures of the
+country, and the large population dependent upon it, have been placed by
+the intelligence brought by another later mail from the United States,
+which arrived in the Mersey on the morning of the 16th ult. I have
+stated that the estimates formed of the probable crop in America, at the
+beginning of the year, varied from 2,250,000 to 2,300,000 bales. These
+had been reduced, up to the arrival of the steamer in the first week of
+April, to 2,100,000 bales. With this progressive decline going on in the
+amount of the crop, as estimated by competent judges upon the spot, and
+with the fact of decreased receipts at the American ports before their
+eyes, the spinners of this country have, with few exceptions, resolutely
+refused to give credit to the representations made to them, and kept
+further exhausting their stocks on hand, or buying only to supply their
+immediate wants. The arrival of the Niagara, however, has put the
+question at rest, and not only confirmed the statements as to the crop
+being a short one, but established the fact that it is likely to be much
+shorter than was by anybody anticipated. The following is the startling
+disclosure made by Mr T. J. Stewart of New York, one of the best
+authorities in the United States, upon the subject, in his circular of
+the 2d ult.:—
+
+
+ “The crop proves to be a short one—and if measured by the ability of
+ the world to consume, the shortest one since ’41–’42. The falling off
+ in the receipts regularly exceeds the progressive estimate I made some
+ time since, and on which I made up my table of 2,100,000 bales. It
+ will close _under two millions of bales_. How far below, I cannot at
+ present say, but the interior of the country is exhausted of supplies
+ to so great a degree, that it is evident that such a figure is totally
+ impracticable.”
+
+
+The decrease in the stocks arrived at the ports of America is put down
+by him now at 470,000 bales. Of this very insufficient crop of less than
+2,000,000 bales—that of the preceding year, I may remark, was
+2,728,000—Mr Stewart reminds us that _America will require above 600,000
+bales to supply her own mills, or nearly two-fifths of the total
+quantity consumed in Great Britain last year_. This, of itself, is a
+somewhat startling fact, and proves the rapid strides which America is
+making toward depriving this country of its manufacturing pre-eminence.
+
+It is obvious, from the above circumstances, that the American planters,
+and the holders of cotton in that country and in Liverpool, have the
+manufacturer at this moment within their grasp, and will be enabled to
+extort from his necessities still higher prices than those which have
+for months past rendered his business a losing one. The stocks of cotton
+held in the manufacturing districts are unprecedentedly light, and those
+of goods have been of late considerably reduced. But can an advance be
+secured on the manufactured article, corresponding with that demanded
+for the raw material? Few people believe this to be practicable. With
+the exception of a little temporary activity in the demand of goods for
+the East Indian market, towards the middle of last month, the gloomy
+feeling existing in every branch of the trade had deepened, and the
+demand for nearly every article perceptibly lessened. The accounts
+received by export houses from foreign markets are not of a character to
+encourage further operations; and the demand for the home trade remains
+very limited. In broad terms, _the leading foreign markets are glutted
+for months to come, and the population throughout the agricultural
+districts, and in the large towns of the kingdom as well, are
+diminishing their consumption of cotton and other fabrics to the lowest
+possible point_. With respect to the foreign trade, the worst feature is
+the falling off in the demand from the United States, to which I showed
+that, in the first two months of this year, we had shipped goods equal
+to the one half of last year’s exports. The returns for these shipments
+may be expected to be very unsatisfactory. On this subject, the last
+steamer (the Niagara) brought the following report:—
+
+
+ “The spring trade of New York _had disappointed all classes_. Early in
+ January there was an unusually active demand. High prices were
+ obtained, and large sales were made; since then business had fallen
+ off, and _the month of March, which ought to have been the best, had
+ been extremely dull—more so than had been known for many years_. The
+ stock of British and other foreign dry goods was not large, but the
+ demand was small.”
+
+
+From this market, expectations of the most sanguine character had been
+previously indulged in, which are thus rudely dashed to the ground.
+
+As yet the manufacturing community, stunned by the conviction which has
+been forced upon them of their desperate position, have formed no
+definite resolution as to the course to be pursued. For a week or two
+longer, it is possible that a portion of them may make further fruitless
+efforts to keep down the market for the raw material, which will now be
+held by speculators, aided by the abundant funds in the hands of
+bankers, with the certainty of ultimately realising higher rates. In the
+opinion of parties acquainted intimately with the whole circumstances of
+the trade, the only available course for spinners is to decrease
+consumption still further, by an extension of the system of working
+short time, or by closing a considerable portion of the mills
+altogether. Profitable working, even without an increase in the price of
+the raw material, is out of the question, with markets in their present
+depressed condition. But with such an advance as must be paid, if even
+the present reduced rate of consumption is to go on, the business would
+be perfectly ruinous.
+
+It is painful to reflect upon the severe suffering which must be
+entailed upon the operative and middle classes, throughout the
+manufacturing districts, by a general suspension of operations, or even
+by an increase of short-time working. These classes, greatly reduced as
+their wages have been during the past two years, have not, I may repeat,
+recovered as yet from the effect of the suspension of manufacturing
+activity to which they were forced in 1847 and 1848; and are
+consequently in a much worse position to be thrown again upon their own
+resources. The neatly furnished cottage no longer remains to be
+dismantled for the purpose of providing food for their families. The
+little savings’ bank hoards disappeared in those years, and have not
+since been replaced. A few employers, no doubt, may be disposed to allow
+to their hands a pittance sufficient to provide against actual
+deprivation; but it is to be feared that the mass will act with no such
+humane considerateness. Another result of such a course must be still
+farther to decrease the consumption, and depress the prices, of our
+large stocks of imported produce, and thus to inflict heavy losses upon
+their holders.
+
+It is to me perfectly clear, and the fact is tacitly admitted by a large
+portion of the community engaged in mercantile and manufacturing
+pursuits, that a most trying and fearful crisis is at hand; and that the
+present summer will not end without her Majesty’s Ministers, and the
+Free Trade party, being compelled to acknowledge that the speech from
+the Throne, and the representations of prosperity made by them at the
+opening of Parliament, were, if not deliberate perversions of the truth,
+at all events most ill-considered and hasty. We had in February last, it
+is now evident, no such thing as even prosperous manufactures, or a
+healthy state of commerce. Whilst these representations were being made,
+and agricultural pursuits alone pointed to as being in a state of
+temporary depression, the leading manufacture of the country was being
+carried on without profit, and our merchants and traders were feeling
+the ground shake beneath their feet. It is of no use, however, to refer
+to the past. The questions for the nation now to consider are—first,
+What is it which has brought about this general prostration of the
+country? and next, Where is the remedy to be applied? It is idle for the
+Free-traders to point any longer to potato rots, to railway manias, or
+to high prices of cotton, as the cause of the failure of their
+predictions of coming general prosperity. The truth is palpably before
+the world that the foreign trade, stimulate it as we may, will not
+employ the industry of the country; and that a prosperous home trade is
+indispensably necessary to render the foreign trade a profitable one. It
+is equally idle to tell us that the present state of things is only
+temporary, and that a different result of our recent policy will be
+attained by and by. In what direction are we to look for the change? Is
+any new world about to be discovered? Is there a single outlet to be
+found for our manufactures, which we cannot close up in a month? I
+confess that I cannot discern a gleam of hope for the future, or a
+prospect of the restoration of this great nation to its wonted
+prosperity, except in a total reversal of the legislation of the past
+few years, by which, and by which alone, has been caused that
+prostration of its industry and enterprise, which we are now witnessing
+on every side—in our own once happy land, and throughout the length and
+breadth of that vast colonial empire, once the pride of Great Britain,
+and the envy of the world, but now her shame, ruined and robbed as it
+has been by the legislation of designing or incapable statesmen. With
+our agricultural population fast sinking into pauperism and insolvency,
+or taking flight from our shores, as from those of an infected land, to
+fertilise with their capital and enterprise other soils, which own
+protective governments and a kindred people; with the landed aristocracy
+of the kingdom, and squirearchy and the yeomen, stripped of half their
+possessions—the baronial hall no longer distributing its hospitality to
+thousands, and pinching poverty and thrift marking the household
+arrangements, where of old there was plenty, a cup for the needy, and
+consolation and succour for the afflicted; with the middle classes in
+our towns forced down in the social scale, and hovering over the gulf of
+insolvency and ruin, and the labourer turned out, a desperate man, to
+wrest with the strong hand the food which we deny him the means to
+purchase, whilst we mock him with its cheapness—the manufacturing body
+will strive in vain for the consummation of that object which, in their
+selfishness, they proposed to themselves as the result of the boasted
+Free-trade policy—viz. the setting up of their houses over those of the
+time-honoured names of the land. Blindly and madly they have detached
+the handful of snow from the summit of the mountain; with mocking jeers
+of hideous and idiotic glee, they have seen its gathering bulk, and
+watched its progress as it rolled, prostrating the cottage and the
+farmstead, and spreading devastation over the vineyard and the waving
+corn; and they stand now shuddering at the mighty avalanche which is
+thundering above the tall chimney and the smoky town, and will shortly
+involve themselves in the general calamity and devastation. Yes, the
+fears of these men are at length beginning to be effectively roused by
+the contemplation of the work of their own hands. I say _beginning_,
+because the day of retribution is only now coming upon them, and making
+itself felt. The philosophers of the loom and spindle talk now “with
+bated breath” of the efficacy of their universal specific. There are
+doubting anxious faces on ‘Change, gloomy greetings as they meet in the
+streets, and idle hands in the once busy salerooms and warehouses. Many,
+whose voices were lately loud in cheering the flattering tales and
+sophistries of their Cobdens and Brights—some of those even whose
+subscriptions enabled the former to buy his Woodland farm, and whose
+votes and influence hoisted the blustering Quaker into a seat in the
+Legislature, are now ready to acknowledge, in private, that “there is
+some mistake;” that they have, perhaps, gone too far; and that, after
+all, Free Trade is “only an experiment.” Alas! it is one whose fatal
+effects will have to be deeply deplored, and from which the country will
+not recover for years to come. A quarter of a century of toil will
+scarcely replace the capital which has been swept away, up to the
+present period. More remains to be swept away; but now it will be the
+capital of the authors of the calamity.
+
+And this portion of these philosophers are busily and eagerly striving
+to persuade the farmer that he is foolishly nervous under the
+apprehension of permanent low prices; and that these have now reached
+the level at which the foreigner can no longer supply us profitably.
+Unfortunately, whilst they are sagely assuring the world of this fact,
+grain and flour keeps steadily pouring into our ports, at still further
+reduced prices; and additional evidence is daily being afforded of the
+total ignorance of the subject displayed in their statistics and
+calculations: supplies are reaching us daily from countries which were
+left altogether out of the catalogue of those from whose growers we were
+led to anticipate competition. Thus from France, a country which it was
+always said was not able to grow sufficient for its own consumption, the
+receipts at the port of Liverpool during two weeks, in which alone the
+quantity is quoted separately, were as follows:—
+
+ French flour.
+ Week ending March 19, 6000 barrels.
+ April 9, 6166
+ and 2419 American.
+
+And from that country, and the whole of the ports of the North of
+Europe, distant from us by only a few days’ sail—by a voyage made in
+less time than the average consumed in those made from port to port on
+our own coasts—supplies will continue to come, at rates with which the
+British grower can never hope to compete. In fact, the farmer of the
+North of Europe may in future be treated as a British subject—enjoying
+all the immunities of one, without contributing towards his burthens. He
+is nearer the London or the Liverpool markets than a Norfolk or a
+Lincolnshire farmer; and that he frequently pays less for the conveyance
+of his produce than it will be seen from the following table, which
+contains the rates actually paid in Liverpool by importing houses during
+the years beginning in 1847 to this year, such farmer pays:—
+
+ COASTING and FOREIGN FREIGHTS of WHEAT to LIVERPOOL.
+
+ ┌─────────────────┬──────────────────┬──────────────────┐
+ │ │ 1847. │ 1848. │
+ ├─────────────────┼──────────────────┼──────────────────┤
+ │ │ Per quarter. │ Per quarter. │
+ │ │_s. d._ _s. d._│_s. d._ _s. d._│
+ │From Stettin, │5 0 │ │
+ │ „ Dantzig, │4 6 │4 0 │
+ │ „ Rostock, │6 0 │4 0 │
+ │ „ Hamburg, │4 0 to 3 6 │4 0 to 3 0 │
+ │ „ Rotterdam, │ │2 6 │
+ │ „ Antwerp, │ │3 0 to 2 6 │
+ │ „ Bremen, │ │3 3 to 3 0 │
+ │ „ Bruges, │ │ │
+ │ „ Ghent, │ │ │
+ │ „ New York, │ │ │
+ │ (last │ │ │
+ │ rates,) │ │ │
+ │ │ │ │
+ │_From Coasts of │ │ │
+ │ England to │ │ │
+ │ Liverpool._ │ │ │
+ │ Colchester, │2 0 │2 0 │
+ │ Woodbridge, │2 6 │2 6 │
+ │ Salcombe, │2 6 │2 6 │
+ │ Kingsbridge,│2 6 │2 6 │
+ │ Lynn, │2 6 │2 1 │
+ │ Ipswich, │2 3 │1 9 │
+ │ Yarmouth, │2 1 │ │
+ └─────────────────┴──────────────────┴──────────────────┘
+
+ ┌─────────────────┬──────────────────┬──────────────────┐
+ │ │ 1849. │ 1850. │
+ ├─────────────────┼──────────────────┼──────────────────┤
+ │ │ Per quarter. │ Per quarter. │
+ │ │_s. d._ _s. d._│_s. d._ _s. d._│
+ │From Stettin, │4 0 to 2 9 │3 0 │
+ │ „ Dantzig, │4 0 │3 0 │
+ │ „ Rostock, │4 0 │ │
+ │ „ Hamburg, │3 0 │1 9 │
+ │ „ Rotterdam, │2 0 to 1 9 │1 9 │
+ │ „ Antwerp, │2 6 to 1 6 │1 3 to 1 0!│
+ │ „ Bremen, │ │1 6 │
+ │ „ Bruges, │1 6 │1 6 │
+ │ „ Ghent, │1 6 │1 6 │
+ │ „ New York, │ │3 0 │
+ │ (last │ │ │
+ │ rates,) │ │ │
+ │ │ │ │
+ │_From Coasts of │ │ │
+ │ England to │ │ │
+ │ Liverpool._ │ │ │
+ │ Colchester, │ │1 6 │
+ │ Woodbridge, │1 9 │1 6 │
+ │ Salcombe, │ │2 0 │
+ │ Kingsbridge,│2 0 │ │
+ │ Lynn, │ │ │
+ │ Ipswich, │1 9 to 1 6 │1 6 │
+ │ Yarmouth, │1 10 │ │
+ └─────────────────┴──────────────────┴──────────────────┘
+
+Yet the freight on wheat was to be a sufficient protection for the
+farmer!
+
+I must here, sir, leave the subject to your own powerful pen. I have
+given you the facts as I have collated them from the most authentic
+sources, and the observations which I have made personally; and they
+have more than confirmed the impressions with which I entered upon this
+inquiry.— have the honour to be, &c.
+
+
+
+
+ ALISON’S POLITICAL ESSAYS.[5]
+
+
+The collection of scattered periodical essays, especially such as are of
+a strictly political character, is an adventure far more perilous to the
+reputation of an author than the issue of any single work deliberately
+planned, and laboriously executed in the closet. The historian, dealing
+solely with the records of the past, reviving or recreating pictures
+which have long ago appeared upon the ancient canvass, may without
+difficulty arrange his scattered portraits and groups in such an order,
+that they shall impress the public mind with a feeling of absolute
+novelty. A historical paradox, if ingeniously conceived and plausibly
+conveyed, is sure to command attention. The fickleness of the Athenians
+was by no means idiosyncratic to that volatile nation. All men weary of
+hearing the same phrase and the same judgment invariably repeated. They
+suspect the justice of Aristides, or the perfidy of Crookback Richard,
+on account of the unanimous verdict, and are by no means displeased when
+any daring casuist steps forward, armed with a tolerable array of proof,
+to detract from the rigid virtue of the one, or to palliate the vices of
+the other. In truth, the materials of all history are so various and
+conflicting in their character, that an artist of consummate skill, who
+is withal not over-scrupulous, may easily pass off fictions under the
+disguise of broad reality. Historical sketches, therefore, which relate
+to past events, may be viewed in the light either of lively episodes or
+of profound commentaries; and their republication, after a term of
+years, can in no way affect the soundness of the author’s judgment.
+
+To republish criticisms, especially such as relate to the works of
+cotemporaries, is certainly a more delicate task. It is easy to comment
+upon an author whose works have been long before the public, and
+frequently and diligently scanned. High criticism may discover beauties
+or detect faults which have escaped the notice of less keen and
+scrutinising observers; but, in the aggregate, certainly in the majority
+of cases, the broad opinion which has been expressed by others is
+allowed to remain unchallenged. The influence of previous judgment
+invariably sways the critic. None are rash enough to deny the genius of
+Shakspeare; at the same time, nothing is more certain than that, were
+another Shakspeare to arise amongst us at this moment, there would be no
+kind of unanimity as to his deserts. In all ages and in all countries
+this has been the rule. Personal spite, unacknowledged and possibly
+unperceived envy, party difference of opinion, disparity of station,
+prejudice of education—all these, in their turn, have passed, like so
+many clouds, between the sun of living genius and the critics who
+surveyed its orbit. Nor ought we to overlook the fact that, in many
+instances, meteors have been mistaken for suns, and the eyes of the
+critic been dazzled by a glare, to which his own willing imagination
+lent at least one half its brilliancy. Therefore it is that contemporary
+criticism, when republished in an abiding form, rarely satisfies the
+expectation of the reader. His own judgment has been formed, apart from
+the considerations and prejudices which are so apt to beset the critic;
+and he conceives an unfavourable impression of the literary acuteness of
+the writer, when he finds a gross discrepancy between the older and the
+later estimate.
+
+But far more trying to an author is the republication of political
+essays, composed during the progress of great national events. This
+branch of composition is peculiar to our own age, in which periodical
+literature is so marked and eminent a feature. Pamphleteering is of
+venerable date. Sir Thomas More, Milton, Marvell, Swift, and Defoe, were
+all notable pamphleteers; but periodical writing, in the highest sense
+of the term, is the invention of the present century. That great and
+influential organs of public opinion, ranking among their contributors
+the men of the highest intellect and the most laborious acquirements,
+should have been established in our time, marks not only the development
+of the influence of the press, but the importance of the events which
+such men are imperatively summoned to discuss. It marks even more, for
+it has established a power beyond the boundaries of the old
+constitution, which, as it is used or misused, cannot fail to affect
+materially the destinies of Great Britain.
+
+Every political treatise referring to events which have engrossed the
+attention of the day, either as modifications or as changes of our
+social system, must be valuable in later years. It must necessarily
+recommend or condemn measures on account of their probable operation in
+the time to come; it must in some degree be a prophecy, or else it is
+practically worthless. The politician studies the past merely as his
+guide for the future. If he is learned, wise, and at all an adept in the
+science which he professes—than which no other is of so momentous an
+import—he will consider past history as the barometer which must guide
+him in predicating the approach either of a tempest or a calm. Temporary
+clamour or occasional obstruction will not lead him to forsake clear
+principles of action, or to recommend a grand constitutional remedy in
+the case of a trifling local disease. He must look forward beyond the
+sphere of immediate action—resolute in this belief, that one false step,
+however small, may upset the equilibrium of the State. Expediency, the
+modern idol, finds little favour in the eyes of the true and sagacious
+statesman. He tests measures by their intrinsic value, regardless of the
+“pressure from without;” and he looks upon Parliamentary majorities as
+of less moment than the maintenance of the real interests of his
+country.
+
+If we apply these remarks to our later political history, and to the
+conduct of those men whom circumstances have elevated to the highest
+stations in Government, we shall at once perceive that the first great
+principles of practical statesmanship have been abandoned. The welfare
+and integrity of the Empire has been made a subsidiary object to the
+triumph of party ambition; and accordingly, CONSISTENCY, that grand test
+of a politician’s sincerity and soundness, is the very quality which is
+wanting. To consistency, indeed, neither Lord John Russell nor Sir
+Robert Peel, for many years the rival chiefs of party, can lay the
+slightest claim. They have been playing a long, and, doubtless, an
+interesting game, with the map of Britain and its dependencies before
+them as a chess-board: they have directed the whole of their energies to
+giving checkmate to one another; and with this view they have again and
+again altered the relative positions of king and queen, bishops,
+knights, castles, and pawns. To counteract the last move of his
+adversary was the great object of each of these ingenious players. It
+was a pretty trial of dexterity and finesse; but we trust, for the sake
+of the chessmen, that the match is finally concluded. Talent of this
+kind may, indeed, be available when it is necessary to contend with a
+foreign adversary; but it is worse than mischievous when practised
+systematically at home.
+
+To have surveyed the political events of the last twenty years with a
+calm and dispassionate eye—to estimate the consequences of each
+concession to popular clamour, and each move for party purposes—to form
+inductions as to the future from the indelible history of the past—to
+trace the causes of social misery and disquiet to their remote and
+recondite source—to discern the coming cloud of adversity in the midst
+of apparent abundance—required more than common thought, learning,
+sagacity, and prescience; and the man who has done all this, cannot fail
+to be ranked, in the estimation of those whose judgment is of real
+value, among the first masters of political and economic science. Many
+brilliant commentaries upon passing events, which at the first blush
+were received as absolute oracles of wisdom, have utterly failed in
+their predictions, and are now consigned to oblivion. They failed—if
+from no other cause, at least assuredly from this—that they flowed from
+the pens of partisans, whose whole energies were devoted to the
+advancement of themselves and their faction. Party spirit, indeed, has
+of late years almost entirely overshadowed that patriotism which was
+once our highest boast. Truth may be spoken of an opponent—and very
+often more than truth; but it is seldom expressed with regard to the
+political conduct of those whom men are accustomed to regard as their
+friends. Private motives are allowed to interfere with the more rigorous
+functions of the censor; the moralist is changed into the apologetic
+rhetorician; the judge becomes the interested advocate.
+
+Were the present crisis of our political history less momentous than it
+truly is—were not the great and final struggle for a return to the
+principles, by means of which our national greatness was achieved, so
+near at hand—we might, from motives and considerations easily
+appreciable, have left this volume of Mr Alison’s collected political
+essays without any special notice. For a long period of years, embracing
+the most important changes which have been made in the institutions and
+relations of this country, Mr Alison has been a constant contributor to
+the Magazine, adopting his own views, enforcing his own opinions,
+without reference to the distinctions of party or the position of
+individual statesmen. We believe that, in some respects, the attitude of
+the Magazine has differed from that assumed by any periodical
+publication in the country. It has never been the organ of a Party, and
+never subservient to a Government. Many times we have been compelled to
+differ from those whose political opinions have been thought most
+closely to approximate to our own; and never have we hesitated to
+express that difference in clear and unambiguous terms, knowing that a
+true and honourable conviction never ought to be concealed, or can be
+without affecting the integrity of those who entertain it.
+
+The present publication sufficiently discloses the part which Mr Alison
+has taken in the political discussions which have arisen during that
+eventful period. They are valuable to the rising generation for two
+especial reasons. In the first place, they are a faithful record of the
+impressions which passing events made upon the mind of a highly-gifted,
+generous, and independent man, the object of whose life was apart from
+those pursuits which inflame the passions, whilst they warp the
+judgment, of the mere partisan. In the second place, they will enable
+the reader to trace, step by step, the innovations which modern
+Liberalism has made upon the older limits of the constitution; and to
+estimate the consistency of those who at one time affected to be the
+opponents of that Liberalism, and at another, whether through weakness,
+or treachery, or ambition, came forward to assist in its blind and
+infatuated progress.
+
+Perhaps the most interesting papers in the present volume are those
+which refer to the memorable and exciting era of the Reform Bill. They
+are not only interesting, but highly instructive in a constitutional
+point of view, as showing the utter disregard of the Whig faction to the
+maintenance of that political framework which, when in power, they
+affect to worship with almost superstitious veneration. Never, probably,
+was there a period in our history when the passions of the populace were
+more dexterously and deliberately excited by men of high station, and by
+no means contemptible intellect. Treason was then in vogue: sedition
+openly encouraged. Most of us can recollect the ugly and ominous emblems
+which were paraded through the streets of the larger towns, and the
+violence with which every one supposed to be hostile to the popular
+measure was assailed. Haughty aristocrats, like the late Earl Grey,
+condescended to treat with Jacobin clubs and political unions; the
+physical power of the masses was appealed to as an argument of
+irresistible weight, and Whig officials were privy to the plan of a
+projected Birmingham insurrection. The voice of reason was entirely
+stifled amidst the general democratic howl, and all suggestions as to a
+modification of the grand electoral scheme were treated with fierce
+hostility. The framers of the measure had no wish that its details
+should be narrowly sifted, or submitted to the test of principle. There
+was a deep meaning in the phrase, which at that time passed into a
+proverb, “The Bill—the whole Bill—and nothing but the Bill!” No other
+method of reform, however large and comprehensive, would have suited the
+junta who then deemed themselves secure of an interminable lease of
+power. And why? Because any other measure which might have embraced the
+claim of the Colonies to a share in the Imperial representation, would
+have interfered with their special project of lowering the landed
+interest, and giving a decided preponderance in Parliament to the votes
+of the urban population.
+
+We are far from wishing to maintain that the spirit which animated the
+councils of the Conservative leaders of the day was in all respects the
+most prudent; or that they did not to a certain extent accelerate the
+movement by withholding minor concessions, which might have been
+gracefully and advantageously given. But in justice to them it must be
+remembered, that they had a great principle to contend for—a principle
+too little understood then, and perhaps only now becoming generally
+appreciated on account of the pernicious effects which have resulted
+from its violation. The older Representative system of Great Britain
+might appear to the casual eye artificial, unequal, and therefore
+unjust; but it had this grand and wholesome advantage, which we look for
+in vain in its successor, that, by means of it, not only were the great
+classes of the community at home adequately represented, but our
+fellow-subjects of the Colonies could, and did, exercise a direct
+influence within the walls of St Stephen’s. To allow this influence to
+be encroached on, however covertly or plausibly, seemed tantamount to an
+abandonment of the principle by which the Conservative party had been
+guided throughout; and subsequent events have shown that no exaggerated
+estimate was formed of the tendencies of democratic rule. This
+conviction of the prospective danger of the Reform measure to the
+integrity of the British Empire was, we know, the main cause of that
+early, though perhaps injudicious, resistance to the extension of the
+electoral suffrage, which finally gave way before the impulse added to
+popular excitement by the example of foreign revolution. As regarded the
+welfare of our Colonies, the Reform Bill was virtually a death-blow. It
+laid the foundation for a rapid succession of measures, selfish in their
+tendency and grossly impolitic, which have already gone far to pervert
+the loyal feelings of the Colonists, by teaching them that the mother
+country has decided upon a policy altogether injurious to their
+interests as subjects of the British Crown. They have had no voice, no
+direction in the legislative enactments which have since that time so
+deeply affected their prosperity; they have been governed rather as
+tributaries than as portions of the Empire; and their complaints have
+been too often treated with undisguised contumely, or, at best, with
+haughty indifference. Our opinion as to the importance of the
+maintenance of our Colonial dominions, and the imminent necessity which
+exists of securing that maintenance by giving them some effective voice
+in the legislative councils of Great Britain, has been repeatedly
+expressed. No other step will suffice to stay the tide of disaffection;
+and happy will it be for all of us, if the practical refutation of the
+Free-trade delusion, now becoming every day more obvious and
+acknowledged, shall lead to such prudent measures, with regard to our
+dependencies, as may again consolidate into one great and united mass,
+inspired by the same feelings and actuated by the same interests, the
+scattered elements of British greatness and renown.
+
+But apart altogether from Colonial considerations, the Reform Bill has
+been productive of the most serious consequences to the internal economy
+of this country. Under its benign operation the National Debt, instead
+of being diminished, is augmented; whilst, at the same time, by a system
+of ruinous cheapness, induced by the free admission of foreign produce
+to compete in the home market with our own, incomes have been lowered by
+nearly a half, and the means of paying the increased taxation have been
+proportionably curtailed. We do not believe that the Whigs, while
+straining every energy to carry the Reform Bill, meditated the
+possibility of any such results. We have their own statements—at least
+those of Lords Melbourne and John Russell—to the contrary; and even were
+it otherwise, we are not disposed to attribute to that party so great a
+share of political prescience, as to assume that they foresaw the
+consequences of their own deliberate act.
+
+It was, however, foreseen by others. In 1831, Mr Alison, arguing from
+historical precedents, predicted that the natural effect of the passing
+of the Reform Bill would be the repeal of the Corn Laws.
+
+
+ “When it is recollected,” wrote he, “that 300 English members of the
+ Reformed house are to be for the boroughs, and only 150 for the
+ counties, it may easily be anticipated that this effect is certain.
+ And in vain will the House of Peers strive to resist such a result:
+ their power must have been so completely extinguished before the
+ Reform Bill is past, that any resistance on their part would be
+ speedily overcome.
+
+ “This first and unavoidable consequence of this great change will at
+ once set the manufacturing classes at variance with the agricultural
+ interest; and then will commence that fatal war between the different
+ classes of society, which has hitherto been only repressed by the
+ weight and authority of a stable, and, in a certain degree, hereditary
+ government, composed of an intermixture of the representatives of
+ _all_ interests. When it is recollected that wheat can be raised with
+ ease in Poland at prices varying from 17s. to 20s. a quarter, and that
+ it can be laid down on the quay of any harbour in Britain at from 33s.
+ to 40s., it may easily be anticipated what a revolution in prices
+ will, in the _first instance_, be effected by this measure. We say in
+ the _first_ instance—for nothing seems clearer than that the
+ _ultimate_ effect will be, by throwing a large portion of British land
+ out of cultivation, and in its stead producing a more extensive growth
+ of grain on the shores of the Vistula, to restore the equilibrium
+ between the supply of corn and its consumption, and, by means of
+ destroying a large portion of British agriculture, raise the prices
+ again to their former standard.”
+
+ We have lately been favoured, from certain quarters, with ingenious
+ disquisitions touching the probable future price of grain in this
+ country—disquisitions to which we by no means object, as, apart
+ altogether from their truth or their falsity, they manifest a growing
+ uneasiness as to the possibility of maintaining the Free-trade system
+ for many months longer. We may perhaps be allowed to take some credit
+ to ourselves for having effected this change in the tone and
+ sentiments of gentlemen who, not long ago, were clamorous in their
+ praise of cheap food and diminished agricultural prices. In our
+ January Number, by the aid of the most intelligent, skilful, and
+ experienced agriculturists of Scotland, we proved, beyond the power of
+ refutation, that no British farmer could stand his ground against the
+ present influx of foreign corn, and that no possible reduction of
+ rent, short of its annihilation, would enable him to meet the
+ deficiency. We were met, as might naturally be expected, by the double
+ weapons of rancorous abuse and deliberate falsification.[6] But these
+ having utterly failed in their purpose, our antagonists have since
+ changed their ground altogether, and are now attempting to argue,
+ against the experience of each successive week, that the present fall
+ of prices is merely temporary, and that wheat must again rise to
+ something like its former level. How long they may continue in their
+ endeavours to propagate this fresh delusion we know not. They cannot
+ mislead the farmers, at whose door ruin is at present knocking with an
+ unmistakeable sound. The only men they can mislead are their unhappy
+ dupes, who have been taught to believe that the prosperity of Britain
+ depends solely upon one of the weakest, most unstable, and most
+ precarious of its manufactures.
+
+
+In the same article from which we have just quoted, Mr Alison wrote as
+follows:—
+
+
+ “Now, the misery arising from the reduction of the resources of the
+ farmer could not be confined to his own class in society; it would
+ immediately and seriously affect the manufacturing and commercial
+ interests. The great trade of every country, as Adam Smith long ago
+ remarked, is between the town and the country: by far the greatest
+ part of the produce of our looms is consumed by those who, directly or
+ indirectly, are fed by the British plough. Not the haughty aristocrat
+ only, who spends his life in luxurious indolence among his hereditary
+ trees, but the innumerable classes who are maintained by his rents and
+ fed by his expenditure—the numerous creditors who draw large parts of
+ his rents through their mortgages, and live in affluence in distant
+ towns upon the produce of his land—the farmers, who subsist in
+ comparative comfort on the industry which they exert on his
+ estates—the tradesmen and artisans, who are fed by his expenditure or
+ the wants of his tenantry—all would suffer alike by such a change of
+ prices as should seriously affect the industry of the cultivators.
+ Every shopkeeper knows how much he is dependent on the expenditure of
+ those who directly or indirectly are maintained by the land, and what
+ liberal purchasers landlords are, compared to those who subsist by
+ manufactures; and it is probable that the first and greatest sufferers
+ by the repeal of the Corn Laws would be many of those very persons
+ whose blind cry for Reform had rendered it unavoidable.
+
+ “Now, the discouragement of British agriculture consequent on a
+ free-trade in corn would be _permanent_, although the benefit to the
+ inhabitants of towns could only be temporary. After the destruction of
+ a large portion of British agriculture had been effected, by the
+ immense inundation of foreign grain, prices would rise again to their
+ former level, because the monopoly would then be vested in the hands
+ of the foreign growers; and the bulky nature of grain renders it
+ _physically_ impossible to introduce an _unlimited_ supply of that
+ article by sea transport. But the condition of British agriculture
+ would not be materially benefited by the change; because prices would
+ rise _solely_ in consequence of the British grower being, for the most
+ part, driven out of the field; and could be maintained at a high level
+ only by his being _kept_ from an extensive competition with the
+ foreign cultivator. Should the British farmers, recovering from their
+ consternation, recommence the active agriculture which at present
+ maintains our vast and increasing population, the consequence would
+ be, that prices would immediately fall to such a degree, as speedily
+ to reduce them to their natural and unavoidable state of inferiority
+ to the farmers of the Continent.
+
+ “In considering this subject, there are two important circumstances to
+ be kept in view, proved abundantly by experience, but which have not
+ hitherto met with the general attention which they deserve.
+
+ “The first of these is, that, in agriculture—differing in this respect
+ from manufactures—the introduction of machinery, or the division of
+ labour, can effect _no reduction whatever_ in the price of its
+ produce, or the facility of its production; and perhaps the best mode
+ of cultivation yet known is that which is carried on by the greatest
+ possible application of human labour, in the form of spade
+ cultivation. The proof of this is decisive. Great Britain, with the
+ aid of the steam-engine, can undersell the weavers of Hindostan with
+ muslins manufactured out of cotton grown on the banks of the Ganges;
+ but it is undersold in its own markets by the wheat-grower on the
+ banks of the Vistula, or in the basin of the Mississippi. It is in
+ vain, therefore, for a state like England, burdened with high prices
+ and an excessive taxation—the natural consequence of commercial
+ opulence—to hope that its industry can, in agriculture as in
+ manufactures, withstand the competition of the foreign grower.
+ Machinery, skill, and capital can easily counteract high prices in all
+ other articles of human consumption: in agriculture, they can produce
+ no such effect. This is a law of nature which will subsist to the end
+ of the world.
+
+ “The second is, that a comparatively small importation of grain
+ produces a prodigious effect on the prices at which it is sold. The
+ importation of a tenth part of the annual consumption does not, it is
+ calculated, lower prices a tenth, but _a half_—and so on with the
+ importation of smaller quantities. This has always been observed, and
+ is universally acknowledged by political economists. Although,
+ therefore, the greatest possible importation of foreign grain must
+ always be a part only of that required for the consumption of the
+ whole people, yet still the effect upon the current rate of prices
+ would be most disastrous. The greatest importation ever known was in
+ 1801, when it amounted, in consequence of the scarcity, to an
+ _eighteenth_ part of the annual consumption; but the free introduction
+ of much less than that quantity would reduce the price of wheat in the
+ first instance, in an ordinary year, to 45s. the quarter.
+
+ “The repeal of the Corn Laws, therefore, is calculated to inflict a
+ _permanent_ wound on the agricultural resources of the empire, and
+ permanently injure all the numerous classes who depend on that branch
+ of industry, and confer only a _temporary_ benefit, by the reduction
+ of prices, on the manufacturing labourers. The benefit is temporary,
+ and mixed up, even at first, with a most bitter portion of alloy; the
+ evil lasting, unmitigated by any benefit whatever.”
+
+
+We are now in the course of enduring that precise phase of suffering,
+arising from the repeal of the Corn Laws, which was predicted by Mr
+Alison more than eighteen years ago; and it is solely from the extent of
+that suffering that we are inclined to form a better augury for the
+future than we could have ventured to have done in the course of the
+bygone year. Three months have not passed since, at the opening of
+Parliament, the Whig Ministry with unparalleled audacity ventured to
+congratulate the country on its general prosperous condition! Themselves
+indeed they might congratulate, that, by means of an income and property
+tax, imposed under false pretences by a former Premier, the public
+revenue was still sufficient to meet its ordinary engagements; but what
+other ground of congratulation there was, no host of witnesses could
+tell. Could they venture to congratulate the country _now_ on the state
+of the manufacturing districts? Has this little interval of three
+months, at a time of universal peace and unparalleled cheapness,
+sufficed to change universal prosperity into widespread and acknowledged
+depression? Not so. The depression had begun long before—it commenced so
+soon as falling prices warned the agricultural consumers of the fate
+which was in store for them; and if Ministers did not know this, they
+are utterly unfit to retain their places longer. The continuance of that
+depression can be only measured by the existence of the Free-trade
+system. If that is allowed to go on, and if there be indeed, as is now
+the common cant of the Liberal journalists, no possibility of retracing
+our steps, the next move will be one of plunder. No foreign trade can
+compensate for the tithe of the loss sustained by the depreciation of
+property at home. That cheapness which means nothing else than
+curtailment of individual profits, from the highest to the lowest,
+cannot possibly coexist with expensive government and enormous taxation.
+The public creditor will be marked for the next blow; and his situation
+is the more precarious from the peculiar monetary history of the
+country, and the first important measure—pity also that it had not been
+the last!—which Sir Robert Peel was instrumental in carrying through the
+House of Commons.
+
+We are not only hopeful but sanguine as to the power of Great Britain in
+extricating herself from a difficulty, not transient as before, but
+settled in its character, because we believe that the downfal of a
+wretched, presuming, and ignorant faction cannot be much longer delayed.
+We have been cursed, for many years back, by the predominance of a race
+of quacks, impostors, sham economists, and political adventurers, who,
+through favour of the Reform Bill, have forced their way into
+Parliament, after having failed in the ordinary occupations of trade,
+and have succeeded in palming their crude and pestilential doctrines
+upon Ministers too occupied with individual ambition to care much for
+the public welfare. Does any one believe that such men have any interest
+in maintaining the public credit, or that they would not, did an
+opportunity occur, attempt to defraud the creditor, as they have already
+succeeded in diminishing the means of the debtor? Surely a thoughtful
+review of the political events which have occurred within the last five
+years is enough to remove any lingering credulity on this point. We do
+not ask any one to adopt our views, or to accept our construction. Let
+him deliberately reflect upon the language of these men in 1845, when
+the political and commercial fever was at its height—when private
+individuals were persuaded that they might rear fortunes without the
+drudgery of industry, and when statesmen were preparing to recommend the
+same false principle for the general guidance of the nation. How the
+upstart economists swaggered, strutted, and cackled then! Not a whit
+less incompetent and treacherous, as guides in their own path, than were
+the mushroom clerks and pimpled adventurers of the Stock Exchanges in
+another, they stood forth like so many political John Laws, proclaiming
+that unbounded wealth, increased demand for labour, and endless influx
+of capital would be the immediate result of their magnificent
+free-trading schemes. They had figures and blue-books, returns,
+calculations and balance-sheets, painfully concocted by plodding
+theorists, ready at hand to back up their asseverations, and to satisfy
+the doubts of the most sceptical. This is peculiarly an age in which men
+are befooled by figures. A century ago, it was enough that a statement
+should pass from writing into print, and be included in the columns of a
+journal, in order to secure its currency as a point of popular belief.
+The increase of journalism has in some respects remedied this, most men
+being now alive to the fact that typography possesses no peculiar
+immunity from falsehood. But figures are—or at least were a few years
+ago—untainted in their reputation. Few people were cautious enough to
+resist a tempting calculation. It never entered into their heads to
+suppose that there lay gross error, radical fallacy, and often
+deliberate fraud, in the imposing array of cyphers which were
+ostentatiously paraded for their inspection. If half-a-dozen
+unscrupulous swindlers determined to start a railway, nothing more was
+required to secure a rush for the scrip, than a summary of phantom
+traffic, exhibiting a clear return of some fifteen or twenty per cent
+after deduction of the working expenses. We all know what has been the
+result of that widespread infatuation. In precisely the same manner did
+the economists concoct their accounts, when they issued their Free-trade
+prospectus. Less honest, or perhaps more daringly fraudulent than the
+railway projectors, they did not propose to grant any compensation for
+the land at all, but their traffic tables were undoubtedly an
+arithmetical _chef-d’œuvre_! Two millions per week of clear gain was
+about the smallest estimate; and to this result various persons, whose
+previous biography, now that they have emerged as public characters,
+might be interesting, pledged their valuable reputations!
+
+That they imposed upon the leaders of party, as well as upon a large
+section of the nation, is no matter of marvel. Statesmen are not exempt
+from folly, imprudence, or delusion, any more than private persons. One
+may be cold, selfish, and greedy; another rash, unscrupulous, and
+obstinate; but, as there are few fish which will not take a bait, so
+there seem to be few modern statesmen proof against the temptation of
+altering their policy, if, by doing so, they believe that they can
+secure possession of an unlimited lease of power. In the present case
+the bait was dexterously spun between the two rivals, and the anxiety of
+both to secure it was so great, that neither took the precaution of
+examining curiously into the nature of its actual texture.
+
+There is hardly a man in the country, from the peer to the artisan, who
+is not asking himself at this moment, what he has gained by Free-trade.
+So far as the agricultural interest is concerned, there is no dubiety on
+the point. The landlord is dunned for reduction of rent, is
+discontinuing his improvements, reducing his establishment, and setting
+his house in order for an altered style of living. The tenant is
+wellnigh ruined, furious that he has been betrayed, economising labour
+as he best can, or seriously meditating emigration. The labourer finds
+his wages reduced, his small comforts curtailed or abolished, work
+scarce, and the workhouse at no great distance. Let them all take
+comfort. According to our hopeful economists, this is a mere “transition
+state of suffering.” What the next state is to be, no prophet of them
+all can foretell. Meantime certain Solons advocate a wholesale
+emigration—rather a strange panacea for a nation about to be so
+prosperous!
+
+Go to the towns or the manufacturing districts, and ask how they are
+prospering. The cotton trade is threatening to shut up. The travellers
+are returning disconsolate to their employers with the news that orders
+are every day becoming more scarce, and money payments even scarcer.
+There is no joy or exultation now in Leeds or Bradford. The journeymen
+operatives are combining against the slop system. The _Morning
+Chronicle_ harrows up the feelings of its readers, by tearful tales of
+the misery and destitution which prevails throughout the large towns of
+the empire, and no human being can deny the truth of the appalling
+statements. Scottish philanthropists, on their midnight visits to the
+wynds of Edinburgh, are struck with amazement at the squalor and vice
+which they encounter, and not less with the shoals of destitute
+creatures who are hurrying, with perverse infatuation, from the free
+open country to the fated atmosphere of a loathsome city garret. They
+want to check the stream, and drive the current back again. But whither?
+In the country there is no work for these people. Machinery has forced
+the hand-loom from the villages; Free Trade is reducing the wages of the
+spade to nothing. From the Western Highlands, and from Ireland, those
+who have money enough left to secure a passage on ship-board are
+emigrating by thousands—it is, we are told by a correspondent, the
+briskest trade in Liverpool. Those who have no money left are trooping
+to the towns, with the prospect before them of a fate which might rend
+the heart of the most callous. Who would wish to be a statesman, if for
+the consequences of all his deeds he must be held accountable hereafter?
+
+Ask the master-manufacturers themselves how they are getting on, now
+that they have succeeded in their darling scheme of securing cheap food,
+and paralysing the home trade? You may ask if you will, but you will
+hardly obtain an answer, save through the medium of the trade circulars,
+all filled with dismal forebodings. Were another Cobden testimonial to
+be proposed just now, the subscriptions would scarcely purchase many
+shares in the most depreciated of the lines.
+
+Ask the gentlemen of the railway interest, what cause is in operation to
+crush down their traffic and annihilate their dividends? They will tell
+you to a man that it is the universal agricultural depression. Ask the
+iron-masters how they are thriving? At this moment they are trembling
+for the stability of their colossal fortunes.
+
+It is utterly impossible that this state of matters can continue much
+longer. If we do not reverse our mad and desperate policy—and that
+soon—the pressure of taxation, still retaining its former money-level,
+whilst the production which contributes to it is depreciated by a half,
+will become so unendurable, that any remedy, however desperate, will
+find numerous advocates; and amongst the foremost and most clamorous of
+these will be the leading sham economists. The stateliest ship, when the
+water is gaining upon her hold, must perforce part with her guns—the
+parallel case is being practically exhibited just now, by the efforts of
+the financial reformers to get rid of our warlike establishments. If we
+cannot part with our defences, we must do without something else. There
+is in the mean time a talk of reducing salaries, paring down judicial
+emoluments, and retrenching diplomatic expenses. Lord John Russell, with
+no very good grace, has been forced to refer these matters to a
+committee, for the evident purpose of securing the longest possible
+period of delay. But the tax-gatherer will not be idle in his function,
+and still the clamour will increase. Superfluities will go first—but no
+surrender of superfluities will meet the exigency. Men, when pressed to
+the last extremity, become reckless of their personal obligations; and
+we have already heard from various quarters intimations that, if the
+land is to be permanently depreciated, the creditor who has lent his
+money on the security of that land must be prepared to share the burden
+of the loss with the owner. There is a smack of wild justice in this,
+not at all unpalatable to the taste of a burdened debtor. Sir Robert
+Peel’s favourite question, “What is a pound?” will be argued afresh,
+after a fashion little likely to secure the approval of the original
+propounder of the query. We shall be told, truly enough, that the pound
+is the mere conventional representation of a certain amount of produce;
+and a very large body of men will begin to talk of paying off their
+debts, both private and public, upon a principle which, if once adopted,
+would destroy the whole credit of the country. Three years ago, Mr
+Doubleday demonstrated that, if the repeal of the Corn Laws should have
+the effect of reducing the price of wheat on the average to 4s. or 4s.
+6d. per bushel, only two courses are left—either to repeal the taxes
+down to five-and-twenty millions at most; or to alter the currency law
+of 1819, and reduce the value of money to half the present value. We
+have now almost touched the mark.
+
+All this was clearly foreseen and foreshadowed by Mr Alison, in his
+memorable paper of 1831; and we beg of our readers to peruse with
+attention the following extract, as of primary importance at the present
+juncture of affairs:—
+
+
+ “Such a change of prices might be innocuous, if individuals and the
+ public could begin on a new basis, and there were no subsisting _money
+ engagements_, which must be provided for at a reduced rate of incomes.
+ But how is such a state of things to go on, when individuals and the
+ State are under so many engagements, which cannot be averted without
+ private or public bankruptcy? This is the question which, in a
+ complicated state of society such as we live in, where industry is so
+ dependent on credit, is the vital one to every interest.
+
+ “There is hardly an individual possessed of property in the country
+ who is not immediately or ultimately involved in money engagements.
+ The landlords are notoriously and proverbially drowned in debt, and it
+ is calculated that _two-thirds_ of the produce of the soil finds its
+ way ultimately into the pocket of the public or the private creditor.
+ Farmers are all more or less involved in engagements either to their
+ landlords or to the banks who have advanced their money; merchants and
+ manufacturers have their bills or cash-accounts standing against them,
+ which must be provided for, whatever ensues with regard to the prices
+ of the articles in which they deal; and private individuals, even of
+ wealthy fortunes, have provisions to their wives, sisters, brothers,
+ or children, which must be made up to a certain money amount, if they
+ would avert the evils of bankruptcy. Now, if the views of the
+ Reformers are well founded, and a great reduction is effected in the
+ price of grain, and consequently in the money-income of every man in
+ the kingdom, through the free trade in corn, how are these
+ undiminished money-obligations to be made good out of the diminished
+ pecuniary resources of the debtors in them? Mr Baring has estimated
+ that the change in the value of money, consequent on the resumption of
+ cash-payments, altered prices about 25 per cent; and everybody knows
+ what widespread, still existing, and irremediable private distress
+ _that_ change produced. What, then, may be anticipated from the far
+ greater change which is contemplated as likely to arise from a
+ free-trade in grain?
+
+ “But, serious as these evils are, they are nothing in comparison with
+ the dreadful consequences which would result to _public credit_ from
+ the change, and the widespread desolation which must follow a serious
+ blow to the national faith.
+
+ “It is well known with what difficulty the payment of the annual
+ charge of the National Debt is provided for, even under the present
+ scale of prices; and how much those difficulties were increased by the
+ change of prices, and the general diminution of incomes, consequent on
+ the resumption of cash-payments. Indeed, such was the effect of that
+ change that, had it not been counterbalanced by a very great increase,
+ both of our agricultural and manufacturing produce at the same time,
+ it would have rendered the maintenance of faith with the public
+ creditor impossible. Now, if such be the present state of the public
+ debt, even under the unexampled general prosperity which has pervaded
+ the empire since the peace, and with all the security to the public
+ faith which arises from the stable, consistent, and uniform rule of
+ the British aristocracy, how is the charge of the debt to be provided
+ for under the diminished national income arising from the much
+ hoped-for change of prices consequent on the Reform Bill and repeal of
+ the Corn Laws, and the increased national impatience, arising from the
+ consciousness of the power to cast off the burden for ever?—Great and
+ reasonable fear may be felt, whether, under any circumstances, the
+ maintenance of the national faith inviolate is practicable for any
+ considerable length of time: no doubt can be entertained that, under a
+ Reform Parliament, and a free trade in grain, it will be impossible.”
+
+
+We forbear quoting the picture which our author has drawn of the awful
+consequences which must instantly follow on a crash of the national
+credit—not because we consider it in any degree overcharged, but because
+we are now satisfied that the country is alive to its danger. We are too
+well accustomed to the braggadocio of modern journalism to attach much
+weight to the expiring vociferations of men who have done their utmost
+to lead us into the present dilemma; and who now, finding themselves
+powerless to advise, are vainly attempting to keep up a delusion which
+the experience of each succeeding week is dissipating with extraordinary
+rapidity. The most talented of the Free-trading journals virtually
+confess that the experiment has altogether failed. They are not able to
+point out one single iota of advantage which has resulted from it,
+beyond the purely supposititious one that, for a time, it secured the
+tranquillity of Great Britain. This is at best an ignoble argument in
+behalf of a bad measure; but we believe it to be utterly without
+foundation, inasmuch as there probably never was a great question
+agitated in which less interest was evinced by the masses of the nation
+than in that of the Corn Laws. But we should be sorry, indeed, to rank
+the loyalty of the British people so low, or to suppose that the crown
+of these realms rested upon so weak a foundation, as the adoption of
+such a view as this must necessarily infer. The journals to which we
+allude are by no means unconscious of the loss which we have incurred,
+or of the danger in which we presently stand. The insane boast of Mr
+Villiers, at the opening of the session, that a depreciation of
+ninety-one millions had taken place in the annual produce of British
+labour, found no echo in the columns of our more sharp-sighted
+contemporaries. They are now attempting to show that this calculation
+was an utter mistake; that importations are gradually diminishing; and
+that prices must necessarily rise. Most glad should we be if their views
+upon this subject were sound; but, unfortunately, stern experience
+points to a different result. We complain, and that with perfect
+justice, that they will not face the difficulty, and tell us what is to
+be done, supposing prices remain as they are. Agricultural quackery has
+done its utmost, and has been extinguished by the shout of general
+derision. No man in his senses believes that production can be
+artificially stimulated, or the earth so manured as to yield double
+crops to supply the frightful deficiency in the annual balance-sheet of
+the farmer. Both arms of husbandry are shattered. Cattle-feeding has
+been made, by Sir Robert Peel’s tariff, as profitless as tillage; and
+all countries have been invited, and are availing themselves of the
+invitation, to inundate our markets with their produce. Under such a
+state of things, what hope is there of recovery—what chance of
+manufactures reviving, so long as the best customers for manufactures
+are borne down? Are they not borne down? Let us see. The depreciation of
+food was stated by Mr Villiers at £91,000,000. The whole land rental of
+the United Kingdom is, according to a late statistical authority,
+£58,753,615. Let us suppose that rents are reduced by one-third—a
+reduction which, considering that mortgages and public burdens still
+remain undiminished, will cripple the means of most of the proprietors
+in the kingdom—and the rental will fall to about £39,169,000. Still
+there will remain a loss of nearly £52,000,000 annually, to be borne by
+the tenantry; in other words, low prices will have to that extent
+affected their power of purchase. The real case is even stronger than
+the hypothetical one, because the farmers, who constitute the larger
+consuming body, are at present receiving no such remission of rent. Of
+£178,000,000, the estimated amount of British manufactures, we export
+£58,000,000, and there remain for home consumption goods to the value of
+£120,000,000. Upon the sale of these depends not only the prosperity,
+but the existence of the manufacturers; and yet people are astonished
+that their wares do not go off as formerly! How, in the name of common
+sense, can they be expected to go off, when no margin of profit is left,
+in his own trade, to the great consumer? What these reasonable gentlemen
+anticipate is this—that the proprietor shall have no surplus from his
+rent, or the farmer any remuneration from his toil and capital; and yet
+that they shall continue to purchase all articles of manufacture as
+before!
+
+We observe that a contemporary journal, which naturally feels rather
+sore on the subject of the Corn Laws, has twitted Mr Alison with a
+failure of prophecy, in not having allowed for a sufficient lapse
+between the passing of the Reform Bill and the notable era when the lion
+and the lamb coalesced—when Sir Robert Peel finally became a convert to
+the dazzling discoveries of Mr Cobden. Our respected brother seems to
+think that Mr Alison must feel disappointed that the march of democracy
+has been so slow; that the avatar of Free-trade was so long in coming;
+and that our fields were not, several years ago, abandoned by the
+disappointed husbandman. For the satisfaction of the kindly critic, we
+shall quote the following passage, penned in 1832, immediately after the
+passing of the Reform Bill, and then, perhaps, refresh his memory as to
+the manner in which the later measure was carried:—
+
+
+ “Dark and disastrous, however, as is the future prospect of the
+ British empire, we do not think its case hopeless, or that, after
+ having gone through the degradation, distraction, and suffering which
+ must follow the destruction of the Constitution, it may not yet
+ witness in the decline of its days some gleams of sunshine and
+ prosperity. The laws of nature have now come to aid the cause of
+ order; its usual suffering will attend the march of revolution;
+ experience will soon dispel the fumes of democracy; the reign of
+ Political Unions, of Jacobin Clubs, and tricolor flags, must ere long
+ come to an end; the suffering, anxiety, and distress consequent on
+ their despotic rule, the suspension of all confidence, and the ruin of
+ all credit, must consign them to the dust, amidst the execrations of
+ their country, if they are not subverted by the ruder shock of civil
+ warfare and military power. The distress, misery, and stagnation, in
+ every branch of industry, already consequent on the Reform Bill, have
+ been so extreme, that they must long ago have led to its overthrow,
+ not only without the resistance, but with the concurrence, of all the
+ Reformers who are not revolutionists, had it not been for the delusion
+ universally spread by the revolutionary journals, that the existing
+ distress was not owing to Reform, but to the resistance which it had
+ experienced, and that the danger of revolution, great in the event of
+ the measure being thrown out, was absolutely nugatory in the event of
+ its being passed. These two sophisms have alone carried the bill
+ through the resistance it experienced from the property, education,
+ and talent of the country, and blinded men’s eyes to the enormous
+ evils which not only threatened to follow its triumph, but attended
+ its progress. But these delusions cannot much longer be maintained.
+ Reform is now victorious: the bill is passed unmutilated and
+ unimpaired; and its whole consequences _now rest on the heads of its
+ authors, and its authors alone_. When it is discovered that all the
+ benefits promised from it are a mere delusion; that stagnation,
+ distress, and misery have signalised its triumph; that trade does not
+ revive with the contracted expenditure of the rich, nor confidence
+ return with the increased audacity of the poor; that the ancient and
+ kindly relations of life have been torn asunder in the struggle, and
+ the vehemence of democracy has provided no substitute in their stead;
+ that interest after interest, class after class, is successively
+ exposed to the attacks of the revolutionists, and the ancient barrier
+ which restrained them is removed: the eyes of the nation must be
+ opened to the gross fraud which has been practised upon it. Then it
+ will be discovered that the aristocratic interest, and the nomination
+ boroughs, which supported their influence in the Lower House, were the
+ real bulwark which protected all the varied interests of the country
+ from the revolutionary tempest, and that every branch of industry is
+ less secure, every species of property is less valuable, every
+ enterprise is more hazardous, every disaster is more irretrievable,
+ when its surges roll unbroken and unresisted into the legislature.
+
+ “It is upon this very circumstance, however, that our chief, and
+ indeed our only hope of the country is founded. Hitherto the great
+ body of the middle classes have stood aloof from the contest, or they
+ have openly joined the reforming party. They were carried away by the
+ prospect of the importance which they would acquire under the new
+ Constitution, and did not perceive that it was their own interests
+ which were defended, their own battle which was fought, their own
+ existence which was at stake, in the contest maintained by the
+ Conservative party. Now the case is changed. The old rampart is
+ demolished, and, unless these middle ranks can create a new one, they
+ must be speedily themselves destroyed. From the sole of their feet to
+ the crown of their head, the middle classes of England at present
+ stand exposed to the revolutionary fire; every shot will now carry
+ away flesh and blood. Deeply as we deplore the misery and suffering
+ which the exposure of these unprotected classes to the attacks of
+ revolution must produce, it is in the intensity of that suffering, in
+ the poignancy of that distress, that the only chance of ultimate
+ deliverance is to be found. Periods of suffering are seldom, in the
+ end, lost to nations, any more than to individuals; and it is years of
+ anguish that expiate the sin, and tame the passions, of days of riot
+ and licentiousness.
+
+ “The Constitution, indeed, is destroyed, but the men whom the
+ Constitution formed are not destroyed. The institutions which
+ protected all the classes of the state, the permanent interests which
+ coerced the feverish throes of democracy, the conservative weight
+ which steadied all the movements of the people, are at an end; the
+ peril arising from this sudden removal of the pressure which hitherto
+ regulated all the movements of the machine is extreme, but the case is
+ not utterly hopeless. It is impossible at once to change the habits of
+ many hundred years’ growth; it is difficult in a few years to root out
+ the affections and interests which have sprung from centuries of
+ obligation; it is not in a single generation that the virtues and
+ happiness, fostered by ages of prosperity, are to be destroyed. As
+ long as the British character remains unchanged; as long as religion
+ and moral virtue sway the feelings of the majority of the people; as
+ long as tranquil industry forms the employment of her inhabitants, and
+ domestic enjoyments constitute the reward of their exertion,—the cause
+ of order and civilisation is not hopeless. Revolutions, it is true,
+ are always effected by reckless and desperate minorities in opposition
+ to opulent and indolent majorities; but it is the ennobling effect of
+ civil liberty to nourish a spirit of resistance to oppression, which
+ outstrips all the calculations of those who ground their views upon
+ what has occurred in despotic monarchies.”
+
+
+And so it happened. The reaction throughout the country was complete.
+The Conservative party rallied; and rallied so effectively, that, with
+many converts in its ranks, and the rising youth of the new generation
+to back it, a great majority in the House of Commons was secured, and
+the leadership intrusted to the hands of one who, in despite of previous
+lapses, appeared at that time to have earned the distinction by his
+zeal, and who gained it by the force of his protestations. Had the
+leader been true to the cause which he then professed, we should have
+been spared the ungracious duty of commenting upon a solemn treachery,
+to which history affords no parallel, and the memory of which will live
+long after the grave has closed above the head of the principal
+delinquent. How was it possible that such an event could fail again, for
+a time, to disunite a party, formed out of the ruins of the old one by a
+rapid and indiscriminate conscription? That dependence and faith which
+high and chivalrous spirits are so ready to place in one beneath whose
+colours they have fought—the ready trustingness of youth—the great
+prestige which surrounds the name of a veteran and successful
+statesman—the belief in his superior sagacity—the recollection of
+blandishments and flattery, so prized by the young when proceeding from
+the lips of honoured age,—all these things combined to break up the
+Conservative party, and to place the reins of government once more in
+the hands of the eager Whigs. Perhaps it is better so. There is no risk
+now of a second betrayal, whatever may be the future fortunes of the
+Country Party; and on the head of him who caused the social change let
+the whole consequences rest. England’s political annals have at least
+gained one character more by the act. The future historian who shall
+chronicle the transactions of the last five years, whatever be his creed
+or his politics, will speak with veneration and honour of LORD GEORGE
+BENTINCK, for whose early fate more honest tears were shed, than have
+often been paid as a tribute to the patriot who has fallen in battle,
+the defender of his country’s cause.
+
+We have not left ourselves much room to glance at the three interesting
+papers in this volume, on the subject of the two French Revolutions of
+1830 and 1848. They will be read with profound attention by thousands
+who may have passed them over cursorily in their anonymous original
+form; because Mr Alison’s profound and intimate knowledge of the working
+of French diplomacy, of the turbulent and dangerous element which lies,
+like molten lava, beneath the surface of French society, and of the
+secret causes of those outrages which, from time to time, have shaken
+that unhappy country, must needs give an additional assurance of their
+value. It is curious to observe how entirely the speculations of the
+author, as to the consequences which might arise from the first of those
+sudden revolutions, are borne out by the marvellous issue of the second.
+The falsity of the system which made the stability of a government and
+the existence of a dynasty mainly depend upon the doubtful adherence,
+and still more doubtful valour, of a civic National Guard, was clearly
+pointed out and exposed at the time when the Liberal press of England
+was loud in its approbation of the citizen soldiers who had violated
+their oaths, and the citizen king, who, more fortunate than his
+worthless father, had succeeded in supplanting his kinsman and rightful
+sovereign.
+
+
+ “Of the numerous delusions,” wrote Mr Alison in 1831, “which have
+ overspread the world in such profusion during the last nine months,
+ there is none so extraordinary and so dangerous as the opinion
+ incessantly inculcated by the revolutionary press, that the noblest
+ virtue in regular soldiers is to prove themselves traitors to their
+ oaths; and that a _national guard_ is the only safe and constitutional
+ force to which arms can be intrusted. The troops of the line, whose
+ revolt decided the three days in July in favour of the revolutionary
+ party, have been the subject of the most extravagant eulogium from the
+ Liberal press throughout Europe; and even in this country, the
+ Government journals have not hesitated to condemn, in no measured
+ terms, the Royal Guard, merely because they adhered, amidst a nation’s
+ treason, to their honour and their oaths.
+
+ “Hitherto it has been held the first duty of soldiers to adhere, with
+ implicit devotion, to that _fidelity_ which is the foundation of
+ military duties. Treason to his colours has been considered as foul a
+ blot on the soldier’s scutcheon as cowardice in the field. Even in the
+ most republican states, this principle of military subordination has
+ been felt to be the vital principle of national strength. It was
+ during the rigorous days of Roman discipline, that their legions
+ conquered the world; and the decline of the empire began at the time
+ that the Prætorian Guards veered with the mutable populace, and sold
+ the empire for a gratuity to themselves. Albeit placed in power by the
+ insurrection of the people, no men knew better than the French
+ Republican leaders that their salvation depended on crushing the
+ military insubordination to which they had owed their elevation. When
+ the Parisian levies began to evince the mutinous spirit in the camp at
+ St Menehould in Champagne, which they had imbibed during the license
+ of the capital, Dumourier drew them up in the centre of his
+ intrenchments, and, showing them a powerful line of cavalry in front,
+ with their sabres drawn, ready to charge, and a stern array of
+ artillery and cannoneers in rear, with their matches in their hands,
+ soon convinced the most licentious that the boasted independence of
+ the soldier must yield to the dangers of actual warfare. ‘The armed
+ force,’ said Carnot, ‘is essentially obedient;’ and in all his
+ commands, that great man incessantly inculcated upon his soldiers the
+ absolute necessity of implicit submission to the power which employed
+ them. When the recreant Constable de Bourbon, at the head of a
+ victorious squadron of Spanish cavalry, approached the spot where the
+ rearguard, under the Chevalier Bayard, was covering the retreat of the
+ French army in the valley of Aosta, he found him seated, mortally
+ wounded, under a tree, with his eyes fixed on the cross which formed
+ the hilt of his sword. Bourbon began to express pity for his fate.
+ ‘Pity not me,’ said the high-minded Chevalier; ‘pity those who fight
+ against their king, their country, and their oath!’
+
+ “These generous feelings, common alike to republican antiquity and
+ modern chivalry, have disappeared during the fumes of the French
+ Revolution. The soldier who is now honoured is not he who keeps, but
+ he who violates his oath; the rewards of valour are showered, not upon
+ those who defend, but on those who overturn the government; the
+ incense of popular applause is offered, not at the altar of fidelity,
+ but at that of treason. Honours, rewards, promotion, and adulation,
+ have been lavished on the troops of the line, who overthrew the
+ government of Charles X. in July last; while the Royal Guard, who
+ adhered to the fortune of the fallen monarch with exemplary fidelity,
+ have been reduced to _beg their bread_ from the bounty of strangers in
+ a foreign land. A subscription has recently been opened in London for
+ the most destitute of these defenders of royalty; but the Government
+ journals have stigmatised, as ‘highly dangerous,’ any indication of
+ sympathy with their fidelity or their misfortunes.
+
+
+ “If these ancient ideas of honour, however, are to be exploded, they
+ have at least gone out of fashion in good company. The National Guard
+ who took up arms to overthrow the throne, have not been long of
+ destroying the altar. During the revolt of February 1831, _the Cross_,
+ the emblem of salvation, was taken down from all the steeples in Paris
+ by the citizen soldiers, and the image of our Saviour effaced, by
+ their orders, from every church within its bounds! The two principles
+ stand and fall together. The Chevalier ‘without fear and without
+ reproach’ died in obedience to his oath, with his eyes fixed on the
+ Cross; the National Guard lived in triumph, while their comrades bore
+ down the venerated emblem from the towers of Notre Dame.”
+
+
+Singular was the retribution which awaited France. The “Ulysses” of
+Europe, as he has been styled—the old, crafty, insincere, penurious, yet
+plausible and half-sagacious man, sate in apparent peace upon his throne
+for wellnigh eighteen years, negotiating alliances, maintaining a fair
+outward character, pandering to popularity, identifying himself with the
+_bourgeoisie_, and identifying his sons with the army—and all this to
+fall at last before the worst planned and most poorly contrived
+insurrection which was ever attempted in the streets of a European
+capital. Surrounded by his citizens, the citizen king went down. We know
+now, from the revelations of De la Hodde and others, what was the true
+nature and commencement of that beggarly conspiracy. We know that a few
+hundred suspected and ill-organised Socialists, along with a handful of
+newspaper editors, not two of whom possessed sufficient personal courage
+to lay hand on a loaded musket, contrived to overawe Paris, to bully the
+redoubted National Guard, and to send poor old Ulysses again upon his
+travels, without much chance of finding a second imperial Ithaca. Farce
+and tragedy are here so closely interwoven that it is wellnigh
+impossible to separate their texture. The dethronement of such a king
+may be a grand European disaster, but it militates nothing against the
+principle or the sanctity of royalty. It was but a simple Presidency
+gone a-begging. The King of the Bourse or the Railway Monarch had about
+them nearly as much of that divinity which should surround the royal
+character as Louis Philippe, the chosen of the shopkeepers, and the
+veteran dabbler in the funds. No true greatness, no high nobility of
+soul, elevated him to the throne of France—ignoble beyond all precedent
+was the manner in which he was compelled to leave it. The retreat of
+Charles X. was a triumph compared with his panic-stricken and unfollowed
+flight.
+
+The following are Mr Alison’s remarks upon the last of these
+Revolutions. The reader will not fail to observe the extreme similarity
+between the two astounding Revolutions, and the precise nature of the
+cause which enabled both of them to be successfully carried through by
+an otherwise contemptible rabble.
+
+
+ “Who is answerable for this calamitous Revolution, which has thus
+ arrested the internal prosperity of France, involved its finances in
+ apparently hopeless embarrassment, thrown back for probably half a
+ century the progress of real freedom in that country, and perhaps
+ consigned it to a series of internal convulsions, and Europe to the
+ horrors of general war for a very long period? We answer without
+ hesitation, that the responsibility rests with two parties, and two
+ parties only—the King and the National Guard.
+
+ “The King is most of all to blame, for having engaged in a conflict,
+ and, when victory was within his grasp, allowing it to slip from his
+ hands from want of resolution at the decisive moment. It is too soon
+ after these great and astonishing events to be able to form a decided
+ opinion on the whole details connected with them; but the concurring
+ statements from all parties go to prove that on the _first_ day the
+ troops of the line were perfectly steady; and history will record that
+ the heroic firmness of the Municipal Guard has rivalled all that is
+ most honourable in French history. The military force was immense; not
+ less than eighty thousand men, backed by strong forts, and amply
+ provided with all the muniments of war. Their success on the first day
+ was unbroken; they had carried above a hundred barricades, and were in
+ possession of all the military positions of the capital. But at this
+ moment the indecision of the King ruined everything. Age seems to have
+ extinguished the vigour for which he was once so celebrated. He shrank
+ from a contest with the insurgents, paralysed the troops by orders not
+ to fire on the people, and openly receded before the insurgent
+ populace, by abandoning Guizot and the firm policy which he himself
+ had adopted, and striving to conciliate revolution by the _mezzo
+ termini_ of Count Molé, and a more liberal cabinet. It is with retreat
+ in the presence of an insurrection, as in the case of an invading
+ army; the first move towards the rear is a certain step to ruin. The
+ moment it was seen that the King was giving way, all was paralysed,
+ because all foresaw to which side the victory would incline. The
+ soldiers threw away their muskets, the officers broke their swords,
+ and the vast array, equal to the army which fought at Austerlitz, was
+ dissolved like a rope of sand. Louis Philippe fell without either the
+ intrepidity of the royal martyr in 1793, or the dignity of the elder
+ house of Bourbon in 1830; and if it be true, as is generally said,
+ that the Queen urged the King to mount on horseback and die as ‘became
+ a King’ in front of the Tuileries, and he declined, preferring to
+ escape in disguise to this country, history must record, with shame,
+ that royalty perished in France without the virtues it was entitled to
+ expect in the meanest of its supporters.
+
+ “The second cause which appears to have occasioned the overthrow of
+ the monarchy in France, is the general, it may be said universal,
+ defection of the National Guard. It had been openly announced that
+ 20,000 of that body were to line the Champs Elysées _in their uniform_
+ on occasion of the banquet; it was perfectly known that that banquet
+ was a mere pretext for getting the forces of this Revolution together;
+ and that the intention of the conspirators was to march in a body to
+ the Tuileries after it was over, and compel the King to accede to
+ their demands. When they were called out in the afternoon, they
+ declined to act against the people, and by their treachery occasioned
+ the defection of the troops of the line, and rendered farther
+ resistance hopeless. They expected, by this declaration against the
+ King of their choice, the monarch of the barricades, to secure a
+ larger share in the government for themselves. They went to the
+ Chamber of Deputies, intending to put up the Duchess of Orleans as
+ Regent, and the Count of Paris as King, and to procure a large measure
+ of reform for the constitution. What was the result? Why, that they
+ were speedily supplanted by the rabble who followed in their
+ footsteps, and who, deriding the eloquence of Odillon Barrot, and
+ insensible to the heroism of the Duchess of Orleans, by force and
+ violence expelled the majority of the deputies from their seats,
+ seized on the President’s chair, and, amidst an unparalleled scene of
+ riot and confusion, subverted the Orleans dynasty, proclaimed a
+ Republic, and adjourned to the Hotel de Ville to name a Provisional
+ Government!...
+
+ “Here, then, is the whole affair clearly revealed. It was the timidity
+ of Government, and the defection of the National Guard, which ruined
+ everything,—which paralysed the troops of the line, encouraged the
+ insurgents, left the brave Municipal Guards to their fate, and caused
+ the surrender of the Tuileries. And what has been the result of this
+ shameful treachery on the part of the sworn defenders of order—this
+ ‘_civic_’ prætorian guard of France? Nothing but this, that they have
+ destroyed the monarchy, ruined industry, banished capital, rendered
+ freedom hopeless, and made bankrupt the State! Such are the effects of
+ armed men forgetting the first of social duties, that of fidelity to
+ their oaths.”
+
+
+Of the other papers contained in this volume, that on the subject of
+“the British Peerage,” written at a time when certain worthy fellows out
+of doors seemed to be determined that crown, mitre, and coronet should
+go together into one blazing bonfire, similar to that which lately
+received the state chair of Louis Philippe—and when certain peers within
+testified their respect for the dignity and privileges of their order,
+by doing their best to have it swamped by new creations—will especially
+challenge notice as a stately, dignified, and elaborate composition.
+Other essays, such as those on Crime and Transportation, Ireland, the
+Navigation Laws, and the Commercial Crisis of 1837, evince the care and
+attention which Mr Alison has bestowed on the leading topics of economy
+and government with which modern statesmen are inevitably compelled to
+grapple. Of their intrinsic merit we shall say nothing. They have often
+been cited as the ablest expositions of the peculiar views which they
+advocate, and all of them bear the impress of a mind earnest in its
+convictions, and thoroughly practical in its tendency. Mr Alison does
+not, like too many writers of the day, content himself with finding out
+what is faulty, or defective, or radically vicious in any branch of our
+social economy—he indulges in no vague and pointless declamation; but
+while he lays bare the wound, distinctly and emphatically inculcates the
+proper remedy. Many persons there are, of course, who will not subscribe
+to his doctrines, but we believe there are very few who will question
+the sincerity or deny the philanthropy of his views. And when it is
+considered that the three massive volumes, of which this is the first,
+were composed at intervals of short respite from the toil of an
+engrossing profession, and form but a small portion of the literary
+labours of the author, it may be questionable which is most to be
+wondered at—the largeness of his information, or the unwearied energy of
+his mind.
+
+These certainly are not the columns in which this work of Mr Alison can
+be discussed with absolute impartiality, nor is the writer of this
+article free from a pardonable bias. Where affection, veneration, and
+gratitude for many wholesome lessons, conveyed with a kindliness which
+has made those lessons still more valuable, are warm at the heart,
+criticism is impossible; and it would be absurd and false to feign that
+we approach this book with any idea of fulfilling the critical function.
+Yet thus much may we be allowed to say, that for integrity of purpose,
+honesty of design, clear and unvarying adherence to principles,
+laboriously sought for and conscientiously adopted—for the virtue and
+total absence of selfishness which distinguish the patriot, and for the
+grace and accomplishment which adorn the scholar and the gentleman, it
+would be difficult to find within the four seas that encircle Britain a
+superior to the author of these Essays, and of the famous History of
+Europe.
+
+
+
+
+ OVID’S SPRING-TIME
+ FROM THE TRISTIA.
+
+
+ For once the zephyrs have removed the cold:
+ One year is over, and a new begun.
+ So short a winter, I am daily told,
+ Never yet yielded to this northern sun.
+ I see the children skipping o’er the green,
+ Plucking the faint unodorous violet,
+ A gentle stranger, rarely ever seen.
+ With other flowers the mead is sparsely set—
+ Brown birds are twittering with the joy of spring:
+ The universal swallow, ne’er at rest,
+ Aye chirping, glances past on purple wing,
+ And builds beneath the humble eaves her nest.
+ The plant, which yester-year the share o’erthrew,
+ Looks up again from out the opening mould;
+ And the poor vines, though here but weak and few,
+ Some scantling buds, like ill-set gems, unfold.
+ W. E. A.
+
+
+
+
+ =Dies Boreales.=
+
+
+No. VII.
+
+CHRISTOPHER UNDER CANVASS.
+
+_Camp at Cladich._
+
+SCENE—_The Wren’s Nest._ TIME—_Three o’clock_ A.M.
+
+NORTH—TALBOYS.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Perturbed Spirit! why won’t you rest? What brings thee here?
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Seward snores.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Why select Seward?
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+I do not select him—he selects himself—singles himself out from the
+whole host; so that you hear his Snore loud over that of the Camp—say
+rather his Snore alone—like Lablache singing a Solo in a chorus.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+It must be Buller.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Buller began it——
+
+ NORTH.
+
+List! How harmonious in the hush the blended Snore of Camp and Village!
+How tuned to unison—as if by pitch-pipe—with the dreamy din of our
+lapsing friend here, who by and by will awake into a positive Waterfall.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+The Snore of either army stilly sounds. At this distance, the Snore
+disposes to sleep. Seward must have awakened himself—there goes Buller——
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Where?
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Shriller than Seward—quite a childish treble—liker the Snore of a
+female—
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Females never snore.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+How do you know? I won’t answer for some of them. Lionesses do—not
+perhaps in their wild state—but in Zoological Gardens.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Not quite so loud, Chanticleer—you will disturb my people.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Disturb your people! Why, he has already stirred up the Solar System.
+
+ “The Cock that is the Trumpet of the Morn,
+ Doth, with his lofty and shrill-sounding throat,
+ Awake the God of Day.”
+
+Taking the distance of the Earth from the Sun, in round numbers, at
+Ninety-Five Millions of Miles, pretty well for a bird probably weighing
+some six pounds not merely to make himself heard by the God of Day, but
+by one single crow to startle Dan Phœbus from his sleep, and force him
+_nolens volens_ to show his shining morning face at Cladich.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Out of Science, we seldom think of the vastness of the System of the
+Universe. Our hearts and imaginations diminish it for the delight of
+love. In our usual moods we are all Children with respect to Nature; and
+gather up Stars as if they were flowers of the field—to form a coronet
+for Neæra’s hair.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+What ailed poor dear Doctor Beattie at Cocks in general? I never could
+understand the Curse.
+
+ “Proud harbinger of Day,
+ Who scarest my visions with thy clarion shrill,
+ Fell Chanticleer! who oft hath reft away
+ My fancied good, and brought substantial ill!
+ Oh, to thy cursed scream discordant still
+ Let Harmony aye shut her gentle ear;
+ Thy boastful mirth let jealous rivals spill,
+ Insult thy crest, and glossy pinions tear,
+ And ever in thy dreams the ruthless fox appear.”
+
+You Poets, in your own persons, are a savage set.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+I am not a Poet, sir; nor will I allow any man with impunity to call me
+so.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+But Doctor Beattie was, and a Professor of Moral Philosophy to boot, at
+Aberdeen or St Andrews, or some other one of our ancient
+Universities—for every stone-and-lime building in Scotland is ancient;
+and. goodness me! hear him cursing cocks, and dooming the whole Gallic
+race to every variety of cruel and ignominious deaths, in revenge for
+having been disturbed from his morning dreams by a Gentleman with Comb
+and Wattles crowing on his own Dunghill, in red jacket, speckled
+waistcoat, and grey breeks, the admiration of Earochs and How-Towdies.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Doctor Beattie was a true Poet—and had an eye and an ear for Nature. Yet
+now and then he shut both—
+
+ “Hence the scared owl on pinions grey
+ _Breaks from the rustling boughs_;
+ And down the lone vale sails away
+ To more profound repose.”
+
+I have seen that Stanza quoted many thousand times as exquisite. It is
+criminal. An owl was never heard, scared or unscared, to “break from the
+rustling boughs.” Silently as a leaf he leaves his perch; you hear no
+rustle, for he makes none—any more than a ghost.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Nor are the other lines good—for they present the image of a long
+rectilinear flight, which that of an owl in no circumstances is; and, in
+a fright, he would take the first blind shelter.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Poets seldom err so—yet I remember a mistake of Coleridge’s about that
+commonest of all birds, the Rook.
+
+ “My gentle-hearted Charles! when the last Rook
+ Bent its straight path along the dusky air
+ Homewards, I blest it! deeming its black wing
+ (Now a dim speck, now vanishing in light)
+ Had crossed the mighty orb’s dilated glory,
+ When thou stood’st gazing; or, when all was still,
+ _Flew creaking o’er thy head_; and had a charm
+ For thee, my gentle-hearted Charles, to whom
+ No sound is dissonant which tells of life!”
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+There is much silliness in the Sibylline Leaves. For Charles read
+Charlotte. ’Tis more like Love than Friendship—effeminate exceedingly;
+and, “no sound is dissonant which tells of life,” reminds one of the
+Sunday Jackasses on Blackheath.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+“‘_Flew creaking._’ Some months after I had written this line,” says
+Coleridge in a note, “it gave me pleasure to find that Bartram had
+observed the same circumstance of the Savanna Crane. ‘When these birds
+move their wings in flight, their strokes are slow, moderate, and
+regular; and even when at a considerable distance, or high above us, we
+plainly hear the quill-feathers; their shafts and webs, upon one
+another, creak as _the joints or working of a vessel in a tempestuous
+sea_.’” That a Rook may fly “creaking” when moulting, or otherwise out
+of feather, I shall not take upon me to deny; but in ordinary condition,
+he does not fly “creaking.” Coleridge was wont, in his younger days, to
+mistake exceptions for general rules. In such a case as this, a moment’s
+reflection would have sufficed to tell him that there could not have
+been “creaking” without let or hindrance to flight—and that the flight
+of a rook is easy and equable—“The blackening train o’ craws to their
+repose.” What creaking must have been there! But Burns never heard it.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+One Burns, as an observer of nature, is worth fifty Coleridges.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Not an arithmetical question. Why, even dear Sir Walter himself
+occasionally makes a slip in this way.
+
+ “Beneath the broad and ample bone,
+ That buckled heart to fear unknown,
+ A feeble and a tim’rous guest
+ The field-fare framed her lowly nest!”
+
+The Field-fare is migratory—and does not build here; in Norway, where it
+is native, it builds in trees—often high up on lofty trees—and in
+crowds.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+I believe, sir, they have been known to breed in this country—and
+perhaps here they build on the ground.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Don’t be nonsensical. Our Great Minstrel knew wood-craft well; and
+hill-craft and river-craft; yet in his fine picture of Coriskin and
+Coolin,
+
+ “The wildest glen but this can show
+ Some touch of nature’s genial glow:
+ On high Benmore green mosses grow,
+ And heath-bells bud in deep Glencroe,
+ And copse on Cruachan Ben;
+ But here, above, around, below,
+ In mountain or in glen,
+ Nor tree, nor shrub, nor plant, nor flower,
+ Nor aught of vegetative power
+ The weary eye may ken.
+ For all is rocks at random strewn,
+ Black waves, bare crags, and banks of stone,
+ As if were here denied
+ The summer’s sun, the spring’s sweet dew,
+ That clothe with many a varied hue
+ The bleakest mountain’s head;”
+
+would you believe it, that he introduces Deer—_fallow_ Deer!
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+ “Call it not vain, they do not err
+ Who say that, when the Poet dies,
+ Mute nature mourns her worshipper,
+ And celebrates his obsequies;
+ Who say tall cliff and cavern lone
+ For the departed bard make moan;
+ That mountains meet in crystal rill,
+ That flowers in tears of balm distil;
+ Through his loved groves that breezes sigh,
+ And oaks in deeper groan reply,
+ And rivers teach their rushing wave
+ To murmur dirges round his grave.”
+
+ NORTH.
+
+And there the Last Minstrel should have ceased. What follows spoils
+all—fanciful, fantastic—not imaginative, poetical. The Minstrel is at
+pains to let us know that
+
+ “Mute nature does _not_ mourn her worshipper!”
+
+that not
+
+ “O’er mortal urn
+ These things inanimate can mourn.”
+
+What, then, is the truth? To explain the mystery of flowers distilling
+tears of balm, we are told that
+
+ “The maid’s pale shade, who wails her lot,
+ That love, true love, should be forgot,
+ From rose and heather shakes the tear
+ Upon the gentle Minstrel’s bier—”
+
+The Phantom Knight shrieks upon the wild blast—and the Chief, from his
+misty throne on the mountains, fills the lonely caverns with his
+groans—while his
+
+ “Tears of rage impel the rill!
+ All mourn the minstrel’s harp unstrung,
+ Their name unknown, their praise unsung!”
+
+Had Sir Walter been speaking in his own person he never would have
+written thus—nor thus contradicted and extinguished the Passion in the
+stanzas you so feelingly recited. But he puts the words into the lips of
+an old Harper improvising at a Feast—on which occasion anything will
+pass for poetry—even to the mind of the true Poet himself—but, believe
+me, it is sheer nonsense—and by power of contrast recalls Wordsworth’s
+profound saying—
+
+ “The Poets, in their elegies and lays
+ Lamenting the departed, call the groves—
+ They call upon the hills and streams to mourn
+ And senseless rocks; nor idly; for they speak
+ In these their invocation, with a voice
+ Obedient to the strong creative power
+ Of human passion. Sympathies there are
+ More tranquil, yet perhaps of kindred birth,
+ That steal upon the meditative mind,
+ And grow with thought. Beside yon spring I stood,
+ And eyed its waters till we seemed to feel
+ One sadness, they and I. For them a bond
+ Of brotherhood is broken; time has been
+ When, every day, the touch of human hand
+ Dislodged the natural sleep that binds them up
+ In mortal stillness; and they ministered
+ To human comfort.”
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Are all these the Cladich Cock and his echoes? No, surely. Farm
+crows to Farm, from Auchlian to Sonnachan. You might almost believe
+them bagpipes. And so it is—that is a bagpipe. On which side of the
+Loch? Why, on neither—beg pardon—on both; forgive me—on the
+Water;—incredible—in the Camp! No snore can long outlive that—the
+People are up and doing.
+
+In my mind’s eye I see women slipping easily into petticoats—men
+laboriously into breeches——
+
+ NORTH.
+
+My more Celtic imagination sees chiefly kilts. But pray, may I ask
+again, Talboys, what brought you here at this untimeous hour of the
+Morn?
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+I feel that I ought to apologise for my unwelcome intrusion on your
+privacy, sir; but on my honour I believed you were in the Van. Yesterday
+I was so engrossed by you and Shakspeare, that during our colloquy I had
+not a moment to look at the Wren’s Nest.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Its existence is believed in by few of the natives. I know no such place
+for a murder. There would be no need to bury the body—here at this Table
+he might be left sitting for centuries—a dead secret in a Safe.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+No need to bury the body! You have no antipathy, I trust, sir, to me?
+
+ NORTH.
+
+We are not responsible for our antipathies——
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+I allow that—but we are for every single murder we commit; and though
+there may be no need to bury the body, murder will spunk out——
+
+ NORTH.
+
+We are willing to run the risk. What infatuation to seek the Lion in his
+Den—the Wren in his Nest! Sit down, sir, and let us have, in the form of
+dialogue, your last speech and dying words on Othello.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Hamlet, sir?
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Othello.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Romeo and Juliet?
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Othello.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Well—Lear let it be.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Mind what you are about, Talboys. There are limits to human forbearance.
+Swear that after this morning’s breakfast you will never again utter the
+words Othello—Iago—Cassio—Desdemona——
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+I swear. Meanwhile, let us recur to the Question of Short and Long Time.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+When Shakspeare was inditing the Scenes of the “Decline and Fall”—“The
+Temptation”—“The Seduction”—or whatsoever else you choose to call it—the
+Sequence of Cause and Effect—the bringing out into prominence and power
+the successive ESSENTIAL MOVEMENTS of the proceeding transformation were
+intents possessing his whole spirit. We can easily conceive that they
+might occupy it absolutely and exclusively—that is to say, excluding the
+computation and all consideration of actual time. If this be an
+excessive example, yet I believe that a huddling up of time is a part of
+the poetical state; that you must, and, what is more, may, crowd into a
+Theatrical or Epic Day, far more of transaction between parties, and of
+changes psychological, than a natural day will hold—ay, ten times over.
+The time on the Stage and in Verse is not literal time. Not it, indeed;
+and if it be thus with time, which is so palpable, so selfevidencing an
+entity, what must be the law, and how wide-ranging, for everything else,
+when we have once got fairly into the Region of Poetry?
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+The usefulness of the Two Times is palpable from first to last—of the
+Short Time for maintaining the tension of the passion—of the long for a
+thousand general needs. Thus Bianca must be used for convincing Othello
+very potently, positively, unanswerably. But she cannot be used without
+supposing a protracted intercourse between her and Cassio. Iago’s
+dialogue with him falls to the ground, if the acquaintance began
+yesterday. But superincumbent over all is the _necessity of our not
+knowing_ that Iago begins the Temptation, and that Othello extinguishes
+the Light of his Life all in one day.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+And observe, Talboys, how this concatenation of the passionate scenes
+operates. Marvellously! Let the Entrances of Othello be four—A, B, C, D.
+You feel the close connexion of A with B, of B with C, of C with D. You
+feel the coherence, the nextness; and all the force of the impetuous
+Action and Passion resulting. But the logically-consequent near
+connexion of A with C, and much more with D, as again of B with D, you
+_do not feel_. Why? When you are at C, and feeling the pressure of B
+upon C, you have lost sight of the pressure of A upon B. At each
+entrance you go back one step—you do not go back two. The suggested
+intervals continually keep displacing to distances in your memory the
+formerly felt connexions. This could not so well happen in real life,
+where the relations of time are strictly bound upon your memory. Though
+something of it happens when passion devours memory. But in fiction, the
+conception being loosely held, and shadowy, the feat becomes easily
+practicable. Thus the Short Time tells for the support of the Passion,
+along with the Long Time, by means of virtuous instillations from the
+hand or wing of Oblivion. From one to two you feel no intermission—from
+two to three you feel none—from three to four you feel none; but I defy
+any man to say that from one to four he has felt none. I defy any man to
+say honestly, that “sitting at the Play” he has kept count from one to
+four.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+If you come to that, nobody keeps watch over the time in listening to
+Shakspeare. I much doubt if anybody knows at the theatre that Iago’s
+first suggestion of doubt occurs the day after the landing. I never knew
+it till you made me look for it—
+
+ NORTH.
+
+For which boon I trust you are duly grateful.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+’Tis folly to be wise.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Why, Heaven help us! if we did not go to bed, and did not dine, which of
+us could ever keep count from Monday to Saturday! As it is, we have some
+of us hard work to know what happened yesterday, and what the day
+before. On Tuesday I killed that Salmo Ferox?
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+No—but on Wednesday I did. You forget yourself, my dear sir, just like
+Shakspeare.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Ay, Willy forgets himself. He is not withheld by the chain of time he is
+linking, for he has lost sight of the previous links. Put yourself into
+the transport of composition, and answer. But besides, every past
+scene—or to speak more suitably to the technical distribution of the
+Scenes, in our Editions—every past _changed occupation of the Stage by
+one coming in or one going out_, (which different occupation, according
+to the technicality of the French Stage, of the Italian, of the Attic,
+of Plautus, of Terence, constitutes a Scene)—every such past marked
+moment in the progress of the Play has the effect for the Poet, as well
+as for you, of protracting the time in retrospect—throwing everything
+that has passed further back. As if, in travelling fifty miles, you
+passed fifty Castles, fifty Churches, fifty Villages, fifty Towns, fifty
+Mountains, fifty Valleys, and fifty Cataracts—fifty Camels, fifty
+Elephants, fifty Caravans, fifty Processions, and fifty Armies—the said
+fifty miles would seem a good stretch larger to your recollection, and
+the five hours of travelling a pretty considerable deal longer, than
+another fifty miles and another five hours in which you had passed only
+three Old Women.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+My persuasion is, sir, that nobody alive knows—of the auditors—that the
+first suggestion of doubt and the conclusion to kill are in one Scene of
+the Play. I do, indeed, believe, with you, sir, that the goings-out and
+re-enterings of Othello have a strangely deluding effect—that they
+disconnect the time more than you can think—and that all the changes of
+persons on the stage—all shiftings of scenes and droppings of curtains,
+break and dislocate and dilate the time to your imagination, till you do
+not in the least know where you are. In this laxity of your conception,
+all hints of extended time sink in and spring up, like that fungus
+which, on an apt soil, in a night grows to a foot diameter.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+You have hit it there, Talboys. Shakspeare, we have seen, in his calmer
+constructions, shows, in a score of ways, weeks, months; that is
+therefore the true time, or call it the historical time. Hurried
+himself, and hurrying you on the torrent of passion, he forgets time,
+and a false show of time, to the utmost contracted, arises. I do not
+know whether he did not perceive this false exhibition of time, or
+perceiving, he did not care. But we all must see a reason, and a cogent
+one, why he should not let in the markings of protraction upon his
+dialogues of the Seduced and the Seducer. You can conceive nothing
+better than that the Poet, in the moment of composition, seizes the
+views which at that moment offer themselves as effective—unconscious or
+regardless of incompatibility. He is whole to the present; and as all is
+feigned, he does not remember how the foregone makes the ongoing
+impracticable. Have you ever before, Talboys, examined time in a Play of
+Shakspeare? Much more, have you ever examined the treatment of time on
+the Stage to which Shakspeare came, upon which he lived, and which he
+left?
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+A good deal.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Not much, I suspect.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Why, not at all—except t’other day along with you—in Macbeth.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+He came to a Stage which certainly had not cultivated the logic of time
+as a branch of the Dramatic Art. It appears to me that those old people,
+when they were enwrapt in the transport of their creative power, totally
+forgot all regard, lost all consciousness of time. Passion does not know
+the clock or the calendar. Intimations of time, now vague, now positive,
+will continually occur; but also the Scenes float, like the Cyclades in
+a Sea of Time, at distances utterly indeterminate—Most near? Most
+remote? That is a Stage of Power, and not of Rules—Dynamic, not Formal.
+I say again at last as at first, that the time of Othello, tried by the
+notions of time in _our Art_, or tried, if you will, by the type of
+prosaic and literal time, is—INSOLUBLE.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+To the first question, therefore, being What is the truth of the matter?
+the answer stands, I conceive without a shadow of doubt or difficulty,
+“The time of Othello is—as real time—INSOLUBLE.”
+
+ NORTH.
+
+By heavens, he echoes me!
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Or, it is proposed incongruously, impossibly. Then arises the question,
+How stood the time in the mind of Shakspeare?
+
+ NORTH.
+
+I answer, I do not know. The question splits itself into two—first, “How
+did he _project_ the time?” Second, “How did he conceive it in the
+progress of the Play?” My impression is, that he projected extended
+time. If so, did he or did he not know that in managing the Seduction he
+departed from that design by contracting into a Day? Did he deliberately
+entertain a double design? If he did, how did he excuse this to himself?
+Did he say, “A stage necessity, or a theatrical or dramatic
+necessity”—namely, that of sustaining at the utmost possible reach of
+altitude the tragical passion and interest—“requires the precipitation
+of the passion from the first breathing of suspicion—the ‘Ha! Ha! I like
+not that,’ of the suggesting Fiend to the consecrated ‘killing myself,
+to die upon a kiss!’—all in the course of fifteen hours—and this
+tragical vehemency, this impetuous energy, this torrent of power I will
+have; at the same time I have many reasons—amongst them the general
+probability of the action—for a dilated time; and I, being a magician of
+the first water, will so dazzle, blind, and bewilder my auditors, that
+they shall accept the double time with a double belief—shall feel the
+unstayed rushing on of action and passion, from the first suggestion to
+the cloud of deaths—and yet shall remain with a conviction that Othello
+was for months Governor of Cyprus—they being on the whole unreflective
+and uncritical persons?”
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+And, after all, who willingly criticises his dreams or his pleasures?
+
+ NORTH.
+
+And the Audience of the Globe Theatre shall not—for “I hurl my dazzling
+spells into the spungy air,” and “the spell shall sit when the curtain
+has fallen.” Shakspeare might, in the consciousness of power, say this.
+For this is that which he has—knowingly or unknowingly—done.
+Unknowingly? Perhaps—himself borne on by the successively rising waves
+of his work. For you see, Talboys, with what prolonged and severe labour
+we two have arrived at knowing the reality of the case which now lies
+open to us in broad light. We have needed time and pains, and the slow
+settling of our understandings, to unwind the threads of delusion in
+which we were encoiled and entoiled. If a strange and unexplained power
+could undeniably so beguile us—a possibility of which, previously to
+this examination, we never have dreamt, how do we warrant that the same
+dark, nameless, mysterious power shall not equally blind the “Artificer
+of Fraud?” This is matter of proposed investigation and divination,
+which let whoever has will, wit, and time, presently undertake.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Why, we are doing it, sir. He will be a bold man who treats of
+Othello—after Us.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Another question is—What is the Censure of Art on the demonstrated
+inconsistency in Othello? I propose, but now deal not with it. Observe
+that we have laid open a new and startling inquiry. We have demonstrated
+the double time of Othello—the Chronological Fact. That is the first
+step set in light—the first required piece of the work—_done_. Beyond
+this, we have ploughed a furrow or two, to show and lead further
+direction of the work in the wide field. We have touched on the gain to
+the work by means of the duplicity—we have proposed to the
+self-consciousness of all hearers and readers the psychological fact of
+their own unconsciousness of the guile used towards them, or of the
+success of the fallacy; and we have asked the solution of the
+psychological fact. We have also asked the Criticism of Art on the
+government of the time in Othello—supposing the Poet in pride and
+audacity of power to have designed that which he has done. Was it High
+Art?
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Ay—was it High Art?
+
+ NORTH.
+
+I dare hardly opine. Effect of high and most defying art it has surely;
+but you ask again—did he know? I seem to see often that the spirit of
+the Scene possessed Shakspeare, and that he fairly forgot the logical
+ties which he had encoiled about him. We know the written Play, and we
+may, if we are capable, know its power upon ourselves. There _are_ the
+Two Times, the Long and the Short; and each exerts upon you its especial
+virtue. I can believe that Shakspeare unconsciously did what Necessity
+claimed—the impetuous motion on, on, on of the Passion—the long time
+asked by the successive events; the forces that swayed him, each in its
+turn, its own way.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Unconsciously?
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Oh heavens! Yes—yes—no—no. Yes—no. No—yes. What you will.
+
+ “Willingly my jaws I close,
+ Leave! oh! leave me to repose.”
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Consciously or unconsciously?
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Talboys, Longfellow, Perpetual Præses of the Seven Feet Club, we want
+Troy, Priam, Achilles, Hector, to have been. Perhaps they were—perhaps
+they were not. We must be ready for two states of mind—simple belief,
+which, is the temper of childhood and youth—recognition of illusion with
+self-surrender, which is the attained state of criticism wise and
+childlike. At last we voluntarily take on the faith which was in the
+goldener age. The child believed; and the man believes. But the child
+believes _this_; and the man who perceives how _this_ is a shadow,
+believes _that_ beyond. _This_ he believes in play—_that_ in earnest.
+The child mixed the two—the tale of the fairies and the hope of
+hereafter. Union, my dear Boys, is the faculty of the young, but
+division of the old. I speak of Shakspeare at five years of age; not of
+Us, whom, ere we can polysyllable men’s names, dominies instruct how to
+do old men’s work and to distinguish.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+My dear sir, I do so love to hear your talkee talkee; but be just ever
+so little a little more intelligible to ordinary mortals—
+
+ NORTH.
+
+You ask what really happened? The Play bewilders you from
+answering—accept it as it rushes along through your soul, reading or
+sitting to hear and see. The main and strange fact is, that these
+questions of Time, which, reading the Play backwards, force themselves
+on us, never occur to us reading straight forwards. Two Necessities lie
+upon your soul.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Two Necessities, sir?
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Two Necessities lie upon your soul. You cannot believe that Othello,
+suspecting his Wife, folds his arms night after night about her disrobed
+bosom. As little can you believe that in the course of twelve hours the
+spirit of infinite love has changed into a dagger-armed slayer. The Two
+Times—marvellous as it is to say—take you into alternate possession. The
+impetuous motion forwards, in the scenes and in the tenor of action,
+which belong to the same Day, you feel; and you ask no questions. When
+Othello and Iago speak together, you lose the knowledge of time. You see
+power and not form. You feel the aroused Spirit of Jealousy: you see, in
+the field of belief, a thought sown and sprung—a thought changed into a
+doubt—a doubt into a dread—a dread into the cloud of death. Evidences
+press, one after the other—the spirit endures change—you feel
+succession—as cause and effect must succeed—you do not compute hours,
+days, weeks, months;—yet confess I must, and confess you must, and
+confess all the world and his wife must, that the condition is
+altogether anomalous—that a time which is at once a day of the Calendar
+and a month of the Calendar, does not happen anywhere out of Cyprus.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+It has arisen just as you say, sir—because Two Necessities pressed. The
+Passion must have its torrent, else _you_ will never endure that Othello
+shall kill Desdemona. Events must have their concatenation, else—but I
+stop at this the incredible anomaly, that for _Othello_ himself you
+require the double time! You cannot imagine him embracing his wife,
+misdoubted false; as little can you his Love measureless, between
+sunrise and sunset turned into Murder.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Even so.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+My dear sir, what really happened?
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Oh! Talboys, Talboys. Well then—_not_ that Othello killed her upon the
+first night after the arrival at Cyprus. The Cycle could not have been
+so run through.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+How then in reality did the Weeks pass?
+
+ NORTH.
+
+That’s a good one! Why, I was just about to ask you—and ’tis your
+indisputable duty to tell me and the anxious world—how.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+I do not choose to commit myself in such a serious affair.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Suppose the framing of the tale into a Prose Romance. Surely, surely,
+surely, no human romancer, compounding the unhappy transactions into a
+prose narrative, could, could, could have put the first sowing of doubt,
+and the smothering under the pillows, for incidents of one day. He would
+have made Othello for a time laugh at the doubt, toss it to the winds.
+Iago would have wormed about him a deal slowlier. The course of the
+transactions in the Novel would have been much nearer the course of
+reality.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+In Cinthio’s Novel—
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Curse Cinthio.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+My Lord, I bow to your superior politeness.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Confound Chesterfield. My dear friend, Reality has its own reasons—a
+Novel its own—and its own a Drama. Every work of art brings its own
+conditions, which divide you from the literal representation of human
+experience. Ask Painter, Sculptor, and Architect. Every fine art
+exercises its own sleights.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+In the Novel, I guess or admit that they would have been a month at
+Cyprus ere Iago had stirred. What hurry? He would have watched his
+time—ever and anon would have thrown in a hundred suggestions of which
+we know nothing. Let any man, romancer or other, set himself to conceive
+the Prose Novel. He cannot, by any possibility, conceive that he should
+have been led to make but a day of it. Ergo, the Drama proceeds upon its
+own Laws. No representation in art is the literal transcript of
+experience.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+The question is, what deviations—to what extent—does the particular Art
+need? And why? The talked Attic Unity of Time instructs us. But
+Sophocles and Shakspeare must have one view of the Stage, in essence.
+You must sit out your three or four hours. You must listen and see with
+expectation _intended_, like a bow drawn. To which intent Action and
+Passion must press on.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Compare, sir, the One Day of Othello to the Sixteen Years of Hermione!
+There, intensest Passion sustained; here, the unrolling of a romantic
+adventure. Each true to the temper imposed on the hearing spectator.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Good. The Novel is not a Transcript—the Play is not a Transcript. Ask
+not for a Transcript, for not one of those who could give it you, will.
+A _conditioned imitation we desire_ and demand—and we have it in
+Othello.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+And put up we must with Two Times—one for your sympathy with his tempest
+of heart—one for the verisimilitude of the transaction.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Think on the facility with which, in the Novel, Iago could have strewn
+an atom of arsenic a day on Othello’s platter, to use him to the taste;
+and how, in the Play, this representation is impossible. Then, the
+original remaining the same, each manner of portraiture _leaves it_, and
+each, after _its own Laws_.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Did not Shakspeare know as much about the Time which he was himself
+making _as we do_, as much and more?
+
+ NORTH.
+
+I doubt it. I see no necessity for believing it. We judge him as we
+judge ourselves. He came to his Art as it was, and created—improving
+it—from that point. An Art grows in all its constituents. The management
+of the Time is a constituent in the Art of “feigned history,” as Poetry
+is called by Lord Bacon. But I contend that on our Stage, to which
+Shakspeare came, the management of Time was in utter neglect—an
+undreamed entity; and I claim for the first foundation of any Canon
+respective to this matter, acute sifting of all Plays _previous_.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Not so very many—
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Nor so very few. Shakspeare took up the sprawling, forlorn infant,
+dramatic Time. He cradled, rocked, and fed it. The bantling throve, and
+crawled vigorously about on all-fours. But since then, thou Tallometer,
+imagine the study that _we_ have made. Count not our Epic Poems—not our
+Metrical Romances—not our Tragedies. Count our Comedies, and count above
+all our Novels. I do not say that you can settle Time in these by the
+almanac. They are the less poetical when you can do so; but I say that
+we have with wonderful and immense diligence studied the working out of
+a Story. Time being here an essential constituent, it cannot be but
+that, in our more exact and critical layings-out of the chain of
+occurrences, we have arrived at a tutored and jealous respect of Time—to
+say nothing of our Aristotelian lessons—totally unlike anything that
+existed under Eliza and James, as a general proficiency of the Art—as a
+step gained in the National Criticism.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Ay, it must be difficult in the extreme for us so to divest ourselves of
+our own intellectual habits and proficiency as to take up, and into our
+own, the mind of that Age. But, unless we do so, we are unable to judge
+what might or might not happen to any one mind of that age; and when we
+affirm that Shakspeare must have known what he was doing in regard to
+the Time of Othello, we are suffering under the described difficulty or
+disability—
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Why, Talboys, you are coming, day after day, to talk better and better
+sense—take care you do not get too sensible—
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+We must never forget, sir, that the management of the Time was on that
+Stage a slighted and trampled element—that what Willy gives us of it is
+gratuitous, and what we must be thankful for—and finally, that he did
+not distinctly scheme out, in his own conception, the Time of
+Othello—very far from it.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+I verily believe that if you or I had shown him the Time, tied up as it
+is, he would have said, “Let it go hang. They won’t find it out; and, if
+they do, let them make the best, the worst, and the most of it. The Play
+is a good Play, and I shall spoil it with mending it.” Why, Talboys, if
+Queen Elizabeth had required that the Time should be set straight, it
+could not have been done. One—two—six changes would not have done it.
+The Time is an entangled skein that can only be disentangled by breaking
+it. For the fervour of action on the Stage, Iago could not have delayed
+the beginning beyond the next day. And yet think of the Moral
+Absurdity—to begin—really as if the day after Marriage, to sow Jealousy!
+The thing is out of nature the whole diameter of the globe. His project
+was “after a time t’ abuse Othello’s ear,” which is according to nature,
+and is _de facto_ the impression made—strange to say—from beginning to
+end. But the truth is, that the Stage three hours are so soon gone, that
+you submit yourself to everything to come within compass. Your
+Imagination is bound to the wheels of the Theatre Clock.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Yet, in our conversation on Macbeth, you called your discovery an
+“astounding discovery”—and it is so. The Duplicity of Time in Othello is
+a hundred times more astounding—
+
+ NORTH.
+
+And the discovery of it will immortalise my name. I grieve to think that
+the Pensive Public is sadly deficient in Imagination. I remember or
+invent that she once resisted me, when I said that “Illusion” is one
+constituent of Poetry. Illusion, the Pensive Public must be made to
+know, is WHEN THE SAME THING IS, AND IS NOT. Pa—God bless him!—makes
+believe to be a Lion. He roars, and springs upon his prey. He at once
+believes himself to be a Lion, and knows himself to be Pa. Just so with
+the Shakspeare Club—many millions strong. The two times at Cyprus _are
+there_; the reason for the two times—to wit, probability of the Action,
+storm of the Passion—_is there_; and if any wiseacre should ask, “How do
+we manage to stand the _known_ together-proceeding of two times?” The
+wiseacre is answered—“We don’t stand it—for we know nothing about it. We
+are held in a confusion and a delusion about the time.” We have effect
+of both—distinct knowledge of neither. We have suggestions to our
+Understanding of extended time—we have movements of our Will by
+precipitated time.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+We have—we have—we have. Oh! sir! sir! sir!
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Does any man by possibility ask for a scheme and an exposition, by which
+it shall be made luminous to the smallest capacity, _how_ we are able
+distinctly all along to know, and bear in mind, that the preceding
+transactions are accomplished in a day, and at the same time and
+therewithal, distinctly all along to know and bear in mind that the same
+transactions proceeding before our eyes take about three months to
+accomplish? Then, I am obliged—like the musicians, when they are told
+that, if they have any music that may not be heard, Othello desires them
+to play it—to make answer, “Sir, we have none such.” It is to ask that a
+deception shall be not only seemingly but really a truth! Jedediah
+Buxton, and Blair the Chronologist, would, “sitting at _this_ play,”
+have broken their hearts. You need not. If you ask me—which judiciously
+you may—what or how much did the Swan of Avon intend and know of all
+this astonishing legerdemain, when he sang thus astonishingly? Was he
+the juggler juggled by aërial spirits—as Puck and Ariel? I put my finger
+to my lip, and nod on him to do the same; and if I am asked, “Shall a
+modern artificer of the Drama, having the same pressure from within and
+from without, adopt this resource of evasion?” I can answer, with great
+confidence, “He had better look before he leap.” If any spectator, upon
+the mere persuasion and power of the Representation, ends with believing
+that the seed sown and the harvest reaped are of one day, I believe that
+he may yet have the belief of extended time at Cyprus. I should say by
+_carrying the one day with him on forwards from day to day_! Or if you
+wish this more intelligibly said, that he shall continually _forget_ the
+past notices. Once for all, he shall _forget_ that the _first suggestion
+was on the day after the arrival_.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Inquire, sir, what intelligent auditors, who have not gone into the
+study, have thought; for that, after all, is the only testimony that
+means anything.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Well, Talboys, suppose that one of them should actually say, “Why, upon
+my word, if I am to tell the truth, I did take note that Iago began
+‘abusing Othello’s ear’ the day after the arrival. I did, in the course
+of the Play, gather up an impression that some good space of time was
+passing at Cyprus—and I did, when the murder came, put it down upon the
+same day with the sowing of the suspicion, and I was not aware of the
+contradiction. In short, now that you put me upon it, I see that I did
+that which thousands of us do in thousands of subjects—keep in different
+corners of the brain two beliefs—of which, if they had come upon the
+same ground, the one must have annihilated the other. But I did not at
+the time bring the data together. _I suppose that I had something else
+to think of._”
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Assume, sir, for simplicity’s sake, that Shakspeare knew what he was
+doing.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Then the Double Time is to be called—an Imposture.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Oh, my dear sir—oh, oh!
+
+ NORTH.
+
+A good-natured Juggler, my dear Talboys, has cheated your eyes. You ask
+him to show you how he did it. He does the trick slowly—and you see.
+“Now, good Conjuror, _do it slowly, and cheat us_.” “I can’t. I cheat
+you by doing it quickly. To be cheated, you must _not_ see what I do;
+but you must _think_ that you see.” When we inspect the Play in our
+closets, the Juggler does his trick slowly. We sit at the Play, and he
+does it quick. When you see the trick again done the right way—that is
+quick—you cannot conceive how it is that you no longer see that which
+you saw when it was done slowly! Again the impression returns of a
+magical feat.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+I doubt, if we saw Othello perfectly acted, whether all our study would
+preserve us from the returning imposture.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+I will defy any one most skilful theatrical connoisseur, even at the
+tenth, or twentieth, or fiftieth Representation, so to have followed the
+comings-in and the goings-out, as to satisfy himself to demonstration,
+that interval into which a month or a week or a day can be
+dropped—_there is none_.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+When do you purpose publishing this your “astounding Discovery?”
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Not till after my death.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+I shall attend to it.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+In comparing Shakspeare and the Attic Three, we seem to ourselves, but
+really do not, to exhaust the Criticism of the Drama. Is Mr Sheriff
+Alison right, when he said that the method of Shakspeare is justified
+only by the genius of Shakspeare? That less genius needs the art of
+antiquity? Our own art inclines to a method between the two; and we
+should have to account for the theatrical success, during a century or
+more, of such Plays as the Fair Penitent, Jane Shore, &c.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Why, sir, does Tragedy displace often from our contemplation, Comedy?
+Not when we are contemplating Shakspeare. To me his method, in reading
+him, appears justified by the omnipotent Art, which, despite
+refractoriness, binds together the most refractory times, things,
+persons, events _in Unity_.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Most true. We feel, in reading, the self-compactness and
+self-completeness of each Play. Thus in Lear—
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+In Lear the ethical ground is the Relation of Parent to Child,
+specifically Father and Daughter. If the treatment of that Relation is
+full to your satisfaction, that may affect you as a Unity. Full is not
+exhaustive; but one part of treatment demands another. Thus the violated
+relation requires for its complement the consecrated relation.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+In Hamlet?
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+The ethical ground in Hamlet, sir, is the relation of Father and Son,
+very peculiarly determined, or specialtied. Observe, sir, how the _like_
+relation between Father and Daughter, the _same_ between Father and Son
+occurs in Polonius’s House. Here, too, a slain Father—a part of the
+specialty. Compare, particularly, the dilatory revenge of Hamlet, and
+the dispatchful of Laertes. Again, the relation of Gertrude the Mother
+and Hamlet the Son—so many differences! And the strange discords upon
+the same relation—my Uncle-Father and Aunt-Mother—the tragic grotesque.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Eh?
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Then in Lear the House of Gloster counterparts Lear’s. And compare the
+ill-disposed Son-in-law Cornwall, and the well-disposed Son-in-law
+Albany. The very Fool has a sort of _filial_ relation to
+Lear—“Nuncle”—and “come on, my Boy.” At least the relation is in the
+same direction—old to young—protecting to dependent—spontaneous love to
+grateful, requiting love, and an intimate, fondling familiarity. Compare
+in Hamlet, Ophelia’s way of taking her father’s death—madness and
+unconscious suicide—the susceptible girl,—and the brother’s to kill the
+slayer, “to cut his throat i’ the church”—the energetic youthy man,
+_ferox juvenis_—fiery—full of exuberant strength;—all variations of the
+grounding thought—relation of Parent and Child.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Of Othello?
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+The moral Unity of Othello can be nothing but the Connubial Relation.
+How is this dealt with? Othello and Desdemona deserve one another—both
+are excellent—both impassioned, but very differently—both frank, simple,
+confiding—both unbounded in love. But they have married against the
+father’s wish—privily, and—he dies—so here is from another sacred
+quarter an influence thwarting—a law violated, and of which the
+violation shall be made good to the uttermost. So somebody remarks that
+Brabantio involves the fact in the Nemesis, “She has deceived her
+Father, and may thee.” Then the pretended corrupt love of her and Cassio
+is a reflection in divers ways of the prevailing relation—for a corrupt
+union of man and woman images _ex opposito_ the true union—and then it
+comes as the wounding to the death. Again, Rodrigo’s wicked pursuit of
+her is an imperfect, false reflection. And then there is the false
+relation—in Cassio and Bianca—woven in essentially when Iago, talking to
+Cassio of Bianca, makes Othello believe that they are speaking of
+Desdemona. Then the married estate of Iago and Emilia is another
+image—an actual marriage, and so far the same thing, but an inwardly
+unbound wedlock—between heart and heart no tie—and so far not the same
+thing—the same with a difference, exactly what Poetry requires. Note
+that this image is also participant in the Action, essentially,
+penetratively to the core; since hereby Iago gets the handkerchief, and
+hereby, too, the knot is resolved by Emilia’s final disclosures and
+asseverations sealed by her death. Observe that each husband kills, and
+indeed stabs his wife—motives a little different—as heaven and hell.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+The method of Shakspeare makes his Drama the more absolute reflection of
+our own Life, wherein are to be considered two things——
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+First—if the innermost grounding feeling of all our other feelings is
+and must be that of Self—the next, or in close proximity, Sympathy with
+our life—then by the overpowering similitude of those Plays to our
+lives—of the method of the Plays to the method of our life—that Sympathy
+is by Shakspeare seized and possessed as by no other dramatist—the
+persuasion of reality being immense and stupendous. Elements of the
+method are, the mixture of comic and tragic—the crossing presentment of
+different interests—presentment of the same interests from divided
+places and times—multiplying of agents, that is number and variety—being
+of all ranks, ages, qualities, offices—coming in contact—immixt in
+Action and Passion. This frank, liberal, unreserved, spontaneous and
+natural method of imitation must ravish our sympathy—and we know that
+the Plays of Shakspeare are to us like another world of our own in its
+exuberant plenitude—a full second humanity.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Opposed to this is the severe method of the Greek Stage—selecting and
+simplifying.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Of the modern craftsmen, to my thinking Alfieri has carried the Attic
+severity to the utmost; and I am obliged to say, sir, that in them
+all—those Greeks and this Italian—the severity oppresses me—I feel the
+rule of art—not the free movement of human existence. That I feel
+overpoweringly, only in Shakspeare.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Ay.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Alfieri says that the constituent Element of Tragedy is Conflict—as of
+Duty and Passion—as of conscious Election in the breast of Man and Fate.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+He does—does he?
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+There is Conflict—or Contrast—or Antithesis—the Jar of two Opposites—a
+Discord—a Rending—in Lear; between his misplaced confidence and its
+requital—between his misplaced displeasure and the true love that is
+working towards his weal. And, again, between the Desert and the Reward
+of Cordelia—with more in the same Play.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Schiller says of Tragic Fate,
+
+ “The great gigantic Destiny
+ That exalts Man in crushing him.”
+
+Welcker has, I believe, written on the Fate of the Greek Tragedy, which
+I desire to see.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Are Waves breaking against a Rock the true image of Tragedy?
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Hardly; any more than a man running his head against a post, or stone
+wall is. The two antagonistic Forces, Talboys, must each of them have,
+or seem to have, the possibility of yielding; the Conflict or Strife
+must have a certain play. Therefore I inquire—Is the Greek Fate the most
+excellent of Dramatic means? and is the Greek Fate inflexible? And,
+granting that the Hellenic Fate is thoroughly sublime and fitting to
+Greek Tragedy, and withal inflexible—does it follow that Modern Tragedy
+must have a like overhanging tyrannical Necessity?
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+No.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+No. The Greek Tragedy representing a received religious Mythology, we
+may conceive the poetical, or esthetical _hardness_ of a Fate known for
+unalterable, to have been tempered by the inherent Awe—the Holiness.
+There is a certain swallowing-up of human interests, hopes,
+passions—this turmoiling, struggling life—in a revealed Infinitude. Our
+Stage is human—built on the Moral Nature of Man, and on his terrestrial
+Manner of Being. It stands _under_ the Heavens—_upon_ the Earth. In
+Hamlet, the Ghost, with his command of Revenge, represents the
+Impassive, Inflexible—with a breath freezing the movable human blood
+into stillness—everything else is in agitation.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Say it again, sir.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Beg my pardon and your own, fully and unconditionally, Talboys, this
+very instant, for talking slightingly of the Greek Drama.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Not guilty, my Lord. Of all Dramas that ever were dramatised on the
+Stage of this unintelligible world, the Greek Drama is the most
+dramatic, saving and excepting Shakspeare’s.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Ay, wonderful, my dear Talboys, to see the holy affections demonstrated
+mighty on the heathen Proscenium. Antigone! Daughter and Sister. Or in
+another House, Orestes, Electra.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Macbeth murders a King, who happens to be his kinsman; but Clytemnestra
+murders her husband, who happens to be a King—the profounder and more
+interior crime.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+We see how grave are the undertakings of Poetry, which engages itself to
+please, that it may accomplish sublimer aims. By pleasure she wins you
+to your greater good—to Love and Intelligence. The heathen Legislator,
+the heathen Philosopher, the heathen Poet, looks upon Man with love and
+awe. He desires and conceives his welfare—his wellbeing—HIS HAPPINESS.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+And the Poet, you believe, sir, with intenser love—with more solemn
+awe—with more penetrant intuition.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+I do. And he has his way clearer before him.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+The Legislator, sir, will alchemise the most refractory of all
+substances—Man. His materials are in truth the lowest and grossest, and
+most external relations of Man’s life.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+They are.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+And these he would, with instrumentality of low, gross, outward means,
+subjugate or subdue under his own most spiritual intuitions.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+A vain task, my dear Talboys, for an impossible. He must lower his
+intuition—his aim—to his means and materials. The Philosopher walks in a
+more etherial region. Compared to the Legislator, he is at advantage.
+But he has his own difficulties. He must _think Feelings_!
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+He might as well try, sir, to trace outline, and measure capacity of a
+mist which varies its form momently, and, without determinate boundary
+loses itself in the contiguous air. His work is to define the
+indefinite.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+And then he comes from the Schools, which in qualifying disqualify
+also—from the Schools of the Senses—of the Physical Arts—of Natural
+Philosophy—of Logical, Metaphysical, Mathematical Science. These have
+quickened, strengthened, and sharpened his wit; they have lifted him at
+last from emotions to notions; but—Love is understood by loving—Hate by
+hating—and only so! Sensations—notions—EMOTIONS! I say, Talboys, that in
+all these inferior schools you may understand a part by itself, and
+ascend by items to the Sum, the All. But in the Philosophy of the Will,
+you must from the centre look along the radii, and with a sweep command
+the circumference. You must know as it were Nothing, or All.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Ay, indeed, sir; looking at the Doctrines of the Moral Philosophers, you
+are always dissatisfied—and why?
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Because they contradict your self-experience. Sometimes they speak as
+you feel. Your self-intelligence answers, and from time to time,
+acknowledges and avouches a strain or two; but then comes discord. The
+Sage stands on a radius. If he looks along the radius towards the
+circumference, he sees in the same direction with him who stands at the
+centre; but in every other direction, inversely or transversely. Every
+work of a Philosopher gives you the notion of glimpses caught, snatched
+in the midst of clouds and of rolling darknesses. The truth is, Talboys,
+that the Moral Philosopher is in the Moral Universe a schoolboy; he is
+gaining, from time to time, information by which, if he shall persevere
+and prosper, he shall at last understand. Hitherto he but prepares to
+understand. If he knows this, good; but if the schoolboy who has
+mastered his Greek Alphabet, will forthwith proceed to expound Homer and
+Plato, what sort of an _ex cathedrâ_ may we not expect? Rather, what
+expectation can approach the burlesque that is in store!
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+All are not such.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+The Moral Sage may be the Schoolboy in the Magisterial Chair. With only
+this difference, that he of the beard has been installed in form, and
+the Doctor’s hat set on his head by the hand of authority. But the
+ground of confusion is the same. He will from initial glimpses of
+information expound the world. He will—and the worst of it is that—he
+must.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+A Legislator, a Philosopher, a Poet, all know that the stability and
+welfare of a man—of a fellowship of men—is Virtue. But see how they deal
+with it.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Don’t look to me, Talboys; go on of yourself and for yourself—I am a
+pupil.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+The Legislator, sir, can hardly do more than reward Valour in war; and
+punish overt crime. The Philosopher will have Good either tangible, like
+an ox, or a tree, or a tower, or a piece of land; or a rigorous and
+precise rational abstraction, like the quantities of a mathematician.
+For Good, _substantial and impalpable_, go to the Poet. For Good—for
+Virtue—_concrete_, go to the Poet.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+The Philosopher separates Virtue from all other motions and states of
+the human will. The Poet loses or hides Virtue in the other motions and
+states of the human will. Orestes, obeying the Command of Apollo,
+avenges his Father, by slaying his Mother, and her murderous and
+adulterous Paramour. So awfully, solemnly, terribly—with such
+implication and involution in human affections and passions, works and
+interests and sufferings, the Poet demonstrates Virtue.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+And we go along with Orestes, sir; the Greeks did—if our feebler soul
+cannot.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Yes, Talboys, we do go along with Orestes. He does that which he _must_
+do—which he is under a moral obligation to do—under a moral necessity of
+doing. Necessity! ay, an Αναγκη—stern, strong, adamantine as that which
+links the Chain of Causes and Events in the natural universe—which
+compels the equable and unalterable celestial motions beheld by our
+eyes—such a bounden, irresistible agency sends on the son of the
+murdered, with hidden sword, against the bosom that has lulled, fed,
+_made_ him!—HE MUST.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Love, hate, horror—the furies of kinned shed blood ready to spring up
+from the black inscrutable earth wetted by the red drops, and to dog the
+heels of the new Slayer—of the divinely-appointed Parricide! So a Poet
+teaches Virtue.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Ay, even so; convulsing your soul—convulsing the worlds, he shows you
+LAW—the archaic, the primal, sprung, ere Time, from the bosom of
+Jupiter—LAW the bond of the worlds, LAW the inviolate violated, and
+avenging her Violation, vindicating her own everlasting stability,
+purity, divinity.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Divine Law and humble, faithful, acquiescent human Obedience! Obedience
+self-sacrificing, blind to the consequences, hearing the God, hearing
+the Ghost, deaf to all other Voices—deaf to fear, deaf to pity!
+
+ NORTH.
+
+Now call in the Philosopher, and hear what he has to preach. Something
+exquisite and unintelligible about the Middle between two Extremes!
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+Shade of the Stagyrite!
+
+ NORTH.
+
+The pure Earth shakes crime from herself, and the pure stars follow
+their eternal courses. The Mother slays the children of a brother for
+the father’s repast. And the sun, stopt in the heavens, veils his
+resplendent face. So a Poet inculcates Law—Law running through all
+things, and binding all things in Unity and in Sympathy—Law entwined in
+the primal relations of Man with Man. To reconcile Man with Law—to make
+him its “willing bondsman”—is the great Moral and Political Problem—the
+first Social need of the day—the innermost craving need of all time
+since the Fall. The Poet is its greatest teacher—a wily preceptor, who
+lessons you, unaware, unsuspecting of the supreme benefit purposed
+you—done you—by him, the Hierophant of Harmonia.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+You ordered me, sir, some few or many hours ago—some Short or Long Time
+since—to swear that after this Morning’s Breakfast I would never more so
+much as confidentially whisper into a friend’s ear the words—Othello!
+Desdemona! And I swore it. I am now eager to swear it over again; but I
+begin, sir, to entertain the most serious apprehensions that that time
+will never arrive.
+
+ NORTH.
+
+What time?
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+_After_ Breakfast. We have been sitting here, sir, _before_ Breakfast
+for ages, in the Wren’s Nest. During our incubation, what a succession
+of changes may there not have been in Europe! Revolution on
+Revolution—blood poured out like water——Hark, the Tocsin!
+
+ NORTH.
+
+The Gong.
+
+ TALBOYS.
+
+The _Breakfast_ Gong! The tremulous thunder meets an answering chord
+within me. Six o’Clock in the Morning—and no victuals have I gorged
+since Eleven Yestreen. Good-by to the Wren’s Nest—the very Cave of
+Famine. This is Turkey-egg—Goose-egg—Swan-egg—Ostrich-egg day. I see
+Buller eyeing open-mouthed, with premeditating mastication, my pile of
+muffins. Gormandising sans Grace. Take care you don’t trip, sir, over
+the precipice—’twould be an ugly fall—into the basin. Now we are out of
+danger. But don’t skip, sir—don’t skip—till we emerge—on the open
+ground—then we may dance among the daisies.
+
+
+
+
+ LETTER FROM MAJOR-GENERAL SIR WILLIAM NAPIER.
+
+
+ CLAPHAM, LONDON, _April 11, 1850_.
+
+SIR,—The writer of the article headed “_The Ministerial Measures_,” in
+your Magazine, has been so complimentary to me that I feel ashamed of
+pointing out an error.
+
+He says I wrote my History on _Whig principles_. Had he said _Radical
+principles_, I should not have winced, though I really endeavoured to
+write it on the principles of truth and knowledge of the subject. But
+for Whig principles! God save the mark!—I never thought of them save to
+censure; and really my History is throughout, by implication, and in
+many places directly, condemnatory of the Whigs’ policy, and of their
+extreme arrogance, and presumptuous, erroneous views of the Peninsular
+War.
+
+I trust the writer will, therefore, acquit me of any such foolish,
+factious design as writing a history upon Whig principles.
+
+I remain, Sir, your obedient Servant,
+
+ W. NAPIER, _Major-General_.
+
+
+ _To the Editor of Blackwood’s Magazine._
+
+
+ [We gladly give place to the gallant General’s communication. The
+ writer of the article in question meant simply to convey his
+ impression, that the able and eloquent History of Sir William Napier
+ was not constructed on _Tory_ principles; and consequently, that the
+ letter which he embodied in his paper was to be regarded as the
+ testimony of a political opponent.]
+
+
+ _Printed by William Blackwood & Sons, Edinburgh._
+
+-----
+
+Footnote 1:
+
+ _Correspondence respecting the demands made upon the Greek Government,
+ and respecting the Islands of Cervi and Sapienza._ Presented to both
+ Houses of Parliament, by command of Her Majesty. February 1850.
+
+Footnote 2:
+
+ Protestant heresy.
+
+Footnote 3:
+
+ This is now the case in Germany.
+
+Footnote 4:
+
+ _Journal de la Campagne de Russie en 1812._ Par M. DE FEZENSAC,
+ Lieutenant-General. Librairie Militaire, Paris 1850.
+
+Footnote 5:
+
+ _Essays; Political, Historical, and Miscellaneous._ By ARCHIBALD
+ ALISON, LL.D. Author of “The History of Europe,” &c. Three vols. 8vo.
+ William Blackwood & Sons, Edinburgh and London.
+
+Footnote 6:
+
+ Vide the _Economist_ newspaper of January 19, 1850.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES
+
+
+ Page Changed from Changed to
+
+ 600 declined only ½ per lb.; No. 40, declined only ½d. per lb.; No.
+ however, 40, however,
+
+ 638 of doing. Necessity! ay, an of doing. Necessity! ay, an
+ Αναζκη—stern, strong, adamantine Αναγκη—stern, strong, adamantine
+ as that as that
+
+ ● Typos fixed; non-standard spelling and dialect retained.
+ ● Used numbers for footnotes, placing them all at the end of the last
+ chapter.
+ ● Enclosed italics font in _underscores_.
+ ● Enclosed blackletter font in =equals=.
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75515 ***
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+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75515 ***</div>
+
+<div class='tnotes covernote'>
+
+<p class='c000'><strong>Transcriber’s Note:</strong></p>
+
+<p class='c000'>New original cover art included with this eBook is granted to the public domain.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='titlepage'>
+
+<div>
+ <h1 class='c001'>BLACKWOOD’S<br> EDINBURGH MAGAZINE.<br> <span class='xlarge'><span class='sc'>No. CCCCXV.&#160; &#160; &#160; MAY, 1850.&#160; &#160; &#160; Vol. LXVII.</span></span></h1>
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <h2 class='c002'>CONTENTS.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<table class='table0'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'><span class='sc'>Free-Trade Finance</span>,</td>
+ <td class='c004'><a href='#Page_513'>513</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'><span class='sc'>Greece Again</span>,</td>
+ <td class='c004'><a href='#Page_526'>526</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'><span class='sc'>The Modern Argonauts</span>,</td>
+ <td class='c004'><a href='#Page_539'>539</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'><span class='sc'>My Peninsular Medal. By an Old Peninsular. Part VI.</span>,</td>
+ <td class='c004'><a href='#Page_542'>542</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'><span class='sc'>German Popular Prophecies</span>,</td>
+ <td class='c004'><a href='#Page_560'>560</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'><span class='sc'>The History of a Regiment during the Russian Campaign</span>,</td>
+ <td class='c004'><a href='#Page_573'>573</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'><span class='sc'>The Penitent Free-Trader</span>,</td>
+ <td class='c004'><a href='#Page_585'>585</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'><span class='sc'>Tenor of the Trade Circulars</span>,</td>
+ <td class='c004'><a href='#Page_589'>589</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'><span class='sc'>Alison’s Political Essays</span>,</td>
+ <td class='c004'><a href='#Page_605'>605</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'><span class='sc'>Ovid’s Spring-Time</span>,</td>
+ <td class='c004'><a href='#Page_621'>621</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'><span class='sc'>Dies Boreales No. VII. Christopher under Canvass</span>,</td>
+ <td class='c004'><a href='#Page_622'>622</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'><span class='sc'>Letter from Major-General Sir William Napier</span>,</td>
+ <td class='c004'><a href='#Page_640'>640</a></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><span class='large'>EDINBURGH:</span></div>
+ <div>WILLIAM BLACKWOOD &#38; SONS, 45, GEORGE STREET;</div>
+ <div>AND 37, PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON.</div>
+ <div class='c005'><span class='small'><em>$1</em></span></div>
+ <div class='c005'><span class='small'>SOLD BY ALL THE BOOKSELLERS IN THE UNITED KINGDOM.</span></div>
+ <div class='c005'><span class='small'>PRINTED BY WILLIAM BLACKWOOD AND SONS, EDINBURGH.</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter ph1'>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c006'>
+ <div>BLACKWOOD’S</div>
+ <div class='c005'>EDINBURGH MAGAZINE.</div>
+ <div class='c005'><span class='xlarge'><span class='sc'>No. CCCCXV.&#160; &#160; &#160; MAY, 1850.&#160; &#160; &#160; Vol. LXVII.</span></span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_513'>513</span>
+ <h2 class='c002'>FREE-TRADE FINANCE.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>The Chancellor of the Exchequer
+has brought forward the Budget,
+and the Financial Measures of Government
+are before the public. It
+contains matter worthy of the most
+serious consideration. It is hard to
+say whether the admission it contains,
+or the measures it proposes, are
+most condemnatory of the system of
+Class Government which the Reform
+Bill has imposed on the country.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The statement of the Chancellor of
+the Exchequer, in a few words, is
+this:—“Last year, I calculated upon
+a small surplus of L.104,000 for the
+year ending 5th April 1850, but that
+surplus has swelled to L.2,250,000,
+by rise in the produce of the taxes,
+and reductions of the expenditure. Of
+this sum L.1,500,000 is to be regarded
+as the real surplus to be
+relied upon for the measures of this
+year.” Assuming this as the surplus
+to be dealt with, he proposes to apply
+L.750,000 in reduction of the last
+contracted part of the debt, and
+L.750,000 in reduction of taxation;
+L.400,000 a-year being applied to the
+reduction of the duty on bricks, and
+L.350,000 to that of stamps on conveyances.
+It is thus that he proposes to alleviate
+the agricultural distress which,
+he admits, prevails in the country.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Three things are especially worthy
+of observation in this statement.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>In the first place, it affords another
+illustration, if another was needed, of
+the present deplorable subjection of
+Government to the pressure from
+without, which has so often and painfully
+been exhibited since the new
+system of government began. It is
+well known that, during the three
+disastrous years that preceded the
+present one, debt to a large amount
+was contracted. To mention two
+items only: eight millions were borrowed
+in 1847 to relieve the Irish
+famine; L.2,000,000 in the succeeding
+year, to carry on the current expenses
+of the year; and in 1841 the deficiency
+had been such, that no less
+than L.5,000,000 was borrowed to
+meet the ordinary expenses of the
+year. One would suppose, that when
+a surplus arose in the year 1849, the
+natural course would have been to
+have applied it, in the first instance,
+to extinguish, so far as it would go,
+the additional debt so recently contracted.
+Has this been done? Not
+at all. Only L.750,000 out of a real
+surplus said to amount to L.1,500,000,
+is to be applied in this way; and
+L.750,000 is to be devoted to reduction
+of taxes. L.10,000,000 is borrowed
+during two years of distress;
+L.750,000 only has been devoted to
+its reduction, in a year, we are told,
+of unparalleled commercial prosperity.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>In the next place, to what object is
+the L.750,000 a-year of surplus available
+to reduced taxation, discovered
+for the first time after three years of
+deficit, to be applied? Is it to be
+devoted to remission of taxes pressing
+upon the agricultural interest, whom
+the measures pursued for behoof of
+towns have reduced to such a state of
+depression? Not at all. It is to be
+applied to reduction of the duty on
+<em>$1</em>. The first may be
+admitted to be desirable, because, as so
+large part of the landed property in
+the kingdom will soon, to all appearance,
+change hands, it is an object to
+render the transfer as little costly as
+possible. But of what use is the
+reduction of the duty on bricks to the
+suffering cultivators? That it is a
+boon to the master-builders in towns,
+may be conceded; though it may well
+be doubted whether it will ever cause
+a reduction of price to the purchasers
+from them. But what the better will
+the farmers and ploughmen, the landlords
+and yeomen, be of the change?
+Additional houses are not wanted <em>$1</em>; on the contrary, there
+will in all probability not be inmates
+for those that already are there, from
+the certain and experienced effect of
+Free-trade in diminishing the demand
+for rural labour. It is in the towns
+and villages that the building is going
+on; because Free-trade policy is
+daily more and more forcing the rural
+inhabitants into the towns in quest of
+employment or relief. In London,
+200 miles of new streets, and 66,000
+houses, are said to have been constructed,
+or to be in course of construction,
+during the last two years.
+Is there any increase of houses in the
+rural districts? Herein, then, lies
+the injustice of the present measures
+of Government, that, though prefaced
+with professions of a desire to relieve
+all parties, they in reality benefit one
+class only; and that, introduced at a
+time when it is admitted the agriculturists
+are in a state of extreme
+depression, and the manufacturers are
+asserted to be in a state of unexampled
+prosperity, they are mainly calculated
+to add to the prosperity of the
+latter, and take nothing from the sufferings
+of the former. It is not difficult
+to see where the Reform Bill has
+practically lodged the power of
+Government in the British Empire.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>In the third place, and what is
+most material of all, the speech of
+the Chancellor of the Exchequer contains
+an admission in regard to the
+present state and past direction of
+our finances, since we have fallen under
+Liberal direction, of such moment, that
+we regard it as the most important
+statement that has ever yet been given
+in regard to the effect of the new measures
+on the national fortunes. It must
+be given in his own words, as reported
+in the <cite>Times</cite> of March 16:—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“If honourable gentlemen will refer to
+what has taken place during the last
+twenty years—the sums which have been
+borrowed on the one hand, and the
+amounts which have been applied to the
+reduction of the debt on the other—I
+think they will see that there is good reason
+for not being indifferent on this subject.
+In 1835 and 1836, a sum of L.20,000,000
+was borrowed for the emancipation of the
+West Indian slave population; to defray
+the deficiency, in the year 1841,
+L.5,000,000 were borrowed; I was
+obliged to borrow L.8,000,000 to meet
+the necessities of the sister country in
+1847; and when the House refused to
+increase the income-tax in 1848, I was
+obliged to borrow a further sum of
+L.2,000,000, to meet the extraordinary
+expenditure. Since the period I have
+mentioned, then, a sum of L.35,000,000
+has been added to the national debt.
+When I turn to the other side of the
+account, I find that all the money which
+has been applied from surplus income to
+the reduction of debt, in the course of the
+last twenty years, amounts to only
+L.8,000,000; so that, <em>$1</em>. (Hear,
+hear.) When, in 1848, the House refused
+to accede to the proposal I made
+for an increased tax upon income, I certainly
+did hope that, when a turn took
+place in our financial affairs, they would
+not, the moment there was a surplus of
+income, instantly press that the whole of
+that surplus should be devoted to the reduction
+of taxation. What should we
+think of a private individual who acted
+in such a manner (hear, hear)—a man
+who, whenever he found his income fall
+short of his expenditure, borrowed the
+money necessary to meet his liabilities,
+but who never thought of paying off that
+debt when, by a fortunate turn of affairs,
+he happened to be in receipt of an excess
+of income? (Hear, hear.) I must say
+that it will be hopeless for us to maintain
+that character as a nation which we
+think indispensable in an individual, if,
+in a time of profound peace, instead of
+reducing our public debt, we go on adding
+to it from year to year.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Here it is admitted, by the Whig
+Chancellor of the Exchequer, that
+after twenty years of profound peace
+and unbroken Liberal government,
+(Sir Robert Peel was essentially Liberal,)
+not only has there been no reduction
+of the public debt, but <span class='fss'>AN
+INCREASE OF IT TO THE EXTENT OF
+TWENTY-SEVEN MILLIONS</span>. It has
+been repeatedly demonstrated that, if
+the noble sinking-fund of L.15,000,000
+a-year, which Mr Pitt’s policy left to the
+Administration at the close of the war
+in 1815, had been preserved unimpaired
+by keeping up the indirect
+taxes from which it arose, the whole
+national debt would have been extinguished
+in 1845. When the ruinous
+monetary act of 1819, and the increasing
+concession of successive Administrations
+to urban clamour had rendered
+that impossible, the semi-Liberal
+semi-Tory Governments from 1815
+to 1830 still contrived to pay off
+L.82,000,000 of the public debt in
+fifteen years; and when the Duke of
+Wellington resigned in November
+1830, he left, by the admission of all
+parties, a real sinking-fund, arising
+from an excess of income above
+expenditure, of L.2,900,000 a-year to
+his successors. But since that time,
+under his Liberal successors, not only
+has that surplus on an average of
+years disappeared, but during twenty
+years of profound peace L.27,000,000
+has been <em>$1</em> to the total amount
+of the debt. Well may Sir Charles
+Wood say, “What should we
+think of a private individual who
+acted in such a manner?” Such is
+the rule of the urban constituencies,
+to humour whose fancies, and appease
+whose clamour, the whole efforts of
+Government for the last twenty years
+have been directed.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The important thing in the statement
+of the Chancellor of the Exchequer
+is, that it gives us the result of
+Whig government and Free-trade
+finance during so long a period.
+Every successive quarter, during these
+twenty years, we have been told by
+the Liberal press that the finances
+were in the most flourishing condition;
+that any deficiency that appeared was
+more apparent than real; and at any
+rate, in the most unfavourable view,
+it was sufficiently explained by temporary
+causes, and afforded no ground
+whatever for despondency in the future.
+Every successive Session, the Ministers
+came down to Parliament with
+the most flourishing accounts of the
+state of the country and of the public
+finances, and demonstrated to the
+satisfaction of every reasonable man
+in the nation that both never were in
+more hopeful and prosperous circumstances.
+Even when a deficiency of
+one or two millions stared the Chancellor
+of the Exchequer in the face,
+which was not unfrequently the case,
+there was always some temporary or
+transient cause to which it was to be
+referred. The China tribute had ceased,
+or some reduction of duties had come
+into operation, or revolutions in
+Europe had diminished our exports to
+the adjoining states. The Irish potato-rot
+was a perfect godsend to the
+Liberal financiers. It constituted their
+stock in trade for the next three years.
+The ruin of L.15,000,000 worth of
+agricultural produce in Ireland, out of
+at least L.260,000,000 worth in the two
+islands, explained the whole distress
+of the country and the exchequer for
+the next three years; and, strange to
+say, the very men who paraded so
+ostentatiously the ruinous effects of
+this comparatively trifling deficiency
+in a single year, made a boast soon
+after of their having destroyed
+L.90,000,000 of agricultural remuneration
+by the importations they induced
+of foreign grain.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But nothing is more certain than
+that error and delusion cannot, by any
+human effort, be prolonged for a very
+long period. With the advent of the
+time when the interest to deceive has
+ceased, or a new generation of deceivers
+has succeeded, the whole fabric
+falls to pieces. As certainly and mercilessly
+as the vices or follies of preceding
+monarchs are portrayed by
+those who have succeeded to the inheritance
+of their results, are the ruinous
+consequences of former delusions in
+democratic Governments exposed by
+succeeding Administrations who find
+themselves hampered by their effects.
+Many a popular Nero is cast down
+from his pedestal, almost before the
+vital warmth has left his body; many
+a republican Necker is exposed by a
+republican Bailly, when he finds the
+public finances rendered desperate by
+the measures which had been pursued
+with the cordial approbation of the
+whole Liberal party in the state. It
+is the same with our present Chancellor
+of the Exchequer. He finds the
+public finances, in the midst of boasted
+commercial and manufacturing prosperity,
+in so deplorable a condition,
+that he is fain to lay the whole blame
+upon his predecessors; and, after deploring
+the extraordinary fact, that
+during twenty years of profound peace,
+Liberal government, and retrenching
+Administrations, we have not only
+made no reduction whatever in the
+public debt, but added twenty-seven
+millions to its amount, he very naturally
+and justly observes, “What
+should we say to a private individual
+who should conduct his affairs in this
+manner?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>We have been so accustomed, during
+twenty years of Liberal and popular
+rule, to see every successive Administration
+live only from hand to
+mouth, and to be content if they can
+get over present difficulties, without
+bestowing a thought on the future,
+that the nation has almost forgotten
+what it was to have a prudent and
+foreseeing Government at the head of
+affairs: or rather, nearly the whole
+generations who have risen to manhood
+have come to think that such a
+system of government is impossible,
+and is to be ranked with the El
+Dorado of Sir Walter Raleigh, or the
+Utopia of Sir Thomas More. To
+enlighten their minds on this subject,
+we subjoin two Tables, showing what
+was done by the corrupt old Tory
+Governments—even during the anxieties
+and expenditure of a most protracted
+and costly war, or when the
+national finances were slowly recovering
+from its effects—to put the finances
+on a good footing, and lay, in present
+fortitude and sacrifice, a solid foundation
+for future relief and prosperity.</p>
+
+<table class='table1'>
+ <tr><th class='c010' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Table I.</span>, showing the growth of the Money applied to the reduction of the Debt, and the Sums paid off from 1792 to 1815, being twenty-three years of war.</th></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c004'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>1792,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>£1,558,504</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>1793,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1,634,972</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>1794,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1,872,957</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>1795,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>2,143,697</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>1796,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>2,639,956</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>1797,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>3,393,210</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>1798,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>4,093,164</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>1799,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>4,528,568</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>1800,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>4,908,379</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>1801,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>5,528,315</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>1802,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>6,114,033</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>1803,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>6,494,694</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>1804,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>6,436,929</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>1805,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>9,406,865</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>1806,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>9,602,658</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>1807,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>10,125,419</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>1808,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>10,681,579</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>1809,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>11,359,691</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>1810,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>12,095,977</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>1811,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>13,073,577</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>1812,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>14,098,842</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>1813,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>16,064,057</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>1814,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>14,830,957</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>1815,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>14,241,397</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c004'><hr></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c004'>£186,928,399</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c004'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>—<span class='sc'>Porter’s</span> <cite>Parl. Tables</cite>, i. 1.</td>
+ <td class='c004'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c008'>It is a total mistake to allege, as is
+often done, that this immense and
+growing sinking-fund was obtained
+entirely by borrowing with the one
+hand what was paid off with another.
+The <em>$1</em> thus applied to the reduction
+of debt were obtained from the
+<em>$1</em> taxes set apart on the contraction
+of each loan, in amount adequate
+not only to defray its annual
+interest, but also to extinguish, within
+forty-five years after it was contracted,
+the principal of the loan
+itself. That part of the loan was
+applied in each year, especially during
+the latter years of the war, to
+keep up the sinking-fund, is true, but
+is immaterial. That was only because
+the taxes set apart for its support were
+absorbed, in great part, by the necessities
+of the contest; and when <em>$1</em>, these taxes
+were amply sufficient to keep up the
+sinking-fund without any extraneous
+aid. This appears from the following
+Table, also taken from Mr Porter,
+exhibiting what was actually paid off
+of the public debt during the next
+fifteen years of Tory peace-government:—</p>
+
+<table class='table1'>
+ <tr><th class='c010' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Table</span> showing the Money applied to the reduction of Debt, Funded and Unfunded, from 1815 to 1832.</th></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c004'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>1816,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>£13,945,117</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>1817,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>14,514,457</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>1818,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>15,339,483</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>1819,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>16,305,590</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>1820,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>17,499,773</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>1821,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>17,219,957</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>1822,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>18,889,319</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>1823,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>7,482,325</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>1824,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>10,625,059</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>1825,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>6,093,475</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>1826,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>5,621,231</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>1827,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>5,704,766</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>1828,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>4,667,965</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>1829,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>2,559,485</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>1830,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>4,545,465</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>1831,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1,663,093</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>1832,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>5,696</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c004'><hr></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c004'>£162,682,256</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c004'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>—<span class='sc'>Porter’s</span> <cite>Parl. Tables</cite>, i. 1.</td>
+ <td class='c004'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c008'>But the Reform Bill, passed in
+1832, has entirely put an end to the
+reduction of the debt. Since that
+time, as Sir Charles Wood tells us,
+the debt, so far from having diminished,
+has increased £27,000,000.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>That there was a substantial reduction
+of debt going on during the period
+included in the above table, and not a
+mere juggle, by transferring debt from
+one denomination to another, though
+not to the amount which these figures
+would indicate, is decisively proved by
+the following Table, showing the general
+result of the financial operations
+from 1816 to 1832, when the Whigs
+introduced the Reform Bill:—</p>
+
+<table class='table1'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003' colspan='3'>Funded Debt on 5th Jan. 1816,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>£816,311,940</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003' colspan='3'>Unfunded do.,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>48,510,501</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c003'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c004'><hr></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013' colspan='3'>Total,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>£860,822,441</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c003'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c004'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003' colspan='3'>Total Debt on 5th Jan. 1832—</td>
+ <td class='c004'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c003'>Funded,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>£754,100,549</td>
+ <td class='c004'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c003'>Unfunded,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>27,752,650</td>
+ <td class='c004'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c003'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'><hr></td>
+ <td class='c004'>781,853,199</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c003'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c004'><hr></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003' colspan='3'>Paid off in sixteen years,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>£82,969,242</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c003'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c004'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003' colspan='3'>—<span class='sc'>Porter’s</span> <cite>Parl. Tables</cite>, ii. 6.</td>
+ <td class='c004'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c008'>In the next eighteen years, since
+the Reform Bill changed the Constitution,
+it has been seen the debt was
+increased by £27,000,000.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>So prodigious and fatal a change
+in our financial system would be
+wholly inexplicable, considering the
+many able and patriotic men who,
+since that period, have been intrusted
+with its direction, if we did not recollect
+the vital change made since that
+time in the constitution of the country,
+and the new class which was brought
+up in overwhelming numbers to return
+representatives to the House of Commons.
+That class is the borough and
+shopkeeping interest, with whom the
+main object is to buy cheap and sell
+dear. Not only has this principle,
+since that time, formed the sole regulator
+of Government measures in
+general or commercial policy, but it
+has operated decisively on our finances,
+and is the main cause to which their
+present hopeless condition is to be
+ascribed. To cheapen everything became
+the great object; and this was to
+be done, it was thought, most effectually
+by taking taxes off articles of
+consumption. Under the influence of
+this principle, indirect taxes to the
+following enormous amount have been
+repealed since the peace, the magnitude
+of which renders it noways surprising
+that the sinking-fund has
+disappeared:—</p>
+
+<table class='table1'>
+ <tr><th class='c010' colspan='6'><span class='sc'>Table</span> showing the Taxes, Direct and Indirect, Repealed and Imposed from 1816 to 1847, both inclusive.</th></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c004'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='c013' colspan='3'><span class='sc'>Repealed.</span></th>
+ <th class='c014' colspan='3'><span class='sc'>Imposed.</span></th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>Year.</td>
+ <td class='c012'>Direct.</td>
+ <td class='c012'>Indirect.</td>
+ <td class='c013'>Direct.</td>
+ <td class='c012'>Indirect.</td>
+ <td class='c004'>Year.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>1816,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>£15,000,000</td>
+ <td class='c012'>£2,547,000</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>£320,058</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1816</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>1817,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>36,495</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>7,991</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1817</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>1818,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>9,564</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>1,336</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1818</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>1819,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>705,846</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>3,094,902</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1819</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>1820,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>4,000</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>119,602</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1820</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>1821,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>471,309</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>43,642</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1821</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>1822,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>2,139,101</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1822</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>1823,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>1,860,000</td>
+ <td class='c012'>2,190,050</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>18,596</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1823</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>1824,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>1,704,724</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>45,605</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1824</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>1825,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>3,639,551</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>43,000</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1825</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>1826,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>1,973,812</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>188,000</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1826</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>1827,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>4,038</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>21,402</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1827</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>1828,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>51,998</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>1,966</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1828</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>1829,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>126,406</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1829</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>1830,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>4,093,955</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>696,004</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1830</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>1831,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>1,598,536</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>627,586</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1831</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>1832,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>747,264</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>44,526</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1832</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>1833,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>1,526,914</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1833</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>1834,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>1,200,000</td>
+ <td class='c012'>891,516</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>198,394</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1834</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>1835,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>165,817</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>75</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1835</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>1836,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>989,786</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1836</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>1837,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>234</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>3,991</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1837</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>1838,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>289</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>100</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1838</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>1839,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>66,258</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>1,783</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1839</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>1840,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>18,959</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>2,155,673</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1840</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>1841,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>27,176</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1841</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>1842,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>1,596,366</td>
+ <td class='c013'>£5,529,989</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1842</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>1843,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1843</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>1844,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1844</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>1845,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>4,535,561</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>23,720</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1845</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>1846,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1846</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>1847,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c004'>1847</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'><hr></td>
+ <td class='c012'><hr></td>
+ <td class='c013'><hr></td>
+ <td class='c012'><hr></td>
+ <td class='c004'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>£18,060,000</td>
+ <td class='c012'>£33,523,623</td>
+ <td class='c013'>£5,529,989</td>
+ <td class='c012'>£7,743,962</td>
+ <td class='c004'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>Imposed,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>5,529,989</td>
+ <td class='c012'>7,743,962</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c004'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'><hr></td>
+ <td class='c012'><hr></td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c004'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>Taxation reduced,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>£12,431,011</td>
+ <td class='c012'>£25,779,661</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c004'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c008'>Thus the balance of indirect taxation,
+reduced since the Peace, has been
+above £25,000,000—of direct, above
+£12,000,000 annually; and till 1842,
+it was £15,000,000 yearly. Had the
+sinking-fund been kept up at its
+amount as it was in 1815—that is,
+at £15,000,000 sterling out of the
+indirect taxes, there might have
+been repealed £15,000,000 of direct,
+and £14,000,000 of indirect taxes, and
+still <em>$1</em>.
+Why has this most desirable, most
+vital object for the national safety in
+future times, not been gained? Simply
+because the mania of cheapening
+everything has ruled the State. Successive
+Administrations, which have
+succeeded to the helm of affairs, have
+endeavoured to gain a fleeting popularity,
+by bidding against each other
+in the race for popularity, by the sacrifice
+of the best interests of their
+country; and because Parliament—composed,
+so far as its majority goes
+since 1832, of the members for
+boroughs—have shut their eyes entirely
+to the ultimate consequences of
+their actions, and looked only to the
+gratifying their buying and selling
+constituents by the incessant reduction
+of the indirect taxes, and lowering
+the remuneration of industry of
+every kind throughout the country.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>In truth, the chasm made in the
+finances of the country by this incessant,
+uncalled for, and ruinous reduction
+of the indirect taxes, in pursuance
+of the mania to cheapen everything,
+under which the nation has been labouring
+during the last thirty years, has
+been far greater and more disastrous
+than the preceding figures, formidable
+as they are, would lead us to suppose.
+The taxes repealed are of course set
+down at the amount they were <em>$1</em>. But that is very
+far from what they would have produced
+if they had been kept up; because,
+in that case, of course they
+would have shared in the vast increase
+of wealth and population which has
+since taken place. At the time when
+a large part of these taxes were
+repealed, the British isles did not
+contain above from 20,000,000 to
+24,000,000 of inhabitants—now they
+contain 29,000,000. Our exports
+and imports have more than doubled
+in amount since the income-tax was
+taken off in 1816. Beyond all doubt,
+at its original rate of ten per cent, it
+would now have produced, at the
+very least, £20,000,000 a-year. The
+duty on spirits, so fatally lowered
+in 1826, would now have produced,
+not £2,000,000, but £3,000,000 or
+£3,500,000 annually. There cannot
+be a shadow of doubt that the taxes,
+which in 1815 produced £72,000,000
+a-year, would, if continued at the same
+rates, have been now producing 50
+per cent more, or £110,000,000.
+There is no man in his senses who
+would think that the nation either
+could have borne, or ought to have
+borne, such a load of taxation. Relief,
+on the return of peace, was indispensable.
+But it is one thing to give
+relief in a reasonable and prudent degree;
+it is another, and a very different
+thing, to throw away the public
+revenue with a reckless prodigality,
+without either principle or foresight,
+and for no other reason but to win a
+temporary popularity for wasteful
+Administrations.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Indeed, the inevitable effect of the
+cheapening system, and especially of
+the repeal of the Corn Laws, in rendering
+the taxes unproductive, and payment
+of the interest even of the public
+debt ere long impossible, was distinctly
+foreseen and foretold not only by ourselves
+in this Magazine, but by the
+most decided apostles of the opposite
+set of opinions. Hear Mr Cobbett
+on the subject, in Vol. LI. of his <cite>Register</cite>,
+No. 2, July 10, 1824—a quotation
+for which we are indebted to
+that able and consistent journal, the
+<cite>Standard</cite>.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“‘The commercial world’ will, I believe,
+find it rather difficult to persuade
+the landlords to ‘modify and alter the
+Corn-laws,’ much less to ‘do away’
+with those laws: but what now is to become
+of all the pretty doctrine about the
+inseparable interests of manufacture and
+agriculture? I trust we shall hear no
+more of that soft nonsense....</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Now mind, I do not say that the manufacturers
+ought not to be permitted to
+get food from abroad; but I say—and
+what man in his senses does not say, that
+in whatever degree this cotton body is
+supplied with food from abroad, it must
+and will dispense with food from our own
+lands....</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I would fain then see the two-legged
+animal who is quadruped enough still to
+contend that the interests of the landlords
+and those of the cotton-lords are
+inseparable. They are directly opposed
+to each other; and opposed to each other
+they must be as long as this debt shall last.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“It will be curious enough to observe
+how ‘the manufacturing mind’ will work
+upon ‘the agricultural mind.’ These
+two minds will now come into direct
+contact with each other. It will be the
+business of the cotton mind to convince
+the landlords that bringing in foreign
+corn will not make their English corn
+sell cheaper; or, failing in this, to convince
+them that wheat at 4s. a bushel
+will, ‘in the long run,’ be better for the
+landlords than wheat at 8s. a bushel. A
+very long run, I believe, indeed! In
+short, it is a question of rents or no rents.
+With the present debt and taxes, and
+with wheat at 4s. a bushel, there can be
+no rents; so that, when the cotton mind
+comes forward to get a repeal of the
+Corn Bill, it comes in fact to pray that
+there shall no longer be rents in England.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“The cotton-lords, and indeed all the
+lords of the loom and anvil, are bestirring
+themselves, and collecting all their forces
+for a desperate assault upon the jolterheads
+(the landlords) who cry aloud for
+national faith. I wish them success.
+I will not absolutely join them; but I
+wish them success; because that success
+would destroy the <em>$1</em> (the system
+of paper-money, national debt, and
+oppressive taxation) root and branch.
+The Corn Bill, the Small-Note Bill, the
+laying out of public money in Ireland, the
+lending of money occasionally to manufacturers
+and merchants, the Bank advancing
+money upon big estates—all
+these shifts and tricks just keep the thing
+agoing; but come a war, or repeal the
+Corn Bill, and you will soon see what is
+to become of the system. Everything
+seems strained to its utmost: and when
+that is the case, something must soon give
+way.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The alleged advantage which the
+Free-trade party oppose to the obviously
+calamitous effects of this incessant
+surrender of the public revenue, and
+the now admitted abandonment of all
+attempts to pay off the public debt, is,
+that commodities have been cheapened
+thereby, and the weight which
+oppressed them taken off the springs
+of industry. We utterly deny this
+advantage. What is the good of this
+constant cheapening, when confessedly
+you cannot cheapen our debts and
+obligations? Is it anything else but
+diminishing the funds from which the
+interest of these debts and obligations
+is to be discharged, and running the
+nation into the most imminent hazard
+of incurring a general bankruptcy,
+public and private? Do not salaries
+and incomes fall, from the highest to
+the lowest, in consequence; and if so,
+what good does the fall of prices do,
+even to the individuals who apparently
+profit by it? Suppose we gained
+our object, and rendered everything
+as cheap here as it is in Poland or
+Norway—what should we gain by it,
+but that we should speedily become
+<em>$1</em>, and that the realised
+wealth of this nation, now for the
+most part invested in situations where
+its interest is paid by the industry of
+the people, would be lost by that
+industry having ceased to receive a
+sufficient remuneration? And is that
+an object for which the national security
+should be endangered, and the
+means of maintaining our independence
+destroyed?</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>In truth,—with the exception of
+some manufactured articles, such as
+cotton and calicoes, in which the fall
+of prices has been prodigious, owing
+to the successive improvement of the
+machinery employed in their formation,—we
+are at a loss to see that this
+immense remission of indirect taxes,
+which has evidently been fatal to the
+national finances, has been attended
+with the slightest benefit to the country
+generally. We say the country
+generally—because there can be no
+doubt that it has been a very great
+advantage to the <em>$1</em>, who have, in most cases, contrived
+to put the whole tax lost to the
+public into their own pockets. That
+is the real secret of the remission.
+Individual selfishness, the thirst for
+gain, was in most cases the moving
+spring. The parties interested besieged
+the Chancellor of the Exchequer
+with memorials, setting forth
+the hardships they sustained from the
+tax affecting their branch of industry,
+and the immense benefit the <em>$1</em>
+would derive from its abolition; but
+the public was the very last thing
+they were really thinking of. It was
+their own profits to which they were
+looking; and but for that, they never
+would have stirred in the matter.
+The immense fortunes made in many
+branches of manufactures, during the
+last quarter of a century, have been
+in great part owing to the tax remitted
+having been wholly gained to the
+master-manufacturers engaged in
+them. We pay the same now for our
+shoes and beer as we did thirty years
+ago, though, since its termination, the
+whole tax on leather and the war tax
+on malt have been repealed.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>There is no doubt that prices have
+declined in most articles of consumption
+to a great degree during the last
+twenty-five years, and in some to a
+most extraordinary extent. But
+where the decline has been great—as,
+for example, in cottons or calicoes,
+which are now selling for a fifth of
+what they cost during the war—it is
+not owing to the remission of taxation,
+so much as to the extraordinary
+perfection to which machinery and the
+division of labour have been brought.
+The proof of this is decisive. The fall
+of price has been fully as great in
+branches of manufactures in regard to
+which no remission has taken place,
+or in a very slight degree, as in those
+in which it has been most considerable.
+And in regard to all commodities,
+the effect of the monetary bills
+of 1819, 1826, and 1844, must be
+taken into consideration. Those bills,
+by contracting the currency to <em>$1</em> of what it previously had been in
+proportion to the industry and population
+of the country, have effected a
+revolution of prices so great, that
+nearly the whole reduction of the cost
+of articles prior to the last year is to
+be ascribed to it. The great organ
+of the money interest, the <cite>Times</cite>,
+boasts that recent legislation has
+doubled the value of the sovereign.
+Unquestionably it has; and of course
+it has also doubled the whole debt of
+the country, public and private. It
+has turned the national debt of
+£800,000,000 into £1,600,000,000;
+it has made the annual taxation of
+£52,000,000 as burdensome as
+£100,000,000 would have been during
+the war. Prices have generally fallen;
+but it is the contraction of the currency
+which has done that. As to the remission
+of taxation, with the exception of
+a few articles, such as salt and spirits,
+in which the remission, being very
+large, was immediately felt by the
+consumer, the reduction of prices has
+not been greater than necessarily
+flowed from the artificial scarcity of
+money, and would have been the same
+though no reduction of public duties
+had taken place. Generally speaking,
+the tax, lost to the public, has been
+entirely gained by the master-manufacturer.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Had the system of cheapening, carried
+into effect by the contraction of
+the currency on the one hand, and the
+extensive remission of duties on the
+other, been attended by beneficial consequences
+to the people, and resulted
+in general happiness and prosperity,
+there would at least have been some
+set-off against the ruin of our financial
+prospects which it has occasioned;
+and we might have consoled ourselves
+for the evident imposition of the public
+debt as a hopeless burden upon
+the nation, by the reflection that at
+least temporary wellbeing had resulted
+from the change. Has this been the
+case? Alas! the fact is just the reverse;
+and among the many mournful
+reflections which the present hopeless
+condition of our finances awakens, it is
+perhaps the most mournful, that the
+price paid for it has been, not public
+happiness, but general and unprecedented
+misery. In the long and varied
+annals of English history, there is
+beyond all question no period which
+has been marked by such repeated and
+widespread suffering as the thirty
+years which have elapsed since the
+cheapening system was begun, by the
+contraction of the currency in 1819,
+and the present time, when it has been
+carried into full effect by Sir R. Peel’s
+Free-trade policy in 1846. The three
+dreadful monetary crises of 1825,
+1839, and 1847, followed, as each of
+them was, by several years of devastation
+and ruin to the trading classes;
+the repeated recurrence of agricultural
+distress, especially from 1832 to 1836,
+and in 1849; the unheard-of agonies
+of the Irish famine of 1846, perpetuated
+by the fall of prices, which
+rendered agriculture unremunerative
+over great part of that country,—are
+some of the leading features of an
+epoch which will ever be regarded as
+at once the most momentous and the
+most disastrous which the British Empire
+has ever known.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>It has left its traces deeply furrowed
+and for ever marked in English
+annals. It has produced consequences
+which will never be forgotten, and to
+which the historians of future times
+will point as the turning-point of
+British story, an eternal warning to
+future ages. It has produced the Revolution
+of 1832; disfranchised our
+whole Colonies; displaced the government
+of property, talent, and intelligence
+in the ruling island, and installed
+that of buying and selling in
+its stead. It has severed the public
+policy from the protection of the Land
+and Native Industry, the real inheritance
+and only sure patrimony of the
+nation, and anchored it instead on the
+shifting quicksands of Commercial
+Prosperity. It has destroyed the
+West Indies beyond the possibility of
+redemption, and spread discontent so
+widely through our other Colonies, that
+it is universally known they are all
+only waiting for some serious disaster
+to the parent state, or the advent of
+a protracted and hazardous war, to
+declare themselves independent. It
+has rendered every seventh man in
+Great Britain and Ireland, taken together,
+a pauper. It has driven from
+250,000 to 300,000 industrious citizens,
+for the last three years, annually
+into exile from their native land. It
+has raised the poor-rate in both
+islands to an unprecedented height,
+and, when measured by its true standard,
+the price of subsistence to double
+what it ever was before. It has implanted
+the seeds of ruin in our Mercantile
+Navy, by the rapid growth of
+foreign shipping as compared with
+British in carrying on our own trade.
+It has rendered our shores defenceless
+as they were in the days of the Saxon
+Heptarchy; and made one of our
+first admirals, Sir Charles Napier,
+thankful when the winter frosts closed
+the Baltic harbours, and secured our
+capital from the insulting visits of the
+successors of the sea-kings of the
+north. It has rendered our means of
+raising a revenue so hopeless, that the
+“greatest bill-broker in the world,”
+Mr Gurney, has declared that we
+must end in national bankruptcy; and
+the leader of the Free-traders himself,
+Mr Cobden, has publicly said that
+there is no resource but to disband
+our troops, sell our ships of war, and
+trust the national security to the justice
+and moderation of our enemies,
+and the total absence of envy in our
+rivals. Such, and not public and
+passing felicity, is the price which the
+nation has paid for the ruin of its
+finances, the abandonment of the sinking-fund,
+and the imposing of the
+public debt <em>$1</em>, as a burden,
+hopeless of redemption, on the country.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The destruction of property which
+has taken place in the British Empire
+during the thirty years that this
+cheapening process was going on,
+exceeds probably anything recorded
+during a similar period in the annals
+of mankind. It has much exceeded
+all that was produced by the confiscations
+of the Convention, or the
+devastation of the wars of Napoleon.
+Each of the three great monetary
+crises of 1825, 1839, and 1847, occasioned
+the destruction at once of
+two or three hundred millions worth
+of mercantile property, and halved the
+fortunes of persons to double that
+extent. The intervals between them
+were, with the exception of a few
+brief gleams of perilous prosperity,
+periods of anxiety, gloom, and depression,
+during which all persons engaged
+in business, with the exception of the
+great capitalists, who were daily
+getting richer, found their property
+melting away under the ceaseless
+and progressive fall of prices. It
+was exactly the obverse of the vast
+impulse given to industry over the
+whole world by the discovery of the
+mines of Mexico and Peru, and the
+consequent rise of prices which everywhere
+ensued. One class, and one
+only, flourished amidst the general
+distress; but, unfortunately, in that
+class the government of the nation
+for the time was vested, viz., the
+<em>$1</em>. So immensely had
+this interest grown under the protective
+policy of the preceding hundred
+and fifty years, that it was able to set
+all other interests in the State at defiance,
+and to pursue the system of
+making the sovereign worth two
+sovereigns, despite the evident ruin
+which that system was bringing on
+all the industrious classes in the state.
+Future ages will ask what were the
+devastating wars, the stunning calamities,
+the loss of provinces, the
+severance of colonies, which inflicted
+such deep and irremediable wounds
+on the British nation during these
+memorable periods? and they will be
+answered, it was thirty years of unbroken
+peace at home, a series of
+brilliant colonial conquests abroad,
+and <span class='fss'>ONE SYSTEM</span>.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But that one system was amply
+sufficient to break down the most
+wisely-conceived system of finance,
+to ruin the most flourishing revenue,
+to render beggarly the richest nation,
+to destroy the greatest empire. It
+is the system, originating with the
+Roman empire, as a necessary and just
+consequence of its universal conquest,
+of universal free-trade—a system
+which ruined the empire. It is the more
+dangerous that it recommends itself to
+the people in the first instance by the
+alluring prospect of cheapening everything,
+of making money daily go farther,
+rendering every one apparently richer
+and more comfortable than he was
+before. It is readily adopted by the
+shopkeeping and trading class, because
+it enables them, in the first
+instance, to purchase the goods at a
+less cost; forgetting that if they buy
+cheap they must also sell cheap, and
+that their customers’ means of payment
+are melting away from the effects
+of that very cheapness. It is long,
+however, before this truth, how obvious
+soever, is generally understood. It is
+by slow degrees, and after much
+suffering only, that it is discovered
+that this system of general cheapening
+does not stop short with people’s <em>$1</em>;
+that it speedily comes to
+affect their <em>$1</em> also, and that in
+a still greater degree; that, if shopkeepers
+buy cheap, they must sell
+little or sell cheap also; that wages
+must fall with the decline in the price
+of commodities; and that the last condition
+of the people is worse than the first.
+But while this great and eternal truth
+is in the course of being brought home
+to the nation by suffering, the national
+pre-eminence is lost, the national
+security is endangered, the national
+spirit is weakened. Multitudes become
+desperate in regard to their own
+and their country’s fortunes, from the
+scenes of suffering and distress which
+they perpetually see around them;
+the selfish feelings acquire a fatal preponderance,
+from the general experienced
+impossibility of indulging in
+the generous. Meanwhile the national
+income melts away under the effects
+of the general cheapening of the remuneration
+of industry—all steady or
+foreseeing system of finance is abandoned,
+and every successive Government,
+like a needy spendthrift, deems
+itself happy if it can get through the
+year without a financial crisis, never
+bestowing a thought on the future,
+either as regards the national security,
+its finances, or its means of defence.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>One memorable instance of the way
+in which, under the cheapening system,
+the public revenue has been recklessly
+and needlessly thrown away, is
+to be found in the Penny Postage. It
+is well known that, prior to the change,
+the Post-office income, after paying
+<em>$1</em>,
+yielded a clear surplus revenue to the
+nation of £1,500,000 or £1,600,000
+a-year. The postage of letters, however,
+was decidedly too high; a reduction
+was loudly called for by the
+public; and, if cautiously and judiciously
+applied, the increase of letters
+might have compensated the reduction
+of rates of postage, and a boon have
+been conceded to the community, without
+any detriment to the public service.
+A uniform 2d. or 3d., or even 4d., postage
+would have been hailed with
+unmixed satisfaction by the people,
+who had been paying 10d. or 1s. for
+their letters, and no material diminution
+of that important branch of the
+revenue experienced. Instead of this,
+what did the Government, urged on
+by the cheapening party, actually do?
+Why, they reduced the postage at once
+to a penny for all letters, from all distances
+within the two islands. We
+were told, that not only would there
+be no loss, but a certain gain, after a
+few years had elapsed, from the vast
+and certain increase in the number of
+letters that would be transmitted.
+How have these expectations been
+realised? The revenue set down as
+coming from the Post-office, immediately
+after the change, was only
+£500,000 or £600,000 a-year; and,
+after having been nine years in operation,
+it has only risen, in the year
+ending 5th April 1850, to £803,000;
+much less than half of what it would
+have been under the former system,
+when the increased population and
+transactions of the country are taken
+into consideration, if either the old
+rates had been continued, or a reasonable
+reduction to 2d. or 3d. had taken
+place. It is to the embarrassment
+produced by this great defalcation that
+we are mainly indebted for the renewal
+of the income-tax.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But this defalcation, great and serious
+as it thus appears on the face of
+the public accounts, was little more
+than <em>$1</em> of what really occurred
+in consequence of the change.
+To conceal the effects of this great
+innovation, the Free-trading party,
+who had now got entire possession of
+the Government, had the address both
+to get the expense of the Packet Service,
+<em>$1</em>, and to keep
+that important change a secret among
+the Government officials. In this way
+a double object was gained. The
+disastrous effect of the reduction was
+kept out of view, and the increased
+charges of the Navy afforded a
+plausible ground for demagogues to
+assail the Government for alleged extravagance
+in that department. But
+that which one demagogue had done,
+another demagogue brought to light.
+Mr Cobden made so violent a clamour
+about the increase of expenditure in
+the Navy since 1835, when it had
+been reduced, under the pressure of
+the Reform mania, to its lowest point,
+that the Admiralty, in their own defence,
+let out the important fact, that,
+since the penny-postage system began,
+they had been saddled with the
+whole cost of the Packet Service,
+which they never had been before;
+and, in the debate on the Estimates,
+Lord John Russell stated that this
+cost now amounted to £737,000
+a-year. Thus the real Post-office
+accounts stand thus:—</p>
+
+<table class='table1'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>Apparent surplus for year ending 5th April 1850,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>£803,000</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>Deduct cost of Packet Service, thrown on Navy,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>737,000</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c004'><hr></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>Real Post-office revenue,</td>
+ <td class='c004'>£66,000</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c008'>And it has been raised to this level
+only during a year of extraordinary
+manufacturing activity, when our
+exports turned £60,000,000. On the
+whole, since the postage was reduced
+in 1841, the Post-office has not yielded
+a farthing to the country, but, on the
+contrary, has occasioned a loss of some
+hundred thousand pounds.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>We have heard enough from the
+Free-traders of the disasters which
+accumulated on the year 1848, and
+commencement of 1849, when a monetary
+crisis, the Irish famine, the
+European revolution, the Irish rebellion,
+and the Chartist sedition, combined
+to reduce the revenue to an unprecedented
+degree. We have heard
+enough, also, of the unexampled
+prosperity of the year 1849, when
+these extraneous disasters had ceased,
+and the blessings of Free-trade and
+the cheapening system were still in
+undiminished lustre. Be it so. Let
+us compare the public revenue of this
+year of unprecedented disaster with
+that obtained in the next year of unexampled
+prosperity, as appearing
+from the finance accounts of April 5,
+1850:—</p>
+
+<table class='table1'>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='c003'></th>
+ <th class='c013'>Year ending</th>
+ <th class='c014'>Year ending</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='c003'></th>
+ <th class='c013'>5th April 1849.</th>
+ <th class='c014'>5th April 1850.</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>Ordinary revenue,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>£48,490,002</td>
+ <td class='c004'>£48,643,042</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>China money,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>84,284</td>
+ <td class='c004'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>Imprest and other monies,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>665,293</td>
+ <td class='c004'>656,855</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>Repayment of advances,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>427,761</td>
+ <td class='c004'>553,349</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'><hr></td>
+ <td class='c004'><hr></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>£49,667,430</td>
+ <td class='c004'>£49,853,246</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'>49,853,246</td>
+ <td class='c004'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c012'><hr></td>
+ <td class='c004'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c012'>Increase in 1849,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>£185,816</td>
+ <td class='c004'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c016' colspan='3'>—<cite>Times</cite>, April 1850.</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c008'>So that the increase in a year of
+extraordinary and unprecedented prosperity,
+as we are told, over one of
+unexampled and overwhelming suffering,
+is <em>$1</em> £185,000, for £128,000
+of which we are indebted to an excess
+in the repayment of advances in 1849
+over 1848. We care not to what this
+extraordinary fact is to be ascribed,
+whether reduction of duties, the continuance
+of distress, or any other
+cause. We rest on the fact that Free-trade
+finance and the cheapening
+system have brought the revenue of
+the country, <em>$1</em>. History
+cannot, and will not, overlook
+these facts. The leaders of the Free-traders
+say they live for posthumous
+fame. Let them not be afraid. Posterity
+will do them full justice.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The financial problem of the Free-traders
+is—“Given a cheapened nation,
+to extract an adequate revenue
+out of their unremunerated industry.”
+We recommend this problem to the
+study of the Free-trading Chancellor
+of the Exchequer. If he solve it,
+we shall assign him a place superior
+to Archimedes in physical—to Bacon
+in political science.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>What a contrast to this mournful
+decay of the national resources, and
+ruin of the national strength, from the
+effects of a theory acted upon by the
+Legislature under the influence of a
+class majority in Parliament, would a
+truly catholic and national policy, protective
+alike to all interests, have
+afforded! An adequate but not redundant
+currency, cautiously administered,
+and relieved from the fatal
+liability to abstraction from a great
+increase of imports in any particular
+year, would at once have afforded free
+scope to national industry, and
+avoided the frightful vicissitudes in
+the demand for labour, which the
+opposite system of making the currency
+entirely dependent on the most
+evanescent of earthly things—gold—of
+necessity occasioned. The terrible
+monetary crises of 1825, 1839, and
+1847, would have been unfelt. They
+would have been surmounted, as that
+of 1810 had been, by an extended
+issue of paper when the gold was for a
+time abstracted, without their existence
+being known to the nation. Industry,
+protected in every department
+by adequate but not oppressive fiscal
+duties, would have generally and
+steadily flourished. Periods of extravagant
+speculation and exorbitant
+wages, followed by commercial depression
+and general suffering, would have
+been unknown. The national revenues,
+sustained by an adequate currency
+and unbroken industry, would
+have afforded an ample surplus to
+Government, both for the public service
+and the promotion of objects of
+general utility, after providing for the
+maintenance of the sinking-fund.
+Emigration, supported, so far as the
+destitute are concerned, by the Government
+resources, and conducted in
+Government vessels, would have
+poured a ceaseless and prolific stream
+into the Colonies, at once vivifying
+their industry, and converting the
+paupers of England and Ireland into
+consumers of our manufactures, at the
+rate of six or seven pounds a-head
+per annum. Pauperism at home,
+relieved in the classes where it originates
+by this wise and paternal
+policy, would have been arrested.
+Crime itself would have been made
+to minister to the general good: the
+jails of Great Britain would have
+been converted into industrial academies
+for behoof of the Colonies. The
+industry of the Colonies, encouraged
+by the protective policy of the mother
+country, and supported by the ceaseless
+streams of its emigration, would
+have advanced with rapid strides,
+and afforded a rising and inexhaustible
+mart for domestic manufactures.
+The ocean would have become a
+British lake: the navy of England,
+the floating bridge which at once
+united and protected its distant dependencies.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Colonial discontent would have
+been unknown. The West Indies,
+Canada, and Australia, would have
+been the most loyal and contented,
+because the most flourishing and justly
+governed parts of the Empire. The
+foreign trade of the world would have
+been to the British Empire what
+Adam Smith justly called the most
+profitable of all trades, a home trade.
+We should have raised the raw material
+for all our staple branches of industry
+within ourselves; wool from
+Australia, cotton from the East and
+West Indies, grain from the British
+isles and Canada. Agriculture at
+home and abroad would have advanced
+abreast of manufactures;
+commerce and shipping would have
+risen with the increase of their productions;
+the Navy, fed by an ample
+and protected commercial marine, and
+sustained at an adequate amount by
+a well-filled treasury, would have
+secured our independence, and enabled
+us to attend to the interests and anticipate
+the wants of our remotest
+dependencies. We should have been
+alike independent of foreign nations
+for the materials of pacific industry,
+and superior to them in warlike resources.
+Great Britain, though grey in
+years of renown, would have retained
+for centuries the vigour of youth,
+because she would have been continually
+renovated by the energy of her
+descendants. The paternal hall would
+have been constantly cheerful and
+happy, because it would have been
+always filled with children and grandchildren,
+or enlivened by their exploits.
+Amidst general prosperity
+and unceasing progress, the National
+Debt—constantly encroached on
+by a sustained sinking-fund—would
+have disappeared. Before this time
+it would have been all extinguished;
+and the taxation of the Empire, reduced
+to £30,000,000 or £35,000,000
+a-year, would have enabled us for ever
+to maintain the national armaments on
+such a scale as would have qualified us
+to bid defiance alike to the covert encroachments
+of our rivals, or the open
+hostility of our enemies. Under the
+opposite or cheapening system, the
+public debt has, on the admission of
+its ablest supporters, been virtually
+doubled; the sinking-fund has, amidst
+general and almost constant distress,
+disappeared; Colonial discontent
+threatens the Empire with dismemberment;
+agricultural distress
+will speedily render it dependent for
+its daily bread on its enemies; and
+the maintenance of the national independence,
+if the present system is persisted
+in, has been rendered, for any
+length of time, impossible.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_526'>526</span>
+ <h2 class='c002'>GREECE AGAIN.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c017'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in2'>“If, Cassandra-like, amidst the din</div>
+ <div class='line'>Of conflict none will hear, or, hearing, heed</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>This voice from out the wilderness, the sin</div>
+ <div class='line'>Be theirs, and my own feelings be my meed.”</div>
+ <div class='line in40'><cite>Prophecy of Dante.</cite></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>Greece is a most unfortunate country.
+She has only escaped the Turks
+to be plundered by her rulers and
+ruined by her protectors. Seventeen
+years ago, Lord Palmerston placed
+King Otho on his throne; he has since
+been occupied in making that throne
+an uneasy seat. King Otho refuses
+to answer Lord Palmerston’s letters;
+in revenge, Great Britain ruins a
+number of Greek shipowners, and
+leaves the Greek ministers unpunished.
+The Duke of Wellington has said that
+he never bombarded a town, and never
+saw the necessity for committing such
+an act of cruelty; and the saying does
+him even more honour than his long
+career of victory. We had hoped that
+no Englishman would ever have forgotten
+this saying; yet Lord Palmerston
+bombards the merchants of Greece
+for the faults of King Otho’s ministers.
+We are irresistibly reminded, by this
+last display of our Foreign Secretary’s
+warlike propensities, of Mr Winkle’s
+fight with the small boy.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Though much has been written on
+the subject of this quarrel, both at
+home and on the Continent, no clear
+statement of the exact relations between
+England and Greece has been
+published; nor can it be gathered
+even from the papers recently laid before
+Parliament.<a id='r1'></a><a href='#f1' class='c018'><sup>[1]</sup></a> We believe, therefore,
+that our readers will thank us
+for devoting a few pages to a serious
+examination of the political relations
+between the two countries, which will
+tend to place the recent coercive measures
+in their true light. This is the
+more necessary, because Ministers,
+both in debates and Parliamentary
+papers, have it in their power to conceal
+everything relating to the past;
+and the Opposition must hunt long
+before they can spring a single truth
+in the thickets of official deception.
+A view of the subject, under the guidance
+of truth and common sense, free
+both from party views and national
+prejudices, has been rendered necessary
+by the speech of Mr Piscatory,
+the late French Minister in Greece.
+The spoken pamphlet of Mr Piscatory
+was prepared with considerable skill;
+but it communicates hardly a single
+fact that has not been perverted by
+being removed from its true context,
+or by having only half its concomitant
+circumstances narrated. Indeed, Mr
+Piscatory having been bellows-blower
+in the disputes between Sir E. Lyons,
+the English envoy at Athens, and
+King Otho’s ministers, for four years,
+is not a famous witness; he has his
+own secrets to conceal. His oratorical
+display did not impose on the good
+sense of General Cavaignac, who parodied
+Sylla’s speech to a wordy Athenian
+ambassador, by hinting to the
+French ex-minister plenipotentiary,
+“that it seemed France had sent him
+to Athens to study rhetoric, not to
+collect information.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The papers laid before Parliament
+prove the worthlessness of Mr Piscatory’s
+diplomacy; but the conduct of
+Lord Palmerston cannot be correctly
+appreciated, unless we trace the connexion
+of England and Greece since
+the convention of 1832, appointing
+Prince Otho of Bavaria King of
+Greece, under the protection and guarantee
+of England, France, and Russia.
+That treaty, it must be recollected,
+was the work of Lord Palmerston.
+King Otho was selected by
+Lord Palmerston; he was conveyed
+to Greece by Lord Palmerston’s
+favourite diplomatist, Sir E. Lyons;
+and it was under Lord Palmerston’s
+special protection that the Anglo-Bavarian
+Regency was furnished with
+£2,400,000, and allowed to destroy
+the institutions of the Greek nation.
+These facts embrace the history of
+British connexion with Greece from
+1832 to 1837. Great Britain, or, to
+speak more correctly, our Foreign
+Secretary, is morally responsible for
+the government of the Greek kingdom
+by Count Armansperg, who ruled far
+more absolutely than King Otho has
+ever done, for the simple reason that
+he had a better filled purse. Sir E.
+Lyons supported him with vigour
+alike against Russian and French
+opposition, Greek patriotism, and constitutional
+principles, as may be seen
+by a reference to the papers laid before
+Parliament in July 1836.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>In 1837, Armansperg was dismissed
+from office; but Greece is still suffering
+from the loss of the institutions he
+destroyed, and the political corruption
+he introduced. Coletti, it is true,
+imitated his political system in the
+internal government with singular
+aptitude, but with diminished funds
+and resources for corruption. Where
+Armansperg could appoint an amnestied
+brigand a captain of infantry,
+Coletti could only make some old
+friend a policeman, or peradventure a
+consul.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>In 1837 the Government of Greece
+broke off its intimate connexion with
+England, and the English Minister at
+Athens became involved in a succession
+of quarrels with the court. It is
+not necessary for us to prove that the
+Bavarian Administration from 1837
+to 1843 was bad. All parties agree
+that it was intolerable; and the
+Greeks were universally applauded
+when they expelled the whole tribe of
+Bavarian officials. King Otho had
+fallen into an error that might have been
+expected from a Whig-created king;
+he had neglected all the real duties of
+royalty, and transacted the business
+of his under-secretaries of state.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The circumstances that have determined
+the position of our relations
+with Greece, since the Constitution of
+1844, occurred in the preceding period.
+Lord Palmerston’s first quarrel
+with the Greek court dates from 1837,
+and originated in the dissatisfaction
+then felt, because the British Minister
+at Athens did not possess as much
+influence with King Otho’s Government
+as he had possessed with Count
+Armansperg’s. The avowed object of
+British diplomacy, at that period, was
+to force the adherents of the English
+party into office; and King Otho incurred
+the enmity of England for preferring
+the counsels of France and
+Russia. The first pitched battle between
+Greece and England was fought
+about the waistcoat of the British
+Minister’s groom. The question was,
+whether the waistcoat worn by Sir E.
+Lyons’ groom in his stable dress, and
+in which he had been carried off to
+prison for squirting water on a policeman,
+was or was not a livery waistcoat.
+After several weeks’ deliberation,
+the Greek court decided, that,
+although they did not consider the
+waistcoat in question to be a livery
+waistcoat, yet, in consideration of the
+fact that the British Minister called it
+his livery, the Government of Greece
+was ready to make every concession
+that could be required to heal the
+wounded honour of Great Britain.
+Parliament had a narrow escape of
+seeing the waistcoat laid before both
+Houses. Now this is very silly. Yet
+there is no doubt that the arrest of the
+groom was an intentional insult.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>This affair was enacted to lower the
+English minister in the eyes of the
+populace, and compel the English
+Government to change him. Everybody
+in Greece knew that the groom
+was sent to prison; few Greeks believed
+that the Government had apologised
+for the insult; indeed, nothing
+but the sight of a policeman chained
+before the British legation for
+twenty-four hours could have reintegrated
+the name of England at
+Athens, so stoutly did all Government
+officials declare that no apology
+was ever made. Another scene was
+exhibited for the satisfaction of the
+court and the <i><span lang="fr">corps diplomatique</span></i>. At
+a private theatrical representation in
+King Otho’s palace, the British minister
+was left without a chair in the
+circle, and remained standing during
+a long comedy. Some ambassadors
+would have been sorely distressed
+by this species of physical torture;
+but the ambassador in question is
+said to have consoled himself, during
+this public exhibition of the feelings
+of protected Greece to protecting
+England, by the reflection that his
+turn came next.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>A blow was shortly after inflicted
+on the royalty of Greece, from which
+it can never recover; but Lord
+Palmerston is accused of tolerating
+the use of forbidden weapons by some
+of his adherents, in his eagerness to
+make the Greek monarch sensible of
+the impolicy of the conduct of the
+Hellenic court. Attacks on the person
+of King Otho, more bold and
+unsparing than the most malignant
+vituperation of Junius, appeared in
+a London morning paper, then supposed
+to be allowed to imbibe some of
+its inspiration from Downing Street.
+These communications pretended to
+come from an anonymous correspondent
+in Athens, but it was evident
+the unknown writer was aware of
+many things that could hardly be
+known beyond the Bavarian court and
+the sanctuaries of Downing Street.
+At least, King Otho drew this conclusion,
+and apparently on good
+grounds. This correspondent informed
+the world, that his Hellenic
+Majesty, who had been selected by
+Lord Palmerston, and supported with
+a loan of £2,400,000, was nevertheless
+unfit to govern his kingdom;
+and that a certificate to this effect
+had been signed by several officers,
+civil, military, and medical, who were
+then at Athens in the service of King
+Otho, and that this certificate had
+been placed in the hands of King
+Louis of Bavaria. This strange communication
+would have passed unnoticed
+in Greece, had it not been
+made the subject of conversation by
+all the English officials, and the attention
+of Greek statesmen called to it
+by the British legation and consulates.
+At last, it was publicly
+noticed by the Greek press, and an
+outcry produced. Three of the Bavarians
+named as having signed the
+certificate, published a declaration
+contradicting the statement, in a
+document bearing date the 11th-23d
+June 1839, which was printed in the
+Greek newspapers. The medical
+and military officers who signed this
+counter-certificate were dismissed
+from all their places, and immediately
+quitted Greece. Very little
+has been said on this subject since.
+All parties seem heartily ashamed of
+their share in the transaction, and
+the public never discovered the key
+of the mystery. It is certain, however,
+that King Otho has given Lord
+Palmerston and Sir E. Lyons good
+proof of the falsity of the certificate,
+if they were ever led into the belief
+that such a document really existed;
+for, during ten years, he baffled them
+both in every diplomatic move, and
+made their vaunted constitutional
+policy tend more to the injury of
+their own reputation than to the
+diminution of his power.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>This episode of the certificate,
+whether its existence be a fact or a
+fable, placed an impassable barrier between
+Lord Palmerston and King Otho.
+Right or wrong, his Hellenic Majesty
+held the English foreign secretary
+responsible for the publication, for he
+believed that the English Government
+possessed the power of dragging the
+calumniator to light, and that it
+would have used the power had the
+anonymous correspondent not been
+protected by a powerful patron. Besides,
+the King of Greece might well
+ask, who in England could have acquired
+the knowledge which enabled
+this correspondent to attack the person
+of a monarch under the special
+protection of Great Britain, without
+fear of investigation or reply, unless
+the information came directly from
+some high diplomatic authority. We
+need not wonder, therefore, when we
+find that, from June 1839, hatred to
+England was the prominent feeling
+displayed by the Greek court in all
+its relations with the British cabinet.
+Lord Palmerston, finding all hope of
+acquiring influence in the Greek court
+vain, changed his policy, and became
+the advocate of constitutional government.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The revolution in 1843 afforded the
+British cabinet an opportunity of
+putting our relations with Greece on
+a proper footing; but the opportunity
+was lost. Instead of English influence
+being employed to restore the national
+institutions destroyed by the Bavarians,
+it supported the establishment
+of what is called the constitutional
+form of government. One of those
+compilations of political commonplace
+which the lawgivers of our age
+are ready, at a week’s notice, to prepare
+either for Greenland or China,
+was translated from French pamphlets,
+and entitled the <cite>Constitution of
+Greece</cite>. Lord Aberdeen, who was
+then foreign secretary, committed as
+great a blunder in engaging Great
+Britain to stand godfather to this
+constitution, as Lord Palmerston had
+done in making Old England guardian
+to King Otho. The following are
+the words in which the British
+Government thought fit to record its
+approbation of this inane waste of
+time and paper,—“Her Majesty’s
+Government have viewed with no
+less satisfaction the admirable temper
+which appears to have generally prevailed
+in the Constituent Assembly,
+throughout the whole of her deliberations
+on the deeply interesting and
+important act on which they have
+been engaged. Such self-command
+in a popular Assembly, convoked
+under very exciting and critical circumstances,
+is highly creditable to
+the Greek nation. Nor is the result
+of their labours, as a whole, less
+entitled to credit for the general
+soundness of the constitutional principles
+therein established.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>This, being the deliberate opinion
+of a British statesman of high character,
+not supposed to be infatuated
+by a blind love of revolutionary doctrines,
+demands serious examination.
+Let us see, therefore, what are the
+principles which received the sanction
+of the British Government on
+this occasion. In our opinion, they
+are precisely those principles that
+lead with certainty to political
+anarchy and national demoralisation.
+This vaunted constitution revived no
+local habits of business, re-established
+no parochial usages, improved no
+provincial institutions, corrected no
+political immoralities, restored no
+religious authority, and insured no
+education to the clergy. It proclaimed
+universal suffrage to an armed people,
+and vote by ballot to a mob that cannot
+write; and these are the principles
+held up to public approbation
+for their <em>$1</em>! While,
+as to the proofs of admirable temper
+and self-command displayed by this
+assembly, these feelings were surely
+not expressed in the decree by which
+this good-tempered assembly excluded
+all their countrymen, who had
+immigrated to the Greek territory
+since the year 1828, from official
+employments. There are, perhaps,
+some who may feel inclined to observe
+to us, as Rob Roy did to his
+kinsman, Bailie Nicol Jarvie, when
+they met in the Tolbooth of Glasgow,
+“Hout, tout! man, let that flee stick
+in the wa’; when the dirt’s dry it will
+rub out.” Be it so; but there are
+political blunders that leave a stain,
+which neither time nor repentance
+can efface.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>We believe that the source of Lord
+Aberdeen’s error arose from his wish
+to treat Greece as an independent
+state. But Greece under the protection
+of the three powers, and loaded
+with debt, could not be an independent
+power. False appearances
+always produce evil consequences.
+Lord Palmerston had been in too
+great a hurry to make the bantling
+monarchy of the treaty of 1832 walk
+without a baby-jumper, and his
+rivalry with Warwick the king-maker
+was not more glorious than his emulation
+of Mr Winkle. He ought to
+have perceived that sundry Klephtopiratic
+excrescences, like the protuberances
+on the body of a young
+bear, required to be carefully licked
+into shape. Our Foreign Secretary
+delayed the operation too long; and,
+when he perceived the dangers that
+had resulted from his negligence, he
+erroneously fancied that a licking
+of a different kind, applied by Admiral
+Parker to King Otho’s Government,
+would set all right.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>When the Greek monarchy was
+founded in 1832, it was the duty of
+Lord Palmerston to have laid before
+Parliament detailed answers to the
+following questions, as a justification
+of the course he had pursued in
+engaging Great Britain to protect
+the new state, and furnish it with a
+loan of £2,400,000. The questions, in
+perfect ignorance of which the character
+of England was compromised, and
+the money wasted, were:—</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>1. What were the actual means of
+government in the country, and the
+nature of the parochial, communal,
+borough, provincial and central administrative
+institutions, which had
+enabled the Greeks to maintain a
+war against Sultaun Mahmoud and
+Mahommed Ali for seven years?
+Enthusiasm and patriotism are good
+words in a debate, and may explain
+the events of a single campaign; but
+common sense tells every one that a
+people must possess some administrative
+institutions, in order to persist in
+a desperate struggle for many successive
+years. If Greece had no
+institutions in 1832, she was clearly
+unfit to receive a king; and the duty
+of the Three Protecting Powers was
+to frame a system of administration,
+not to choose a monarch. But on
+the other hand, if the foundations of
+political government already existed,
+it was especially the duty of Great
+Britain to see that these foundations
+or local institutions were improved,
+and not destroyed, by the new Government.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>2. What were the land and sea
+forces necessary to maintain order on
+shore, and guard the Grecian seas
+from piracy; and how could these
+forces be immediately subjected to
+the system of discipline, which the
+protecting powers might consider indispensable?</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>3. What measures were requisite,
+in order to enable the mass of the
+population to turn their attention to
+profitable branches of industry without
+loss of time?</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>And 4. What were the financial
+resources of the country? What was
+the amount of the debts contracted
+by the Government during the revolutionary
+war? What sum would be
+required to supply the deficit in the
+annual expenditure for the first year
+of the new monarch’s reign; and what
+sum would be required to be set
+apart annually for paying the interest
+of the debts of the Greek state,
+now converted into a European kingdom?</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Strange as it may seem, there is
+not the slightest information on these
+important questions in the papers laid
+before Parliament in 1832; and we
+believe that, had Lord Palmerston
+taken the trouble to collect even the
+limited information we have specified,
+before he involved Great Britain in a
+guarantee of King Otho’s throne, he
+would have perceived that it was not
+necessary to burden Greece either
+with a new debt or the presence of a
+foreign army. Great Britain would
+then have prevented the regency
+from destroying the existing institutions,
+and saved the country from the
+administrative corruption that ruined
+the despotic royalty of King Otho,
+and promises very soon to annihilate
+his constitutional monarchy.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>One advantage might have been
+obtained for Greece by the constitution
+of 1844, if either the Greeks or
+their sovereign had known how to
+profit by it. The direct influence of
+the protecting powers in the internal
+affairs of the country was greatly diminished.
+Unfortunately, Mr Coletti
+did not avail himself of this circumstance
+to lead the Greeks to make one
+single improvement in the interior.
+Not a road was made, or a packet
+established. Coletti was, nevertheless,
+a favourite minister with King
+Otho, for he fomented the King’s aversion
+to England, and carried on an
+active warfare with Sir E. Lyons.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>When Mr Wyse arrived at Athens
+last year, as British minister, he found
+the train laid to the mine Lord Palmerston
+was about to spring. He tried
+in vain to persuade the Greek ministers
+to make such concessions as would
+prevent an open rupture. His conciliatory
+conduct misled the Greek court
+into a belief that Lord Palmerston
+was afraid to come to blows, and, in
+an evil hour, it deemed itself secure of
+victory. The only alternative left to
+Great Britain, in King Otho’s opinion,
+was to withdraw the English minister
+from Athens. But, even if Lord
+Palmerston’s disposition had made
+him inclined to take this course, King
+Otho ought to have remembered that
+the convention of 1832, which created
+the Greek kingdom, bound England to
+watch over it. So infatuated was the
+court of Athens at this time, that the
+modifications which it would be possible
+to make in the Greek constitution,
+after the departure of the English
+minister, became a subject of conversation.
+Yet when the hour arrived,
+and Lord Palmerston’s demands were
+communicated, the Greek ministers
+felt the folly of resistance; and they
+would have capitulated, had the minister
+of the French Republic not
+availed himself of the conjuncture to
+flatter King Otho’s private prejudices,
+and assumed the direction of affairs.
+The Greek minister of foreign affairs,
+Mr Londos, was a man utterly unfit
+for the place. His communications to
+the Chambers, on the subject of the
+quarrel, are a tissue of erroneous
+statements. M. Thouvenel persuaded
+this unlucky minister to brave Lord
+Palmerston, and trust to the protection
+of France and the European
+press. The French minister knew
+that he would gain for himself the
+star and the broad blue ribbon of King
+Otho’s Order of the Redeemer, and he
+knew equally well that he would inflict
+a serious injury on the commerce
+and revenues of Greece, and that he
+would cause the ruin of many Greek
+merchants. There can be no doubt,
+that ambassadors ought never to be
+allowed to receive Orders from the
+sovereigns to whose court they are
+accredited. The interests of nations
+are often sacrificed by honourable men
+for stars and ribbons. In finally coming
+to an open rupture with Greece,
+Lord Palmerston probably only did
+what any other minister who had
+placed himself in a similar position
+must have done. But though we believe
+that it was King Otho who made the
+cup run over, we have shown our
+readers that Lord Palmerston had
+already filled it pretty full; and we
+are far from approving of the measures
+he adopted for the coercion of
+the Greek Government. In our opinion,
+it was cruel to punish the Greek
+people for the faults of their rulers,
+since those rulers were selected and
+protected by the Three Powers, of
+which England is one. The coercion
+ought to have been confined to measures
+that would have directly affected
+the King and the Government.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>We have now laid before our readers
+the history of all the causes, supposed
+and real, of Lord Palmerston’s war
+with Greece. It was neither the livery
+waistcoat of Sir E. Lyon’s groom, the
+missing chair at the royal comedy, Mr
+Pacifico’s furniture, Mr Finlay’s garden,
+no, nor the constitutional policy
+of the English Government, that
+brought our fleet to Salamis. It was
+the anonymous correspondent of the
+<cite>Morning Chronicle</cite> in 1839, be that
+individual who he may. Lord Palmerston’s
+conduct to Greece since that
+period, it is true, has been generally
+unwise, and often unjust; but that correspondence
+having been once placed
+to the account of the British Cabinet
+by the King of Greece, he consequently
+acted in such a spirit towards
+England, that we acknowledge a
+collision became unavoidable, without
+a sacrifice of the dignity of the British
+Crown. The papers laid before Parliament
+show, that the communications
+of the English Government were
+left unanswered for years.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>We are bound also to observe, that
+the conduct of King Otho has so completely
+disorganised the finances of
+Greece, that his throne is in imminent
+danger, and a great change in the
+government of Greece must take place
+in the present year. In the year 1848,
+a serious rebellion took place in Greece.
+The diplomacy of England was accused
+of encouraging the insurgents, and, for
+some days, the flight of King Otho
+from Athens was an event hourly expected.
+When the full extent of the
+evil, and the anarchy which threatened
+the country in consequence of the
+insane conduct of the Greek Opposition,
+was known in England, Lord
+Palmerston frankly changed his policy,
+and sent our ablest and best English
+diplomatist, Sir Stratford Canning, to
+save King Otho’s throne. If a throne
+be of any value, the King of Greece
+owed some thanks to England for the
+great services of Sir Stratford Canning,
+who had to encounter a virulent and
+unfair opposition from the English
+officials at Athens during his exertions
+to save Greece from anarchy.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>We have no time to point out the
+connexion of the events we have noticed
+with the general movement of
+European diplomacy since 1833. Our
+space compels us to confine our observations
+to Greece; and we must now
+hastily examine the state of society
+in the country, in order to enable our
+readers to judge of the manner in
+which the civilisation of the people
+affects the administration of public
+affairs. The Greeks themselves think
+that their great political want is a good
+systematic central administration. We
+believe, on the contrary, that their
+great political deficiency is the want
+of municipal institutions, that would
+admit of their making some exertions
+to improve their own condition. Every
+one who has travelled much in Greece
+must have seen, that every little town
+and island contains two or three individuals
+capable of fulfilling the duties
+of a local magistracy with honour to
+their country; while everybody who
+has had anything to do with the ministers
+of King Otho, or with the
+members of his council of state, knows
+that there is not a statesman in Greece
+capable of filling a ministerial post, in
+a period of political difficulty, without
+disgracing his country. It would be
+invidious to name respectable men as
+instances of incapacity; but every
+one, who has followed the political
+history of Greece, is aware that every
+Greek statesman has had opportunities
+of disgracing it, and repeating the
+same blunders several times. The
+despotic government of King Otho
+failed from the utter incapacity of his
+ministers; the constitutional monarchy
+is hastening to ruin from the same
+cause. In the present state of Greece,
+it is not possible to find men capable
+of conducting the King’s Government
+with the necessary ability. The people
+are greatly in advance of their rulers.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The conclusion of the revolutionary
+war left the nation divided into several
+classes of society, as different in
+their ideas and habits of life as if they
+had formed parts of different nations.
+These classes were, first, the peasantry—for
+so the cultivators of the
+soil are generally called, though a
+large portion of them are landed proprietors,
+and often the only persons of
+substance in the provinces. Second,
+the primates, or proprietors, who did
+not cultivate their own lands. These
+men managed public business, and
+acted as collectors of the revenue
+under the Turks: they frequent coffee-houses,
+and form political societies
+under the centralised constitutional
+system of government. This
+class, however, possesses some education,
+but its moral character is vitiated
+by a firm conviction that it is
+entitled to be maintained in a state
+of idleness at the public expense. It
+has gained considerable political influence
+by means of the election law
+of 1844. Coletti, by intimidating the
+weak, bribing the active, and creating
+innumerable places, purchased this
+class wholesale, and rendered himself
+master of nearly all the electoral districts
+in Greece. The third class is
+composed of that numerous body of
+Greeks who have emigrated to the
+Hellenic territory from different provinces
+of Turkey. This class includes
+the greater part of the ablest and
+best educated men in the country;
+but the abject principles of the Phanariotes,
+or Greeks educated for the
+public service in Turkey, and the base
+avidity displayed by this class in
+place-hunting, which is their principal
+means of life, rendered them very
+unpopular, and enabled their rivals,
+the primates, to exclude them from
+official employments by a decree of
+the national assembly of 1844. The
+fourth class is the military. This
+class is very numerous, as its ranks
+are swelled by crowds of individuals
+who never served in a military capacity,
+but who have received military
+rank as a payment for political services.
+King Otho makes generals of
+secretaries, and colonels of commissaries;
+while farmers of the revenue,
+muleteers, and officers’ servants, form
+about one half of the unattached officers
+of an army which counts an
+officer for every two privates and a
+quarter, if we can trust the Greek
+Budget and the Greek newspapers.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>There is also a remarkable difference
+between the social condition of
+the inhabitants of the country and of
+the towns; and this difference must
+be taken into consideration in estimating
+the political state of Greece.
+The principal towns contain as many
+persons of education, and as high a
+degree of mental cultivation, as can be
+found in any towns of a similar size
+in other countries; but in the rural
+districts, on the contrary, there is a
+want of material civilisation, a degree
+of rudeness in every process of industry,
+which places the agricultural
+population far below the people of
+every other European country, even
+including the Greek population in
+Turkey. The Hellenic peasant
+cultivates his <em>$1</em>, or yoke of land,
+in a manner that only enables him to
+live, to rear a family to replace his
+own, and to pay his taxes. No improvements
+take place on his farm—nor,
+indeed, can any take place under
+the system of taxation and administration
+actually in force. Fruit trees
+are annually destroyed, and forests
+are burnt down, but none are ever
+planted. The depopulation caused by
+the war of the revolution may still
+admit of the location of some additional
+families on uncultivated land;
+but no improvement has yet been
+commenced in agricultural industry or
+transport, that will give one family
+the means or the time to cultivate
+more land than its predecessors have
+cultivated, or that will make the same
+extent of land to yield any additional
+produce.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Here, then, we find precisely the
+state of things which produced the
+stationary condition of European society
+during the middle ages, and
+which still keeps the greater part of
+the East in its immutable condition.
+The land under the windows of King
+Otho’s palace, and the fields around
+the university of Athens, are more
+rudely cultivated than any other portion
+of the soil of Europe; yet neither
+king, senators, deputies, nor professors,
+appear to have perceived that
+the turning point of national civilisation
+is not marked by the splendour
+of court balls, the regularity of the
+payment of official salaries, or the
+number and quality of scholastic lectures,
+but by the creation of a state of
+things in which capital is advantageously
+employed in augmenting the
+produce of the soil. When this is
+not the case, generations of agriculturists
+succeed one another for ages,
+treading in the footsteps of their predecessors
+in the same numbers, and
+in the same state of barbarism.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Coexistent with this rude peasantry,
+there is an educated class
+whose numbers are also limited by
+the fixed amount of rent and taxes,
+on which they depend for their support,
+and by means of which they
+perpetuate themselves by the side of
+the rude agriculturists, giving the
+towns all the appearance of civilisation.
+This unfortunate state of society
+is not new in the history of the
+Greek nation: it has now existed for
+more than 1000 years, and it forms
+the prominent feature in the internal
+organisation of the Byzantine empire.
+Judging from the records of that
+government, it is a state of society
+that presents greater obstacles to
+change than any social combinations
+which the history of the human race
+reveals to the west of China. The
+cultivators of the soil cannot improve
+their condition or increase in number;
+the educated classes are interested in
+opposing change, and have influence
+enough to prevent it: poverty in the
+country, and meanness in the towns,
+render the universal moral degradation
+an element of stability in the political
+condition of a nation whose social
+state is such as we have described.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>There remains an important class
+of society in Greece, which we have
+not yet mentioned, because it has been
+excluded from all political influence
+since the formation of the Hellenic
+monarchy. This is the mercantile
+class. Before the revolutionary war,
+and during the contest with the
+Turks, it was the Greek merchants
+and shipowners who formed the
+aristocracy of the nation; but this
+class is now almost null in the movement
+of political affairs at Athens.
+The greater part of the able, respectable,
+and wealthy merchants have
+quitted the country, and are to be
+found at Odessa, Trieste, Marseilles,
+London, and Manchester, not in King
+Otho’s dominions. A small fraction
+of shipowners remain, but the small
+schooners that now compose the
+mercantile navy of Greece cannot be
+compared with the fine ships that
+Hydra, Spetzia, and Psara formerly
+sent out to engage the Turkish fleet;
+and the comparative increase of the
+tonnage of the trading vessels of large
+size in Greece and Turkey, since 1840,
+shows that the trade of the Levant is
+extending more rapidly under the
+Turkish than under the Greek flag.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>We have now described the state of
+society with sufficient accuracy to
+enable us to examine the value of the
+measures adopted for founding a monarchy
+in Greece. From what we
+have said, it must be evident that
+constitutional government, as the
+Continental liberals and English political
+lecturers understand the term,
+could not be an object of much interest
+to those classes that were called upon
+to exercise universal suffrage. It probably
+never engaged their attention
+more seriously than the laws of gravitation
+or the number of the fixed
+stars. They felt that they wanted
+permanent and systematic administration,
+in place of the inconstant and
+arbitrary measures from which they
+suffered; they demanded security of
+property, liquidation of the public
+debt, and employment for labour, but
+they knew not how to arrive at the
+consummation of their wishes. Instead
+of attending to these commonplace
+matters, the British Government
+and its allies gave the Greeks a king,
+a court, a regency less united than
+their own Capitani, civil wars, additional
+debts, and an order of knighthood
+to corrupt foreign diplomatists;
+but not a road, a bridge, or a ferry-boat,
+was introduced into a country
+full of mountains and dangerous torrent-beds,
+and consisting, in great
+part, of peninsulas and islands. King
+Otho, who has spent £3,000,000 sterling
+on civil wars, and £1,000,000 on
+palaces, does not possess fifty miles
+of road practicable for a donkey-cart,
+in his whole dominions. There is not
+a carriage-road from Athens to Corinth,
+nor a ferry-boat to the islands
+of the Archipelago. Need we wonder,
+then, if the Greeks despise their own
+Government, and suspect the intentions
+of the three protecting powers
+that support it in its evil conduct?
+The consequence is, that fifteen thousand
+military and police officials fail
+to preserve order in a population of
+nine hundred and twenty thousand
+souls. The result of this political
+experiment, in the foundation of monarchies,
+certainly reflects little credit
+on the statesmen of England, France,
+and Russia.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>We must examine the error that
+was committed, in giving the countenance
+of Great Britain, as a protecting
+power, to the absurd constitution
+established in 1844; and while we
+blame what was then badly done, we
+shall point out what common sense,
+when not warped by party interests,
+dictated ought to have been done.
+Of course, we can only offer the suggestions
+urged by a wise minority at
+Athens. The nation, in making the
+revolution in 1843, did not want a
+constitution, for they possessed institutions
+which a written constitution is
+only valuable as a means of attaining.
+The Greeks, as we have said before,
+sought to reform the system of administration.
+The method of carrying
+on the executive government, under
+the hourly control of an elective
+chamber, called constitutional government,
+was forced upon them by accident,
+as France lately became a
+republic. Without the assistance of
+this <i><span lang="fr">pons asinorum</span></i> of French politicians,
+the Greeks had saved the
+liberty of the press from the attacks
+of Count Armansperg, and established
+trial by jury in spite of Austria and
+Russia.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The constitutional system of government,
+as it has laid hold of the
+public mind on the Continent, is a
+very imperfect political contrivance:
+practically, it has proved a delusion—a
+mere form, figured in empty space
+by a mass of thick clouds, impelled
+hither and thither by unseen currents
+of wind, the precursor of an approaching
+storm, not the source of beneficial
+showers. When examined in detail,
+with its tribunes; its orators, pamphlet
+in hand; its galleries, and its
+ministers playing at see-saw between
+social democracy and court corruption,
+what hope does it hold out of
+establishing a sense of moral responsibility
+and firmness of purpose in
+individual statesmen, or the deep
+conviction that creates patriotic feeling,
+and the power of self-sacrifice, in
+a whole people? What collection of
+men, chosen by a mob which can
+never hear the names of the wisest
+and best in their immediate vicinity,
+can, in the actual state of education,
+morality, and religion, either possess
+the qualifications necessary to make
+laws, or the experience required to
+control and direct the executive government?
+English institutions, or
+what we call, in conversation, the
+English constitution, is even now
+something totally different from this
+spawn of modern political quackery.
+Yet even among men of education, at
+home as well as among demagogues
+and itinerant orators, we now find
+some who pretend that our political
+system would be improved by allowing
+Gregory the poacher, and Herman the
+tinker, to take an active share in
+legislation, by the adoption of universal
+suffrage, annual Parliaments, and
+the vote by ballot. We doubt whether
+a British <cite>Codex Gregorianus</cite> or <cite>Hermogenianus</cite>,
+so framed, would do our
+country much honour. Things are
+bad enough as they are. We already
+make laws faster than lawyers can
+read them; and the electors care
+very little about the legislative labours
+of the elected. They seem contented
+to know that the work has been done
+in such a hurry, that half of it must
+be done over again next year. The
+people of England, like the Continental
+constitutionalists, are beginning
+to fancy that the proper function
+of our legislators is to make themselves
+the real executive. A true
+constitutional chamber, according to
+the modern theory of government,
+ought to use the king’s ministers as
+its own head-clerks. The evil is
+manifest. Ministers know that their
+masters, the chambers, have no administrative
+plans, and a very defective
+memory, so they themselves remain
+without any settled policy. This
+state of things is a vice of our age.
+It is as apparent in the embryo constitutionalism
+of Greece, as in the
+premature decrepitude of Liberalism
+in France.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Constitutional government, where
+no educated and independent class
+exists in the provinces, must always
+turn out, as it has done in Greece, to
+be injurious to the cause of liberty,
+unless it be neutralised by powerful
+municipal institutions, and an able
+and disinterested monarch. The prominent
+vices of the Greek constitution
+are, universal suffrage, vote by ballot,
+and a servile, ignorant, and useless
+Senate, as a satire on a House of Peers.
+Without entering into any general
+examination of the value of similar
+measures in other countries, we shall
+show that they are unsuited to the
+actual state of society in Greece.
+Universal suffrage evidently supposes
+that the people intrusted with it is
+entitled to self-government; yet the
+constitution of Greece, which gives
+the people universal suffrage, does
+not allow them any practical influence
+even in the affairs of their smallest
+towns and rural districts. Every
+person in Greece is supposed to be
+capable of choosing legislators, but
+not mayors, aldermen, and provincial
+councillors. The Greeks possessed
+great power in the local administration
+under the Turks. This power contributed
+in a high degree to the preservation
+of their national existence, but it
+alarmed the weak-minded Bavarians;
+and, under the shield of the three
+protecting powers, the Greeks were
+robbed of their municipal institutions
+by the Regency. A system of local
+oligarchies was introduced, which
+prevails at present.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The election of the mayor and
+aldermen is vested in an electoral
+college, one half of which is composed
+of the persons who pay the greatest
+amount of taxes. Here is an element
+of respectability; but in order to
+dilute it with one of servility, a certain
+number of individuals, decorated with
+crosses, is admitted. Even this respectably
+servile body is not allowed
+to elect the mayor; it is only empowered
+to name three candidates,
+from which the King chooses the
+individual who is to direct the interests
+of the little community. The
+mayor so chosen enjoys his office for
+three years, and receives a good
+salary from the municipal funds. Let
+us now examine how this system is
+worked, in conformity with constitutional
+principles, in the capital of the
+Hellenic kingdom. Attica, it must
+be observed, sends four deputies to the
+Legislative Chamber; and as these
+deputies receive two hundred and
+fifty drachmas a-month, and have
+succeeded in making the sittings of
+the Greek Chambers perpetual, the
+place of deputy is worth as much as
+the best estates in Greece. Now, as
+these interminable sitters are chosen
+by universal suffrage, but are required
+to support the minister, it became
+absolutely necessary to job the elections,
+by means of the oligarchy holding
+office in the municipalities. This
+was not very difficult, for the number
+of persons who can read and write
+among the Albanian population of
+Attica, which outnumbers the Greek,
+is very small. Even among the Greek
+population of the city of Athens, the
+proportion of government officials and
+street porters, who pay no taxes,
+exceeds the number of the independent
+citizens. The middle classes, and
+the friends of order, are excluded from
+all local influence, by being excluded
+from any share in the municipal government.
+A town-council party is formed,
+and this party is allowed to employ
+the whole local revenues of Attica,
+amounting to between three and four
+hundred thousand drachmas annually,
+in jobbing, on condition that they
+support the ministerial candidates at
+the elections.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The constitutional system of political
+corruption, to make universal suffrage
+profitable to the court, runs
+thus: The mayors are selected from
+men without character or local influence.
+This is brought about by
+naming the third candidate mayor, he
+being generally some insignificant
+person, whom both the leading parties
+agree to admit on the list. This individual,
+when appointed, is nothing
+more than a creature of the prefect or
+of the court, which alone possesses the
+power of protecting him in office, and
+in the receipt of a good salary for
+three years. The duty of the mayor
+is to bribe the aldermen, by allowing
+them to arrange with the municipal
+councillors how to divert the revenues
+of the city into their own pockets, or
+that of their relations, by the creation
+of places. The extent to which the
+court have brought jobbing, is testified
+by the shifts and tergiversation
+employed to prevent the publication
+of any regular accounts of the receipts
+and expenditure of the municipalities;
+and the municipal revenues exceed the
+sum of two millions of drachmas.
+Athens, with a revenue of three hundred
+thousand drachmas a-year,
+would be the filthiest town in Europe,
+were nature not kinder to it than its
+magistrates.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>A single instance of how matters
+are carried on in the provinces, is sufficient
+to describe the whole system.
+A rural commune, placed on an important
+line of communication, wished
+to make a good mule road over a
+mountain pass. It voted the sum of
+six hundred drachmas in its budget,
+hoping, by its example, to produce
+similar votes in the neighbouring
+communes. The central government
+was then invited to send an engineer,
+to trace the best line of road. The
+deputy of the province was a creature
+of the court; he and the minister of
+the interior put their heads together,
+and sent down an inspector of the
+road, before it was surveyed or commenced,
+with an order on the commune
+which had put six hundred
+drachmas in its budget, to pay him a
+salary of fifty drachmas monthly for
+a year. This ministerial exploit put
+an end to all projects of road-making
+on the part of the municipalities.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The vote by ballot is converted into
+a constitutional method of counteracting
+any evil effects that might otherwise
+arise to ministerial candidates
+from the use of universal suffrage; for
+man is fallible, and the Greeks felt
+inclined, in some places, to oppose the
+system of Coletti. We recommend
+the plan adopted to the attention of
+an eminent historian of ancient Greece,
+who has more faith in the wood of the
+ballot-box than in the moral responsibility
+of the elector. When the
+number of electors in a district was
+about five thousand, and it was feared
+that three thousand might vote against
+the government candidates, and only
+two thousand in their favour, the
+ballot-boxes were doctored beforehand,
+by having one thousand votes
+placed in them before the process of
+the public ballot commenced. Intimidation
+was resorted to, to prevent
+at least one thousand of the real
+voters from attending, and it was
+generally successful with the middle
+classes; but, in one unlucky district,
+which contained only about four thousand
+voters, six thousand tickets were
+found in the ballot-box. At times,
+the success of the opposition was so
+great, that nothing could be done at
+the time of voting. The persons
+charged to convey the ballot-box to
+the place appointed for the scrutiny,
+were, in such cases, waylaid by armed
+bands, and the ballot-boxes were destroyed.
+These scenes were enacted
+even in Attica. We believe that, in
+order to secure free institutions to any
+people, it is more necessary to create
+a feeling of moral responsibility, than
+to protect the electors from the effects
+of intimidation and fraud merely when
+they exercise the franchise. National
+liberty cannot be protected by a
+wooden box; it must be fought for
+boldly before the face of all mankind.
+The vote by ballot injures the nation
+more than it protects the individual;
+and it can only cease to do harm in a
+state of society where perfect equality
+reigns among the electors themselves,
+and between the electors and the
+elected.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>With regard to the Greek Senate,
+we have little to say. In a country
+where not one single element of an
+aristocracy exists, and where it was
+impossible to secure superior education
+in the members of a chamber
+appointed for life, it was evident that
+one chamber would afford a better
+guarantee against bribery and corruption
+than two. No nobles, no independent
+gentlemen, no dignified clergy,
+no learned lawyers, can enter the
+Greek Senate. The qualification of a
+senator is a certain period of service
+in official appointments, which have
+been generally held by men who can
+neither read nor write. The consequence
+is, that the Senate is utterly
+useless as a legislative body, from the
+ignorance of its members; while the
+nature of the materials from which it
+is composed, render it a more servile
+instrument, in the hands of every minister,
+than the elective chamber. It
+was yesterday a tool in the hands of
+Coletti—to-morrow it may become
+one in those of Mavrocordatos. It
+would be an object of contempt, were
+it not an expensive instrument of
+oppression.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>We have now shown what the constitution
+has effected; let us turn to consider
+what measures Great Britain ought
+to have recommended to the attention
+of the national assembly, when it was
+occupied in framing this constitution.
+The first great national question was
+municipal reform. Unless the people
+could be intrusted with the direction
+of the affairs of their own districts, it
+was unwise to entrust them with a
+direct control over the national legislation
+and expenditure. Men take a
+more lively interest in the trifling details
+of their own households, and in
+affairs that pass under their own eyes,
+and with which they are perfectly
+cognisant, than they do about more
+distant though more important matters.
+Had the people in Greece been
+allowed to administer their local affairs,
+they would have drawn much
+of their attention from party struggles
+about which they knew very little, to
+devote it to business they perfectly
+understood. No guarantee for the
+permanent existence of Greece, as an
+independent and free state, can exist,
+until the present oligarchical constitution
+of the municipalities throughout
+the country is destroyed. The mayors
+must be annually elected by the
+people, and not removable by the
+minister of the interior. The accounts
+of the municipal expenditure must be
+published quarterly.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The next step towards giving
+Greece some practical liberty is to
+abolish universal suffrage. In a country
+where the election of provincial
+councillors is regulated by a census,
+surely the same guarantee ought to be
+required in the election of legislators.
+In Greece, everybody is expected to
+know how to read and write except
+the national legislators and the King’s
+ministers. Oligarchy prevails in the
+municipal institutions, aristocracy in
+the provincial, democracy in the legislative,
+and ignorance in the executive;
+and British statesmen, under
+whose protection matters have arrived
+at this condition, express surprise at
+the anarchy they have themselves
+nourished, instead of blushing at their
+own negligence or political incapacity.
+The vote by ballot had better
+be abolished, and the senate replaced
+by a deliberative council of state,
+composed of men of education capable
+of preparing laws. The actual representative
+chamber must only be allowed
+to sit for two months annually,
+in order to put an end to the jobbing
+in which its members have acquired
+an alarming degree of experience.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The question arises, How are the
+changes necessary to save Greece to
+be effected? We believe that there
+is not moral force in the country to
+produce the necessary reforms. Greece
+is now very much in the situation in
+which England was during the reign
+of Charles II.; she is exhausted with
+civil war and party struggles. Besides,
+she does not possess a body of
+statesmen, or any statesman, of superior
+abilities or commanding character.
+In the present state of things, any
+ministry that attempted to clean the
+Augean stable of the administration,
+would create a degree of opposition, on
+the part of the court and of the officials
+in Athens, that would drive him or
+them from office in less than six months.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>If Lord Palmerston desire to save
+Greece, and secure her a place among
+independent states, he must lose no
+time in convoking a conference of
+England, France, and Russia; and
+this conference must decide on a practical
+scheme of administration for the
+Greek government, and impose a
+budget on the ministers. The army
+must be reduced; a navy of packets
+must be created; roads must be
+made; the taxes in kind must be
+gradually commuted; and a field must
+be opened for the improvement of
+agriculture. If this is not done, the
+first great convulsion in the East will
+put an end to the monarchy created
+by Lord Palmerston in 1832, and
+Greece will separate into a number of
+small cantons, like ancient Hellas and
+modern Switzerland, or fall under the
+domination, direct or indirect, of some
+foreign power. The reputation of
+Great Britain for political wisdom is,
+throughout the East, connected with
+the growth and prosperity of the
+monarchy she founded: hitherto she has
+gained very little honour by the share
+she has taken in the affairs of Greece.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>We cannot conclude without making
+a few observations on Lord Palmerston’s
+attempt to conquer the
+islets of Cervi and Sapienza for the
+Ionian republic. We never knew
+Lord Palmerston undertake a worse
+case, nor conduct one in a worse
+manner. Whether the islands in
+question belong to King Otho or Sir
+H. Ward, is a matter about which
+neither can feel very positive, as it
+turns on the interpretation of obscure
+treaties that make no mention of the
+thing in dispute; and these treaties
+were in part framed before either of
+the states now appearing as claimants
+had an existence.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The facts are, Greece is in possession
+of two islands. The Ionian republic
+advances a claim to them.
+Greece takes no notice of this claim,
+even when backed by the powerful
+intervention of England. Lord Palmerston,
+considering the British Government
+is not treated with proper
+courtesy by King Otho, gives orders
+to seize the islands and deliver them
+to Sir H. Ward; but, before these
+orders are executed, he receives an
+answer from the Greek Government,
+and recalls his orders. Still he boldly
+tells the world that he had given these
+orders, as may be seen in the last
+despatch printed in the Parliamentary
+papers. Now this announcement was
+quite uncalled for, and has very naturally
+given great offence to the Russian
+Government, for it was a gratuitous
+violation of the diplomatic
+courtesy due to our allies, the joint
+protectors of Greece. When England
+found that Greece was withholding
+property supposed to belong to
+the Ionian republic, it was clearly her
+duty, as protector of the Ionian republic,
+to lay the case before Russia,
+France, and England, the three protectors
+of Greece. No want of courtesy
+on the part of Greece, in leaving
+the communications of England unanswered,
+could ever warrant England
+forgetting what was due to Russia
+and France, and even to herself.
+England alone could not pretend to
+decide whether Cervi and Sapienza
+belong to Greece or to the Ionian
+republic. Russia, from her earlier
+connexion with the Ionian islands, and
+her more intimate knowledge of Greek
+and Turkish affairs, was the power
+best qualified to decide the question;
+and both Russia and France had a
+right to take part in deciding it. Had
+the imprudent order of Lord Palmerston
+been unfortunately carried into
+execution, it might have seriously
+troubled our relations with Russia;
+even as it is, the unnecessary publicity
+given to the fact that such an order
+had been issued, has been viewed as
+an intentional slight.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>These two islands, it must be remembered,
+have been in the possession
+of the Greek Government ever
+since its formation. King Otho found
+them a part of the Greek territory
+when it was delivered over to him by
+the protecting powers in 1833; and as
+they are within cannon-shot of the
+shores of Greece, he could hardly doubt
+that he was their lawful sovereign.
+But, at all events, we cannot understand
+what object could be gained by
+Great Britain taking forcible possession
+of these paltry little islands, when
+it was evident that the final decision
+concerning their property could only
+be given by Russia and France.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>We hope Lord Palmerston has some
+better argument to plead before these
+two powers than he has communicated
+to Greece in his despatch of the 9th
+February last, as given in the correspondence
+presented to Parliament.
+If not, his case is lost. The geography
+and the logic of this document are
+equally defective. As a proof that
+these islands belong to the Ionian state,
+he cites an act of the Ionian legislature
+dated in the year 1804, in which they
+are enumerated as portions of the territory
+of the republic. This act, however,
+does not even prove that they
+were ever occupied by the Ionian
+government. The legislature of Great
+Britain, when Lord Palmerston was a
+young man, was in the habit of enumerating
+France as an appendage of
+the crown of England; the King of
+France used to boast of himself as
+King of Navarre, without Europe attaching
+much importance to the enumeration
+of territory in the possession
+of others. The Sultan does not
+trouble his head about the pretensions
+of the Kings of Sardinia and Naples to
+the kingdom of Jerusalem; so that
+King Otho may be excused for not
+paying more attention to the Ionian
+claim to Cervi and Sapienza, than he
+does to the Spanish claim to the
+Duchy of Athens and New Patras.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Nor does Lord Palmerston strengthen
+his argument when he declares, that
+no island belongs to Greece except
+those expressly enumerated in the
+protocol of the 3d of February 1830.
+If this dictum of his lordship be correct,
+neither Hydra, Spetzia, Poros,
+Ægina, nor Salamis, would belong to
+Greece, which is manifestly absurd;
+unless, indeed, Lord Palmerston supposes
+these islands are included under
+the name of Cyclades, which would be
+still more absurd, for it is wiser to quarrel
+with King Otho than with Strabo.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>This imprudent attack on Greece
+lays the despatch open to reply; for
+though Lord Palmerston is proved to
+be wrong when he says that no island,
+except those expressly enumerated in
+the protocol of 3d February 1830, can
+belong to Greece, he is right in maintaining
+that the legislative act of the
+Ionian republic in 1804 cannot advance
+a claim to any island not enumerated
+in it. Now only one island of Cervi
+is mentioned in that act, and that
+island will be found laid down on the
+west side of Cerigo, with the Greek
+name of Elaphonisi, which is identical
+with the Italian name Cervi, in
+the map of Greece published by Arrowsmith,
+which we believe was the
+one used at the conference on the
+3d February 1830. It corresponds
+in size, form, and value, with the
+island of Dragonera, situated on the
+east side of Cerigo, which is enumerated
+immediately before it in the
+legislative act of 1804. The island of
+Cervi on the coast of Greece does not,
+therefore, belong to the Ionian republic.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_539'>539</span>
+ <h2 class='c002'>THE MODERN ARGONAUTS.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c017'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in28'>I.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in9'>You have heard the ancient story,</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>How the gallant sons of Greece,</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>Long ago, with Jason ventured</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>For the fated Golden Fleece;</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>How they traversed distant regions,</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>How they trod on hostile shores;</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>How they vexed the hoary Ocean</div>
+ <div class='line in12'>With the smiting of their oars;—</div>
+ <div class='line'>Listen, then, and you shall hear another wondrous tale,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Of a second Argo steering before a prosperous gale!</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in28 c019'>II.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in9'>From the southward came a rumour,</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>Over sea and over land;</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>From the blue Ionian islands,</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>And the old Hellenic strand;</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>That the sons of Agamemnon,</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>To their faith no longer true,</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>Had confiscated the carpets</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>Of a black and bearded Jew!</div>
+ <div class='line'>Helen’s rape, compared to this, was but an idle toy,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Deeper guilt was that of Athens than the crime of haughty Troy.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in28 c019'>III.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in9'>And the rumour, winged by Ate,</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>To the lofty chamber ran,</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>Where great Palmerston was sitting</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>In the midst of his Divan:</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>Like Saturnius triumphant,</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>In his high Olympian hall,</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>Unregarded by the mighty,</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>But detested by the small;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Overturning constitutions—setting nations by the ears,</div>
+ <div class='line'>With divers sapient plenipos, like Minto and his peers.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in28 c020'>IV.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in9'>With his fist the proud dictator</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>Smote the table that it rang—</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>From the crystal vase before him</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>The blood-red wine upsprang!</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>“Is my sword a wreath of rushes,</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>Or an idle plume my pen,</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>That they dare to lay a finger</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>On the meanest of my men?</div>
+ <div class='line'>No amount of circumcision can annul the Briton’s right—</div>
+ <div class='line'>Are they mad, these lords of Athens, for I know they cannot fight?</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in28 c019'>V.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in9'>“Had the wrong been done by others,</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>By the cold and haughty Czar,</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>I had trembled ere I opened</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>All the thunders of my war.</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>But I care not for the yelping</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>Of these fangless curs of Greece—</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>Soon and sorely will I tax them</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>For the merchant’s plundered Fleece.</div>
+ <div class='line'>From the earth his furniture for wrath and vengeance cries—</div>
+ <div class='line'>Ho, Eddisbury! take thy pen, and straightway write to Wyse!”</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in28 c019'>VI.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in9'>Joyfully the bells are ringing</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>In the old Athenian town,</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>Gaily to Piræus harbour</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>Stream the merry people down;</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>For they see the fleet of Britain</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>Proudly steering to their shore,</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>Underneath the Christian banner</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>That they knew so well of yore,</div>
+ <div class='line'>When the guns at Navarino thundered o’er the sea,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And the Angel of the North proclaimed that Greece again was free.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in28 c019'>VII.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in9'>Hark!—a signal gun—another!</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>On the deck a man appears</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>Stately as the Ocean-shaker—</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>“Ye Athenians, lend your ears!</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>Thomas Wyse am I, a herald</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>Come to parley with the Greek;</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>Palmerston hath sent me hither,</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>In his awful name I speak—</div>
+ <div class='line'>Ye have done a deed of folly—one that ye shall sorely rue!</div>
+ <div class='line'>Wherefore did ye lay a finger on the carpets of the Jew?</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in28 c019'>VIII.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in9'>“Don Pacifico of Malta!</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>Dull, indeed, were Britain’s ear,</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>If the wrongs of such a hero</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>Tamely she could choose to hear!</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>Don Pacifico of Malta!</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>Knight-commander of the Fleece—</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>For his sake I hurl defiance</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>At the haughty towns of Greece.</div>
+ <div class='line'>Look to it—For by my head! since Xerxes crossed the strait,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Ye never saw an enemy so vengeful at your gate.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in28 c019'>IX.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in9'>“Therefore now, restore the carpets,</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>With a forfeit twenty-fold;</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>And a goodly tribute offer</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>Of your treasure and your gold:</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>Sapienza, and the islet</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>Cervi, ye shall likewise cede;</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>So the mighty gods have spoken,</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>Thus hath Palmerston decreed!</div>
+ <div class='line'>Ere the sunset, let an answer issue from your monarch’s lips;</div>
+ <div class='line'>In the meantime, I have orders to arrest your merchant ships.”</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in28 c019'>X.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in9'>Thus he spake, and snatched a trumpet</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>Swiftly from a soldier’s hand,</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>And therein he blew so shrilly,</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>That along the rocky strand</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>Rang the war-note, till the echoes</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>From the distant hills replied;</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>Hundred trumpets wildly wailing,</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>Poured their blast on every side;</div>
+ <div class='line'>And the loud and hearty shout of Britain rent the skies,</div>
+ <div class='line'>“Three cheers for noble Palmerston!—another cheer for Wyse!”</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in28 c019'>XI.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in9'>Gentles! I am very sorry</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>That I cannot yet relate,</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>Of this gallant expedition,</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>What has been the final fate.</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>Whether Athens was bombarded</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>For her Jew-coercing crimes,</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>Hath not been as yet reported</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>In the columns of the <cite>Times</cite>.</div>
+ <div class='line'>But the last accounts assure us of some valuable spoil:</div>
+ <div class='line'>Various coasting vessels, laden with tobacco, fruit, and oil.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in28 c019'>XII.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in9'>Ancient chiefs! that sailed with Jason</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>O’er the wild and stormy waves—</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>Let not sounds of later triumphs</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>Stir you in your quiet graves!</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>Other Argonauts have ventured</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>To your old Hellenic shore,</div>
+ <div class='line in9'>But they will not live in story,</div>
+ <div class='line in11'>Like the valiant men of yore.</div>
+ <div class='line'>O! ’tis more than shame and sorrow thus to jest upon a theme</div>
+ <div class='line'>That, for Britain’s fame and glory, all would wish to be a dream!</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_542'>542</span>
+ <h2 class='c002'>MY PENINSULAR MEDAL.<br> BY AN OLD PENINSULAR.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<h3 class='c021'>PART VI.—CHAPTER XV.</h3>
+
+<p class='c022'>Early in the morning I was surprised
+by a visit from Mr Chesterfield.
+He had received information, which
+he wished to communicate. From
+other British officers, then in the
+town, he had learned that the state
+of the country through which we had
+to pass was far from satisfactory;
+and one or two had even told him that,
+in the course of this day’s march,
+we should certainly be attacked.
+Mr Chesterfield added that he had
+attempted, under the circumstances,
+to obtain an addition to our escort,
+but without success; there were but
+few troops in the place, and none
+could be spared. He wished, therefore,
+to know what course I thought
+preferable; whether to wait till fresh
+parties bound to headquarters came
+up, or to proceed at once.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>I was quite for proceeding. Begged
+to ask, Did he know what was the
+character of the road we should have
+to travel?</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Mr Chesterfield had inquired. It
+was for the most part through an open
+country. “Any villages?”—If there
+were, no doubt parties of troops were
+stationed in them, and their presence
+would be a check on the population.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>These replies confirmed my previous
+views; and, as my orders were to
+conform to the written route, not only
+with regard to places, but with regard
+to time, I gave my voice decidedly
+in favour of going on. If plans against
+us were in process of concoction,
+delay on our part would both give
+encouragement, and afford time for
+the mischief to come to a head. With
+a convoy like ours, holding out so
+many temptations to irregular enterprise,
+it seemed far better to pass
+quickly on, ere reports could spread,
+and an attack be organised. Admitting
+that there was danger if we proceeded,
+there was also danger if we
+remained stationary. If we incurred
+any disaster by remaining, we incurred
+it by a breach of orders; if by proceeding,
+we met it in the path of
+duty.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Fully concurring in these views,
+and agreeing that we should proceed,
+Mr Chesterfield then suggested—might
+it not be proper to adopt some
+precautions? He thought, as soon as
+we were out of the town, the men
+should load.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>This I fully concurred in, not only
+as a defence, but as likely to keep the
+men steadier, by letting them see that
+we were preparing for business in
+earnest. Here were two inexperienced
+youths, the one raw from college, the
+other from school, thrown on their
+own resources, and laying their heads
+together to meet an emergency, by
+the most prudent measures their
+united stock of wisdom could suggest.
+Suffice it to say, we both spoke with
+oracular gravity; and gave dignified
+evidence of our perfect self-possession,
+by blowing copious puffs of fragrant
+smoke.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The conference between our two
+high mightinesses, though, was suddenly
+interrupted. Enter Corporal
+Fraser, evidently in a little bit of a
+flurry. The sight of Mr Chesterfield
+brought him at once to a halt. He
+saluted, and seemed to check himself
+in something that he was going to say.
+In short, he looked flushed and
+anxious—not altogether himself—breathed
+hard between his clenched
+teeth—stood silent. The visit being
+to me, Mr Chesterfield gave me a
+look; so I asked the corporal what
+he wanted.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I am sorry, sir,” said he, “to be
+the bearer of disagreeable intelligence.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Well, corporal, out with it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“The men, sir, I regret to say,
+are in a state of beastly intoxication.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The corporal, it was clear, wishing
+to shield the men, had come to my
+billet, intending the information for
+my ears only. But finding Mr Chesterfield
+with me, and not being at the
+time in the absolute possession of his
+faculties, (for, though quite unconscious
+of the fact, he was himself partially
+under the influence of liquor,)
+he had no resource but to tell out all,
+though not by any means one of those
+petty officers “as likes to get poor
+fellers into trouble.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Beastly intoxication? What! at
+this early hour of the day? It was a
+strange circumstance, and excited
+ugly apprehensions. How could they
+have become so? Who made them
+drunk? Under other circumstances,
+I should have applied to the corporal
+for an explanation forthwith;
+but I saw indications, in the corporal’s
+eye, that it would not be kind to
+question him at the moment before an
+officer—so proposed, instead, that we
+should go and look for ourselves. We
+went. The case was much as Fraser
+had stated it. We reached a large
+old house with a <i><span lang="fr">porte cochère</span></i>, within
+which was a court. On entering this
+court we found the men—happily the
+infantry only, for the cavalry had
+quarters just by—all, with one exception,
+more or less in a state of intoxication.
+Some were laughing; others
+were wrangling; one or two were
+crying—maudlin drunk. Some were
+making a show of cleaning arms and
+accoutrements, with profound bows
+and sagacious nods. All tried, on our
+arrival, to look as sober as they could.
+On any morning this would have been
+a serious state of things, at the hour
+of mustering to start; but now, when
+we expected hostility, it was worse
+than ever. Neither did I like the
+look of the inhabitants. There was
+no exact throng, indeed; but parties
+were standing near in groups, evidently
+cognisant of our present fix,
+watching, and making their remarks
+among themselves. In that old house,
+guarded by those drunken soldiers,
+were sixty mule-loads of silver and
+gold! Things looked still worse,
+though, when we entered the quarters.
+Three or four men, who were most
+overcome, had deliberately laid themselves
+down again for a snooze. There
+they were, wrapped up in their blankets,
+stretched and snoring on the
+floor; while Corporal Fraser, himself
+a little “disguised,” flushed in the
+face, and in a high state of indignation
+and excitement, was storming
+and kicking them up; and a fellow,
+who found it easier to lean against
+the wainscot than to stand upright,
+was expostulating—“You haven’t no
+business to kick a poor soger in that
+’ere way.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>To this general boskiness, I have
+said, there was one exception. It was
+Jones. In fact, with all his faults, I
+never, on any one occasion, saw Jones
+overcome with liquor; which was the
+more remarkable, because he got more
+than any other soldier of the detachment.
+His own ration—all that he
+could appropriate of mine—occasional
+contributions from Coosey—all he
+could get from every quarter, (and he
+never missed an opportunity,) all went
+down his throat without visible effect.
+In short, he seemed brandy-proof.
+I never saw him affected, nor had he
+the appearance of a hard drinker.
+Observing that he looked much as
+usual, while all around were looking
+so different, I applied to him for an
+explanation. “Why, Jones, what’s
+the cause of this disgraceful scene?
+How did the men get it?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Please, sir, the fellers is very
+sorry for it, sir. Hadn’t no intentions
+to get drunk <em>$1</em>, sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Well, but how did it happen,
+man?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Please, sir, the jeddleham stood
+treat, sir; treated ’em all, sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“What gentleman?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Please, sir, the same as treated
+me the night before last, sir: give me
+a tumbler of hot punch what was all
+a-fire, sir; brought it out into the
+inn-yard all of a blaze, sir. Told me
+the French soldiers got that twice a day,
+sir. Said, if the Hinglish soldiers
+had their rights, they’d get the
+same, sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“The night before last? What
+gentleman treated you the night before
+last?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Please, sir, it was the same jeddleham
+as aast to speak to you, sir;
+the jeddleham what you went into the
+house to speak to him, sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Oh, that fellow! Why, you
+might have seen him again yesterday.
+Didn’t you notice him among the
+people at the ferry?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Please, sir, when we come to the
+ferry, I was in the rear, sir; halted
+there, and remained till we turned the
+hinnimy over the ford, sir. Didn’t
+git a sight on him, sir. Only wish I
+had, sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Well, but how comes it some of
+the other men didn’t know him again?
+They must have seen him yesterday,
+if you didn’t.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Please, sir, I s’pose it’s ’cause
+this morning he was dressed different,
+sir. Had a large hat pulled over his
+eyes, sir; and muffled up in a long
+cloak, sir. Shouldn’t not have knowed
+him myself, sir, only if it hadn’t not
+a-been for his nose, sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Stood treat, though? How?—did
+he treat the whole party?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Please, sir, I won’t tell you no lie,
+sir. Jest after the fellers turned out
+in the morning, sir—jest as I was a-washing
+my face in this ’ere horse
+trough, sir—there come along a man
+with a couple of barrils, sir; which
+the barrils was slung on a-top of a
+donkey, sir. So he took and stopped
+the donkey close to that ’ere gateway,
+sir, which some of the fellers was
+standing at it, sir. So they knowed
+at once it was wine, sir—in course
+they did, by the look on it, sir—so
+they got a-bargaining with him for a
+drink, sir. So, jest as they was a-bargaining
+come along that ’ere Nosey,
+sir; which, as soon as he see the
+fellers a-talking to the man what belonged
+to the donkey, sir, he looked
+very pleasant, and stopped and spoke
+to him, sir. Then he spoke to the
+fellers, sir, and told ’em they might
+drink as much as they pleased, sir;
+might drink it all, if they liked, sir;
+and he’d stand it, sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Did he speak English, then?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Yes, he did, sir; sitch Hinglish as
+they speaks here, sir; not sitch as you
+and I speaks, sir. I won’t tell you no
+lie, sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The case was too clear. Hookey
+was still on our traces. Disappointed
+in his two previous attempts to turn
+us from our route, he meant to keep
+near us, watch his opportunity, and
+act accordingly. Making the men
+drunk just when we were about to
+start on a dangerous part of the road,
+was as unquestionably part of some
+more extensive plot as it was palpably
+Hookey’s doing. I briefly
+stated the matter to Mr Chesterfield,
+adding, “We shall see that fellow
+again to-day.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“If he comes once more within the
+range of a firelock,” said Mr Chesterfield,
+“we must not let him get off so
+easily.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Meanwhile, the immediate question
+was a practical one: What course was
+best, under existing circumstances?
+In spite of the state of the men, I was
+still for proceeding.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Very well,” said Mr Chesterfield;
+“then let the packing commence. We
+will take all the infantry who are fit
+to march when the mules are loaded,
+and go on with them and the cavalry.
+Such as are too bad must remain behind,
+and come up afterwards with
+other parties, as they can.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Mr Chesterfield then went to see
+after his own men; the mules arrived,
+and the muleteers began loading.
+Jones stepped up to me: he had
+apparently overheard our conversation.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Please, sir, none of the fellers
+won’t not stay behind, sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“How do you know?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“’Cause, sir, when the mules is
+ready, they’ll be ready, sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Ready? How ready, if they ’re
+beastly drunk?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Please, sir, they won’t be beastly
+by that time, sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“How can you tell that?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Please, sir, ’cause I knows they
+won’t, sir; ’cause it’s only that ’ere
+wine, sir. Please, sir, that ’ere hasn’t
+not got no varchy in it, like the sperrits
+has, sir. ’Cause, please, sir, when a
+feller gets drunk on sperrits, sir, they
+makes him rale drunk, sir; but that
+’ere wine only jest makes him drunkish-like,
+sir; ’cause it’s only jest for a
+time, sir, and then it goes off again,
+sir; ’cause there’s no good in it, sir,
+if you drink a butt of it, sir. Hope no
+offence, sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Common country wine, was it?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Please, sir, it was new wine,
+sweetish-like, sir. That’s what did
+it, sir. Sitch new wine gits into a
+feller’s headpiece at once, sir; makes
+him silly drunk directly instant, sir;
+but then he soon gits sober agin,
+sir. Consickvent, I considers the fellers
+will all be sober agin in an hour
+or two, sir; and then they’ll be able
+to fall in, sir. ’Cause I knowed it
+was new, sir; ’cause it sparkled like
+cider do when it’s drawed frish from
+the barril, sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Jones’s prognosis, though not very
+clearly expressed, was verified by the
+result. Ere the loading was completed,
+all the men had become either
+sober or nearly so. Even those who
+had been most affected fell in, and
+mustered with the rest; and though
+our rank and file displayed some set
+and gummy eyes, only two or three
+of the worst betrayed the disaster by
+their gait. Hookey had thus outwitted
+himself. By dosing the men
+with new wine, (which, as all persons
+acquainted with the wine countries are
+well aware, flies at once to the head,
+even if taken moderately,) he had,
+indeed, succeeded in making them
+drunk at once; but not in making
+them drunk for a continuance. “Let
+alone it’s new,” said Jones, “it
+isn’t no wine, sitch as the fellers gits,
+as would make ’em rale drunk;
+nayther Spanish wine, nor yit Frinch
+wine, except it’s the jinny-wine.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The men having somehow discovered
+that they were likely to be put
+on their mettle during the day’s
+march, were all, in appearance, truly
+sorry for what had occurred. They
+became aware, through Jones, of
+Hookey’s real character; saw through
+his contrivance to make them all
+drunk; and, feeling that they had
+been in a measure his dupes, were
+savage at the artifice, and burned for
+an opportunity to retrieve their character
+in the course of the day. Mr
+Chesterfield now returned: he glanced
+at the men, and afterwards took an
+opportunity of speaking to me.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“That fellow with the nose,” said
+he, “according to your account of
+him, must be a dangerous character.
+Should not steps be taken for his
+apprehension?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“If you like, I will go to the Mairie,
+and make inquiries about him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I fear,” said he, “you will not be
+very cordially seconded in that quarter,
+judging, at least, from my own
+last night’s experience, when I applied
+for billets. However, it can do no
+harm.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Well, then, the sooner I go the better.
+I will take with me the Spanish
+Capataz. As soon as we have gone in,
+be so kind as to keep an eye on the entrance.
+If Señor Roque puts his head
+out, send me three or four dismounted
+dragoons. We must see if we can’t
+teach those fellows good manners.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>I took with me Señor Roque, and
+explained to him, by the way, what I
+wished him to do. If, after we entered
+the bureau of the Mairie, I gave him a
+look, he was to go down to the door,
+and bring up the dragoons.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>We entered; and, as at a previous
+interview the night before, found three
+gentlemen busily employed in writing,
+each at his desk. The interval had
+wrought no improvement in their
+manners. When I saluted them,
+neither of the three took the least
+notice—all went on writing. I addressed
+the head man of the party.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I have the honour of waiting on
+you, Monsieur, for the purpose of soliciting
+your co-operation.”—Still he
+writes. Wait awhile. Try again.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I must soon be leaving this place,
+Monsieur, and have duties which will
+occupy me in the interval. May I
+claim a moment’s attention?”—Scribble,
+scribble, scribble.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>One or two similar attempts were
+similarly met. I then gave friend
+Roque the concerted look; and he,
+nothing loath, went off to fetch the
+dragoons. Meanwhile, no seat having
+been offered me, I took one, and remained
+quiet. The three official gentlemen,
+though so dreadfully busy,
+just before, that they could not notice
+my application, now began jabbering
+amongst themselves upon some indifferent
+topic, as if no one else had been
+in the room. When a Frenchman
+really wishes to treat you with insolence,
+I must say he has a neat, quiet
+way of doing it, which no other people
+on earth can equal. An Englishman,
+I admit, can beat him in vulgarity;
+but for <em>$1</em> of execution, there is
+no intentional rudeness like the rudeness
+of a Frenchman.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Presently was heard on the stairs
+a stumping—ha!—a hoof-like tread!—the
+tramp of heavy feet! With it
+ascended the clatter of accoutrements!
+Four scabbards were mounting the
+stairs, each scabbard marking each
+step by a bang! The three officials
+started—exchanged looks—wrote on
+in silence with redoubled energy,
+while their faces twitched.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The door opened! Four big fellows
+entered the bureau, with clattering
+accoutrements and resounding steps.
+Señor Roque, his face burnished with
+exultation—for he hated the French—followed,
+and closed the door. The
+bold dragoons ranged themselves in
+line, with their backs to the wall.
+Nay, more: their four right hands,
+probably by a hint from the Capataz,
+moved simultaneously towards their
+left sides; four enormous swords
+leaped from their scabbards, flashed
+in the air, and slumbered on the
+bearers’ shoulders. The writing was
+now intense.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The display of arms in such a place,
+though, might compromise us with
+our own authorities. I made a sign,
+and the swords were sheathed.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Having so often spoken in vain, I
+was determined that the civic dignities
+should speak first. I therefore quietly
+took out a cigar. Quick as lightning,
+my friend the Capataz whipped out
+his smoking gear, and went to work
+with flint, steel, and junk. At the
+first click, my three polite entertainers
+almost jumped from their stools.
+The twinkle of the jolly old Spaniard’s
+eye, as he handed me a light, was
+worth a dollar any day. The four
+dragoons, much to their credit, maintained
+the most perfect gravity
+throughout. I lit, and blew a cloud.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The panic of the three writers increased.
+They were evidently telegraphing.
+At length the chief turned
+round on his seat, and, with alarm
+and courtesy comically mingled in his
+visage, begged to be informed in what
+way he could be of service to me.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I interrupt you, Monsieur. Pray,
+finish the business you have in hand.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Monsieur, I have no business so
+cherished as to expedite yours.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>I then told my object—that there
+had been in the place a suspicious
+<i><span lang="fr">sujet</span></i>, whom I described. Should he
+again make his appearance, he must
+be apprehended <i><span lang="fr">tout-de-suite</span></i>, and kept
+in safe custody, till he was surrendered
+to the normal authorities. “Messieurs,
+has he presented himself here?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Three voices answered simultaneously—“Yes”—“No”—“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Do you know anything of him?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“He is an Englishman—a courier
+from Madrid.”—“He bears despatches
+to the British headquarters.”—“Nothing
+whatever.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“He is neither an Englishman nor
+a courier; consequently, he must be
+provided with a passport. Has he
+presented it <span class='fss'>HERE</span>?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Viewing him as attached to the
+British service, we did not consider it
+our affair.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Where is he now?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“He is not here.”—“He didn’t
+state his intended route.”—“He has
+left this place.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“By what route?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“We don’t know.”—“He went,
+within the last hour, towards St
+Sever.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Is that an ascertained fact?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Yes, Monsieur, yes,” they all answered;
+“he is gone in the direction
+of St Sever.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“If, Messieurs, what you have now
+stated should prove correct, and if I
+find that you have told me all you
+know, I trust I shall not feel it necessary
+to report the matter to our commander-in-chief.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>These gentlemen, I felt, could have
+told me more, had they chosen; and
+I, with time at my command, could
+have extracted more. But in our case
+it was touch and go. We could not,
+with such a charge, stop to pursue
+investigations. So I took my leave,
+deeming it, at any rate, something to
+have ascertained that friend Hookey,
+in accordance with my anticipations,
+though not in accordance with his own
+statements, had preceded us by the
+route which we were so soon to
+follow.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The civic trio were as courteous at
+my departure as they were rude at my
+entry. First stumped out the cavalry—who
+had really done the business;
+then followed the old unctuous Capataz;
+and I, with a horizontal tripartite
+bow, closed up the rear. Ere I
+had fairly quitted the room, the three
+were all at work again, intently scribbling.
+The “dressing” of a <em>$1</em>,
+with formal and full details of
+the whole transaction, was probably
+their occupation for the rest of the
+morning. I was sorry that we had
+compromised ourselves by the exhibition
+of cold steel. But, under all
+the circumstances, I felt little apprehension,
+to borrow an expression from
+Jones, of their “telling that ’ere to
+my Lord Valentine.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The mules were loaded, the men
+fell in; and, though some of them
+were still a little the worse for the
+disaster of the morning, we were quite
+in a condition to lick any Frenchmen
+that might come across us, and made
+a very respectable march of it to the
+outskirts of the town. There we were
+again joined by Pledget and Gingham;
+and shortly after, Fraser, by Mr
+Chesterfield’s direction, made the infantry
+load, and saw that each had a
+supply of cartridges—a process which
+caused the muleteers to look a little
+queer. We then proceeded on our
+march.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Passing through an open country,
+Mr Pledget and Mr Chesterfield rode
+on side by side in conversation, at the
+head of the line; while Gingham and
+I followed close, in similar guise.
+Suddenly was heard, in the rear, the
+crack of a musket! A ball whistled
+close over our heads, and struck the
+road, a few yards before us. Mr
+Chesterfield immediately called a halt
+of the whole party; and he and I proceeded
+to the rear. As we were
+riding back, Corporal Fraser came
+running forward to meet us, and soon
+explained. Our Yorkshire lad, it appeared,
+had been larking with another
+soldier, one of those whose early sobriety
+the wine had most disturbed,
+and had got him into a scrape. The
+result was, that the musket of the
+half-tipsy soldier had gone off, and
+had so nearly done execution amongst
+us in front. It was evident our infantry
+were not yet in a state to be
+trusted with loaded arms; it wouldn’t
+do. Mr Chesterfield gave directions
+at once, that they should all draw
+their charges. And as our route for
+some distance appeared perfectly level
+and open, so as to afford no cover for
+a sudden attack, (it was that sort of
+country so common in France, cultivated
+to the road-side, but totally
+bare of hedges, copse, or trees,) it
+was settled that they should not load
+again till circumstances rendered it
+necessary. The man whose musket
+had caused the alarm looked stupid
+and bewildered—could give no explanation,
+but that “it went off.” I
+observed, however, that Mr Chesterfield
+quietly spoke a few words to the
+Yorkshireman. What they were, I
+did not hear; but they certainly had
+the effect of making that worthy a
+better-behaved, though not a merrier
+man, during the rest of our march.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c023'>CHAPTER XVI.</h3>
+
+<p class='c022'>Finding no foe to fight withal, we
+began to suspect that Mr Chesterfield,
+as a new-comer, had been hoaxed, in
+our last halting-place, by some military
+wag; and Gingham and I fell
+into a long conversation, which he
+commenced by reminding me of our
+arrangement to campaign together,
+entered into a year before, at Falmouth.
+All obstacles, he said, were
+removed; he hoped, therefore, the
+plan would now be carried out. To
+this I readily consented; the advantages,
+indeed, were all on my side.
+Gingham then, in his own way, introduced
+a discussion respecting his plans
+and mine. Be it however premised,
+we had dined together the night before;
+and I had shown him some
+methods—more expeditious than those
+in common use, which were the only
+ones he knew—of reducing one denomination
+of coin to another: <em>$1</em>,
+dollars to pounds sterling, pounds
+sterling to francs, &#38;c. He expressed,
+as before, his high gratification; and
+begged my MS. calculations “in the
+strictest confidence,” depositing them
+in the recesses of his writing-desk.
+He now, as we were riding along,
+commenced an important, and, on his
+part, highly diplomatic conference,
+by a friendly examination as to the
+nature of my official duties at Lisbon.
+I described them, as I have described
+them to the reader a few chapters
+back.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Then, in fact,” said Gingham,
+“your last year has been employed
+to as good purpose as it could have
+been in any London counting-house.”
+(That was Gingham’s standard.)
+“You have had the keeping of a distinct
+account, and that in all its parts,
+from the items to the account current.
+Of course, it occupied your whole
+time.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Not the whole,” said I. “There
+was some to spare, for which I had
+other employment.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Indeed!” said Gingham, with interest.
+“Will you, Mr Y—, as a particular
+favour, permit me—confidentially
+of course—to make an inquiry?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Make any inquiry you like: I
+shall feel pleasure in answering it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Would you, then,” said Gingham,
+“have the kindness to inform me—that
+is, unless you feel it a violation
+of official confidence—what were your
+other duties?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“No violation whatever. I kept
+the letter-books; managed the correspondence:
+not the whole correspondence
+of the department, but that of
+the branch I belonged to—the account
+office.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Your duty, then,” said he, “was
+to arrange and enter all letters received,
+and to keep copies of all letters
+sent?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Sometimes to copy, sometimes to
+make the draughts. A man soon gets
+into the way, you know.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“One entire account,” said Gingham,
+speaking to himself, “and one
+whole branch of correspondence!
+What an excellent introduction!”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Not understanding in what sense he
+used the word “introduction,” I made
+no reply.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Of course,” he proceeded, “the
+correspondence was in English?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Almost exclusively. I should
+scarcely feel equal to any other, except
+perhaps Portuguese.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Might I not,” said Gingham, “add
+Spanish and French?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Well, if I get a little polishing,
+perhaps you might. Italian I hope to
+be able to add ere long; and, in due
+time, German.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Gingham now turned half round in
+his saddle, and addressed me with
+great gravity. “Mr Y—, my dear
+sir, I venture, as a friend, to offer one
+suggestion. If a person, not older
+than yourself, applied for an engagement
+in the corresponding line, I
+would say to him—that is, in the
+strictest confidence, speaking as a
+friend—‘Say only three languages;
+wouldn’t advise you to say more.’
+The principal, however unjustly, might
+suspect—excuse me, I speak candidly—might
+suspect a little romancing.
+In short, if a person under eight-and-twenty
+or thirty said five languages,
+it might prevent an engagement.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Gingham, I should observe, talked
+just as he always did. There was
+still the touch of mannerism, the quiet
+earnestness blended with courtesy. I
+never viewed any man with more unfeigned
+respect and esteem; and yet
+there were moments, in the course of
+our present conversation, when I could
+scarcely refrain from laughing in his
+face. True, I was one year farther
+removed from boyhood than when our
+acquaintance commenced; and more
+than one incident had taught me, in
+the interval, the necessity of respecting
+“time, place, and circumstances.”
+But the trial was great; a gravity
+that even Liston could not shake,
+would have been shaken by Gingham.
+Still there was his comical solemnity.
+Still there was his politeness, touched
+off with formality. Still there were
+his green barnacles, and his two little
+winky-pinky eyes. Still, still there
+was his irresistible nose. Stand everything
+else, I would defy you to stand
+that. Great, please to observe, was
+the difference between Gingham’s nose
+and Hookey’s, though both arrested
+the beholder. When Hookey and
+Gingham met on board the packet,
+each observed of the other that he
+had a very odd nose. The first meeting
+of the two noses, and the look
+exchanged by the two wearers, beat
+anything in Molière—so much more
+comical is nature than fancy. Hookey’s,
+unquestionably the most marked feature
+of a very marked countenance,
+did nevertheless so far maintain the
+unities, that it perfectly harmonised
+with the rest of his physiognomy. It
+was an eagle’s beak, and his whole
+face was aquiline. Gingham’s, on the
+contrary, was conspicuous by contrast.
+It had no appearance of belonging to
+his face. You might fancy him one
+of the triumphs of Talicotius—a man
+(on which subject see Lavater) with
+a false nose. Neither broad nor massive,
+yet prominent and conspicuous,
+it was slightly crooked, flattened on
+one side; as if, when a baby, he had
+slept too much on his right cheek, and
+his nose, from its thinness, had got
+bent towards his left. This nose, I
+say, from its peculiar expression, or
+rather want of expression, appeared
+no part or parcel of the face in which it
+stood. And, what was unfortunate,
+its extraneous appearance was most
+marked when Gingham was most in
+earnest; so that it provoked you to
+laugh just at the time when a man is
+least disposed to be laughed at.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Well, Gingham having thus accomplished
+his first object, by ascertaining
+all that he wished to ascertain
+concerning myself, now went on, in
+the second place, to develop his own
+plans.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“You are, I believe,” said he, “to
+a certain extent aware of the scheme
+which brought me out from England.
+By the public prints, and still more by
+my private correspondence, I am now
+led to conclude that Napoleon’s day
+is near its close, and that the war will
+soon be terminated. In that event,
+my plan falls to the ground. But
+should we carry on the war here
+another twelvemonth, I shall have
+time to try it; and, if we go on permanently,
+I mean to carry it out.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I have some general idea of your
+plan, and that is all. You wish to
+meet the monetary difficulties connected
+with the operations of our
+army, by a method which you have
+concocted; and which you intend to
+start, for self and friends, as a private
+speculation. Don’t see how you can
+make a beginning: where’s the opening?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“An opening is afforded by the
+necessity of the case,” replied he;
+“which necessity my plan will
+meet.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Don’t see how. Look here; the
+difficulty is just this: Here are certain
+headquarters transactions, which
+require ready money; and that ready
+money must be current coin. Credit
+will not do; bank notes will not
+answer the purpose; no, nor yet bills,
+nor any kind of available security.
+It must be specie, minted gold and
+silver, hard cash. For example, the
+troops have hitherto been usually
+paid in dollars. When we have got
+dollars in the military chest, the
+troops can be paid; when our dollars
+are gone, they must wait till we get
+more. And though we had power to
+draw at will on the British treasury,
+for three months’ pay to the whole
+army, not a stiver can the army
+receive till we have more dollars.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“That’s just it,” said Gingham;
+“and I beg to ask, is such a state
+of things desirable? The efficiency of
+our army depends, not on the solvency
+of our Government, but upon the
+activity of money-dealers in raking
+up specie in the four quarters of
+the globe. That is the state of
+things which my plan proposes to
+remedy.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Do that, and you will effect a
+great object. The mode, though, is
+quite beyond me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I mean to do it, sir,” said Gingham,
+almost sternly, (for the little man,
+as he sat on his splendid horse,
+swelled with the grandeur of his conceptions)—“I
+mean to do it, sir, by a
+twofold method: not by two independent
+methods, operating simultaneously;
+but by the united operation
+of two systems combined in one.”
+His eyes looked full in mine; but his
+nose pointed at Pledget, who was
+riding before. I didn’t laugh—in
+face at least I didn’t—though suddenly
+seized with a dreadful twitching
+of the intercostal muscles. “I
+shall effect my object, sir, partly by
+paper, partly by hard cash. I shall issue
+notes payable at sight; and I shall
+get all the dollars I can into my own
+keeping. You, when you want dollars
+to pay the troops, come to me. I, on
+receiving what I deem an equivalent,
+let you have them. What will be the
+result? Instead of requiring a fresh
+supply of dollars from the coast every
+time you give the soldiers their pay,
+you will pay them with the same dollars
+twice over, nay, over and over
+again.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Why, that’s a bank! You will be
+banker to the British army!”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Exactly,” said Gingham, subsiding
+all at once into his ordinary style
+of speech: “I mean to establish a
+headquarters bank. Suggest a title.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Suppose,” said I, “as of course
+you will move with the army, you
+borrow a suggestion from the military
+hospitals of the French, and call it
+“The Ambulatory Bank.” No, that
+title doesn’t go well. Let me see. A
+good title requires time and consideration.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“To be candid, sir,” said Gingham,
+“you need not trouble yourself: the
+title is already decided. I won’t tell
+it, I’ll show it you. Have the kindness
+to draw up by the road-side.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>We halted, the convoy passed, the
+cart came on in the rear, and was
+stopped by Gingham. He then dismounted,
+gave the bridle to Coosey,
+stepped up into the cart, opened the
+tarpaulin at its back, raised a lid, and
+exhibited a green baize frame fitting
+into the top of a box, which frame
+contained a large and splendid brass
+plate.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“It wouldn’t exactly do,” said
+Gingham, “to borrow this title at
+home. Here, though, I mean to
+make free with it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>In bold, broad letters, excavated
+in the burnished brass, I read</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>“THE BANK OF ENGLAND.”</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Really the largeness of Gingham’s
+plans was too much for my limited
+capacities. We rode forward again to
+the head of the column; and I, for a
+while, rode on in silence, digesting.
+At length, one idea leading to another,
+I ventured to say something about
+“authority—concurrence.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Gingham, big with his scheme, was
+now like a gladiator prepared for
+every thrust. “At home,” said he,
+“I have all the concurrence, all the
+authority I need, with many good
+wishes to boot; and, as to pecuniary
+support, I can have whatever amount
+is required. All that I settled before
+I left Falmouth, or have since
+arranged by correspondence. Here
+I ask for countenance only so far as
+my plan is found, on trial, to aid the
+public service. Let that once become
+manifest, and I doubt not we shall
+find all the favour we want.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Only sorry your plan was not
+thought of before. It might have
+spared our Commander much anxiety,
+and our soldiers many privations.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Swelling with the plenitude of his
+anticipations, Gingham began to dogmatise.
+“In London,” said he,
+“credit is equivalent to cash. Here,
+at headquarters, the case is different.
+In London, so long as my
+banker will honour my cheques, I have
+cash at command. Here, I may
+possess unlimited power to draw
+bills, yet not be able to raise a rap.
+What makes the difference?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Here, your resource is at a distance;
+there, your banker is close at
+hand.” I was more disposed, though,
+to chew upon Gingham’s ideas than
+to discuss them, and we again rode
+on in silence. At length I bolted
+out a difficulty.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Well, we make an issue in cash—say
+a hundred thousand dollars, for
+the pay of the troops. These dollars
+are distributed, and spent; the whole
+sum evaporates. How do you get
+them together again, for a second
+payment?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I don’t expect to get them all,”
+said Gingham, scornfully. “But
+suppose I can get a part of them, say
+half. That, I think, I shall manage;
+for, observe, ten dollars are quite as
+many as you can carry about your
+person without annoyance. Undoubtedly,
+then, many individuals,
+receiving a payment in dollars, will
+be glad enough to lodge them in a
+bank, when there’s a bank at hand.
+And when I have issued my paper,
+payable at demand, many, I make no
+question, will much rather take it,
+than burden themselves with a load
+of specie.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The reasonableness of Gingham’s
+expectations was fully borne out, by
+scenes which I afterwards witnessed,
+when accompanying the military
+chest, as it moved from place to place
+with the headquarters of the British
+army. A gentleman, say a Frenchman
+or a Spaniard, has a claim for
+payment, on account of provisions,
+forage, or other necessaries, supplied
+for the service of the troops—the
+amount, suppose, ten thousand dollars.
+After long following headquarters
+from place to place, till he is
+far distant from his own home, he has
+at length established his claim: it’s all
+right, he has got a written order for
+payment, and enters our office elated,
+bearing it between his finger and
+thumb, eager to receive the cash.
+The cashier takes the bill, points to
+five deal boxes, each containing two
+thousand dollars, and tells him,
+“There’s the money.” I have seen a
+man, under such circumstances,
+knocked down in a moment, perfectly
+dumfounded. He has not brought a
+horse and cart, and every available
+conveyance has been impressed by the
+troops. One of the five boxes is as
+much as a man can carry; two are a
+load for a mule. If he has a lodging
+in the place, he possesses no means
+even of taken them there; but probably
+he has none—the whole town
+is full of soldiers. But to-morrow it
+will be worse: the army will have
+swept on; headquarters will be three
+or four leagues in advance; and the
+troops will be succeeded by stragglers,
+camp-followers, marauders, and all
+the lawless tribe that close up the rear
+of an advancing host. Poor man!
+what an alteration in his looks! He
+sees, in an instant, the full amount
+of his difficulties. Two minutes ago,
+he was dying to realise; now, he
+has got the cash, and doesn’t know
+what to do with it. I remember an
+instance when an acquaintance of
+mine, a Frenchman, came to receive
+five thousand dollars, which, with the
+aid of an attendant, he removed from
+the office. Presently he reappeared
+at the door, caught my eye, intimated
+by bows and simpers his request
+for a private interview. It was
+easy to guess the subject of his communication,
+but I followed him out.
+He had got his five bags in a cowhouse.
+His home was distant a two
+days’ journey. How was he to get
+them there? Could he have gold
+instead of silver? Would gladly
+make any sacrifice in the way of <em>$1</em>.
+Couldn’t I <em>$1</em> it?—How he
+managed at last, I never learned—whether
+he got his dollars to a place
+of safety, or was robbed and murdered
+on the road. Sometimes the
+claimants would come eagerly demanding
+their money, and, the next
+moment, would most earnestly entreat
+permission to leave it in our
+keeping. If a man so circumstanced,
+instead of hard dollars, could have
+had paper securing him cash at demand,
+at a time more convenient for
+receiving it—in short, Gingham’s
+plan just meets a case like this. And
+Gingham, who knew headquarters
+well, especially in respect to financial
+details and the attendant difficulties,
+had devised his scheme as a practical
+remedy. The claimant gives his bill
+to Gingham, and takes Gingham’s
+bank notes, or, if he prefers it, part
+notes and part specie. Gingham, at
+his own convenience, gets the official
+dollars on the bill. Then comes the
+other advantage. So much hard
+cash as has not been paid away to
+the claimant remains at headquarters,
+available, by monetary arrangements
+with the authorities, for the payment
+of the troops, or for any other headquarters
+purposes. What an improvement
+from the state of things when
+cash was so low, that, the commander-in-chief
+wishing to communicate with
+a distant point, it was necessary to
+raise a private loan for the expenses
+of the courier!</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>In short, twenty practical difficulties
+occurred to my mind, all which Gingham
+took off, as fast as I started them.
+“After all,” said he, “the only real
+difficulty will be this: that whereas
+now, at headquarters, there sometimes
+is not a dollar disposable for
+public purposes, we shall then, especially
+if the army is on the move, have
+more dollars than we know what to
+do with.” His plan, indeed, contemplated
+a large concern, for the cash
+transactions of headquarters were
+immense; but it was clear he had
+viewed the scheme in every light,
+and was prepared to carry it out.
+No question, Gingham would have
+made a good thing of it, both for
+himself and for his backers in London.
+Yet it was a concern which Government
+could not undertake; and which,
+if Government had undertaken it,
+would have infallibly broken down.
+Private enterprise alone could prosperously
+conduct the scheme.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Gingham had laid out our conference
+in three parts, and two were now
+disposed of. First, he had ascertained
+the progress of my financial education
+in the past year; secondly, he had
+developed his own plans; but there
+yet remained the third topic of discussion,
+into which he now led with
+all his usual elegance, straightforwardness,
+and good feeling. The
+long and the short of it was this,—he
+had two gentlemen in London,
+ready to come out to Bordeaux
+whenever he commenced operations;
+they would arrive, like a letter, by
+return of post; but there was a question
+respecting myself. Did I feel so
+far interested in his plan that I might
+be willing, on due reflection, to relinquish
+my actual appointment, and
+work with him? He asked it “in the
+strictest confidence,” and begged me
+to consider all that now passed “as
+merely conversation.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Have the kindness to excuse me
+for a few moments. I’ll presently
+tell you just exactly my own prospects
+and plans, and then we’ll talk the
+matter over. In the mean time, accept
+my best thanks for this proof of
+confidence.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>While listening with the profoundest
+attention to Gingham, I had,
+it must be confessed, been taking a
+look, from time to time, at the country
+round. Hitherto our route had been
+across an open level, and we had
+always seen the road before us. Now,
+first, we reached a spot were we could
+not discern what was in front. The
+table-land, over which we had been
+marching, terminated in a brow or
+declivity. The road dipped, and disappeared;
+where it led us there was
+no perceiving. The road itself also
+became hollow—that is, it descended
+between two high banks, and these
+were covered with underwood. This
+was the part of our way on which we
+were now about to enter.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Just at this moment, while I was
+debating with myself whether we
+ought to go on without a little exploration,
+Jones stepped up to me
+rather hastily. “Please, sir,” said
+he, “I’m a-thinking Nanny siz something
+as we doesn’t see.” I should
+mention that, in the course of our
+march, when we approached any
+eminence that afforded a view of the
+road and country in front, Nanny
+would trot off from the party, run to
+the summit, and make her observations—in
+short, see all that was to be
+seen. Goats, if you observe, never,
+unless compelled, venture on new
+ground, till they have first halted, and
+taken a view of it. Even sheep, if
+not over-driven, will not turn down a
+lane, till they have stopped and turned
+their heads, for the purpose of
+taking a look with <em>$1</em> eyes. Cows,
+on the contrary, look and advance at
+the same time; and your nag, contenting
+himself with a <em>$1</em> view,
+appears to advance without looking
+at all. Your dog, who has more
+sense than all the others put together,
+when you come to a place where the
+road forks—dear old Burruff!—<em>$1</em>. Well, Nanny, in the
+present instance, had done as she
+always did. The ground rose to our
+left, and the elevation <em>$1</em> the
+valley in front. On that elevation
+Nanny was now standing, and Jones’s
+observation was evidently correct. She
+saw something, or somebody, unseen
+by us. There she stood—not, though,
+as on previous occasions, quietly taking
+a survey of the road before us:
+her tail, the “upward curl” of which
+was more than perpendicular—<em>$1</em>—from
+time to time vibrated
+rapidly. She uttered, at intervals,
+a sharp, anxious bleat, and ever and
+anon stamped with a movement so
+quick, the eye could scarce discern it.
+“What d’ye think, then, she sees
+down there?” said I to Jones—“other
+goats?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Please, sir,” said Jones, “I’m
+a-thinking it’s not goats, sir; ’cause
+then she wouldn’t stop up there, sir.
+Please, sir, she’d come back at once,
+and keep close, sir; ’cause she knows
+as how I’d protect her varchy, sir;
+’cause for fear the Billies should make
+too free, sir; ’cause, when the Nannies
+is in milk, sir, they doesn’t not
+pemit hinnersint libbities, sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Nanny now adopted a new style of
+attitude—rearing, as when at play,
+with arched neck and combative front,
+still, at times, subsiding into the quadruped;
+now bleating, now stamping,
+now wagging her tail with intense
+vivacity; then walking back, stamping
+again, advancing; gazing all the while
+on the low ground in front. “If
+Nanny takes a view, why shouldn’t
+Sancho?” I cantered up, and speedily
+cantered down again. “Mr Chesterfield,
+I think, sir, we had better
+halt.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Indeed there was reason. In front
+was the enemy, drawn up to receive
+us, in military array. The road, I
+must explain, led down to a lower
+level. Just at the bottom, another
+road crossed it; and, where the two
+roads cut, they spread out round a
+large pond. About this pond, but
+principally in advance of it, appeared
+a large concourse of the rural population.
+“<i><span lang="fr">Tout Français est soldat.</span></i>”
+I never felt the force of the phrase as
+I did at that moment. They were
+armed, and stood in line; their number
+formidable, their aspect decidedly
+pugnacious. Oh, you plucky villains!
+won’t we be down upon you presently?
+I stated to Mr Chesterfield what
+I had seen, and he immediately halted
+our whole party. “If you will ride
+up with me,” said I, “you may see
+the whole lot of them.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>I returned to Nanny’s look-out
+post, but Mr Chesterfield did not follow.
+Had I known what he was
+about to do, I should certainly have
+remonstrated. He chose to take a
+nearer look at the enemy, and for that
+purpose rode forward alone. On the
+eminence on which I stood, I heard
+the rattle of his horse’s hoofs in the
+hollow way; and presently I saw him
+emerge below, at its further extremity.
+He then reined in his horse,
+and sat viewing the foe, who greeted
+his appearance with shouts and yells.
+Having quietly made his observations,
+he turned, and began to come back at
+a walk. As he withdrew, three or
+four shots were fired after him from
+below, but without effect. After he
+again disappeared in the hollow road,
+though, on his way to rejoin us, I
+heard, with great uneasiness, other
+shots fired—the report much nearer.
+They were evidently from rascals
+ambushed in the underwood of the
+two banks, between which he was
+passing. I rejoined the convoy just
+as he rode up. His look was perfectly
+calm and self-possessed, but
+pale as ashes. He held the bridle in
+his right hand, while his left hung
+helpless at his side. Pledget at once
+tumbled off his mule, stepped up, and
+addressed him with a tone and aspect
+of unfeigned concern—“Not serious,
+sir, I hope?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Oh, nothing,” said he, his manner
+a little hurried; “a mere graze—nothing.
+Corporal Fraser, the infantry
+must load immediately. Let them
+fix bayonets, though. We must begin
+by clearing those two banks.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Scarcely were the words out of his
+lips, when his face became ghastly
+like death, his eyes half closed, his
+mouth half opened. His head drooped;
+and speechless, almost fainting,
+he sank down gradually from his
+saddle into Fraser’s arms. The corporal
+carried him to the road-side—why,
+he was but a boy—and seated, or
+rather laid him upon the bank. Pledget
+was promptly in attendance, got
+off the patient’s coat, and examined
+the wounded arm, amidst the clatter
+of fixing bayonets and ramming down
+cartridges. “Oh, ain’t we going at
+it in yarnest, though?” said Jones.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“The system,” said Pledget, with
+all his usual deliberation—“the system
+has received a severe shock; that
+is the cause of these alarming symptoms—they
+will not last. So it often
+happens with gunshot wounds. The
+wound itself is not dangerous. The
+ball has gone clean through the arm,
+and at short distance too, but without
+fracturing the bone or injuring any
+important vessel.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Oh, had you seen that lad languishing
+on the sod, with the black blood
+trickling from two holes at once, and
+joining in a sluggish stream which
+went rippling down his arm, and
+dripped into the grass! I don’t know
+what he thought of; I thought of his
+mother. Enough: the foe is in
+front.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But affairs now assumed a new
+phase. While I was anxiously surveying
+our wounded commander, Corporal
+Eraser stepped up to me, saluting
+in due form, <i><span lang="fr">à la militaire</span></i>! He
+stood waiting and looking at me, as if
+he expected to receive directions.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The nature of the position in which
+I was so unexpectedly placed, broke
+upon me in a moment. I’ll tell you
+just everything, exactly as it occurred.
+Mr Chesterfield was <em>$1</em>.
+Pledget, in discharge of his professional
+duty, was wholly occupied in
+attending upon him. The corporal,
+and, it was clear, the men also, looked
+to me for direction in our present fix.
+Gingham, when the corporal approached
+me, backed his horse. From
+many persons such an action might
+have gone for nothing. But Gingham
+had a reason for all he did; and, from
+him, it seemed to say, “Now, Mr
+Y—, take the management of this
+little business, and go through with it.
+Don’t you see, my dear sir? It has
+devolved upon you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“The men are ready, sir,” said
+Corporal Fraser; “shall we now
+proceed to clear the banks?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>It was evident I must direct, or
+nothing could be done. “Wait a
+minute, Fraser.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>I beckoned to the cavalry sergeant,
+and desired him to place a few of his
+men, with swords drawn, in the rear
+of the convoy, giving them strict directions
+to suffer no one to fall behind,
+mule or muleteer. He was then to
+divide the rest of our mounted force
+into two equal parties, under his two
+corporals, who, when the infantry advanced,
+were to descend along the top
+of the banks, and halt at its extremity.
+I then gave the word to Corporal
+Fraser to move forward at once
+with the infantry, and clear the underwood,
+but to halt where the cavalry
+halted, and by no means to go beyond.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Then, to prevent that,” said the
+corporal, “I will go first myself, sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>He dashed forward, and the infantry
+followed, with a shout. Thus we
+moved down to the extremity of the
+hollow road. The infantry led the way,
+gallantly headed by General Fraser,
+and dislodged some ten or a dozen
+fellows from the banks, who bolted
+successively, and cut away, making
+good their retreat to their own party
+below. This movement was not
+effected without some firing on both
+sides, but nobody was hurt on either.
+The cavalry, supporting the infantry,
+walked quietly down the two edges of
+the cutting: and I put the convoy in
+motion to follow. Mr Chesterfield
+now rallied for a few moments, and
+was eager to remount. But the faintness
+returned; it was evident he
+could neither ride nor walk; so he
+was brought down in Gingham’s cart,
+with every attention both from Gingham
+and Pledget.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>While we were thus moving down
+through the hollow, I heard, close behind,
+an angry shout from our dragoons
+on the banks above. Then followed
+three shots in quick succession, one from
+the underwood, on the side, two from
+the summit. A bullet whizzed by my
+head, and spat into the opposite bank.
+A rustling was then distinguishable
+among the bushes, and presently a
+peasant, in a blue gabardine, slid down
+stiff into the road, and there doubled
+up. Eluding Fraser and the foot
+soldiers, he had remained in ambush
+till we came along, when he had
+selected me for a passing compliment,
+as the head of the party, intending
+no doubt to climb up the bank, if
+pursued, and escape above. Just as
+he was taking aim, though, he was
+seen by the dragoons, who, unheard
+by him, were quietly moving down at
+a walk over the ploughed ground.
+Two of them fired their carbines, and
+one or both of their shots taking effect,
+prevented the effect of his.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Too green to know that it was unmilitary,
+I returned a few paces to
+take a view of the dying foe. A
+Frenchman to the last, he must needs
+find something to say, though life was
+now ebbing apace. Slowly, and with
+apparent difficulty, he raised his eyes
+till they were fixed full on mine; and
+then, with quivering features, and a
+strange snapping of the jaw, began to
+speak. “<i><span lang="fr">Ah, Monsieur —— j’ai
+pensé—vous.</span></i>”——He was dead!</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>We now gained the extremity of
+the hollow way, and stood looking
+down on the enemy ranged in order of
+battle at the pond. Fraser had drawn
+up the infantry across the road, and
+the cavalry, with the exception of the
+rearguard, formed on our two flanks.
+Our first movement was thus effected.
+All our men were perfectly steady,
+but burning to fall to, and savage on
+account of Mr Chesterfield’s casualty.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Gingham now suggested, as the
+enemy were so numerous—two hundred
+and fifty at least, if not three hundred—that
+it might be prudent to wait a
+while, in the hope that other parties,
+bound to headquarters, might come
+up. But I happened to know that
+none were coming that day; and
+Gingham, on hearing this, withdrew
+his motion. What, then, was our
+course? How were we to deal with
+these Mounseers? No doubt we could
+lick them; and, had fighting been our
+object, nothing would have given our
+men greater satisfaction. But we had
+dollars in charge, and our first care
+must be to get safe through, and
+deliver them safe at headquarters.
+My decision, then, was taken. We
+must advance—we must continue our
+march—and we mustn’t let those fellows
+hinder us; but we must, if possible,
+effect our purpose, without coming
+to close quarters. A mêlée we
+must shun; for, though the issue would
+be glorious—no doubt of that—yet, if
+once mixed up with our convoy, the
+enemy, when they took to flight,
+might persuade some of our mules to
+go with them. Our object, then, reduced
+itself to this: we must disperse
+the foe, without coming to close quarters
+with them. Gingham quite
+adopted this view of the subject, and
+now prepared for further operations by
+drawing his pistols from the holsters,
+and examining their priming. He
+next called to Coosey to get him his
+sword out of the cart, girded it on, and
+drew it forth from the scabbard—a
+formidable Andrea Ferrara, equally
+available for cut and thrust. He bore
+it bolt upright, with great gravity,
+and with an air half military, half
+civic, which, on his showy Spanish
+horse, would have rendered him a
+highly ornamental addition to a Lord
+Mayor’s procession.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>We were now immediately in front
+of the enemy; and I rode a few yards
+forward, to take a full view of their
+position, previous to our advance.
+They favoured me with a great deal
+of noise, and, on my turning, with a
+few shots, which I acknowledged by
+taking off my hat. Many of them returned
+the compliment; while others
+expressed their civility by a courteous
+gesture, vernacular in most civilised
+countries.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The enemy, it was clear, had no idea
+that we marched with a Nanny-goat in
+company, and had intended that we
+should walk into them unawares. In
+that case, we should probably have
+come off second best. As matters
+stood, our position was far more
+favourable: and theirs, less advantageous
+in the same degree. The worst
+of it was, though, that to the left of the
+main road—that is, on the enemy’s
+right—a wood came down to within
+two hundred yards of them; which
+same wood, further on, extended close
+up to the road we were to proceed by,
+and seemed to skirt it for some distance.
+The danger was that, when
+we attacked the enemy, and drove
+them before us, some of them, perhaps
+the greater number, might escape into
+this wood; in which case we might
+afterwards find it difficult to get rid of
+their agreeable company. These considerations,
+then, indicated the plan
+of our attack. I desired the sergeant
+of cavalry to select seven or eight of
+his steadiest men, and gain at once
+the skirts of the wood, at the point
+nearest the enemy. He was to advance
+at first as if intending to attack
+their right; but, when he got nearer,
+was to quicken his pace, and make at
+once for the wood. Immediately after,
+when he saw the general attack commence,
+his party, also, were to advance
+and fire; but not to advance so
+far that fugitives, escaping from the
+enemy’s rear, might be able to enter
+the wood. The infantry were to advance,
+firing, down the road; and the
+remainder of the cavalry was to spread
+out on our flanks, and act in concert
+with us: our whole party pressing
+more on the enemy’s right than left,
+in order that their retreat might be
+from the wood, not to it. These
+matters I explained distinctly. One
+other point remained.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Corporal Fraser, step this way.
+Your duty is the most responsible of
+any.” I knew it would be a bitter
+pill for the corporal, so endeavoured
+to gild it.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I am ready for any duty you may
+assign me, sir,” said the corporal,
+whose blood was up.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“You must take two or three of
+the infantry to the rear—we shall
+want all the cavalry—and see that no
+muleteer loiters behind, or falls out—bring
+all up.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“As you please, sir,” said Fraser;
+“but in action, the rear is not the
+place to which I have been most accustomed.”
+The poor fellow looked so
+dismally blank, I really felt for him.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Never mind that, corporal. Remember
+you have had your turn already,
+and have done well. Depend upon
+this,” I added, with a consolatory wink,
+“should there be any real business in
+front, though I don’t expect it, you, if
+possible, shall have your share.” The
+clouds were now dispelled from the
+corporal’s face, and he retired to his
+station in the rear.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Our preparations being thus completed,
+I forthwith sent forward the
+cavalry sergeant with his party, to
+gain the wood. The movement was
+well executed. They advanced steadily
+down upon the enemy’s right, without
+answering his fire; then turned suddenly
+to the left, and trotted off to the
+trees. Having reached the point assigned
+them, they pulled up, faced
+round, and formed in line. Immediately
+upon this commenced our general
+movement in advance, Fraser following
+the train of mules and muleteers,
+and “keeping them up behind.” Infantry
+and cavalry marched down to
+the attack; while both the contending
+armies maintained a brisk fusillade.
+As far as I then discovered, none of
+the enemy’s shots took effect, while
+some of ours appeared to tell. The
+foe stood his ground manfully at first;
+but, as we got closer, some of them
+began to run from the rear, and all
+soon joined in the flight. The retreat
+was as rapid as it was general; and
+we, as the convoy could not be left,
+abstained from pursuit. The cavalry
+advancing from the wood, though, got
+a little too forward. The consequence
+was that a few of the fugitives, running
+down the main road, attempted
+to escape into the wood. But a few
+carbine shots soon turned them back
+on the main body; and the whole
+mass then made their escape down the
+road to our right, which was just what
+I wanted. Long after we had ceased
+to fire, they continued to run, without
+stopping to look behind, alarmed probably
+by the apprehension of a cavalry
+pursuit. Half a mile off, in remarkably
+short time for the distance, I
+saw some of them, like a scattered
+flock of sheep, scampering up a hill,
+and disappearing over its summit.
+What execution was done by our fire,
+did not immediately appear. Some
+decamped slower than others; one or
+two were carried. Some made their
+escape through the pond; and of
+these, some fell over in the water, as
+if they had been hit. One fell, the
+men said, and didn’t get up again. A
+few of the enemy halted awhile to
+take a look, in their run down the
+cross-road, as if they would like to
+make an attempt on the extremity of
+our convoy, which probably appeared
+to them unprotected. But, receiving
+the fire of our rearguard, they again
+took to flight. We assembled at the
+pond, and there halted in a body, convoy
+and escort.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Mr Chesterfield had not yet recovered
+from the first shock of his
+wound; and was obliged to remain in
+the cart, unable to sit up. Gingham
+administered some brandy, with good
+effect. We had, however, one other
+wounded man. I noticed several of
+our fellows, horse and foot, assembled
+in a group, from which proceeded
+loud jeers, and shouts of laughter.
+There was something in the midst of
+them, the occasion of their mirth,
+which I could not see. Presently,
+however, I caught a sight of poor
+Jones, the picture of woe. He was
+standing in a posture very far from upright,
+and leaning with his elbows on
+the back of a spare mule—his aspect
+cadaverous. Advancing, I heard the
+talk.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Why, Taffy, old feller, how come
+ye to get hit there?” A roar of
+laughter drowned Jones’s indignant
+reply.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Taffy, my lad, why, I didn’t think
+you vos the chap as vould turn tail.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“It’s a lie,” roared Jones, in a voice
+of extreme agony and exasperation.
+“I didn’t turn tail; nor I haven’t not
+never turned tail. Only jest turned
+round to load, and felt all at wance
+jest as if somebody had bin and give
+me a kick——” A universal roar
+drowned the conclusion of the sentence.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Mr Pledget,” said I, “there seems
+to be here another case, soliciting your
+attention.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The men made way. Pledget advanced
+with great seriousness; and
+the laughter, though less vociferous,
+became tenfold in intensity, at the
+rich idea of Pledget’s investigating
+and doctoring Jones’s wound. Jones,
+at the sight of the doctor, in his alarm
+and anguish set up a regular hullabaloo,
+almost running into a cry. The
+doctor, regardless of Jones’s fears and
+lacerated feelings, began gravely to
+question him—made serious attempts
+and approaches to ascertain particulars.
+Two or three of the fellows,
+positively overcome with the scene,
+threw themselves down by the road-side
+in an agony. One, I really thought,
+would have laughed himself into a fit.
+He turned red, crimson, purple, almost
+black in the face; still, in his
+bursts, casting his eyes, from time to
+time, towards Jones and the doctor.
+Jones, leaning on the mule’s back,
+screwing and twisting first this way
+then that, evaded and defeated all
+the doctor’s approaches; while the
+men, taking a little extra freedom
+after our glorious victory, renewed
+their vociferous merriment. Pledget,
+at length, began to lose his patience.
+“Come, my good fellow,” said he;
+“this won’t do, you know.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>He then looked round at the soldiers,
+and made a sign. Four of them
+stepped forward, seized Jones by the
+arms and legs, and bore him off to the
+road-side—struggling, fighting, kicking,
+roaring, screeching, his agony increasing
+as he saw the moment at
+hand when he must be doctored.
+Pledget humanely pointed to some
+bushes close by, and the men carried
+Jones behind them. There the bullet
+was extracted at once. But how
+Pledget proceeded, or what was the
+precise character of the wound, of
+course we, who remained in the road,
+had no opportunity of perceiving. The
+progress of the operation, however,
+was marked by occasional shouts and
+yells from Jones; and in five minutes
+he hobbled forth with a rueful aspect,
+but looking “as well as could be expected.”
+Pledget almost immediately
+followed, and handed the bullet to
+Jones. “There, my man,” said he;
+“put that in your pocket.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>There still was something, though,
+upon Jones’s mind. He limped down
+to the edge of the pond with an eager,
+anxious look; and began prowling
+about, examining among the reeds and
+bushes, right and left.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Jones, hadn’t you better keep
+yourself quiet? Sit down, man.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Please, sir, if you’ve no objections,
+sir, I’m noways inclined to sit down
+jest at present, sir, ’cause it would be
+rayther ill-colvelielt, sir; rayther be
+excused, sir. Hope no offence, sir.”
+He continued on the prowl.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“What are you looking for, Jones?
+Lost any part of your kit?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Please, sir, I’m a-looking for that
+’ere Nosey, sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“What! the man that stood treat
+this morning? You don’t expect to
+find him here.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Please, sir, I see him here, sir; and
+I marked him too, sir. See him drop
+somewhere hereabouts, sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>This intelligence was “important,
+if true;” and I also began to look.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>There was nothing, however, on
+this part of the field of combat, to
+indicate that a wounded man had
+fallen. Jones, though, was positive.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Sure you were not mistaken,
+Jones?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“No, sir; it wasn’t no mistake,
+I’m sartain, sir. I’m sartain as I see
+him, and I’m sartain as I marked him,
+sir. Knowed him by his——Oh,
+there he is, sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Jones pointed to something in the
+pond that looked like a package or
+bundle, half immersed in the water, at
+the edge of the reeds, a little out from
+the side.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>A soldier stepped in, and examined
+more closely. “It’s a dead man, sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Dead! Get him out, that’s a good
+fellow. Perhaps he’s only wounded,
+and not past recovery.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“He’s past that, sir,” said the soldier,
+as he turned him, face upwards,
+on the bank.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The face had a mask of mud. The
+soldier knelt down, felt in the dead
+man’s pockets, brought out a white
+handkerchief of French cambric—wiped
+away the mud. Yes, it was
+Hookey! The features retained their
+general expression—harsh by temperament,
+but composed to blandness.
+Oh, what a look was that! Hookey
+shot through the neck! The brow
+was slightly knit; the lips were parted;
+the teeth clenched. His perpetual
+smile had set his face, at last, in a
+fixed, unmeaning smirk—the dead
+man’s simper! The two corners of
+his semicircular mouth, drawn up high
+on the cheeks, were flanked by two
+furrows, rigid and profound! It was
+the sort of look which, seen but for a
+moment, stamps on the memory an
+impression that we can recall at will,
+and that sometimes comes unbidden!</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Just hold up that handkerchief,
+my man. Spread it out, will you?
+Oh, there’s the mark—<em>$1</em>.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Any papers?” said I to Jones,
+who was rummaging in the dead man’s
+pockets.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Only this here, sir,” said Jones,
+holding up an envelope, which had
+been emptied of its contents. It was
+the cover of my letter, which Hookey
+had undertaken to deliver at headquarters.
+The letter itself he had probably
+sent in a different direction.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Jones, meanwhile, had found a
+leathern purse, which, without any
+remarks, he was quietly secreting about
+his own person. The soldier, though,
+who had landed the dead man, detected
+this act of conveyance, and
+demanded “snacks.” A discussion
+arose, and a squabble seemed inevitable.
+“Corporal Fraser,” said I,
+“just see all fair here.” I then turned
+Sancho’s head, and withdrew from
+the scene. Sancho had more than
+once brought down his nose, slowly
+and cautiously, into close proximity
+with the object that lay stretched out
+before him. He now, ere he obeyed
+the bridle, pawed, tossed his head,
+and snorted; as though fain to get rid
+of the very air that he had just been
+inhaling, and to blow out of his nostrils
+the smell of blood!</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Mr Chesterfield, now considerably
+recovered, stood by the cart, with his
+arm slung in a silk handkerchief. He
+thought he was able to sit his horse—at
+any rate, wished to try. Pledget
+objected—wanted him to come on in
+the cart. A discussion arose; and it
+was settled at last, that Pledget should
+mount the horse, while Mr Chesterfield
+rode Pledget’s mule. Gingham
+then gave directions to Coosey and
+Joaquim, who helped Jones into the
+cart. Coosey had already been won
+upon by Jones. But now, when Jones
+came out fresh from the field, with a
+memorial of the combat that would
+follow him to the day of his death,
+Coosey’s admiration knew no bounds.
+I saw him pass something to Joaquim,
+who took an early opportunity of passing
+it to Jones. “You don’t think,”
+said I to Gingham, “Coosey will give
+him more than will do him good?”—“No,
+no,” said Gingham; “you may
+depend on Coosey’s discretion.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>It was time to be getting on again.
+First, however, Mr Chesterfield deemed
+it advisable to see all right respecting
+the wood. For this purpose, he sent
+forward Corporal Fraser with part of
+the infantry. After they entered the
+wood, we heard a single shot. In
+about ten minutes the whole party
+returned, the Corporal riding a clumsy
+French cart-horse, with a rope bridle.
+They had found a horse and cart.
+The shot was fired to bring up the
+driver, who had, however, got off.
+The object of the horse and cart was
+pretty evident. It no doubt had occurred
+to Hookey that, in case of his
+making a successful foray, and securing
+part of our dollars, such a conveyance
+might do good service in carrying
+off the “swag.” There was no
+convenient way of getting the cart to
+us out of the wood; it appeared to
+have been brought from another direction;
+so Fraser had taken out the
+horse, which he considered his own
+lawful prize. All being now arranged,
+we proceeded on our march.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Jones rode on in the cart. He lay
+along at full length; not on his back,
+though, but in the opposite position,
+which he preferred under existing circumstances.
+I observed him—like a
+recumbent bull-terrier, with muzzle
+protruding from his kennel—keenly
+watching as we proceeded—now forwards,
+now right, now left, looking
+out for the <em>$1</em>, and eager to have
+another slap at a Frenchman.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>With regard to the enemy’s position,
+it will probably occur to the military
+reader, that they might have
+chosen a better. A more skilful opponent,
+probably, would have concealed
+himself in the forest, and
+attacked us in flank; and a bolder
+one might have ventured to occupy
+the hollow way with all his forces—a
+plan which, if detected, would have
+been attended with greater risk to
+himself, but, if successful, with greater
+damage to us. As it was, the ambuscade
+was too far in front of the
+main body, and we were able to deal
+with it before we were further engaged.
+Still, I think, it must be
+admitted, on the whole, the arrangements
+of the enemy were not badly
+made. Had we not kept a good look-out—or
+rather, had not our four-legged
+attendant providentially put us on
+our guard—we might not have discovered
+our opponents till it was too
+late to avoid a conflict at close quarters,
+the probable consequence of
+which would have been the loss of
+some of our mules; while the crossroads
+afforded facilities for driving
+them off, with the choice of four directions.
+And, some of their party being
+concealed in the two banks between
+which we had to pass, we might have
+discovered an enemy at hand only by
+finding ourselves under fire. On the
+whole, we had reason to be thankful
+that our loss was so small.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>With regard to our fallen opponent,
+Hookey or Christophe, in lately turning
+over Colonel Gurwood’s volumes,
+I met with something which appears,
+curiously enough, to identify him.
+In a letter from our Commander-in-Chief,
+bearing date 2d January 1814,
+that is, two or three months before
+our rencontre, I find that a person,
+calling himself Christophe, had been
+arrested and sent to General Freyre,
+to be forwarded to Madrid; that, in
+the November previous, this Christophe
+was at Bilbao; that he had letters
+from King Ferdinand; that he
+showed a draft or order on the Biscayan
+Provinces to pay him seventy
+thousand dollars; that he was advised
+to present himself to the Government;
+and that, as the opinion entertained of
+him was not very favourable, and he
+remained at St Jean de Luz, he was
+at length arrested, and sent off.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Now, I am not prepared to assert
+that this was the same individual
+with my Christophe or Hookey; but,
+supposing it so, we may give some
+such sketch of his services as the following.
+In the early part of 1813,
+the period of my voyage from Falmouth
+to Lisbon, the French authorities
+in Spain, civil and military, were
+not a little perplexed as to our Commander’s
+plans for the ensuing campaign.
+This mystery he solved ere
+long, by breaking forth from the
+north of Portugal, advancing on the
+line of the Douro, marching across the
+north of Spain, winning the battle of
+Vittoria, investing San Sebastian and
+Pampeluna, liberating the Peninsula,
+crowning the Pyrenees, completing
+the great circle that was closing round
+Napoleon, and menacing the south of
+France. Precisely when we may
+suppose the curiosity of the Gallic
+leaders to have been most intense,
+that is, in the early spring of 1813,
+just previous to Lord Wellington’s
+advance, Hookey—Christophe, said
+his cambric handkerchief—came off
+to us in the Oporto boat, and, under
+the assumed character of a courier,
+obtained a passage by the Falmouth
+packet from Oporto to Lisbon—in
+other words, from the left to the right
+of the position then occupied by the
+British troops. Subsequently, a
+Christophe makes his appearance at
+Bilbao, in the November of the same
+year; and, on account of his suspicious
+conduct there, and afterwards at
+headquarters, is arrested, and delivered
+over to the Spaniards, for transmission
+to Madrid. The Spaniards,
+of course, let him escape; and he then
+returns to his old trade. He cannot,
+however, appear again at headquarters,
+therefore hangs about the line
+of march on the look-out for a job;
+falls in with a greenhorn in charge of
+treasure; gets out of him all the information
+he can; tries to divert him
+from his route; tampers with his personal
+attendant; opposes his passage
+of a river; makes his escort drunk;
+and musters a rural force, with the
+aid of which he hopes to realise more
+by ready cash, than he did by his
+cheque on the “Biscayan provinces.”
+Thus he went on, prying, plotting,
+and meddling, till he found his
+end.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>We proceeded quietly on our march,
+Gingham and I riding side by side,
+while Pledget and Mr Chesterfield
+preceded us.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Yes,” said Gingham, resuming
+the thread of our conversation where
+our rencontre with the enemy had
+broken it off; “I know that you have
+formed schemes connected with military
+service; and those, I presume,
+are the plans you allude to.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>I really did not understand, at the
+moment, what Gingham meant; and,
+fancying he referred to our recent
+operations in the presence of the foe,
+answered wide of the mark.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“No, no,” said he; “I was not
+speaking, sir, with regard to the little
+affair which has just come off; though,
+give me leave to say, Mr Y—, you
+acquitted yourself in a way that does
+you credit. I allude to what fell from
+you within the last hour, when you
+mentioned some plans that you had
+formed, and which, you were kind
+enough to say, you would communicate
+for my information.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>We now resumed the conversation,
+which the “little affair” had interrupted.
+I stated my plans, hopes,
+difficulties, without reserve; and
+Gingham, in reply, from his own
+knowledge and observations, drew,
+with equal force and feeling, a not
+very agreeable picture of the discouragements,
+disappointments, toils,
+hardships, sufferings, privations,
+wrongs, and snubbings, incidental
+to the life of a marching officer on
+actual service. He was still eloquently
+descanting on these topics,
+when we reached the termination of
+our day’s journey.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_560'>560</span>
+ <h2 class='c002'>GERMAN POPULAR PROPHECIES.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>LETTER FROM PROFESSOR GREGORY TO THE EDITOR.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><span class='sc'>Dear Sir</span>,—The following notice of certain popular prophetic traditions,
+widely current in the country to which they refer, may perhaps prove interesting
+to your numerous readers.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>All widely-spread opinions, however apparently absurd, have, or have had
+at some time, a foundation in nature or in historical fact; and it cannot be
+uninteresting, with a view to the history of popular traditions, to place on
+record those which I have here collected, even although we cannot at present
+trace them satisfactorily to their origin. The whole subject of trances, and
+the various phenomena connected with them, including the second sight, is
+one hitherto very imperfectly studied, and for that reason I have not entered
+into detail on that part of the question; but I may possibly do so at a future
+period.—Believe me, very truly yours,</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r c024'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><span class='sc'>William Gregory.</span></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='sc'>Edinburgh</span>, <em>$1</em>.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is well known that in all ages,
+and in most countries, prophetic traditions
+have been said to exist; and
+although it may often have happened
+that such traditions have arisen from
+spurious prophecies, written after the
+event, and falsely said to have existed
+before it, yet it would also appear
+that genuine prophecies have from
+time to time appeared, and become
+traditions before the events took
+place. Of course, we do not here
+allude to the Scriptural prophecies,
+but to such as have no pretensions to
+a divine origin. There can be little
+doubt that the Sybilline Books contained
+prophecies of the future fate of
+Rome; and although we cannot now
+ascertain, even if this were the case,
+whether they were accurate predictions,
+or merely sagacious guesses,
+nor whether the event confirmed them,
+yet the tradition of their existence is
+in itself curious. We cannot here
+enter into an enumeration of the various
+prophecies which are said to have
+existed, in ancient or modern times,
+before the events occurred, but on
+some future occasion we may return
+to that subject: in the mean time
+we may allude, as a modern example
+of popular prophecy in our own
+country, to the prediction of the extinction
+of the male line of the house
+of Seaforth, in the person of a deaf
+Caberfae—a prediction which Mr
+Morritt of Rokeby, the friend of Scott,
+heard quoted in Ross-shire at a time
+when the last Lord Seaforth, who became
+quite deaf, had several sons in
+perfect health. We have no doubt
+our Highland readers are acquainted
+with many analogous cases.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Our present object is to direct attention
+to the fact, that in Germany,
+more especially on the Rhine and in
+Westphalia, there exist many remarkable
+popular prophecies concerning
+public events, of various dates, and
+originating in various quarters, but
+exhibiting a remarkable coincidence
+in many of the chief points. Many of
+these have been printed at various
+times; others exist as traditions
+among the peasantry; others, again,
+are said upon good evidence to
+have been in modern times taken
+down from the lips of the prophets
+themselves, all or most of whom are
+now dead. Yet they generally predict,
+and often with strange minuteness
+of detail, events which were to
+occur about this time,—viz. in 1848,
+1849, and 1850. Political and religious
+convulsions, wars, and finally
+peace and prosperity, form the burden
+of them; and we shall see that the
+events of 1848 and 1849 supply apparently
+strong confirmation of their
+truth, their previous existence being
+admitted.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Having spent some months in
+Rhenish Prussia during the summer
+of 1849, we made many inquiries on
+the subject, and found everywhere,
+and among all classes, a firm conviction
+of the <em>$1</em> of many of the
+popular prophecies; while it was admitted
+that they had long been known
+and believed by the people. As the
+matter, considered under any point of
+view, is a curious and interesting one,
+we procured the latest work on the
+subject, which in fact appeared while
+we were in Germany. It is entitled,
+“Prophetic Voices, with Explanations.
+A collection as perfect as possible,
+of all Prophecies, of Ancient
+and Modern date, concerning the
+Present and Future Times, with an
+explanation of the obscure parts,” by
+Th. Beykirch, licentiate in Theology,
+and (R.C.) curate in Dortmund. The
+worthy Curate is often too brief in his
+accounts of the prophecies themselves,
+and very diffuse in his explanations,
+which, for the most part, tend to extract
+from the predictions the comfortable
+assurance of the complete reestablishment
+of the Roman Catholic
+religion, and the utter discomfiture of
+Protestantism. He even treats his
+readers to a disquisition, altogether
+out of place, on Scriptural prophecies,
+and an interpretation, by Holzhaüser,
+of the Apocalypse, in which he applies
+to Protestantism the same passages
+which Protestants apply to the
+Papacy, and does so, apparently, very
+much to his own satisfaction. We
+shall not touch on these parts of his
+work, but use it as a storehouse, from
+which we may draw the predictions
+themselves, without regarding them
+through the theological medium of
+the reverend author.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The first we shall mention is of an
+ancient date. It is the vaticination
+of Brother Herrmann, a monk of the
+monastery of Lehnin, who flourished
+circa <span class='fss'>A.D.</span> 1270, and died in the odour
+of sanctity. It is written in a hundred
+leonine hexameters, rhyming in the
+middle and end of each verse, and was
+printed in 1723 by Professor Lilienthal,
+from what was said to be an old
+MS. His prophecies chiefly concerned
+the future fate of his own monastery
+of Lehnin in Brandenburg, and
+of the monastery of Chorin in the
+Uckermark, a part of Brandenburg.
+But as that fate depended on public
+events, more especially on the history
+of the princes of that country, his
+vaticination assumes the form of a
+brief prophetic history of the house of
+Hohenzollern, that is, the now royal
+house of Prussia. Our readers will
+probably readily dispense with the
+whole of the original hexameters of the
+good monk, but we shall give a few
+specimens: he begins—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>1. <span lang="la">“Nunc tibi, cum cura, Lehnin!
+cano fata futura,</span></p>
+
+<p class='c015'>2. <span lang="la">Quæ mihi monstravit Dominus, qui
+cuncta creavit,” &#38;c.</span></p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Now, oh Lehnin! I sing with sorrow
+to thee thy future fates,</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Which the Lord, the creator of all, has
+shown to me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He proceeds to describe the prosperity
+of Lehnin under the race of
+Otto I., and its decay after the extinction
+of this family, which took
+place in the person of Henry III.,
+1320. These princes were from
+Anhalt, of the race called the Askanier
+in German history.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>At verses 14 <em>$1</em>, he describes
+Brandenburg as becoming a den of
+lions, while the true heir is excluded.
+After Margrave Henry III., the
+Dukes of Pomerania, Mecklenburg,
+Brunswick, Anhalt, Electoral Saxony,
+and Bohemia attacked the Mark,
+(Brandenburg,) and committed horrible
+devastations. The Emperor
+Louis of Bavaria seized it for himself,
+excluding the princes of Saxony, the
+nearest heirs to the former princes.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>After various details concerning
+the fate of Brandenburg, plundered by
+robber knights and barons, who were
+to be put down by a strong emperor,
+as happened under Charles IV. who
+died in 1378,—he comes to the accession
+of the Hohenzollerns, and describes
+the first prince of that family
+as rising to distinction by holding two
+castles or Burgen. The Emperor
+Sigismund sold Brandenburg to
+Frederick, Burggraf of Nuremberg, of
+the house of Hohenzollern. He belonged
+to the lower nobility, but now
+became more important by the possession
+of two castles—those of
+Nuremberg and Brandenburg. These
+examples are sufficient to give an idea
+of that part of Brother Herrmann’s
+prophecy, concerning events which
+preceded the printing of it in 1723,
+and in which he describes <em>$1</em>,
+without giving the names, and very
+briefly, but in striking language, the
+fate and character of the successive
+Margraves, Electors, and Kings, till
+he comes to Frederick William I.,
+who died in 1740, seventeen years
+after the prophecy was printed, and
+whose character and death he describes.
+Then follows Frederick the
+Great, whose career, with its vicissitudes,
+is indicated with tolerable
+clearness. One line is curious,</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>84. “<span lang="la">Flantibus hinc Austris, vitam
+vult credere claustris.</span>”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“When the south wind blows, he trusts
+his life to the cloisters.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In fact, Frederick, when hard
+pressed by the Austrians, was once
+compelled to conceal himself in a
+monastery.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><em>$1</em> signifies south wind, but is
+probably here used for Austria.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>After his successor, Frederick William
+II., whom the good monk truly
+describes as vicious, sensual, and oppressive,
+but not warlike, comes this
+line—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>89. “<span lang="la">Natus florebit; quod non sperasset
+habebit.</span>”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“The son shall flourish; he shall possess
+what he did not hope for.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The application of this to the late
+king, Frederick William III., is obvious.
+Under him, Prussia, after
+having been reduced to the lowest
+ebb by Napoleon, became, unexpectedly,
+far more powerful than it had
+ever been.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>90. “<span lang="la">Sed populus tristis flebit temporibus
+istis.</span></p>
+
+<p class='c015'>92. “<span lang="la">Et princeps nescit quod nova
+potentia crescit.</span>”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“But the sad people shall mourn in
+these times;</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“And the King knows not that a new
+power is arising.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>These lines also apply well to
+Frederick William III.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>93. “<span lang="la">Tandem sceptra gerit, qui ultimus
+stemmatis erit.</span>”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“At length he bears the sceptres, who
+shall be the last of his race.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now this is very remarkable. In
+line 49, he had said—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>49. “<span lang="la">Hoc ad undenum durabit stemma
+venenum.</span>”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“This poison<a id='r2'></a><a href='#f2' class='c018'><sup>[2]</sup></a> shall last to the eleventh
+generation.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The present king, Frederick William
+IV., is the eleventh from Joachim
+III., the first Protestant prince of
+Brandenburg, in reference to whom
+the above line is written. But why
+did the writer (even supposing the
+prophecy not to have existed earlier
+than 1723, when it was printed) stop
+at this point? We shall see that
+other prophecies coincide with this
+one in predicting that the present
+will be the last King of Prussia.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Then comes the remarkable line—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>95. “<span lang="la">Et pastor gregem recipit, Germania
+regem.</span>”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“And the shepherd receives his flock,
+Germany a king.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The worthy curate of Dortmund
+explains this as pointing out the submission
+of Europe to the Pope, and of
+Germany to one sovereign. Brother
+Herrmann goes on to predict peaceful
+times, and the restoration of Chorin
+and Lehnin to their pristine splendour.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>We have omitted many curious
+lines, but the reader will probably
+feel satisfied that the brief and obscure
+vaticinations of Brother Herrmann
+are worthy of notice, especially that
+part of them relating to the last
+hundred and twenty years, bearing in
+mind that they were printed in 1723.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The next prophet mentioned by our
+author is Joseph von Görres, who
+died in January 1848—that is, before
+the last revolution in France, which
+shook the thrones of Europe. On
+his deathbed he lamented the misfortunes
+about to come on Poland, described
+Hungary as appearing to him
+one huge field of carnage, and wept
+over the approaching downfall of the
+European monarchies. The events
+of February and March 1848, the insurrection
+in Posen, the devastations
+committed by the Prussians in suppressing
+it, and the war in Hungary,
+would appear to be the events to
+which he referred. But he was a
+man deeply read in history, and there
+are some of those prophetic hints
+which may possibly have occurred to
+him as reflections on probable events,
+and have assumed a certain degree of
+vividness in his mind.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>We now come to a peasant prophet,
+namely Jaspers, a Westphalian shepherd,
+of Deininghausen, near the
+ancestral seat of the Lord of Bodelschwing.
+He was a simple-minded
+pious man. In 1830, soon after which
+time he died, he publicly predicted as
+follows:—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“A great road (said he) will be carried
+through our country, from west to east,
+which will pass through the forests of
+Bodelschwing. On this road, carriages
+will run <em>$1</em>, and cause a
+dreadful noise. At the commencement
+of this work, a great scarcity will here
+prevail; pigs will become very dear, and
+a new religion will arise, in which wickedness
+will be regarded as prudence and
+politeness. Before this road is quite completed,
+a frightful war will break out.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>These words, to the astonishment
+of the natives, have nearly all been
+fulfilled. The railway from Cologne
+to Minden has, since his death, been
+carried through the very district he
+mentioned in 1830, before the first
+English railway had been opened,
+and when the primitive shepherds of
+Westphalia were little likely to know
+anything about railways. The scarcity
+took place at the time specified;
+and his remark as to a new religion
+is supposed to apply to a deterioration
+of manners among the simple
+natives, consequent on the opening
+up of their district. A personal
+friend of Jaspers collected the following
+sayings, which the author, after
+minute inquiry on the spot, considers
+as genuine.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>1. “Before the great road is <em>$1</em>, a dreadful war will break out.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The railway has for a year or two
+been in operation; but, up to the
+end of 1849, as we saw by advertisements,
+the second line of rails was
+not laid down. It is probably still
+only in progress. Now in 1848 and
+1849, we have seen war in Schleswig-Holstein,
+Hungary, Italy, Posen, and
+Baden.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>2. “A small northern power will be
+conqueror.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Probably the Danish war, and the
+success of Denmark, is here meant.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>3. “After this another war will break out—not
+a religious war among Christians,
+but between those who believe in Christ
+and those who do not believe.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Here we must remember that the
+simple and ignorant peasants of Westphalia
+have strong religious feelings
+and prejudices, and are apt, like some
+nearer home, to apply the term Infidel
+somewhat rashly. Possibly
+Russia and the Greek church may be
+here alluded to.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>4. “This war comes from the East. I
+dread the East.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>5. “This war will break out very suddenly.
+In the evening they will cry
+‘Peace, peace!’ and yet peace is not;
+and in the morning the enemy will be at
+the door. Yet it shall soon pass, and he
+who knows of a good hiding-place, for a
+a few days only, is secure.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The probability of a war, in which
+Russia shall take an active share, cannot
+escape any observer of the signs
+of the times; and, with the aid of
+railways, which were not known at
+the date of Jaspers’ death, the sudden
+outbreak is quite possible, even in
+Westphalia.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>6. “The defeated enemy will have to
+fly in extreme haste. Let the people
+cast cart and wheels into the water,
+otherwise the flying foe will take all
+carriages with them.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>7. “Before this war, a general faithlessness
+will prevail. Men will give out
+vice for virtue and honour, deceit for
+politeness.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>8. “In the year in which the great
+war shall break out, there shall be so fine
+a spring, that in April the cows will be
+feeding in the meadows on luxuriant
+grass. In the same year, wheat may be
+harvested, (in his district,) but not oats.”
+(This appears to be likely to apply to
+1850.—W. G.)</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He seems here to hint that the harvest
+of oats will be interrupted by the
+war; if so, the war occurs in autumn.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>9. “The great battle will be fought <em>$1</em>, between Unna, Hamm, and
+Werl. The people of half the world will
+there be opposed to each other. God will
+terrify the enemy by a dreadful storm.
+Of the <em>$1</em>, but few shall return
+home to tell of their defeat. Jaspers
+described this battle as terrific.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We shall by and by hear more of
+this birch-tree.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>10. “The war will be over in 1850, and
+in 1852 all will be again in order.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>11. “The Poles are at first put down;
+but they will, along with other nations,
+fight against their oppressors, and at
+last obtain a king of their own.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>12. “France will be divided internally
+into three parts.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is curious to notice, that at present,
+although the state of matters in
+1830 was very different, there are
+three parties in France, all of them
+powerful: namely, the Buonapartists,
+(with at least a part of the Orleanists,)
+and the moderate as well as the <i><span lang="fr">pro
+tempore</span></i> Republicans, headed by Louis
+Napoleon; the party of the old Bourbons
+and the priests, led by Falloux
+and the old nobility, such as Larochejaquelein
+and Montalembert; and
+lastly the Red Republicans, Socialists,
+and Communists. These three parties
+hold each other in check, and no one
+of them can at this moment do much.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>13. “Spain will not join in the war.
+But the Spaniards shall come after it is
+over, and take possession of the churches.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>14. “Austria will be fortunate, provided
+she do not wait too long.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>15. “The papal chair will be vacant
+for a time.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>16. “The nobility is much depressed,
+but in 1852 again rises to some extent.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>17. “When asked as to the future of
+Prussia, he maintained an obstinate
+silence, saying only that King Frederick William
+IV. would be the last.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This agrees with Brother Herrmann,
+as formerly stated. A man named
+Pottgiesser, in Dortmund, long since
+dead, drew up a genealogical tree of
+the royal house, in which he says of
+the present king—to whom he gives
+no successor—“He disappears.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>18. “There will be one religion. On
+the Rhine stands a church which all
+people shall aid in building. From
+thence, after the war, shall proceed the
+rule of faith. All sects shall be united;
+only the Jews shall retain their old obstinacy.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The dome at Cologne is obviously
+alluded to. We shall see, hereafter,
+that Cologne is expected to become
+the seat of ecclesiastical rule by other
+prophets.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>19. “In our district priests shall become
+so rare, that, after the war, people
+will have to walk seven leagues in order
+to attend divine service.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>20. “Our country will be so much depopulated,
+that women will have to cultivate
+the soil; and seven girls shall
+fight for a pair of inexpressibles.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>21. “The house of Ikern shall be set
+on fire by shells.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>22. “The soldiers shall march to battle
+(or to war) first, then return, decked
+with the cherry blossoms. And only after
+that shall the great war break out.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In spring 1848, troops marched to
+Baden, at the time of the first insurrection
+there, in which war General
+von Gagern was killed; and they
+returned home decked with cherry
+blossoms.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>23. “Germany shall have one king,
+and then shall come happy times.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>24. “He spoke also of an approaching
+religious change, and warned his children,
+when that time should come, to go to
+Mengede.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>When jeered on his prophetic
+powers, Jaspers often said—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“When I have long been in the grave,
+you will then often remember what I
+have said.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There is a prophet in Dortmund,
+who, among other curious things, said,
+in 1840, “When the Prussian soldiers
+shall be dressed like those who
+crucified our Lord, then war shall
+break out with great violence.” It is
+worthy of notice that, since that time,
+the whole Prussian army, with the
+exception of the Hussars, have been
+armed with helmets of Roman form.
+Their new Waffenrock, or military
+coat, is also a short plain surtout,
+buttoned to the throat, and probably
+not unlike a Roman tunic.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The predictions of Jaspers are curious—first,
+on account of their minuteness;
+secondly, because they specify
+dates yet future. We shall see that
+they coincide, in many of the chief
+points, with other popular prophecies.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The next prophet is Spielbähn,
+a Rhenish peasant. “Spielbähn” signifies,
+in the dialect of his countrymen,
+“the fiddler;” and this name was given
+to him on account of his skill as a rustic
+performer on the violin. He was employed
+as messenger and servant in
+the convents of Siegburg and Heisterbach.
+His predictions have been published
+by Schrattenholz, and widely
+circulated; but, as we could not
+procure this work, we can only
+give such extracts as our author has
+selected.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Spielbähn died in 1783 in Cologne.
+He is said to have been rather addicted
+to the wine-flask, and to have
+occasionally indulged in predictions of
+doubtful authenticity, possibly from
+interested motives. But he is thought,
+in the main, to have uttered what he
+really believed to be true predictions,
+and he gave them out as visions. He
+predicted the imprisonment of the
+Archbishop of Cologne, which took
+place a few years ago, with many less
+interesting local occurrences, which
+our author passes over. Speaking of
+the present time, (1848–50,) and of
+what should follow, he said—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>1. “In that time it will be hardly possible
+to distinguish the peasant from the
+noble.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In Rhenish Prussia, where the Code
+Napoleon prevails, there is hardly a
+trace of the splendour of the old aristocracy
+to be found. The nobles of
+old family who remain have lost all
+exclusive privileges, and are poor.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>2. “Courtly manners and worldly vanity
+will reach to a height hitherto unequalled.
+Yea, things will go so far, that
+men will no longer thank God for their
+daily bread.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>3. “Human intellect will do wonders,
+(or miracles,) and on this account men
+will more and more forget God. They
+will mock at God, thinking themselves
+omnipotent, because of the carriages,
+which shall run through the whole world,
+(or everywhere,) without being drawn by
+animals.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>4. “And because courtly vices, sensuality,
+and sumptuousness of apparel, are
+then so great, God will punish the world.
+A poison shall fall on the fields, and a
+great famine shall afflict the country.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In Nos. 3 and 4, railways and the
+potato blight seem meant.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>5. “When a bridge shall be thrown
+across the Rhine at Mondorf, then it will
+be advisable to cross, as soon as possible,
+to the opposite shore. But it will only be
+necessary to remain there so long as a
+man will take to consume a 7 lb. loaf of
+bread; after which (that is, in less than a
+week,) it will be time to return.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This coincides with Jaspers’ prediction
+of the shortness of the last
+great struggle.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>6. “Thousands shall conceal themselves
+in a meadow among the seven mountains,
+(opposite Bonn.)</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>7. “I see the destruction of the heretics,
+with dreadful punishments; of those
+who dared to think their puny minds
+could penetrate the councils of God. But
+the long-suffering of God is at an end,
+and a limit is put to their wickedness.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The worthy curate dwells with peculiar
+satisfaction on this prediction.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>8. “Observe well, thou land of Berg!
+Thy reigning family, which proceeds from
+a Margraviate, shall suddenly fall from
+its high station, and become less than the
+smallest Margraviate.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The grand-duchy of Berg, on the
+Lower Rhine, of which Düsseldorf is
+the chief town, was given by Napoleon
+to Murat, and was afterwards
+part of the kingdom of Westphalia,
+but, since the peace, has formed part
+of Prussia, the royal family of which,
+as we have seen, descends from the
+Margraves of Brandenburg; but in
+1783 all this was as yet in the womb
+of time. See also Jaspers, No. 17,
+and Brother Herrmann, verse 93.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>9. “The false prophets (heretic clergy?)
+shall be killed with wife and child.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>10. “The holy city of Cologne shall
+then see a fearful battle. Many, of foreign
+nations, shall here be killed, and men and
+women shall fight for their faith. And
+it will be impossible to avert from Cologne,
+up to that time spared by war, all
+the cruel extremities of war. Men will
+then wade in blood to the ankles.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>11. “But at last a foreign king shall
+arise, and gain the victory for the good
+cause. The survivors of the defeated
+enemy fly to the <em>$1</em>; and here shall
+the last battle be fought for the good
+cause.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>See Nos. 9 and 33 of Jaspers’ sayings,
+as to the birch-tree and the German
+king; also verse 95 of Brother
+Herrmann.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>12. “The foreign armies have brought
+the ‘black death’ into the land. What
+the sword spares the pestilence shall devour.
+Berg shall be depopulated, and
+the fields without owners; so that one
+may plough from the river Sieg up to the
+hills without being (Scoticè) challenged.
+Those who have hid themselves among
+the hills shall again cultivate the land.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>See No. 20 of Jaspers’ predictions.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>13. “About this time France will be
+divided internally.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>See Jaspers, No. 12.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>14. “The German Empire shall choose
+a peasant for Emperor. He shall govern
+Germany a year and a day.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The Archduke John, late regent of the
+empire, had long lived, banished from
+court, as a Styrian peasant, adopting
+the costume and manners of the peasantry.
+He also married a peasant
+girl. His regency lasted little more
+than a year, and, indeed, after the
+year had expired, he only returned to
+Frankfort in order to resign his power
+to the present commission.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>15. “But he who after him shall wear
+the imperial crown, he will be the man
+for whom the world has long looked with
+hope. He shall be called Roman Emperor,
+and shall give peace to the world.
+He shall restore Siegburg and Heisterbach,
+(two convents, above mentioned.)</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>16. “Then shall there be no more Jews
+in Germany, and the heretics shall beat
+their own breasts.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>17. “And after that shall be a good
+happy time. The praise of God shall
+dwell on earth; and there shall be no
+war, except beyond the seas. Then shall
+the fugitive brethren return, and dwell in
+their homes in peace for ever and ever.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Men should heed well what I have said,
+for much evil may be averted by prayer;
+and although people jeer me, saying I
+am a simple fiddler, yet the time will
+come when they shall find my words
+true.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>See Jaspers’ predictions, Nos. 18
+and 23. Brother Herrman, also, in
+verses 96–100, prophesies happy times,
+and the restoration of the convents of
+Chorin and Lehnin.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The next seer is Anton (Anthony),
+called the Youth of Elsen, a village
+near Paderborn, in Westphalia. He
+had the gift of the “second sight”—that
+is, he saw visions—and has a
+great reputation in that country as
+a true seer. His predictions were first
+collected by Dr Kutscheit, from whose
+work the author extracts as follows.
+The date is not given by our curate.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>1. “When the convent of Abdinghof is
+occupied by soldiers, armed with long
+poles, to which little flags are attached,
+and when these troops leave the convent,
+then is the time near.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>At this time (1849) Prussian lancers
+occupy the convent, which has been
+converted into a barrack. This was
+not the case when the prediction was
+made.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>2. “From Neuhaus, houses may be
+seen on the Bock, (Buck,) and a village is
+founded between Paderborn and Elsen.
+Then is the time near.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The Bock is a wooded eminence
+near Paderborn, where an inn was
+built. To obtain a fine view from the
+inn, the wood was lately cut through,
+and thus the buildings have become
+visible from Neuhaus. The village
+or <em>$1</em> is a newly-founded country
+house, or rather farm-house, with its
+appurtenances—<em>$1</em>, a town.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>3. “When people see, in the Roman
+field, houses with large windows; when
+a broad road is made through that field,
+which shall not be finished till the good
+times come, then shall come heavy
+times.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the Roman field, on the high road
+to Erwitte, the Thuringian Railway
+was begun in 1847, and a terminus,
+the buildings of which have very large
+windows, has been laid down on the
+spot. The works have been, from the
+necessity of the times, suspended for
+the present. See Jaspers, No. 1, and
+Spielbähn, No. 3.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>4. “When barley is sown on the Bock,
+then is the time close at hand. Then
+shall the enemy be in the land, and kill
+and devastate everything. Men will
+have to go seven leagues to find an acquaintance.
+The town of Paderborn
+shall have eight heavy days, during which
+the enemy lies there. On the last day,
+the enemy shall give up the town to plunder.
+But let every man carry his most
+valuable property from the ground floor
+to the garret; for the enemy will not have
+time, even to untie his shoestrings, so near
+will succour be.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the summer of 1848, the first
+attempt was made to grow barley on
+the Bock, a cold, high-lying district.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>5. “The enemy will try to bombard
+the town from the Liboriberg, (a hill
+close to Paderborn); but only one ball
+(or shell) shall hit, and set on fire a house
+in the Kampe. The fire, however, shall
+soon be extinguished.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>6. “The French shall come as friends.
+French cavalry with shining breastplates
+(cuirassiers) shall ride in at the Westergate,
+and tie their horses to the trees in
+the Cathedral close. At the Giersthor,
+(another gate) soldiers with gray uniforms,
+faced with light blue, shall come
+in. But they will only look into the
+town, and then immediately withdraw.
+On the Bock stands a great army, with
+double insignia, (or marks—possibly the
+two cockades, Imperial German and
+Prussian, now worn by the Prussians,)
+whose muskets are piled in heaps.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>7. “The enemy shall fly towards Salzkotten,
+and towards the heath. In both
+places a great battle shall be fought, so
+that people shall wade in blood to the
+ankles. The pursuers from the town
+must take care not to cross the Alme
+bridge; for not one of those who cross it
+shall return alive.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>8. “The victorious prince shall enter,
+in solemn procession, the castle of Neuhaus,
+which shall be repaired (for the
+occasion?) accompanied by many people
+with green boughs in their hats. On the
+Johannes Bridge, before Neuhaus, there
+shall be such a crowd that a child shall
+be crushed to death. While this goes on
+a great assembly shall be held in and
+before the Rathhaus (Town House.)
+They shall hurry (or drag) a man down
+from the Rathhaus, and hang him on a
+lamp-post before it.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>9. “When all these things shall have
+come to pass, then shall there be a good
+time in the land. The convent (of Abdinghof)
+shall be restored; and it will be
+better to be a swineherd here, in our
+land, than a noble yonder in Prussia
+(proper).”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Next comes an old traditionary
+prophecy concerning Münster.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Woe to thee, Münster! Woe to you,
+priests, doctors, and lawyers! How shall
+it be with you in the days of sorrow?</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“For three days they shall go up and
+down thy streets. Three times shall the
+city be taken and lost.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Let every man keep in the garret;
+thus shall he be safe. A dreadful fire
+shall break out in and destroy Ueberwasser,
+so that it may be seen from the
+cathedral place to the castle.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“The enemy shall be beaten, and shall
+fly through Kinderhaus so fast that they
+leave their cannon on the street. All this
+shall happen in the same year in which
+an illustrious person dies in the castle.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“The conquering prince shall make his
+entry through the Servatii-Thor, (a gate).”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Part of this prophecy has been spread
+over the district of Münster for sixty
+years; part of it comes from the tailor
+at Kinderhaus, who also prophesied
+much to Blucher. He was one of
+the seers, or, as they are called
+in that country, “Spoikenkikers.”
+“Spoikenkikers,” in high German, signifies
+ghost or spirit; “Spoikenkikers” is our Scotch
+word “Keeker,”—in high German,
+“Spoikenkikers.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The next is an old prophecy concerning
+Osnabrück.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Osnabrück shall suffer much for fourteen
+days, and see a bloody contest in her
+streets.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Even the service of the Greek Church
+shall be performed in the churches of
+Osnabrück.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This is quite possible, should Russians
+enter Westphalia. See Jaspers, No. 9.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“A violent contest shall arise between
+Catholics and Protestants. All the
+churches shall be again taken possession
+of by the Catholics.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“A priest, in the act of carrying the
+most Holy (the Host) into the Lutheran
+Church, shall be killed by a ball at the
+church door.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The three preceding prophecies are
+very remarkable, from the minute details
+which they contain, and which
+seem to indicate that the seers described
+<em>$1</em> in visions or in
+dreams. Of course, most of these
+visions, referring to events yet future,
+cannot be at present verified. But
+the signs given by Anton, to know
+when the time approaches, have come
+to pass.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The following traditionary prophecy
+about Cologne, was found by Magister
+Heinrich von Judden, pastor of the
+small church of St Martin, in the convent
+of the brethren of the Holy Virgin
+of Carmel, (in Cologne?):—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“O happy Cologne! when thou art
+well paved, thou shalt perish in thine
+own blood. O, Cologne! thou shalt
+perish like Sodom and Gomorrha; thy
+streets shall flow with blood, and thy
+relics shall be taken away. Woe to thee,
+Cologne! because strangers suck thy
+breasts and the breasts of thy poor,—of
+thy poor, who therefore languish in
+poverty and misery.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Old tradition concerning Coblenz:—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Woe! woe! Where Rhine and
+Moselle meet, a battle shall be fought
+against Turks and Baschkirs, (Russians?)
+so bloody, that the Rhine shall be dyed
+red for twenty-five leagues.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Traditions of battles in Westphalia:—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“A prodigious number of people shall
+come from the east towards the west.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“The whole west and south shall rise
+against them.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“The armies shall meet in the middle
+of Westphalia.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“A dreadful battle shall take place on
+the Strönheide, (a heath,) near Ahaus.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“At Riesenbeck, a bloody combat shall
+be fought.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“At Lüdinghausen,” said a seer, “I
+saw whole hosts of white-clad soldiers.
+(Austrians?)</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Ottmarsbocholt will have much to
+suffer.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“On the Lipperheide (a heath) a bloody
+battle is fought.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Also in Rittberg, and the whole
+country round, a battle shall be fought.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“But the chief engagement shall be <em>$1</em>.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Every one, says the author, who
+takes the trouble, can hear all this
+from the mouths of the peasantry. In
+many places, the seers have even
+described the positions of the troops,
+and the direction in which the cannon
+are pointed.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Prophecy of a Capuchin monk in
+Düsseldorf, of date 1672:—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“After a dreadful war (Napoleon’s
+wars?) shall there be peace; yet there
+shall be no peace, because the contest of
+the poor against the rich, and of the rich
+against the poor, shall break out.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“After this peace shall come a heavy
+time. The people shall have no longer
+truth nor faith.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“When women know not, from pride
+and luxuriousness, what clothes they shall
+wear—sometimes short, sometimes long,
+sometimes narrow, sometimes wide; when
+men also change their dress, and wear
+everywhere the beards of the Capuchins,<a id='r3'></a><a href='#f3' class='c018'><sup>[3]</sup></a>
+then will God chastise the world. A
+dreadful war shall break out in the south
+(Hungary?) and spread eastward and
+northward. The kings shall be killed.
+Savage hordes shall overflow Germany,
+and come to the Rhine. They shall take
+delight in murdering and burning, so that
+mothers, in despair, seeing death everywhere
+before their eyes, shall cast themselves
+and their sucklings into the water.
+When the need is greatest, a preserver
+shall come from the south. He shall defeat
+the hordes of the enemy, and make
+Germany prosperous. But, in those days,
+many parts shall be so depopulated, that
+it will be necessary to climb a tree to
+look for people afar off.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>An old prophecy concerning the
+battle of the <em>$1</em>:—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“A time shall come when the world
+shall be godless. The people will strive
+to be independent of king or magistrate,
+subjects will be unfaithful to their princes.
+Neither truth nor faith prevails more. It
+will then come to a general insurrection,
+in which father shall fight against son,
+and son against father. In that time,
+men shall try to pervert the articles of
+faith, and shall introduce new books.
+The Catholic religion shall be hard
+pressed, and men will try with cunning to
+abolish it. Men shall love play and jest,
+and pleasure of all kinds, at that time.
+But then it shall not be long before a
+change occurs. A frightful war shall
+break out. On one side shall stand
+Russia, Sweden, and the whole north;
+on the other, France, Spain, Italy, and
+the whole south, under a powerful prince.
+This prince shall come from the south.
+He wears a white coat, with buttons all
+the way down. He has a cross on his
+breast, rides a gray horse, which he
+mounts from his left side, because he is
+lame of one foot. He will bring peace.
+Great is his severity, for he will put down
+all dance-music and rich attire. He will
+hear morning mass in the church at Bremen.
+(According to some traditions, he
+will read mass.) From Bremen he rides
+to the Haar, (a height near Werl;) from
+thence he looks with his spyglass towards
+the country of the Birch-Tree, and observes
+the enemy. Next, he rides past
+Holtum, (a village near Werl.) At
+Holtum stands a crucifix between two
+lime-trees; before this, he kneels and
+prays with outstretched arms, for some
+time. Then he leads his soldiers, clad in
+white, into the battle, and, after a bloody
+contest, he remains victorious.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“The chief slaughter will take place at
+a brook which runs from west to east.
+Woe! woe! to Budberg and Söndern in
+those days! The victorious leader shall
+assemble the people after the battle, and
+address to them a speech in the church.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>So runs the above prophecy, according
+to the concurring testimony of
+many peasants of that country. It
+was long ago printed in a small pamphlet,
+in the convent at Werl. But, at
+the removal of the convent, all its
+books were lost or destroyed. The
+tradition, however, remained among
+the peasantry, and has even penetrated
+into France; for when French
+(troops?) came to Werl, they inquired
+for the Birch-Tree. In Pomerania
+also, natives of Westphalia, when
+quartered there, have been questioned
+about its position. It stood long between
+Holtum and Kirch-Hemmerde,
+villages lying between Unna and
+Werl. When it withered, a new one
+was, by royal order, planted on the
+spot. This proves that the Government
+knew of the prophecy or tradition,
+and felt an interest in it. The
+people believe so firmly in the prophecy,
+that the peasantry near Werl
+even opposed the introduction of new
+hymn-books, under the impression
+that they were the predicted <em>$1</em>. Bremen, Holtum, Budberg,
+and Söndern are villages near Werl.
+A crucifix stands at Holtum between
+two young lime-trees; and a brook
+there flows from west to east.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Another old prophecy of the battle
+of the Birch-Tree. This prophecy was
+printed at Cologne in 1701, in Latin.
+The title, translated, is as follows:—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“A prophecy concerning the frightful
+contest between South and North, and a
+terrific battle on the borders of the duchy
+of Westphalia, near Bodberg, (Budberg.)
+From a book, entitled, A treatise on the
+heavenly regeneration (or restoration,) by
+an anonymous author, illuminated (or enlightened,)
+by visions. With permission of
+the Officialate at Werl. Cologne, 1701.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It was translated and printed in
+German by the monks of Werl, but,
+as already stated, their library was
+destroyed or dispersed.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“After these days shall dawn the sad
+unhappy time, predicted by our Lord.
+Men, in terror on the earth, shall faint
+for expectation of the coming events.
+The father shall be against the son and
+the brother against the brother. Truth
+and faith shall no longer be found. After
+the nations, singly, have long warred
+against each other, after thrones have
+crumbled, and kingdoms been overthrown,
+shall the entire South take arms against
+the North. (Auster contra Aquilonem.)
+Then country, language, and faith shall
+not be contended for, but they shall fight
+for the rule of the world.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“They shall meet in the middle of
+Germany, destroy towns and villages,
+after the inhabitants have been compelled
+to fly to the hills and the woods. This
+dreadful contest shall be decided in Lower
+Germany. There the armies shall pitch
+camps, such as the world has not yet
+seen. This fearful engagement shall begin
+<em>$1</em> near Bodberg. Woe!
+woe! poor Fatherland! They shall
+fight three whole days. Even when
+covered with wounds, they shall mangle
+each other, and wade in blood to the
+ankles. The bearded people of the seven
+stars (?) shall finally conquer, and their
+enemies shall fly; they shall turn at the
+bank of the river, and again fight with
+the extremity of despair. But there shall
+that power be annihilated, and its strength
+broken, so that hardly a few will be left,
+to tell of this unheard-of defeat. The
+inhabitants of the allied places shall
+mourn, but the Lord shall comfort them,
+and they shall say, It is the Lord’s doing.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The two preceding prophecies, both
+old, and printed long since, have
+probably a common origin, whatever
+that may be. The tradition has probably
+come to the people from the
+monks of Werl.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Some predictions or visions, connected
+with the prophecy of Werl:—</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>A seer, named Rölink, of Steinen,
+who has been dead some time, prophesied
+of three processions in Kirch-Hemmerde.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“The first shall be a funeral procession.
+The names of several men shall be
+hung up on the church.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This happened when, in the war of
+1813–15, some brave men of this
+district fell in battle.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“The second procession shall go from
+the old church to the new one.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This took place when the Catholics
+of Kirch-Hemmerde built a new
+church; and the Host was carried
+from the Simultankirche into the new
+edifice.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“The third shall be after a dreadful
+war. Then shall Catholics and Protestants
+again go together in procession into
+the old church, and have one religion.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He said further,—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“When two towers are built between
+Söndern and Werl, then shall a frightful
+war soon break out.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The towers are now there, having
+been lately built. One is a chimney
+for the Salt-Works; the other a
+Bohrthurm, (a tower over the pit
+whence the salt spring is pumped up.)</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Another seer, named Ludolf, saw
+the whole order of battle of both
+armies, and pointed out in a corn-field
+near Kirch-Hemmerde the spot, near
+the <em>$1</em>, where he saw in his
+vision a colonel fall from his horse,
+struck by a ball. The horse, he said,
+would run to a sheaf of oats, (therefore
+late in autumn,) snap at it, and in the
+same moment fall, also pierced by a
+shot.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>A third seer, Hermann Kappelmann,
+of Scheidingen, near Werl, prophesied
+as follows, thirty years ago
+(1819,) before a whole company.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“The times are yet good, but they shall
+change much. After many years a frightful
+war shall break out. The signs shall
+be: When in Spring the cowslips appear
+early in the hedges, and disturbances prevail
+everywhere; in that year the explosion
+does not take place. But when,
+after a short winter, the cowslips bloom
+very early, and all appears quiet, let no
+man believe in peace.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“When great wisps of straw stand on
+the Bärenwiese, (Bear’s meadow,) then
+shall the war break out.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The Bärenwiese is a large common
+meadow at Scheidingen. Soon after
+the French and Polish revolutions of
+1830 it was divided, and on that
+account wisps of straw were set up.
+The people believed the great war was
+then at hand. Now there are once
+more wisps of straw set up, to mark
+the line of the railway to Cassel,
+which is in progress.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“When you then hear cannon from the
+side of Münster, then hasten to cross the
+Ruhr, and take bread (a loaf) with you
+sufficient for three days. He who only
+puts his foot in the water shall be safe
+from harm. Then you may return, but
+whether you shall find your posts (or
+poles) again, I cannot say. (Probably
+marks of agricultural subdivisions.) After
+a short contest shall follow peace and
+quiet. The peace shall be announced at
+Christmas from all the pulpits.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Numberless traditions speak of the
+burning of the town of Unna, round
+which, and not through it, the armies
+will march, on account of the conflagration.
+Others speak of the burning
+of Dortmund, on the east side.
+Others, again, describe how the remains
+of the enemy fly to Erwitte
+and Salzkotten, and are there totally
+cut to pieces. All the towns and
+villages from Paderborn to the Rhine
+have similar traditions. There is a
+very old one concerning the Marienheide,
+(a heath,)—namely, that there
+the Whites shall drive the Blues
+before them, and through the Lippe,
+in which many shall be drowned.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Traditions concerning the years
+1846–1850:—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“1846, I would not be a vine.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“1847, I would not be an apple-tree.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“1848, I would not be a king.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“1849, I would not be a hare, a soldier,
+or a gravedigger.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“1850, I would not be a priest.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In 1846, the crop of grapes was too
+heavy for the vines.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>In 1847, the apple-trees broke
+under the weight of their fruit.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>In 1848, as we know, kings were
+at a discount.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>In 1849, the hares suffered from
+the suspension or abolition of the
+game laws in Germany; the soldiers
+had much to suffer; and the gravediggers,
+in consequence of war and
+cholera, were overwhelmed with work
+in many places.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>As to the priests in 1850, we heard
+from several quarters, of an old
+prophecy that there shall be a fearful
+massacre of priests, against whom the
+people shall be much embittered.
+One seer declares, that such will be
+the hatred of the peasantry towards
+the priests, that a peasant, sitting
+down to dinner with his family, and
+having just stuck a fork into the
+fowl, shall, on seeing a priest pass by
+the house, lay down his fork, rush
+out, beat out the priest’s brains with
+his club, and then return to his meal
+with satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Another tradition, of which we
+heard from several well-informed
+persons, states that a pope shall come
+as a fugitive to reside at Cologne,
+with four cardinals, and there exercise
+his ecclesiastical functions.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>A prophecy, of date 1622, concerning
+certain months of a year not
+named.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“The month of May shall earnestly
+prepare for war. But it is not yet time.
+June shall also invite to war, but still it
+is not time. July will prove so cruel,
+that many must part from wife and
+child. In August, men shall everywhere
+hear of war. September and October
+shall bring great bloodshed. Wonders
+shall be seen in November. At this
+time the child is twenty-eight years old,
+(the powerful monarch) whose wet nurse
+shall be from the east. He shall do
+great things.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Prophecies of the “Powerful Monarch:”—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>One prophet says,—“He shall be of
+an ancient noble house, and descend
+from the top of the rocks. His mother
+shall be a twin. He will be Emperor
+of the Holy Roman Empire, (the German
+Empire.) Holzhaüser says, ‘He shall
+be born in the bosom of the Catholic
+Church;’ his name shall be, ‘The Help of
+God.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>See the preceding prophecies, <em>$1</em>.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>We have now given a sufficient
+sketch of some of the more curious
+and definite popular German prophecies.
+The curate of Dortmund
+adds a considerable number of others,
+more vague, mystical, and in some
+cases theological, which we omit, as not
+adapted to our present purpose; and
+others not bearing on Germany, of some
+interest—especially a long one concerning
+Italy, by the Franciscan monk,
+Bartolomeo da Saluzzi—which want
+of space prevents us from discussing
+at this time.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Let us now consider the foregoing
+prophecies in general. We must
+admit, as it seems to us, that there
+exist in Germany unfulfilled popular
+prophecies, the authenticity of which
+is respectably attested and generally
+admitted.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>We further observe, that, taking the
+whole of them, as far as known to us,
+we can trace the following points pervading
+the entire series, more or less:—</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>1. A great war after a peace, about
+this time.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>2. It is preceded by political convulsions,
+and lesser wars.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>3. The East and North fight against
+the South and West.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>4. The latter finally prevail, under
+a powerful prince, who unexpectedly
+rises up.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>5. The great struggle is short, and
+occurs late in the year.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>6. It is decided by the battle of the
+Birch-Tree, near Werl.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>7. After horrible devastations, and
+murders, and burnings, caused by this
+war, peace and prosperity return.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>8. Priests are massacred and become
+very rare; but</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>9. One religion unites all men.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>10. All this takes place soon after
+the introduction of railways into
+Germany.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>11. The present King of Prussia is
+the last.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>12. The “powerful prince” from
+the South becomes Emperor of Germany.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>13. France is, about this time, inwardly
+divided.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>14. The Russians come as enemies
+to the Rhine, the French enter Germany
+as friends—without entering
+into further details.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>We see moreover, that, admitting
+the genuineness of the prophecies,
+partial fulfilment has in several cases
+taken place. Here it must be noted,
+that our curate has chiefly confined
+himself to the unfulfilled parts, and
+has avowedly omitted many fulfilled
+predictions. While we attach considerable
+importance to the general
+impression among the people of the
+truth of these prophecies, which in
+part depends on their partial fulfilment
+in past times, our chief object has
+been to put on record the more remarkable
+of the unfulfilled predictions,
+in order that they may be compared
+with future events.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>If we seek to form any idea of the
+origin of these prophecies, we find
+that there are three sources, from
+which the people may have derived
+the traditions.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>1. They may possibly be, in some
+cases at least, derived from the reflections
+of sagacious men. Even Napoleon
+predicted dreadful wars, and that
+Europe must become either Cossack
+or Republican. But although some
+things may thus be explained, we do
+not see how the minute details, in
+other cases, can be thus accounted for.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>2. Scriptural prophecies may have
+been applied to modern events, which,
+indeed, are no doubt foretold in
+them, in a general way. We cannot
+avoid observing the tolerably frequent
+occurrence of Scripture language in
+the predictions; but this also does
+not account for all the details.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>3. The seers or prophets may have
+had genuine visions, or dreams, in
+which they saw what they describe;
+it has been seen that various prophets
+use language implying this. And,
+while the general resemblance of the
+different visions naturally leads us to
+suspect that the popular traditions
+have a common origin; we can at
+most conclude from this, that the
+original seer or seers lived long ago,
+which only increases the difficulty.
+They were probably, like Brother
+Herrmann, monks and ascetics, their
+imaginations exalted by religious
+fervour: in other words they were
+nervous and excitable, and predisposed
+to visions. Supposing their
+visions known to the people, the feeling
+of the marvellous, if excited along
+with religious sentiments, may have
+led to visions or second sight among
+the peasantry, and thus visions may
+have been multiplied and expanded
+in details.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>If we reflect on the many known
+instances of prophetic dreams,
+and on the alleged and respectably
+attested cases of somnambulistic
+prevision, we shall see reason to hesitate
+before we deny the possibility of
+the occurrence, in certain individuals,
+of prophetic visions. We are far
+from imagining that, if such have been
+the case with our German seers, they
+have enjoyed direct communications
+from Heaven; on the contrary, were
+we satisfied of the fact, we should
+regard it as a phenomenon depending
+on some obscure physical cause,
+which may in time be discovered and
+traced; and which, at all events,
+exists by Divine permission.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Here we may allude to the remarkable
+prophecy of Monsieur de Cazotte,
+who, some years previous to 1787,
+predicted to a large company of persons
+of rank, science, and literature,
+with much detail, the atrocities of the
+Reign of Terror. He likewise told
+many of those present, both male and
+female, that they should perish on
+the guillotine. To Condorcet he
+said, that he should die in prison, of
+the effects of a poison which he
+should long, with the view of escaping
+a public execution, have carried about
+his person—which happened. He
+also predicted the fate of Louis XVI.
+and his Queen. This prophecy caused
+much amazement, and soon became
+known. Persons are yet alive, both
+in France and England, who heard it
+detailed before 1789. We have seen
+one of them. Now, it might be said,
+that Cazotte merely exercised a rare
+sagacity, in judging of the course of
+events, at a time when all France
+was enthusiastically looking forward
+to the blessings of liberty, and while
+yet no one dreamed of violence or
+bloodshed. But this would hardly
+account for the details he gave. On
+the other hand, he often uttered predictions;
+and it is very remarkable,
+although it has been too much overlooked,
+that those who report his prophecies,
+including the above one,
+always state that, when about to predict,
+he fell into a peculiar state, <em>$1</em>—yet not ordinary sleep. It can
+hardly be doubted that this was a
+trance, in which he saw visions.
+That they were fulfilled to the letter
+is surely, if only a coincidence, a
+most wonderful one. If, again, it was
+merely the result of sagacious reflection,
+how came it that Cazotte alone,
+of all the able thinkers then in Paris,
+made these reflections, and was
+laughed at for his pains?</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The laborious, minute, and conscientious
+researches of the Baron von
+Reichenbach have proved, beyond a
+doubt, that we are far from being
+acquainted with all the physical influences
+which surround us; and he has
+even referred to a physical cause—<em>$1</em>
+source of the belief in ghosts—by
+proving that luminous appearances
+are visible, to sensitive persons, over
+recent graves. No one can fail to
+see the resemblance between the Sensitives
+of Baron von Reichenbach,
+who are far from rare, and the Spoikenkiker,
+or ghost seers, of the curate
+of Dortmund.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>We consider it probable, therefore,
+that at different periods seers have
+had visions, more or less distinct and
+detailed, of what appeared to their
+minds likely to happen; that these
+visions have occurred in a state of
+trance; that among ascetic monks,
+who may be regarded as liable to such
+trances, it may often have happened
+that extensive knowledge of history
+and of mankind has enabled them to
+foresee the probable course of events;
+that their predictions, becoming known
+to the peasantry, have given a tone
+to <em>$1</em> visions, in which the events
+are generally localised in the immediate
+vicinity of the seer; and that
+thus, by degrees, more detailed predictions
+have arisen. Considering
+the general ignorance and superstition
+of the peasantry in all countries, it is
+not wonderful that such predictions,
+generally bearing on violent political
+convulsions, war, and religion, the
+subjects most interesting to their
+minds, should acquire a hold over
+them such as is found to exist in
+many parts of Germany, in reference
+to the prophecies above described. It
+is even probable that the existence of
+the predictions may have had a considerable
+influence in preparing the
+people for such sudden outbreaks as
+those of 1848, and may thus, in some
+measure, have contributed to their
+own fulfilment.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>We must admit that these remarks
+do not much assist in explaining the
+occurrence of minute details in these
+predictions, many of which are said,
+on good authority, to have been fulfilled.
+But we do not feel ourselves
+in possession of sufficient evidence to
+justify us in arguing on the alleged
+fulfilment as certain; and we have
+therefore satisfied ourselves with laying
+before the reader a brief sketch of
+these predictions, the existence of
+which, as an article of belief with
+many thousands of people at this day,
+is, under whatever point of view it
+may be considered, very interesting.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>W. G.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_573'>573</span>
+ <h2 class='c002'>THE HISTORY OF A REGIMENT DURING THE RUSSIAN CAMPAIGN.<a id='r4'></a><a href='#f4' class='c018'><sup>[4]</sup></a></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>The Russian Campaign of Napoleon
+is unquestionably the most wonderful
+episode in the history of war.
+We are not only interested, but
+astounded, by its study. It comprises
+a series of events gigantic and unparalleled
+in the annals of human strife.
+From the note of preparation to the
+final wail of despair, the reader’s imagination
+is continually on the stretch
+to realise and comprehend the prodigious
+scale of its circumstances. At
+the word of the great military magician,
+half-a-million of men, levied from
+half Europe, mustered in arms for
+aggression. From France they came,
+from Italy and Poland: Austria and
+Prussia dared not refuse their contingents;
+Illyria and Dalmatia sent forth
+their infantry; to their astonishment
+and dismay, Spanish and Portuguese
+battalions were marched into the
+dreary north under the banners of the
+man against whose generals their brothers
+and fathers were at that moment
+contending on the mountains of their
+native peninsula. The West was
+arrayed against the East. Since the
+birth of discipline and civilisation,
+such an army had never been seen.
+The events of its first and only campaign
+were in proportion to its unprecedented
+magnitude. In six months
+the mighty armament returned, a
+shattered wreck, having fought the most
+desperate battle the world ever saw,
+having witnessed the self-destruction
+of a vast and wealthy capital—suicide
+for the country’s salvation—and having
+endured sufferings which may have
+been equalled on a smaller scale, but
+which certainly never before or since
+fell to the lot of so numerous and
+powerful a host.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>After reading that delightful work
+of Count Ségur, which combines the
+fascination of a romance with the
+value of history, few persons much
+care to consult any other French
+account of the great campaign. It
+was with something of this feeling,
+and with slender expectation of interest,
+that we opened General de Fezensac’s
+recently-published Journal. But
+its perusal agreeably disappointed us.
+Narratives of personal adventure have
+a peculiar charm; and the unadorned
+tale of a soldier’s hazards will often
+rivet the attention of those who would
+not persevere through the more copious
+and important history of a great
+war. M. de Fezensac has not attempted
+the history of the campaign.
+He confines himself to his own adventures
+and those of the regiment he
+commanded. At most does he include
+in his delineations the exploits of the
+3d (Ney’s) corps, (to which his regiment
+belonged,) at the time when
+cold, famine, fatigue, and the sword
+had reduced it to little more than the
+ordinary strength of a brigade, and,
+subsequently, to a mere handful of
+jaded, frost-bitten warriors. By a few
+lines here and there, he supplies, with
+true military brevity, that outline of
+the operations necessary to connect
+and complete the interest of his journal.
+He avoids controversy; he is
+slow to censure acts or impute motives;
+his style is remarkably free from that
+fanfarronade into which many French
+writers unconsciously run when recording
+the military achievements of
+their countrymen. He tells only what
+he himself saw, and he tells it modestly
+and well, without attempt at rhetorical
+adornment; rightly believing that
+the events he witnessed and shared in
+are sufficiently remarkable to need no
+factitious colouring.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>M. de Fezensac commenced the
+campaign upon the staff. In the capacity
+of aide-de-camp to Berthier, he
+joined the headquarters of the Grand
+Army at Posen, and marched with
+them to Wilna. It was in the month
+of June. Already, although the campaign
+had been opened but a few days,
+during which the Russians had everywhere
+receded before the invaders,
+certain ominous circumstances contradicted,
+to observant eyes and reflecting
+minds, those anticipations of
+triumphant success so confidently and
+universally entertained, a few short
+weeks before, at Dresden. The fervent
+heat was succeeded by torrents
+of rain; mortality amongst the horses
+commenced; the army, living upon
+the country, suffered from want of
+food and forage; already the number
+of stragglers was great, and acts of
+pillage and violence were frequent.
+As an instance of these, when the Poles,
+with Napoleon’s approval, organised
+a civil government of Lithuania, one
+of the sub-prefects, repairing to his
+post, was plundered by the French
+soldiers, and arrived almost naked in
+the town he was sent to preside over.
+The French Emperor’s seventeen days’
+halt at Wilna, so severely censured by
+historians, gave M. de Fezensac opportunity
+to observe the details and
+composition of the monstrous staff
+and retinue that attended Napoleon,
+of which he furnishes the following
+curious account:—</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“The Emperor had around him the
+grand marshal, (Duroc,) the master
+of the horse, (Caulaincourt,) his aides-de-camp,
+his orderly officers, the
+aides-de-camp of his aides-de-camp,
+and several secretaries attached to his
+cabinet. The major-general (Berthier)
+had eight or ten aides-de-camp, and
+the number of clerks necessary for the
+great amount of work occasioned by
+such an army; the general staff, composed
+of a vast number of officers of
+all grades, was commanded by General
+Monthion. The administration,
+directed by Count Dumas, intendant-general,
+was subdivided into the administrative
+service properly so called,
+comprising directors, inspectors of reviews,
+and commissaries; the service
+of health, including physicians, surgeons,
+and apothecaries; the service
+of provisions in all its branches, and
+workmen of every kind. When the
+Prince of Neuchatel passed it in review
+at Wilna, it looked, from a distance,
+like a body of troops ranged in order
+of battle, and, by an unfortunate
+fatality, notwithstanding the zeal and
+talents of the intendant-general, this
+immense administration was almost
+useless from the very commencement
+of the campaign, and became noxious
+at its close. Let the reader now picture
+to himself the assemblage, at one
+point, of the whole of this staff; let
+him fancy the prodigious number of
+servants, of led horses, of baggage of
+all kinds that it dragged along with it,
+and he will have some idea of the spectacle
+presented by the headquarters
+of the army. Also, when a movement
+was made, the Emperor took with him
+but a very small number of officers;
+all the rest set out beforehand, or followed
+behind. At a bivouac, the
+only tents were for the Emperor and
+the Prince of Neuchatel; the generals
+and other officers slept in the open air,
+like the rest of the army.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“There was nothing irksome in
+our duty as aides-de-camp to the
+major-general.... In his personal
+intercourse with us, the Prince of Neuchatel
+exhibited that mixture of goodness
+and roughness which composed
+his character. Often he appeared to
+pay no attention to us, but, upon
+occasion, we were sure to find his
+sympathy; and during the whole of
+his long military career, he neglected
+the advancement of none of the officers
+employed under his orders. The best
+house in the town, after that taken
+for the Emperor, was allotted for his
+accommodation; and as he himself
+always lodged with the Emperor, the
+house belonged to his aides-de-camp.
+One of these was charged with the
+household details, whose regularity
+was a pattern; the Prince of Neuchatel
+himself, in the midst of all his occupations,
+found time to give his thoughts
+to these matters; he wished his aides-de-camp
+to want for nothing, and had
+often the goodness to inquire whether
+such was the case.... We saw
+little of him, having no duty to do
+under his immediate eye; he passed
+almost the whole day in his cabinet,
+dispatching orders agreeably with the
+Emperor’s instructions. Never was
+there seen greater exactness, more
+complete submission, more absolute
+devotion. It was by writing during
+the night that he reposed from the
+fatigues of the day; often he was
+roused from his sleep to alter all
+that he had done on the previous
+day, and sometimes his sole recompense
+was an unjust, or, at least, a
+very severe reprimand. But nothing
+slackened his zeal; no amount of
+bodily fatigue, or of assiduity in the
+cabinet, exceeded his powers; no
+trials wearied his patience. In short,
+if the Prince of Neuchatel’s position
+never gave him an opportunity to
+develop the talents essential to the
+commander-in-chief of great armies,
+it is at least impossible to unite, in a
+higher degree, the physical and moral
+qualities adapted to the post he filled
+near such a man as the Emperor.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The peculiar talents of Berthier,
+his patience, industry, and wonderful
+habit of order, have been often admitted,
+but we do not remember to
+have seen his character placed in so
+amiable a light as here by his former
+aide-de-camp. M. de Fezensac continued
+upon his staff until after the
+battle of Borodino, when he was promoted
+by the Emperor, on Berthier’s
+recommendation, to the command of
+the 4th regiment of the line, vacant
+by its colonel’s death in that murderous
+fight. He was doubly grateful
+for this promotion, because it placed
+him under the orders of Marshal Ney,
+with whom he had served some years
+previously. As to the regiment itself,
+it was in no very flourishing state.
+Of 2800 men who had crossed the
+Rhine, 900 remained, so that the
+four battalions formed but two upon
+parade. The equipments, and especially
+the shoes, were in bad repair;
+supplies of provisions were irregular;
+and constant change of place was indispensable,
+for the troops ravaged
+within twenty-four hours the country
+they traversed. The majority of the
+officers were raw youths from the
+military schools, or old sergeants,
+whose want of education should have
+retained them in the ranks, but who
+had been promoted to sustain emulation,
+and to fill the enormous gaps
+occasioned by destructive campaigns.
+For the 4th was an old regiment,
+formed in the first years of the Revolution,
+and had fought through all
+the German wars, and numbered Joseph
+Buonaparte amongst its colonels.
+Its present shattered and unprosperous
+condition extended to the whole
+of Ney’s corps, which was reduced to
+a third of its original numbers. The
+losses were unparalleled, and so was
+the depression of the soldiers. Their
+gaiety had disappeared; a mournful
+silence replaced the songs and
+pleasant tales with which they formerly
+beguiled the fatigues of the
+march. The officers themselves were
+uneasy; they served for duty and for
+honour’s sake, but without ardour or
+pleasure. After a victory that opened
+the road to Moscow, this universal
+discouragement was strangely ominous.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>With his regimental command commences
+the interesting portion of M.
+de Fezensac’s journal, of which his staff
+experience occupies but a couple of
+chapters. Often as it has been described,
+he yet contrives to give freshness
+to his details of Moscow’s appearance
+after the terrible conflagration,
+at whose flame was sealed the
+doom of the Grand Army.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“It was both a strange and a horrible
+spectacle. Some houses appeared
+to have been razed; of others, fragments
+of smoke-blackened walls remained;
+ruins of all kinds encumbered
+the streets; everywhere was a horrible
+smell of burning. Here and there a
+cottage, a church, a palace, stood erect
+amidst the general destruction. The
+churches especially, by their many-coloured
+domes, by the richness and
+variety of their construction, recalled
+the former opulence of Moscow. In
+them had taken refuge most of the
+inhabitants, driven by our soldiers
+from the houses the fire had spared.
+The unhappy wretches, clothed in
+rags, and wandering like ghosts amid
+the ruins, had recourse to the saddest
+expedients to prolong their miserable
+existence. They sought and devoured
+the scanty vegetables remaining in
+the gardens; they tore the flesh from
+the animals that lay dead in the
+streets; some even plunged into the
+river for corn the Russians had thrown
+there, and which was now in a state
+of fermentation.... It was with
+the greatest difficulty we procured black
+bread and beer; meat began to be
+very scarce. We had to send strong
+detachments to seize oxen in the
+woods where the peasants had taken
+refuge, and often the detachments
+returned empty-handed. Such was
+the pretended abundance procured us
+by the pillage of the city. We had
+liquors, sugar, sweatmeats, and we
+wanted for meat and bread. We
+covered ourselves with furs, but were
+almost without clothes and shoes.
+With great store of diamonds, jewels,
+and every possible object of luxury,
+we were on the eve of dying of hunger.
+A large number of Russian soldiers
+wandered in the streets of Moscow.
+I had fifty of them seized; and
+a general, to whom I reported the
+capture, told me I might have had
+them shot, and that on all future occasions
+he authorised me to do so. I
+did not abuse the authorisation. It
+will be easily understood how many
+mishaps, how much disorder, characterised
+our stay in Moscow. Not an
+officer, not a soldier, but could tell
+strange anecdotes on this head. One
+of the most striking is that of a Russian
+whom a French officer found
+concealed in the ruins of a house;
+by signs he assured him of protection,
+and the Russian accompanied him.
+Soon, being obliged to carry an order,
+and seeing another officer pass at the
+head of a detachment, he transferred
+the individual to his charge, saying
+hastily—‘I recommend this gentleman
+to you.’ The second officer,
+misunderstanding the intention of the
+words and the tone in which they
+were pronounced, took the unfortunate
+Russian for an incendiary, and
+had him shot.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The retreat commenced. After the
+affair of Wiazma, Ney’s corps relieved
+the 1st corps as rearguard, and the
+4th regiment, rearmost of Ney’s corps,
+had to repel the repeated attacks of
+the Russian van and of the swarming
+Cossacks. They were hard pressed;
+but still the Emperor’s order was to
+march slowly and preserve the baggage.
+In vain Ney wrote to him
+there was no time to lose, and that he
+risked being anticipated by the Russians
+at Smolensko or Orcha. At
+Dorogobuje the marshal formed the
+design of arresting the progress of the
+Russians for a whole day; but the
+attempt was unsuccessful, and the
+French rearguard was driven onwards.
+The cold had set in, and the
+sufferings of the troops were terrible.
+Famine was superadded to their other
+miseries. The road resembled a
+battle-field. Some, with frozen limbs,
+lay dying on the snow; others fell
+asleep in the villages, and perished in
+the flames lighted by their comrades.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“At Dorogobuje I saw a soldier of
+my regiment, in whom hunger had
+produced the effect of intoxication.
+He stood close to us without recognising
+us, inquiring for his regiment,
+naming the soldiers of his company,
+and at the same time speaking to
+them as to strangers; his gait was tottering,
+his look wild. He disappeared
+at the commencement of the affair,
+and I saw him no more. In two days
+from Dorogobuje, we reached Slobpnowa,
+on the bank of the Dnieper.
+The road was so slippery that the ill-shod
+horses could hardly keep their
+legs. At night we bivouacked amidst
+the snow in the woods. Each regiment
+in turn formed the extreme
+rearguard, which the enemy unceasingly
+followed and harassed. The
+army continued to march so slowly,
+that we were on the point of overtaking
+the 1st corps, which immediately
+preceded us. The encumbrance on
+the bridge over the Dnieper was
+extreme: for a quarter of a league
+beyond, the road was still covered with
+abandoned carriages and ammunition-waggons.
+On the morning of the
+10th November, before crossing the
+river, measures were taken to clear
+the bridge and burn all these vehicles.
+In them were found a few bottles of
+rum, which were of great service. I
+was on the rearguard, and during the
+whole morning my regiment defended
+the road leading to the bridge. The
+wood through which this road passes
+was full of wounded whom we were
+obliged to leave to their fate, and
+whom the Cossacks massacred almost
+by our sides. M. Rouchat, sub-lieutenant,
+having imprudently approached
+an ammunition-cart that was to
+be blown up, was shattered to pieces
+by the explosion. Towards night the
+troops passed the Dnieper; the bridge
+was destroyed.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>It was important to delay the
+enemy’s passage of the river, and Ney
+prepared to do so.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“That night he walked for a long
+time in front of my regiment with
+General Joubert and myself. He
+pointed out to us the unfortunate
+results of the failure at Dorogobuje.
+The enemy had gained a day’s march;
+had forced us to abandon ammunition,
+baggage, wounded: all these misfortunes
+would have been avoided had
+we held Dorogobuje for twenty-four
+hours. General Joubert spoke of the
+weakness of the troops, of their discouragement.
+The marshal replied
+quickly, that the worst that could have
+happened was to be killed, and that a
+glorious death was too fine a thing to
+be shunned. For my part, I contented
+myself with remarking that I had not
+left the heights of Dorogobuje till I
+had twice received the order.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The “bravest of the brave” could
+see no terrors in death. His own
+insensibility to it made him slow to
+sympathise with others. A few days
+later, M. de Fezensac learned the
+death of M. Alfred de Noailles, who
+had been one of his brother aides-de-camp
+to Berthier.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“He was the first friend I had lost
+in this campaign, and it caused me
+very deep sorrow. Marshal Ney, to
+whom I spoke on the subject, told me,
+for sole consolation, <em>$1</em>. In similar
+circumstances he always showed the
+same insensibility: on another occasion
+I heard him reply to an unfortunate
+wounded man, who begged to be
+carried away—‘<em>$1</em>;’
+and he passed on. Most assuredly he
+was neither cruel nor devoid of feeling;
+but the frequency of the misfortunes
+of war had hardened his heart. Penetrated
+with the idea that the fate of
+all soldiers is to die upon the field of
+battle, he thought it quite natural they
+should fulfil their destiny; and it has
+been seen in this narrative that he
+prized not his own life more highly
+than the lives of others.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The passage of the river was defended
+for twenty-four hours. Two
+days later, those of the weary rearguard
+who were not prevented by
+frozen limbs or the cold hand of
+death from rising from their ice-bound
+bivouac, joyfully beheld, at half a
+league’s distance, the towers of Smolensko.
+Joyfully, because they had
+long looked for that town as the term
+of their misery. Repose and food, so
+greatly needed, were there anticipated.
+But there, as on every occasion during
+the retreat where alleviation was hoped
+for, disappointment ensued. Wittgenstein
+was pressing southwards from
+the Dwina, Tchitchagoff northwards
+to Minsk, the Austrians had retreated
+behind the Bug, and the French were
+in imminent danger of being intercepted
+at the Beresina. A halt at
+Smolensko was impossible, and orders
+were given to continue the march.
+Smolensko contained large stores of
+provisions; but these availed little to
+the famished troops, for the general
+disorganisation had extended to the
+commissariat, and waste was the
+result. The Guard, which arrived first
+with Napoleon, received abundant
+supplies of all kinds; but then came
+pouring in stragglers and undisciplined
+bodies; the warehouses were broken
+open and plundered, and rations for
+several months were squandered in a
+day. When the 3d corps, after defending
+the approaches to the town,
+entered in its turn, the work of destruction
+was at an end, and Colonel
+de Fezensac could find nothing either
+for his regiment or himself. But
+though they had nothing to eat, they
+were expected to fight; for Ney, the
+indefatigable, prepared obstinately to
+defend the town. On the 15th November,
+a severe combat occurred in
+the suburb, in which the 4th regiment
+was alone engaged, and during which
+its colonel received from Ney the order
+that daring leader was most rarely
+known to give—namely, not to advance
+too far. M. de Fezensac records
+this order with as much honest pride
+as he does the warm eulogium which
+his regiment’s conduct elicited from
+the marshal. For three days Smolensko
+was held, and then the 3d
+corps resumed its march. Meanwhile
+the Emperor, Eugene, and Davoust,
+with the Guard, the 4th and 1st corps,
+were hard pressed at Krasnoi, the
+two latter, especially, suffering most
+severely.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“The Emperor, having not a moment
+to lose to reach the Beresina,
+saw himself compelled to abandon the
+3d corps, and precipitated his march
+to Orcha. During the three days’
+fighting (at and near Krasnoi,) no
+information was sent to Marshal Ney
+of the danger about to menace him....
+On the morning of the 18th
+November, we set out from Koritnya,
+and marched upon Krasnoi: on approaching
+that town, a few squadrons
+of Cossacks harassed the 2d division,
+which headed the column. We
+attached no importance to this; we
+were accustomed to the Cossacks, and
+a few musket-shots sufficed to drive
+them away. But soon the advanced
+guard fell in with General Ricard’s
+division, belonging to the 1st corps,
+which had remained behind, and had
+just been routed. The marshal rallied
+the remains of this division, and under
+cover of a fog, which favoured our
+march by concealing the smallness of
+our numbers, he approached the enemy
+until their cannon compelled him to
+pause. The Russian army, drawn
+up in order of battle, barred our further
+passage; then only did we learn
+that we were cut off from the
+rest of the army, and that our sole
+chance of salvation was in our despair.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>We know not whence M. de Fezensac
+derives his statements of numbers,
+but they frequently require correction.
+At Borodino, for instance, he gives, as
+an exact detail of the French loss,
+6547 killed, and 21,453 wounded—making
+a total of about 28,000.
+Alison and other historians rate it
+nearly twenty thousand higher; and
+certainly nothing in the events of the
+battle argues it as much less than that
+of the Russians, which M. de Fezensac
+estimates at about 50,000—figures
+confirmed by other authorities. In
+like manner, he states the entire
+strength of the 3d corps, when it first
+entered the fire of the Russian batteries
+at Krasnoi, as barely 6000 combatants,
+with six guns, and a mere
+picket of cavalry. This is extraordinarily
+discrepant with other accounts,
+which make Ney’s loss, in the immediately
+ensuing engagement, to be
+nearly as great as the whole number
+of bayonets allotted to him by M. de
+Fezensac. Doubtless it was most
+difficult to ascertain numbers correctly
+during that confused retreat, where
+there can have been little question of
+muster-rolls and morning-states, and
+many seeming contradictions may be
+explained, by some writers estimating
+only the effective fighting men, and
+others including the unarmed and
+stragglers who dragged themselves
+along with the columns. But we
+attach no importance to differences of
+this kind as regards the <cite>Journal</cite>, which
+we here notice, not as a work of historical
+value—a character to which it
+makes no pretensions—but as the interesting
+memoir of a brave gentleman
+and soldier, who has written down,
+modestly and unaffectedly, his own
+and his regiment’s share in a most
+extraordinary campaign.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Hardly had Marshal Ney withdrawn
+his advanced guard from under
+the enemy’s guns, when a flag of truce,
+sent by General Miloradowitsch, summoned
+him to lay down his arms.
+All who ever knew him will understand
+with what disdain the proposal
+was received.... For sole reply,
+the marshal made the messenger prisoner;
+a few cannon-shot, fired during
+this species of negotiation, serving as a
+pretext; and then, without considering
+the masses of the enemy and the small
+number of his own followers, he ordered
+the attack. The 2d division, formed
+in columns by regiments, marched
+straight to the enemy. Let me here
+be allowed to pay homage to the devotedness
+of those brave soldiers, and
+to congratulate myself on the honour
+of having marched at their head. The
+Russians beheld them, with admiration,
+marching towards them in the
+most perfect order, and with a steady
+step. Every cannon-ball carried away
+whole files—every step rendered
+death more inevitable; but the pace
+was not for an instant slackened. At
+last we got so near to the enemy’s
+line, that the first division of my regiment,
+crushed by the grape-shot, was
+thrown back upon that which followed,
+and disordered its array. Then the
+Russian infantry charged us in its
+turn, and the cavalry, falling on our
+flanks, completely routed us. Some
+sharpshooters, advantageously posted,
+checked for an instant the enemy’s
+pursuit; the division of Ledru deployed
+into line, and six guns replied
+to the numerous artillery of the Russians.
+During this time, I rallied the
+remains of my regiment upon the high
+road, where the cannon still reached
+us. Our attack had not lasted a quarter
+of an hour, but the 2d division
+no longer existed: my regiment lost
+several officers, and was reduced to
+two hundred men; the regiment of
+Illyria, and the 18th, which lost its
+eagle, were still worse treated; General
+Razout was wounded, and General
+Lenchantain made prisoner. The
+marshal now made the 2d division
+retire on Smolensko; at the end of
+half a league, he turned it to the left,
+across country, at right angles with
+the road. The first division, having
+long exhausted its strength by sustaining
+the shock of the whole hostile
+army, followed this movement with
+the guns and some of the baggage;
+those of the wounded who could still
+walk dragged themselves after us. The
+Russians cantoned themselves in the
+villages, sending a column of cavalry
+to observe us.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“The day declined: the 3d corps
+marched in silence; none knew what
+was to become of us. But Marshal
+Ney’s presence sufficed to reassure us.
+Without knowing what he would or
+could do, we knew he would do something.
+His self-confidence equalled
+his courage. The greater the danger,
+the more prompt was his determination;
+and when once he had made up
+his mind, he never doubted of success.
+Thus, in that terrible hour, his countenance
+expressed neither indecision nor
+uneasiness; all eyes were fixed upon
+him, but none dared question him.
+At last, seeing near him an officer of
+his staff, he said to him in a low voice:
+<em>$1</em>—<em>$1</em>
+replied the officer.—<em>$1</em>—<em>$1</em>—<em>$1</em>—<em>$1</em>—<em>$1</em>—<em>$1</em>, said the officer. This
+singular dialogue, which I here set
+down word for word, revealed the
+marshal’s project of reaching Orcha
+by the right bank of the river, and so
+rapidly as still to find there the army,
+which was making its movement by the
+left bank. The plan was bold and ably
+conceived; it will be seen with what
+vigour it was executed.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“We marched across the fields,
+without a guide, and the inexactness
+of the maps contributed to mislead us.
+Marshal Ney, endowed with that peculiar
+talent of the great soldier which
+teaches how to take advantage of the
+slightest indications, observed some
+ice in the direction we were following,
+and had it broken, thinking it must be
+a rivulet that would lead us to the
+Dnieper. It really was a rivulet; we
+followed it, and reached a village,
+where the Marshal feigned to establish
+himself for the night. Fires were
+lighted and pickets thrown out. The
+enemy left us quiet, expecting to have
+us cheap the next day. Under cover
+of this stratagem, the Marshal followed
+up his plan. A guide was
+wanted, and the village was deserted;
+at last the soldiers discovered a lame
+peasant; they asked him where was
+the Dnieper, and if frozen. He replied,
+that at a league off was the
+village of Sirokowietz, and that the
+Dnieper must there be frozen. We
+set out, conducted by this peasant, and
+soon reached the village. The Dnieper
+was sufficiently frozen to be traversed
+on foot. Whilst they sought a place
+to cross, the houses rapidly filled with
+officers and soldiers, wounded that
+morning, who had dragged themselves
+thus far, and to whose hurts the surgeons
+could hardly apply the first
+dressings; those who were not
+wounded busied themselves in seeking
+provisions. Marshal Ney, forgetful
+alike of the day’s and the morrow’s
+dangers, was buried in a profound
+sleep.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Towards the middle of the night
+we crossed the Dnieper, abandoning
+to the enemy artillery, baggage, vehicles
+of every kind, and those wounded
+who could not walk. M. de Briqueville,
+(aide-de-camp of the Duke of
+Placentia,) dangerously wounded the
+day before, passed the river on his
+hands and knees; I gave him in
+charge to two sappers, who succeeded
+in saving him. The ice was so thin
+that very few horses could pass; the
+troops re-formed on the other side of
+the stream. Thus far success had
+attended the marshal’s plan; the
+Dnieper was crossed, but we were
+still fifteen leagues from Orcha. It
+was essential to reach it before the
+French army left; we had to traverse
+a strange country, and to repel the
+attacks of the enemy with a handful
+of exhausted infantry, unsupported by
+cavalry or artillery. The march
+began under favourable auspices, with
+the capture of some Cossacks, surprised
+asleep in a village. At dawn on the
+19th we were following the road to
+Liubavitschi. We were scarcely
+delayed for a moment by the passage
+of a torrent, and by some Cossack
+detachments which retired on our
+approach. At noon we reached two
+villages situated on a height, and
+whose inhabitants had scarcely time
+to escape, leaving us their provisions.
+The soldiers were giving themselves
+up to the joy occasioned by a moment
+of abundance, when there was
+a sudden call to arms. The enemy
+was advancing, and had already driven
+in our pickets. We left the villages,
+formed column, and resumed our
+march. But we had no longer to
+deal, as heretofore, with detached
+parties of Cossacks; here were whole
+squadrons, manœuvring in regular
+order, and commanded by General Platow
+himself. Our skirmishers made
+head against them; the columns accelerated
+their march, making their
+arrangements to receive cavalry.
+Numerous as these horsemen were,
+we feared them little, for the Cossacks
+never ventured to charge home a
+square of infantry; but soon a battery
+of several guns opened fire
+upon us. This artillery followed the
+movements of the cavalry, upon
+sledges, wherever it could be of use.
+Until nightfall, Marshal Ney never
+ceased to struggle against all these
+obstacles, skilfully availing himself of
+the least advantages the nature of the
+ground afforded. Amidst the balls
+which fell in our ranks, and in spite of
+the Cossacks’ yells and feigned attacks,
+we marched at the same pace.
+Darkness approached; the enemy redoubled
+his efforts. We had to quit
+the road, and to throw ourselves to
+the left into the woods fringing the
+Dnieper. But the Cossacks already
+held these woods; the 4th and 18th
+regiments, under command of General
+d’Henin, were directed to drive them
+thence. Meanwhile the hostile artillery
+took position on the further brink
+of a ravine we had to pass. There
+General Platow reckoned on exterminating
+us.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I entered the wood with my regiment.
+The Cossacks retired; but
+the wood was deep, and tolerably
+dense, and we had to face every way
+to guard against surprise. Night
+came, we no longer heard anything
+around us; it was more than probable
+that Marshal Ney was continuing his
+advance. I advised General d’Henin
+to follow his movement; he refused,
+lest he should incur reproach from
+the marshal for quitting, without orders,
+the post assigned to him. At
+this moment loud shouts, announcing
+a charge, were heard at some distance
+in our front; giving us the certainty
+that the column was continuing its
+march, and that we were about to be
+cut off from it. I redoubled my entreaties,
+assuring General d’Henin
+that the marshal, with whose way of
+serving I was well acquainted, would
+send him no order, because he
+expected commanding officers, thus
+detached, to act according to circumstances;
+besides which, he was too
+far off to be able to communicate
+with us, and the 18th regiment had
+assuredly moved on long ago. The
+general persisted in his refusal; all I
+obtained from him was to move us on
+to the place where the 18th ought to
+be, and unite the two regiments. The
+18th had marched, and in its place
+we found a squadron of Cossacks.
+Tardily convinced of the justice of my
+remarks, General d’Henin determined
+to rejoin the column; but we had
+traversed the wood in so many directions,
+that we no longer knew our
+way. The officers of my regiment
+were consulted, and we took the direction
+the majority thought the right
+one. I will not undertake to describe
+all we had to endure during that cruel
+night. I had but one hundred men
+left, and we were more than a league
+in rear of our main body, which we
+must overtake through a host of enemies.
+It was necessary to march
+quick enough to make up for lost time,
+and in sufficient order to resist the
+attacks of the Cossacks. The darkness,
+the uncertainty of our road, the
+difficulty of making way through the
+wood, all augmented our embarrassment.
+The Cossacks called to us to
+surrender, and fired pointblank into
+the midst of us: those who were hit
+remained behind. A sergeant had his
+leg broken by a carbine ball. He fell
+at my side, saying coolly to his comrades—<em>$1</em> They
+took his havresack, and we moved on
+in silence. Two wounded officers had
+the same fate. I observed with uneasiness
+the impression our position
+made upon the soldiers, and even upon
+the officers, of my regiment. Men
+who had shown themselves heroes in
+the battle-field, now appeared anxious
+and troubled; so true is it that the
+circumstances of danger have often
+greater terrors than the danger itself.
+Very few preserved the presence of
+mind that was then more necessary
+than ever. I needed all my authority
+to maintain order and prevent straggling.
+An officer even ventured to say,
+that we should perhaps be obliged to
+surrender. I reprimanded him aloud,
+and the more severely that he was
+an officer of merit, which made the lesson
+more striking. At last, after
+more than an hour, we emerged from
+the wood and found the Dnieper on
+our left. We were in the right track,
+therefore; and this discovery gave the
+men a moment’s joy, of which I took
+advantage to cheer them up, and inculcate
+coolness, which alone could
+save us. General d’Henin moved us
+along the river’s bank to prevent the
+enemy from turning us. We were far
+from out of our difficulties; we knew
+our way, but the plain over which we
+marched permitted the enemy to fall
+on us in a large body, and to use their
+artillery. Fortunately it was dark,
+and the guns were fired rather at random.
+From time to time the Cossacks
+approached with loud cries; we
+stopped to drive them away with
+musketry, and then set off again.
+This march lasted two hours over the
+most difficult ground, across ravines
+so abrupt, that it required the utmost
+efforts to ascend the opposite side, and
+through half-frozen rivulets, where we
+had water to our knees. Nothing
+could shake the constancy of the soldiers;
+the utmost order was preserved;
+not a man left his rank.
+General d’Henin, wounded by a fragment
+of shell, concealed his hurt in
+order not to discourage the soldiers,
+and continued to command with unabated
+zeal. Doubtless he may be
+reproached with too obstinate a defence
+of the wood, but in such difficult
+circumstances error is pardonable;
+and what cannot be disputed, is the
+bravery and intelligence with which
+he led us during the whole of this
+perilous march. At last the enemy’s
+pursuit slackened, and on an eminence
+in our front fires were seen. It was
+Marshal Ney’s rearguard, which had
+halted there, and was now resuming
+its march: we joined it, and learned
+that upon the previous evening the
+marshal had advanced against the
+Cossack artillery, and forced it to
+yield him passage.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Thus did the 4th regiment extricate
+itself from a position seemingly
+desperate. The march lasted another
+hour. The exhausted soldiers required
+repose, and we halted in a village
+where we found some provisions. But
+we were still eight leagues from
+Orcha, and General Platow would
+doubtless redouble his efforts for our
+destruction. The moments were precious;
+at one in the morning the
+assembly sounded, and we set out....
+We marched unmolested
+till the dawn. With the first sunrays
+came the Cossacks, and soon our
+road led us over a plain. General
+Platow, desirous of profiting by this
+advantage, advanced that sledge-artillery
+which we could neither avoid
+nor overtake; and when he thought
+he had disordered our ranks, he commanded
+a charge. Marshal Ney rapidly
+formed each of his two divisions
+into a square; the 2d, under General
+d’Henin, being the rearmost,
+was first exposed. We forced all
+stragglers who still had a musket to
+join our ranks; severe threats were
+required to do this. The Cossacks,
+but feebly restrained by our skirmishers,
+and driving before them a crowd
+of unarmed fugitives, strove to reach
+the square. On their approach, and
+under fire of the artillery, our soldiers
+hastened their march. Twenty times
+I beheld them on the point of disbanding
+and flying in all directions, leaving
+us at the mercy of the Cossacks;
+but the presence of Marshal Ney, the
+confidence he inspired, his calmness
+in the moment of such great danger,
+kept them to their duty. We reached
+an eminence. The marshal ordered
+General d’Henin to hold it; adding,
+that we must know how to die there
+for the honour of France. Meanwhile,
+General Ledru marched to Jokubow,
+a village on the edge of a wood.
+When he had established himself
+there, we marched to join him: the
+two divisions took up a position, mutually
+flanking each other. It was
+not yet noon, and Marshal Ney declared
+he would defend this village
+till nine at night. General Platow
+made twenty attempts to take it from
+us; his attacks were constantly repulsed,
+and at last, fatigued by such
+a tenacious resistance, he himself took
+position opposite to us.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Early in the morning the marshal
+had sent off a Polish officer, who
+reached Orcha and described our
+condition. The Emperor had left the
+town the day before: the Viceroy and
+Marshal Davoust still occupied it.
+At nine that night we resumed our
+march in profound silence. The Cossack
+pickets, distributed along the
+road, retired at our approach. The
+march continued with much order.
+At a league from Orcha, our vanguard
+fell in with an advanced post, which
+challenged in French. It was a division
+of the 4th corps coming to our
+assistance with the Viceroy. One
+must have passed three days between
+life and death to judge of the joy this
+meeting gave us. The Viceroy received
+us with lively emotion, and
+warmly expressed to Marshal Ney his
+admiration of his conduct. He congratulated
+the generals and the two
+remaining colonels. His aides-de-camp
+surrounded us, and overwhelmed
+us with questions on the details of
+this great drama, and the part that
+each of us had played in it. But time
+pressed; after a few minutes we again
+moved on. The Viceroy formed our
+rearguard: at three in the morning
+we entered Orcha. Thus terminated
+this bold march, one of the most
+curious episodes of the campaign. It
+covered Marshal Ney with glory, and
+to him the 3d corps owed its salvation;
+if, indeed, the term of <i><span lang="fr">corps d’
+armée</span></i> may be applied to the 800 or
+900 men who reached Orcha, remnant
+of the 6000 who had fought at
+Krasnoi.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>For eighteen days, over a distance of
+sixty leagues, the 3d corps had formed
+the rearguard. Diminished as its
+numbers now were, it was no longer
+available for that dangerous duty, and
+it joined the main body. Scarcely
+had it taken three hours’ repose in
+some wretched houses of the faubourg
+of Orcha, when the Russians, from
+the other side of the Dnieper, set fire
+to the town with shells, which were
+more particularly aimed at some conspicuous
+buildings, serving as provision-stores.
+It was impossible to
+serve out rations; at the risk of their
+lives, a few soldiers brought off some
+brandy and flour; but Davoust, now
+in command of the rearguard, hurried
+the troops’ departure, and by eight
+o’clock the unfortunate 3d corps was
+on the march to Borisow. A broad,
+good road facilitated their progress,
+and Colonel de Fezensac, no longer
+occupied in repelling the enemy, was
+able to investigate the state of his
+regiment. Eighty men remained, out
+of the 2800 that began the campaign;
+eighty tattered, famine-stricken, desponding
+wretches. They lived from
+hand to mouth, almost by a miracle;
+sometimes on flour steeped in water;
+at others, with a morsel of honeycomb
+or fragment of horseflesh; their sole
+drink the melted snow. “At some
+distance from Orcha, I fell in with M.
+Lanusse, a captain of my regiment,
+who had lost his sight by a shot, at
+the taking of Smolensko; a sutler
+belonging to his company was leading
+and taking the greatest care of him.
+He told me that after having been
+taken and plundered by the Cossacks
+at Krasnoi, he had contrived to escape,
+and that he and his guide would do
+their utmost to keep up with us. Soon
+afterwards they were found dead and
+stripped upon the road.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Bad as the state of things already
+was, it became worse after the passage
+of the Beresina; for the cold,
+abated for a while, resumed all its
+severity, and heavy snow almost
+stifled the scanty fires kindled by the
+unhappy fugitives. “I myself was
+at the end of my resources. I had but
+a horse left; my last portmanteau had
+been lost at the Beresina; I had nothing
+but what I stood in, and we
+were still fifty leagues from Wilna,
+eighty from the Niemen; but, amidst
+so many misfortunes, I took little
+account of my personal sufferings and
+privations. Like us, Marshal Ney
+had lost everything; his aides-de-camp
+were dying of hunger, and I
+gratefully remember that more than
+once they shared with me the scanty
+food they managed to procure.” On
+the 29th November, during a brief
+halt of the 3d corps, a confused stream
+of stragglers poured by, all of whom
+had to tell of a miraculous escape at
+the Beresina. “I remarked an Italian
+officer, who scarcely breathed,
+borne by two soldiers, and accompanied
+by his wife. Greatly touched
+by this woman’s grief, and by the
+care she lavished on her husband, I
+yielded her my place at a fire the men
+had lighted. It needed all the illusion
+of her affection to blind her to
+the inutility of her care. Her husband
+had ceased to live, and still she
+called and spoke to him; until at last,
+no longer able to doubt her misfortune,
+she fell fainting upon his
+corpse.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“There would be no end to the
+task,” continues M. de Fezensac, “if
+one attempted to relate all the horrible,
+affecting, and often incredible
+anecdotes that signalised that terrible
+time. A general, exhausted with
+fatigue, had fallen upon the road. A
+passing soldier began to pull off his
+boots; the general, raising himself
+with difficulty, begged him to wait
+till he was dead before stripping him.
+‘General,’ replied the soldier, ‘I would
+willingly do so; but another would
+take them; I may as well have the
+benefit.’ And he continued to take
+off the boots.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“One soldier was being plundered
+by another; he entreated to be allowed
+to die in peace. ‘Pardon me, comrade,’
+was the reply, ‘I thought you
+were dead;’ and he passed on. For
+the consolation of humanity, a few
+traits of sublime devotion contrasted
+with the innumerable ones of egotism
+and insensibility. That of a drummer
+of the 7th regiment of light infantry
+has been particularly cited.
+His wife, sutler to the regiment, fell
+ill at the beginning of the retreat. The
+drummer brought her to Smolensko
+in her cart. At Smolensko the horse
+died; then the husband harnessed
+himself to the cart, and dragged his
+wife to Wilna. At that town she
+was too ill to go any farther, and her
+husband remained prisoner with her.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“A sutler of the 33d regiment had
+been brought to bed in Prussia, before
+the beginning of the campaign. She
+followed her regiment to Moscow,
+with her little daughter, who was six
+months old when the army left that
+city. During the retreat this child
+lived by a miracle: her sole nourishment
+was black pudding made of
+horses’ blood: she was wrapped in a
+fur taken at Moscow, and often her
+head was bare. Twice she was lost;
+and they found her again, first in a
+field, then in a burnt village, lying on
+a mattress. Her mother crossed the
+Beresina on horseback, with water to
+her neck, holding the bridle in one
+hand, and with the other her child
+upon her head. Thus, by a succession
+of marvellous circumstances, this little
+girl got through the retreat without
+accident, and did not even take cold.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>For many many leagues before
+reaching the Niemen, the harassed
+remnant of the great French army
+had looked forward to that river as the
+term of pursuit. The idea that the
+Russians would not pass the Niemen
+had taken a strong hold of the imaginations
+of both officers and soldiers.
+At Kowno, a stand was made by the
+rearguard; no very steadfast one,
+certainly; but then, as ever, Ney
+proved equal to the emergency. An
+earthen work, hastily thrown up,
+seemed to him sufficient to check the
+foe for a whole day. Here were
+posted two pieces of cannon, and some
+Bavarian infantry; and the marshal
+sought a moment’s repose in his
+quarters. But the very first discharge
+of the Russian artillery dismounted
+a French gun; the infantry
+took to flight—the gunners were
+about to follow. Another minute,
+and the Cossacks might enter the
+streets unopposed. Just then Ney
+appeared upon the ramparts, musket
+in hand. His absence had been
+nearly fatal; his presence restored
+the fight. The troops rallied, and
+the position was held till night, when
+the retreat recommenced. The bridge
+was crossed, and each man, as he set
+foot south of the Niemen, deemed
+himself safe. Great then was the
+consternation of all, when, at the foot
+of a lofty hill, over which winds the
+road to Königsberg, an alarm was
+given, and, at the same moment, a
+cannon-ball plunged into their ranks.
+The Cossacks had crossed the river
+on the ice, and had established themselves
+on the summit of the mountain.
+This fresh danger, so totally
+unexpected, completed the demoralisation
+of the troops. Brave spirits,
+which, till then, had steadfastly held
+out, lost their firmness in face of this
+new calamity. There is something
+very affecting in the following passage:—</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Generals Marchand and Ledru
+succeeded in forming a sort of battalion
+by uniting the stragglers to the
+3d corps, (again on rearguard.) But
+it was in vain to attempt to force a
+passage; the muskets were unserviceable,
+and the soldiers dared not
+advance. There was nothing for it
+but to remain under fire of the artillery,
+without daring to take a step
+backwards, for that would have exposed
+us to a charge, and our destruction
+was then certain. This position
+drove to despair two officers, who had
+been a pattern to my regiment during
+the whole retreat, but whose courage
+at last gave way under long physical
+exhaustion. They came to me and
+said, that as they were no longer able
+either to march or to fight, they should
+fall into the hands of the Cossacks,
+who would massacre them, and that,
+to avoid this, they must return to
+Kowno and yield themselves prisoners.
+I made useless efforts to dissuade
+them, appealing to their feelings
+of honour, to the courage of
+which they had given so many proofs,
+to their attachment to the regiment
+they now proposed abandoning; and
+I conjured them, if death was inevitable,
+at least to die in our company.
+For sole reply they embraced me
+with tears, and returned into Kowno.
+Two other officers had the same fate;
+one was intoxicated with rum, and
+could not follow us; the other, whom
+I particularly loved, disappeared soon
+afterwards. My heart was torn: I
+waited for death to come and reunite
+me to my unhappy comrades, and I
+should perhaps have wished for it but
+for all the ties which, at that time,
+still bound me to life.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Once more Ney came to the rescue.
+No accumulation of difficulties could
+cloud his brow with uneasiness. Once
+more his promptness and energy
+saved his shattered corps. A flank
+march was the means resorted to. On
+the 20th December, the 3d corps
+reached Königsberg. It then consisted
+of about one hundred men
+on foot, about as many cripples on
+sledges, and a handful of officers.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Monsieur le duc,” wrote Marshal
+Ney to the Duke of Feltre, Minister
+of War, from Berlin, on the 23d January
+1813, “I avail myself of the
+moment when the campaign is, if not
+terminated, at least suspended, to
+express to you all the satisfaction I
+have received from M. de Fezensac’s
+manner of serving. That young man
+has been placed in very critical circumstances,
+and has always shown
+himself superior to them. I commend
+him to you as a true French chevalier,
+(<i><span lang="fr">veritable chevalier Français</span></i>,)
+whom you may henceforth consider
+as a veteran colonel.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>M. de Fezensac almost apologises
+for subjoining to his journal this
+extract from a letter now in his
+possession. He has no need to do
+so. He may well and honestly exult
+in such a testimonial from such a
+man.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_585'>585</span>
+ <h2 class='c002'>THE PENITENT FREE-TRADER.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c017'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>Tufnell! For the love of mercy,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Let me go for half an hour—</div>
+ <div class='line'>I’ll be back before that proser</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Hath discussed the price of flour.</div>
+ <div class='line'>Don’t you hear, he’s just beginning</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>To investigate the rate</div>
+ <div class='line'>Of the Mecklenburg quotations,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Metage, lighterage, and freight?</div>
+ <div class='line'>Next, I know, he’ll pass to Dantzic,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>With a glimpse at Rostock wheat—</div>
+ <div class='line'>I have seen the whole already</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>In his Economic sheet.</div>
+ <div class='line'>See! upon the backward benches</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>There reposes stealthy Peel—</div>
+ <div class='line'>Dreaming, doubtless, that he’s smothered</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>In an atmosphere of meal.</div>
+ <div class='line'>Palmerston’s recumbent yonder—</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Hawes is sleeping by the door;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Even Russell’s tiny nostril</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Quivers with a nascent snore.</div>
+ <div class='line'>Let me go—nay, do not hold me</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>So intensely by the coat;</div>
+ <div class='line'>I assure you, on my honour,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>I’ll be back in time to vote.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>Oh, the night-winds wander sweetly</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>O’er my hot and throbbing brow!</div>
+ <div class='line'>What a contrast is the moonlight</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>To the scene I left just now!</div>
+ <div class='line'>Let me walk a little onward</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Underneath the budding trees,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Where the faint perfume is wafted</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>On the pinions of the breeze:</div>
+ <div class='line'>Overhead a thousand starlets</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Glisten in the robe of night,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And the earth is wrapped in slumber</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>With a pure and calm delight.</div>
+ <div class='line'>By your leave, good Master Tufnell,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>I shall stay a little here;</div>
+ <div class='line'>You have plenty noodles yonder</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Who are safe enough to cheer</div>
+ <div class='line'>Wilson’s dunderhead discourses,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Or the cant of Labouchere!</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>What a dolt was I to credit</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>All these wild free-trading schemes!</div>
+ <div class='line'>Cobden’s calico predictions,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Porter’s importation dreams!</div>
+ <div class='line'>For I loathed the mean alliance,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Even when I chose to wheel</div>
+ <div class='line'>In the wake of him who led us,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Pinning foolish faith to Peel.</div>
+ <div class='line'>Was I mad, to place my honour</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>In this most disgusting fix?</div>
+ <div class='line'>Half the world was rather crazy</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>In the days of Forty-six.</div>
+ <div class='line'>O the happy times of premiums!</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>O the balmy touch of scrip!</div>
+ <div class='line'>Would that I had sold my bargains</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Ere they had me on the hip!</div>
+ <div class='line'>Every day a new allotment</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Promised shining heaps of gold;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Every day the mounting market</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Swelled my hopes a hundredfold.</div>
+ <div class='line'>I remember old Sir Robert,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>With his shirt-sleeves rolled on high,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Lust of speculation gleaming</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>In his gray and greedy eye;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Turning sods with silver shovel,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Celebrating that event</div>
+ <div class='line'>With a speech on competition</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>At the opening of the Trent.</div>
+ <div class='line'>I have dined with royal Hudson,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>And may dine again, perhaps,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Should another exaltation</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Follow on this drear collapse.</div>
+ <div class='line'>All had drunk the wine of gambling,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>All had quaffed the share champagne,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Wisdom’s warnings were rejected,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Prudence preached to us in vain.</div>
+ <div class='line'>Madness, frenzy, lust of riches,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Reigned within the minds of all,</div>
+ <div class='line'>That, we thought, must answer Peter</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Which had served the turn of Paul.</div>
+ <div class='line'>If, by scorning honest labour,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Men made fortunes in a trice,</div>
+ <div class='line'>What might be the luck of Britain,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Casting with Free-traders’ dice?</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>I am strongly of opinion—</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Looking to my country’s good—</div>
+ <div class='line'>That I’ve stuck by him of Tamworth</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Rather longer than I should.</div>
+ <div class='line'>As concerning next election,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>I’ve received some pregnant hints,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Both from country correspondents,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>And the leading public prints.</div>
+ <div class='line'>Cultivation’s at a discount,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Rents are very slowly paid:</div>
+ <div class='line'>Some aver that sly Sir Robert</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Has contrived to coin his spade;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Neither is there much progression</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>In the wool and cotton trade.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>What the deuce would men be after?</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>If those fellows had their will,</div>
+ <div class='line'>England would be straight converted</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>To a monstrous cotton-mill.</div>
+ <div class='line'>Everywhere would ghastly chimneys</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Vomit forth their odious mist,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Settling, like the breath of Satan,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>O’er this island of the blest;</div>
+ <div class='line'>When the only occupation</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Would be spinning yarn and twist!</div>
+ <div class='line'>Spin away, my brave compatriots!</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Spin as largely as you can;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Who shall dare to set a limit</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>To the sale of shirts for man?</div>
+ <div class='line'>Whilst the raw material’s granted,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Spin away with might and main;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Use the time that’s still vouchsafed you,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>For it may not come again.</div>
+ <div class='line'>There’s a smartish kind of notion</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Running in the Yankees’ head,</div>
+ <div class='line'>That they need not be indebted</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>To your kindness for their thread.</div>
+ <div class='line'>In the meanwhile go for cheapness,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Smite the farmers hip and thigh—</div>
+ <div class='line'>Making honest people bankrupt</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Is the way to make them buy.</div>
+ <div class='line'>Starve the masses of the nation,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Drive them all into the mills;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Clear the plains and sweep the valleys,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Desolate the Highland hills.</div>
+ <div class='line'>Let the rough hard-fisted yeoman,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>All too clumsy for the loom,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Migrate to the western prairies,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Where for labour still there’s room.</div>
+ <div class='line'>Let the peasant and the cottar</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Quit the useless plough and spade—</div>
+ <div class='line'>Built for them are costly mansions,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Raised for them are rates in aid.</div>
+ <div class='line'>To the workhouse let them gather,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Or by theft attain the jail;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Honesty has bread and water,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Crime is fed on beef and ale.</div>
+ <div class='line'>O the glorious consummation</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Of this truly Christian scheme,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Such as never saint or prophet</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Witnessed in ecstatic dream!</div>
+ <div class='line'>Wasted fields and crowded cities,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Swarming streets and desert downs,</div>
+ <div class='line'>All the light of life concentred</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>In the focus of the towns!</div>
+ <div class='line'>Yea, exult, ye foes of England!</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>In the downfall of the race</div>
+ <div class='line'>That of yore, in fiery combat,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Met your fathers face to face:</div>
+ <div class='line'>For the pride of lusty manhood,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>And the giant Saxon frame,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Never more shall be embattled</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>In the coming fields of fame;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Shrunken sinews, sallow faces,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Twisted limbs, and factory scars—</div>
+ <div class='line'>These shall mark your next opponents</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>In the European wars.</div>
+ <div class='line'>Not such yeomen as with Alfred</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Won their freedom long ago—</div>
+ <div class='line'>Such as on the plain of Crecy</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Triumphed o’er a worthy foe—</div>
+ <div class='line'>Such as drove invasion backward,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Have their homes in Britain now!</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>This at least our sons may utter,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Blushing for their fathers’ shame—</div>
+ <div class='line'>Brain me with a billy-roller,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>If I longer play this game,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Either for the crimp of Tamworth,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Or his first lieutenant, Graham!</div>
+ <div class='line'>No, by Jove! I will not suffer</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Degradation of the kind—</div>
+ <div class='line'>What care I for Johnny Russell,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>With his hungry host behind?</div>
+ <div class='line'>Let them blunder on insanely,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Digging holes within the sand,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Thinking, like the stupid ostrich,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>To escape the hunter’s hand.</div>
+ <div class='line'>Let them shirk the facts before them,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Comforting themselves the while,</div>
+ <div class='line'>That their Economic asses</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Can the public ear beguile.</div>
+ <div class='line'>Lord! to hear the blockheads braying,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Spite of proof before their eyes—</div>
+ <div class='line'>“I assure the house,” quoth Wilson,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>“Wheat must very shortly rise.</div>
+ <div class='line'>It was so-and-so at Dantzic</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>More than twenty years ago;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Therefore wait a little longer—</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>’Twill be up again, I know.”</div>
+ <div class='line'>Jolly Villiers, on the other</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Hand, with exultation vows,</div>
+ <div class='line'>More than one-and-ninety millions</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Have been plundered from the ploughs;</div>
+ <div class='line'>And he hopes before another</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Year shall run its destined course,</div>
+ <div class='line'>To congratulate the public</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>That affairs are worse and worse.</div>
+ <div class='line'>I, for one, am sick and weary</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Of these everlasting prigs;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Quite disgusted with the shuffling</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Of the miserable Whigs;</div>
+ <div class='line'>With their impudent averments,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>And their flagrant thimblerigs!</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>Hark, the midnight chimes! I fancy</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>The palaver’s nearly over:</div>
+ <div class='line'>For to-night let Johnny Russell</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>And his colleagues rest in clover.</div>
+ <div class='line'>But, upon the next occasion,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>When there’s talk about a tax,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Whether it shall weigh on foreign</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Or on native British backs,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Master Tufnell must excuse me,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>If I seek another lobby</div>
+ <div class='line'>Than the one that’s now frequented</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>By my former chief, Sir Bobby!</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_589'>589</span>
+ <h2 class='c002'>TENOR OF THE TRADE CIRCULARS.</h2>
+</div>
+<div class='lg-container-r c019'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><em>$1</em></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TO THE EDITOR OF BLACKWOOD’S MAGAZINE.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Sir,—That a period of severe commercial
+suffering is approaching us, in
+which the ruinous condition of the
+agricultural classes will recoil disastrously,
+not only upon the selfish
+Free-trade agitators in the manufacturing
+districts, but also upon the
+importers of foreign produce, the
+broker, the factor, the shopkeeper,
+and the labourers in our towns, has
+for some months been patent to all
+who have dispassionately watched the
+current of events, and been able to
+draw correct conclusions from what is
+going on before their eyes. It is not
+to official tables of exports and imports
+that such men look as the
+indices of the nation’s prosperity.
+They turn rather to <em>$1</em> of these
+operations, as disclosed in our commercial
+circulars; to the degree of
+confidence displayed by bankers in
+their dealings with their customers,
+and by merchants in their transactions
+with each other; to the movements
+of produce in our leading
+markets, and to the amount of activity
+which characterises the internal trade
+and the consumption of the country.
+They are guided, too, very materially,
+by the general feeling of merchants
+and traders, expressed in their daily
+communications with each other, on
+‘Change, or in the intercourse of
+private life. Such a mode I propose
+to employ, in investigating the real
+condition of the cotton manufacturing
+districts of the north of England; and
+the result of this investigation, which
+I shall now proceed to lay before
+your readers, will, I fear, dissipate
+somewhat rudely the dream of prosperity
+in which her Majesty’s
+Ministers, and their supporters in
+Parliament and throughout the country,
+are just now indulging.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>In pursuing such an inquiry, the
+condition of the port of Liverpool, the
+great mart of this portion of the kingdom,
+naturally suggests itself as of
+prominent interest. In this port, by the
+result of our vast operations in imported
+foreign and colonial produce, the
+actual results of our export trade in
+manufactures, and the consuming
+power of the large population which
+draw their supplies from it, can be
+tested with considerable fairness. In
+an article in your last Number, I find
+a quotation from the monthly circular
+of Messrs T. and H. Littledale &#38; Co.,
+whom you truly designate as perhaps
+the greatest brokers in the world. A
+portion of this I must re-quote, in
+order to enable your readers the
+better to appreciate some later observations
+of these gentlemen. On
+the 4th of March, Messrs Littledale
+wrote:—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“<em>$1</em> The
+serious falling off in the deliveries of
+sugar, coffee, tea, and cocoa, for the two
+months of this year, compared with those
+of the last, but too truly confirms these
+complaints, and are perhaps the most
+alarming features in our present prospects.
+As given in Prince’s public
+prices current of the 1st inst., they stand
+as follows:—</p>
+
+<table class='table0'>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='c011'></th>
+ <th class='c013'>1850.</th>
+ <th class='c013'>1849.</th>
+ <th class='c013'>&#160;</th>
+ <th class='c014'>1848.</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>Sugar,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>37,006</td>
+ <td class='c012'>43,408</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c014'>42,368 tons</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>Coffee,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>3,795,712</td>
+ <td class='c012'>4,907,691</td>
+ <td class='c013'>pounds</td>
+ <td class='c014'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>Cocoa,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>450,774</td>
+ <td class='c012'>558,888</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c014'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>Tea,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>5,375,648</td>
+ <td class='c012'>5,502,931</td>
+ <td class='c013'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c014'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c008'>The circular of this house, dated
+the 4th of April, has since been published,
+in which they confirm their
+previous statement; and indeed show
+that the condition of the country, as
+tested by its consumption of imported
+produce, is retrograding. We quote
+the following as their summary:—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“<em>$1</em>—Another month
+of dull spiritless trade, as well in our produce
+markets as in the manufacturing
+districts of Lancashire. The demand for
+consumption has somewhat improved from
+exhaustion of stocks in the hands of
+dealers; but we regret to find the deficiency
+in deliveries of the principal
+articles noticed in our circular of last
+month (tea excepted) has still further
+increased, which speaks ill for the internal
+state of the country; in fact, <em>$1</em>.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Corn has fallen so low in value, that
+<em>$1</em>.
+This falls immediately on the wholesale
+dealers, from them on the importing merchants,
+and eventually, if no revival take
+place, must act with double force on the
+manufacturers in a diminished home
+trade and in crippled exports, which
+latter must ever depend on our power to
+take the products of other countries as
+returns for our manufactures. To what
+class, then, are the present ruinous low
+prices of grain a blessing? We emphatically
+say <em>$1</em>; indeed it is quite
+impossible for so large a portion of the
+community as that connected with agriculture
+to be depressed, and the other
+portions long to continue prosperous; and
+probably the best impulse we could receive,
+in the present inactive state of our
+colonial markets, would be an advance of
+5s., to 10s. per qr., in the price of wheat.
+There is no doubt, also, that the fearful
+depreciation of railway property, which
+appears a bottomless abyss of mismanagement
+and ruin, tells cruelly on the available
+resources of a very large proportion
+of the people, and adds seriously to the
+embarrassment of trade.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In glancing over this circular in
+detail, we find opposite nearly every
+important item the words, “has
+moved off at easier prices,” “is less
+inquired for,” “is dull,” or some other
+phrase significant of commercial depression;
+yet, during the preceding
+month, the stocks on hand, owing to
+the prevalence of easterly winds,
+which had kept a large number of
+vessels windbound outside the Channel,
+had received very little augmentation.
+It must be borne in mind
+that the dealings of this firm extend
+over nearly every description of
+foreign produce—certainly every large
+one, timber and iron excepted;—and
+that the money amount of their annual
+transactions may be reckoned by many
+millions sterling. Further inquiries
+amongst other houses enable me to
+state confidently that, with the exception
+of a few trifling articles, the mass
+of the produce, which is pouring into
+Liverpool, arrives at an unprofitable
+market. In cotton alone, amongst
+the leading imports, a small margin
+of profit may at present be secured,
+the abundance of unemployed money
+in the hands of the banks allowing the
+speculators, for a short crop, to inflate
+prices. Such a case, however, tells
+nothing in favour of a sound state of
+things. The question of most material
+import is, whether either the
+foreign demand, or the home consumption,
+is so urgently requiring
+supply, as to enable the manufacturer
+of cotton goods to concede the advanced
+rates demanded for the staple,
+by the American grower, or the
+speculator at home. Present appearances
+scarcely warrant such an expectation.
+The following opinion
+upon the subject, given by a leading
+firm in the trade, Messrs George
+Holt &#38; Co., in their circular of the
+12th April, expresses the opinion of
+all except the most sanguine:—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“We can hardly account for this tendency
+of prices,”—(they had slightly advanced
+during the week)—“or lay before
+our readers any new circumstances affecting
+the value of the staple. No doubt
+confidence in the shortness of the American
+crop remains, and probably is on the
+increase. We may add also that stocks
+in spinners’ hands are at a low ebb. Still
+<em>$1</em>”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Depression so long in existence!”
+A great majority of the public, with
+the speech from the Throne, and the
+prosperity-speeches of movers and
+seconders of the Address before them,
+imagined that the cotton districts, at
+all events, were flourishing!</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>A later circular of the produce
+market, published upon the authority
+of the entire brokers of the port, exhibits
+the state of the general produce
+market in even a worse light than
+that of Messrs Littledale, quoted
+above. I append it here:—</p>
+
+<p class='c025'>“<span class='sc'>Liverpool Prices Current, Imports</span>,
+&#38;c. for the week ending <em>$1</em>. Arranged by a Committee of
+Brokers.—<span class='sc'>T. M. Myers</span>, <em>$1</em>.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“<span class='sc'>Sugar.</span>—Holders continuing to offer
+freely, there has been a fair amount of
+business, but at rather lower prices;
+450 hhds. B. P., of which 300 were new
+Barbadoes, sold at 34s. 6d. to 41s., 3500
+bags Bengal at 34s. to 40s., 1600 bags
+Khaur at 28s. 6d., and 3500 bags Mauritius
+at 36s. to 36s. 6d., being a decline of
+6d. to 1s. per cwt.—<em>$1</em>—180 hhds.
+Porto Rico, of the new crop, sold at 40s.
+per cwt. duty paid; the export demand
+continues slack, and sales are only 24
+cases, 150 bags and brls. Brazil and 100
+boxes Havanna.—<span class='sc'>Molasses.</span>—The new
+arrivals coming in have induced holders
+of last year’s crop to take much lower
+prices than have been hitherto accepted;
+the sales are 500 puns. Porto Rico at
+15s. 6d., 400 Cuba at 15s. 6d. to 16s., and
+300 Barbadoes at 15s. per cwt.; the two
+cargoes of new Porto Rico, just arrived,
+have been sent to store, the importers
+not being willing to accept the low price
+offered by the Trade; the quotations are
+reduced accordingly.—<span class='sc'>Coffee.</span>—The recent
+import of Jamaica has been freely
+offered, and the slight improvement that
+existed ten days ago is entirely lost,
+prices being now as low as ever. 80
+tierces have been sold, at 46s. 9d. to 54s.
+for low to fine ordinary, and 62s. to 100s.
+for low to fine middling—the latter
+quotation being 15s. below the rates of
+January. 100 bags native Ceylon were
+sold early in the week at 52s. 6d., but
+that price is not now obtainable, the
+nominal value being about 48s. per cwt.—A
+small parcel of Bahia Cocoa sold at
+33s. per cwt.—Nothing done in <span class='sc'>Ginger</span>
+or <span class='sc'>Pepper</span>, but a small lot of <span class='sc'>Pimento</span>
+brought 6⅛d. per lb., being an extreme
+price.—<span class='sc'>Rice.</span>—No sales of Carolina;
+13,000 bags East brought 7s. 6d. for
+broken, and 8s. 6d. to 9s. 9d. for low to
+good white, being a decline of fully 6d.
+per cwt.—<span class='sc'>Rum</span> is difficult of sale, except
+at lower prices; the business consists of
+200 puns. Demerara, 32 to 37 per cent
+O. P. at 2s. 2d. to 2s. 4½d. per gallon.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There is a further decline, it will be
+seen, in every important article; and
+the most experienced houses, I find,
+are at a loss to tell at what point it
+will stop. It is generally admitted
+that, but for the accommodation
+which the large holders can command,
+there must have been a general crash
+long ere this, which would have overwhelmed
+half the mercantile community
+in ruin. This would have reacted
+fearfully upon the shopkeepers
+in the interior of the country, whose
+credits would have been suddenly
+stopped, whilst their overdue accounts
+would necessarily have been sternly
+exacted. In fact the bulk of this class
+at present stand upon the verge of an
+abyss, into which a sudden panic may
+hurry them at any moment.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>It will doubtless be urged that this
+state of the produce market is only
+temporary; that importations, having
+become profitless, will be discontinued,
+and the supply thus become equal to
+the demand. This would be the natural
+course of things under a sound
+system; but no sign of cessation of
+imports is at present to be seen; and
+it is much to be questioned whether
+any such cessation can take place,
+without throwing a large portion of
+our manufacturing population into
+very serious distress, if not into
+anarchy and outbreak. If importation
+of produce is restricted, exportation
+must be restricted in proportion.
+The manufacturer has thrown himself
+into almost total dependence upon
+the foreign buyer of his wares. With a
+flourishing home market for manufactures,
+a glut of produce might be got
+rid of without difficulty. But the same
+cause—an inability of the masses to
+consume—which depresses the prices
+of produce, now exists equally with
+respect to the home market for manufactured
+goods; and to stop production
+and exports, with a view to
+enhance the value of the stocks of produce
+already received in remittance
+from the foreigner, would add another
+element to the perplexity in which the
+nation is plunged. This portion of
+the subject, however, it is not for me
+to discuss here. I only refer to it in
+order to express the opinions which
+are beginning to be mooted in influential
+commercial circles.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>In order to be enabled to state,
+as much as possible upon my own
+knowledge, the extent to which
+the internal markets of the country
+are depressed, and the consumption
+of produce is declining, I have instituted
+inquiries among some of the
+leading houses in Liverpool, who
+send travellers into the country,
+and the reports given are fully as discouraging
+as those given by Messrs
+Littledale, as to the difficulty both of
+making sales and collecting accounts.
+From a gentleman connected with a
+leading firm in the tea trade, I learn
+that in the country over which their
+travellers prosecute their business,
+the orders which they receive are for
+very limited quantities, and are, in
+fact, demonstrative of what, in mercantile
+parlance, is styled “a hand to
+mouth” business. Excessive caution
+and want of spirit characterise the
+feelings of the retail trade everywhere.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Some of these parties, he suggests,
+may have locked up a portion of their
+capital in railway investments, or perhaps
+lost it. Still, hand to mouth
+orders—orders for a week’s instead of
+a month’s consumption, would tell in
+the long run, if they served to make
+up the aggregate of past years. But
+they do not. The consumption of this
+necessary article is found to be declining;
+and the objection of the
+retail dealer to order as largely as
+usual is accounted for, in the majority
+of cases, by the inability of
+the farming and middle classes to
+pay their accounts as punctually as
+heretofore. It must be borne in
+mind, in treating of the consumption
+of such an article as tea—and
+I may include coffee, sugar, &#38;c.—that
+they frequently form the substitute
+for the poor man’s meal. When
+the consumption of tea declines, in
+times acknowledged to be bad, it is
+the worst sign of the condition of the
+community.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Another gentleman connected with
+an extensive firm in the grocery trade,
+gives still more discouraging accounts.
+The travellers of this firm extend their
+operations over the whole of the Midland
+Counties and the North of England.
+Their reports to their employers
+are most lugubrious. For
+example, one of them, a few weeks
+ago, remitted home £120, whereas his
+accounts due were about £1500. As
+to sales, these are most difficult to
+make. Consumption is gradually
+and rapidly declining. Retail dealers
+in the country towns complain that
+the farmers no longer expend the
+money they have been accustomed to
+do, when visiting markets; but confine
+their consumption of food more
+and more to the products raised upon
+their own lands. One of the travellers
+of this firm journeys through the
+counties of Cumberland and Westmoreland,
+in which for many years an
+extensive trade has been carried on
+in the curing of bacon and hams.
+This trade he represents as now
+almost extinct, or rapidly becoming so—the
+parties engaged in it being unable
+to compete with the importers
+of the low-priced hams and bacon of
+America. Of this class are the farmers
+of the country which owns Sir
+James Graham as their feudal lord,
+and of whom that distinguished statesman
+asserted, in the debate on the
+Address, that they must be in a state
+of plethoric prosperity, inasmuch as
+he had never had his rents better paid
+than at his last rent-day. The worthy
+baronet forgot to say that rent is the
+last debt that a tenant farmer will
+omit to pay, the landlord having a
+power which overrides the claims of
+all other creditors. If he could have
+added that his farmers’ tradesmen’s
+bills had been equally well paid, he
+would have imparted some information
+most gratifying to the community.
+Neither this house, nor any
+other that I have conversed with, can
+see any termination to the present
+declining state of things. It is becoming
+admitted, amongst the circles
+with which their travellers mix, that
+reductions of rent are wholly unequal
+to meet the emergency of the present
+crisis.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>It is proper that I should refer to
+one trade in Liverpool which is most
+prosperous—in fact, the only prosperous
+one. This is the trade of the
+merchants engaged in, and others
+connected with, the emigration of our
+fellow-countrymen, to seek a home
+in foreign lands. The following are
+the statistics of this trade, kindly furnished
+me by a gentleman officially
+connected with the shipping of emigrants
+from Liverpool:—</p>
+
+<table class='table1'>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='c013'></th>
+ <th class='c013'>&#160;</th>
+ <th class='c013'>Ships.</th>
+ <th class='c014'>Emigrants.</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>Emigration in</td>
+ <td class='c013'>1847</td>
+ <td class='c013'>514</td>
+ <td class='c014'>128,447</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>Do.</td>
+ <td class='c013'>1848</td>
+ <td class='c013'>519</td>
+ <td class='c014'>124,522</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>Do.</td>
+ <td class='c013'>1849</td>
+ <td class='c013'>565</td>
+ <td class='c014'>146,162</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c008'>During the present year the emigration
+has been—</p>
+
+<table class='table1'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>January,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>6943</td>
+ <td class='c014'>Persons.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>February,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>8779</td>
+ <td class='c014'>„</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>March,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>16,783</td>
+ <td class='c014'>„</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>Cabin emigrants,</td>
+ <td class='c012'>705</td>
+ <td class='c014'>„</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c008'>At the present moment, notwithstanding
+the large increase in the
+shipping—principally American—provided
+for the trade, berths, and
+these at very high prices, are most
+difficult to be got, unless detention
+is submitted to. Moreover, a great
+change has taken place in the kind
+of persons emigrating. Last year,
+the same gentleman informs me, four-fifths
+of the parties emigrating consisted
+of substantial small farmers
+from Ireland and elsewhere, and
+skilled artisans from this country.
+This year, a very superior class of
+English farmers are leaving a land
+which no longer affords them a living
+in exchange for their honest industry.
+The quays of Liverpool daily present
+a scene, which few thinking men can
+rejoice in, and which the country will
+have to regret. The aged as well as
+the mature, mothers with infants at
+the breast, and stalwart youths and
+maidens, going from vessel to vessel,
+to select that particular one whose departure
+from our shores will cut for
+ever their connexion with the country
+which they have loved, and in which
+they leave behind the graves of
+their fathers. It is melancholy to
+think upon the misery there must be
+amidst all this activity, with the momentary
+absence of regret for old scenes,
+and enjoyment of the new ones, into
+which these poor people find themselves
+thrown. Yet we cannot but
+feel satisfied that they are about to
+be bettered in condition by the change.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The depression complained of, as
+existing in Liverpool, is by no means
+confined to the classes immediately
+connected with the staple commerce
+of the port, but pervades all classes
+of the community without exception.
+The produce of half a world is stored
+in the warehouses of Liverpool, or
+floating in her magnificent docks.
+The capital of her merchants is embarked
+in every clime, and her
+shipping crowds every foreign port;
+yet her industrious population are
+plunged in suffering and embarrassment,
+and a portion of them—her
+labouring classes, pressed down by
+the influx of pauper competition from
+the hordes of immigrants from ruined
+Ireland—are continually upon the
+verge of actual starvation. It is distressing
+to witness the shifts to which
+tradesmen are compelled to resort,
+from time to time, in order to meet
+engagements, and to stave off, by
+sacrifices of their goods, the day of
+ruin. “Selling off” announcements,
+under all kinds of pretexts, meet the
+eye in every direction, and yet tempt
+in vain. The whole community appear
+to be economising; and tardily
+paid bills, and reduced expenditure
+in the comforts, and even in some of
+the necessities of life, is the rule, not
+the exception. The extent to which
+this is carried, and the suffering existing
+amongst the middle classes, may
+be judged of by the fact that it has
+already affected the incomes of many
+of the clergy of the town, by diminishing
+the numbers of their congregations
+and the yield of pew-rents.
+In one instance which has been
+mentioned to me, the income of a
+clergyman, universally beloved, has
+been thus cut down from £600
+a-year, to little more than half;
+and this is far from being a solitary
+case.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The result of this state of things is
+already being felt in a strong reaction,
+amongst those once the loudest in its
+advocacy, against the system of Free
+Trade. Doubts are freely hazarded
+with respect to the soundness of a
+policy which has produced such fruit;
+and the question is upon the lips of
+numbers,—“Where is the prosperity
+which was promised to us?” If Mr
+Cobden or Sir Robert Peel were to
+present themselves in Liverpool at
+the present moment, they would have
+to answer this question, not to the
+uninquiring crowds who would have
+cheered their fallacies three years
+ago, but to men who have reflected
+deeply, and had deep cause for such
+reflection. The Right Hon. Baronet,
+in particular, would perhaps have to
+reply to another question, and to go
+a little back in the history of his political
+life. He would be asked not
+only, Who had benefited by his
+Free-trade measures?—a difficult one
+enough to answer—but what class of
+the community had been aggrandised
+<em>$1</em>. To this vital subject the minds
+of the intelligent mercantile community
+of Liverpool, of all shades of
+politics, are being rapidly directed.
+The Free-trader sees, in the operation
+of our monetary laws, one leading
+source of the evil brought upon the
+country by the carrying out of his
+favourite measure. He is prepared
+to acknowledge that Free-trade and
+a Restricted Currency are incompatible
+things. And the mercantile body
+of all political parties still remember
+the disasters of 1847 and 1848; and
+the insulting manner in which their
+prayer, in the October of the previous
+year, for relief from the unexampled
+money pressure, which was
+then prostrating the most extensive
+and solvent firms, was denied by a
+flippant and shallow Chancellor of the
+Exchequer, although at that moment
+the nation was within a few days of
+bankruptcy. These things are not
+forgotten; and, from the impressions
+which I have been able to form, from
+a close examination of popular opinion,
+I should not be surprised to see the
+influential community of Liverpool
+throwing politics and party to the
+winds, and uniting their efforts to
+procure a relief from the monstrous
+system which at present withers and
+strangles in its grasp the industry
+of England—which tempts us one
+day, by its lavish kindness, to erect
+vast structures of commercial enterprise
+and usefulness; and the
+next day dashes them into wrecks
+before our eyes, to be scrambled
+for by greedy extortioners and selfish
+usurers.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>It is the fear of this power which,
+to a great extent, is at the present
+moment paralysing the enterprise of
+the commercial communities, which
+would otherwise have succeeded in
+neutralising a portion at least, but
+certainly only a portion, of the ruinous
+effects of Free-trade. A few
+years ago, no community embarked
+more largely in those railway investments,
+so strongly recommended to
+them by the fosterer of the system, Sir
+Robert Peel, than the mercantile
+people of Liverpool. The extent to
+which such investments were encouraged
+by the lavish offer of banking
+facilities to merchants and others,
+may be judged of by the fact, that
+the Directors of one Liverpool Bank
+were, a few weeks ago, compelled to
+acknowledge to their shareholders,
+that nearly the whole of their subscribed
+capital was advanced upon
+railway stock; and that their Rest,
+amounting to £100,000, had entirely
+disappeared. This species of security
+is now, by the caution with
+which capitalists act, rendered totally
+unavailable for the purpose of raising
+money, when required for legitimate
+commercial purposes. Hence the
+timid apprehension with which men,
+thus situated, regard the accumulation
+of stocks of produce, for which
+no remunerative market at present
+offers itself; and the consumption of
+which is so obviously on the decline.
+Hence also the pressure to sell, when
+they see cargo after cargo pouring in
+to augment those stocks; the unwillingness
+to part with funds, for which
+the shopkeeper and the tradesman
+are eagerly longing, to enable them
+to sustain their tottering credit; and
+that total suspension of all internal
+enterprise and improvement, which
+is driving so many thousands of our
+skilled workmen to other countries,
+and the labourer to that desolate
+resort for the very poor—the Union
+Workhouse. To the attempt to carry
+out a Free-trade, involving the holding
+of large stocks of produce and
+extended operations in foreign markets,
+with a currency artificially restricted
+by the last Banking Act
+of Sir Robert Peel, and further
+restricted by the caution with which
+bankers are now conducting their
+business, since the severe warning
+inflicted upon them in 1847, is
+attributable not only the commercial
+depression already noticed, but also
+that fearful sacrifice of realised capital,
+which has taken place from the
+decline in the saleable value of railway
+shares, and which, in Liverpool
+alone, has rendered hundreds of once
+wealthy men comparatively poor
+ones, and brought many, in the
+decline of their days, to a condition
+lower than that even in which they
+began the world.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Such is the condition generally of
+the mercantile community of Liverpool—that
+port of all others in the
+kingdom which was most largely to
+be benefited by the advent of the
+Free-trade system. From the apex to
+the base of the social fabric all is uncertainty,
+fear, and suffering, too intense
+any longer to be concealed from
+the most superficial observer; and the
+crisis has not yet been reached. The
+reaction has still to come from the
+manufacturing districts, which, up to
+within the past few months, in the
+enjoyment of a moderate amount of
+activity, caused by a temporary revival
+of the export demand, are only
+now beginning to feel the results of
+the system which, in their selfishness,
+they invented for their own aggrandisement,
+at the expense of the industry
+of the whole empire.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The avowed object of the Free-trader
+was to stimulate the export trade in cotton
+goods, which it was always boasted
+was the most valuable to the manufacturer.
+So far as regards the quantity
+of the raw material consumed for
+the export trade, this is an undisputed
+fact; but that the amount of skill and
+labour employed in it is equal to that
+expended upon goods consumed in the
+home market is not true. In order to
+arrive at an idea of the relative value
+of the two trades, it will be necessary
+for me to bring before the reader a
+few figures and authorities. In the
+excellent <cite>Commercial Glance</cite>, compiled
+for many years by the late Mr John
+Burn of Manchester, and now continued
+by his son, the following statement
+was given, as the mode in which
+the cotton spun in 1845 was disposed
+of. I take that year as being one of
+great prosperity in the home market,
+and as showing the state of things antecedent
+to the introduction of free
+trade in corn.</p>
+
+<table class='table1'>
+ <tr><th class='c010' colspan='3'><span class='sc'>Statement of the Cotton Spun in England and Scotland in 1845, and of the quantity of Yarn produced, showing also how the quantity spun in England was disposed of.</span></th></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='c003'></th>
+ <th class='c026'>&#160;</th>
+ <th class='c027'>Lbs.</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>Total cotton consumed, in lbs.,</td>
+ <td class='c026'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c028'>555,527,283</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>Allowed for loss in spinning, 1¾ oz. per lb.,</td>
+ <td class='c026'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c028'>60,760,796</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c026'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c028'><hr></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>Total yarn produced in England and Scotland,</td>
+ <td class='c026'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c028'>494,766,487</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>Deduct spun in Scotland in 1845,</td>
+ <td class='c026'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c028'>27,737,022</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c026'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c028'><hr></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>Total spun in England in 1845,</td>
+ <td class='c026'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c028'>467,029,465</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c026'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c028'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='c003'></th>
+ <th class='c029'>Lbs.</th>
+ <th class='c028'>&#160;</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>Exported in yarn during the year,</td>
+ <td class='c026'>131,937,935</td>
+ <td class='c028'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>Exported in thread do.,</td>
+ <td class='c026'>2,567,705</td>
+ <td class='c028'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>Exported in manufactured cotton goods,</td>
+ <td class='c026'>302,360,687</td>
+ <td class='c028'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>Estimated quantity of yarn sent to Scotland and Ireland,</td>
+ <td class='c026'>10,734,859</td>
+ <td class='c028'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>Exported in mixed manufactures, consumed in cotton banding, healds, candle and lamp wick, waddings, socks, calender bowls, paper, umbrellas, hats, and loss in manufacturing goods,</td>
+ <td class='c026'>31,655,230</td>
+ <td class='c028'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>Balance left for home consumption and stock, 1st January</td>
+ <td class='c026'>87,773,049</td>
+ <td class='c028'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c026'><hr></td>
+ <td class='c028'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c026'>467,029,465</td>
+ <td class='c028'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c026'>===========</td>
+ <td class='c028'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c008'>I have the most perfect confidence
+in the correctness of Mr Burn’s calculations,
+being personally acquainted
+with that gentleman, and knowing the
+excellent sources from which he derives
+his information, and the care
+which he devotes to the accuracy of
+all his facts. The result to which the
+above statement leads is, that the consumption
+of raw cotton in goods sold
+in our home markets is 18·36 per cent
+only, upon the total quantity of yarn
+spun in England. This, a superficial
+observer will say, is a very trivial
+quantity for our boasted home consumption.
+Let us see, however, in
+what stage of manufacture, and in
+what description of goods, the cotton
+taken off by foreign markets principally
+consists. In the first place,
+131,937,935 lbs., or 28 per cent of the
+total cotton spun, was exported, as
+shown in the table above, in the shape
+of yarn, an article but one remove
+from the raw material, and the manufacture
+of which employs machinery
+principally, and leaves only a small
+margin of profit to the country. With
+respect to the description of goods, in
+the manufacture of which for the
+foreign market the remainder of the raw
+material is consumed, little difficulty
+is felt by persons acquainted practically
+with the subject. Mr M‘Culloch,
+in his <cite>Dictionary of Commerce</cite>,
+page 456 of the edition of 1847—the
+latest I have before me—remarks upon
+the facts as striking, that, notwithstanding
+the superiority of our machinery,
+and this branch thus being
+one in which we most greatly excel
+our foreign rivals, the proportion of
+fine to coarse yarns spun has materially
+decreased; and that, in fact, the
+actual quantity of fine yarns has decreased,
+whilst the total consumption of
+cotton has quadrupled during the last
+twenty-five years. That the quantity
+has decreased to this extreme extent
+may well be doubted, although the
+cheapening which has taken place in
+silk and other fabrics during this period
+has, we know, to a great extent
+caused the disuse, for home consumption,
+of many once highly prized
+articles of the cotton manufacture.
+We may accept, however, the admission
+of Mr M‘Culloch, as bearing
+upon the quality of those goods which
+are taken off by the foreign trade, and
+of which the great increase in the
+manufacture must consist. These are,
+confessedly, the coarse, heavy fabrics,
+into the manufacture of which the
+<em>$1</em> amount of skill and labour
+enters. We approach then, from this
+point, to a view of the comparative
+value to the country of the home and
+the export trade in cotton goods. In
+the same work, Mr M‘Culloch estimates
+the total annual value of the
+cotton manufacture of the kingdom
+at £36,000,000 sterling, of which
+£10,000,000 is put down for the cost
+of the raw material, £17,000,000 for
+wages, and £9,000,000 for profits,
+wages of superintendence, and cost of
+machinery, coals, &#38;c. I am a little
+inclined to believe that this calculation
+is underdrawn, the leaning of
+the author being to exaggerate the
+importance of the export trade, the
+declared value of which in 1845 was
+£26,119,231, leaving a little under
+£10,000,000 as the consumption
+of the home market, or about two-fifths
+of the consumption of the foreign.
+In estimating the value to the
+country, however, of the home trade,
+we have a right to take into consideration
+the fact that the great component
+material of the goods which
+we consume at home consists of labour;
+for, whilst the proportion of the
+raw material consumed in the home
+trade was little over one-fifth of that
+consumed in the foreign, the value of
+the goods was two-fifths.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Admitting, however, Mr M‘Culloch’s
+version of the case to be correct,
+but at the same time bearing in mind
+the fact of his being a somewhat prejudiced
+authority, let us apply the
+figures given to the present condition
+of the manufacturing interest. The
+average quantity of cotton taken
+weekly from Liverpool for consumers’
+use, was, from 1st of January to 12th
+of April 1849, 29,475 bales. It has
+been this year, up to the same date,
+23,176 bales—a falling off of 6299
+bales weekly, or a little above a fifth of
+the preceding year’s importations. Perhaps
+a portion of this decline in apparent
+consumption may be accounted for by
+the fact that the stock in the hands of
+spinners has, to a considerable extent,
+been allowed by them to become exhausted,
+through their unwillingness
+to pay the advanced prices recently
+demanded for the raw material. With
+respect to the prudence of this policy,
+and its probable effect in still further
+increasing the embarrassment of
+affairs, I shall have something to say by
+and by; at present, the question which
+presses is—In what market has this
+decreased consumption occurred? The
+answer must be—In that market which
+pays for the greatest amount of labour
+expended upon the manufacture of
+cotton goods—in the home market.
+I have not within my reach the most
+authentic record of the Cotton Trade,
+for the period up to which I should
+desire to extend my inquiries—viz.,
+<cite>Burn’s Commercial Glance</cite>, which is
+only made up half yearly. I have,
+however, before me this gentleman’s
+<cite>Monthly Colonial Circular</cite>, dated
+March the 18th, in which I observe a
+considerable increase in the exports
+of plain calicoes, printed and dyed
+calicoes, and cotton yarn to the following
+markets, with a few exceptions,
+for the first two months of the present
+year:—Calcutta, Bombay (increase in
+printed and dyed and in yarn, and
+small decrease in plain only); Madras
+(considerable increase in plain and
+printed and dyed, and small decrease
+in yarn); Singapore and Manilla
+(small decrease in printed and dyed
+and in yarn only); Batavia (large increase
+in all kinds); Hong Kong and
+Canton (large increase in plain, and
+small decline in printed); Shanghae
+(trade removed to other Chinese ports
+in which there is a large increase):
+Australian Colonies (increase in all
+kinds); Mauritius (stationary); Cape
+of Good Hope (increase in all); Coast
+of Africa (decline in all); Jamaica
+(decrease in plain and increase in
+printed); Honduras (increase); other
+West Indian ports (decrease); Cuba
+and St Thomas (both increase);
+French West Indies (increase in
+printed and small decline in plain);
+Brazils (large increase); Chili and
+Peru (large decrease); Colombia (decrease);
+River Plata (considerable
+decrease); Mexico (increase in plain,
+and decrease in printed); British
+North America (season for shipments
+not commenced); and United States
+(increase in both printed and plain,
+and a large business done, the shipments
+for the two months being upwards
+of half of the entire quantity
+exported in 1849.) Compared with
+the average of the same period of the
+preceding three years, there is an increase
+to nearly every market. With
+respect to the shipments to European
+markets, I cannot speak with precision
+as to quantities, from the circumstance,
+which I have named, of the accounts
+not having been yet made up. From
+the monthly return from the Board of
+Trade, however, it appears that a
+general increase has taken place in the
+declared value of cotton manufactures
+to all markets, the amount being in
+1850, £3,264,350 for the two months,
+against £2,837,300 last year. There
+is a very trifling decline in the export
+of yarns. From my own observation,
+I should augur that the increase has
+extended over March, to the United
+States and the markets of the Pacific
+especially—an unusual stimulus having
+been given to the consumption of
+these markets by the Californian discoveries.
+By the bye, I ought to mention,
+in connexion with the increase
+in the declared value of our exports
+this year, the fact that, owing to the
+advance in the price of the raw material,
+the value of goods exported will
+be rated higher than last year. To
+some extent, however, the severe
+winter of this year preventing the
+early opening of the navigation of the
+rivers of the north of Europe, as compared
+with the mild season last year,
+may be a set-off. The Mediterranean
+trade, and the operations of
+the Greek houses, have also been
+limited by our petty quarrel in this
+part of Europe.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Assuming, however, the actual
+quantity of cotton consumed by the
+Export Trade to have been equal to
+that consumed last year up to this
+period, and allowing for 40,000 bales,
+alleged by spinners to have been
+drawn from their own stocks instead
+of the Liverpool market, <em>$1</em>. When it is
+considered that these goods consist of
+the finer fabrics, in which the greatest
+amount of labour is employed, and
+upon which the largest percentage of
+profit is realised, whilst those consumed
+in the foreign markets are sold
+at the lowest margin of profit, and
+when exported frequently result in
+heavy losses to the shipper, the extent
+of the sacrifice made by the manufacturing
+community, in their mad adoption
+of a policy which has destroyed
+the Home market, may readily be
+seen.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The correctness of these calculations
+has been borne out by the
+general character of the Home Trade
+during the past four months, in which
+stagnation, and difficulty in accomplishing
+sales to consumers and retailers
+throughout the country, early
+manifested themselves. In the month
+of January, strong hopes were entertained,
+by the majority of the houses
+engaged in this branch of the business,
+that the worst of the embarrassment
+which had so long hung over the
+cotton manufacturing districts had
+passed over; and that a wholesome
+and active trade was before them.
+The circulars of the month of February,
+and the reports given week by
+week in the local journals published
+in the manufacturing districts, resumed
+their gloomy statements; and
+the home demand, it became clear,
+had returned to its previous lethargic
+state. From communications entered
+into with some of the country
+houses, I have derived intelligence
+respecting the result of their operations,
+almost precisely similar to those
+sent home by the representatives of
+produce houses as given above. The
+country buyers who come to the market
+display an entire want of their
+accustomed spirit, and buy sparingly
+an inferior class of goods to those
+which they have been, in former
+years, in the habit of consuming. The
+universal complaint of these parties,
+and of commercial travellers engaged
+in the Home Trade, is of declining
+consumption and ill-paid accounts,
+especially throughout the purely agricultural
+districts. One circumstance
+has tended in some measure to prevent
+the trade becoming absolutely
+ruinous—viz., the fact that cotton
+fabrics are now resorted to by many
+classes from motives of economy. The
+farmer’s and the tradesman’s wife and
+daughters make a fashion of necessity,
+and substitute printed cotton dresses
+for more expensive articles. A cotton
+shirt supplies moderately well the
+place of a linen one. Articles of elegance
+and luxury, however, even of
+this material, are complained of as
+most difficult of sale. In some of the
+large towns, a few houses are doing a
+fair business in heavy fabrics, such as
+fustians, moleskins, and other articles
+worn by the artisans and other working
+classes; and in some fancy goods
+of the same description for the middle
+classes. This fact, however, is in a
+great measure an <em>$1</em> of the declining
+condition of the country generally,
+the articles in question being
+worn, in a majority of cases, as substitutes
+for the more costly woollen
+fabrics. Moreover, no profit accrues
+to the manufacturer from these goods,
+their production at existing rates of
+the raw material being, on the contrary,
+attended with absolute loss.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The retail trade in the manufacturing
+towns themselves, represented as
+being in such a satisfactory condition,
+is anything but good, a considerable
+portion of the population being employed
+only two or three days in the
+week, and the whole having been compelled
+during the past two or three
+years to submit to reduction of wages,
+as the price of their boasted boon of
+Free-trade. This is particularly the
+case in the districts of Rochdale,
+(John Bright’s district,) Heywood,
+Bury, Middleton, &#38;c. The effect of
+preceding years’ short-time working
+is still severely felt, last year having
+been the only one since 1846—when
+we had the boasted measure of Sir
+Robert Peel, and the “heavy blow
+and great discouragement” was inflicted
+upon British agriculture and
+our sugar-growing colonies—that the
+manufacturing population have been
+fully employed.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Such being the acknowledged condition
+of the home market for manufactured
+goods, the question naturally
+presents itself—what has been the result,
+so far as profit is concerned, of
+the operations generally of the manufacturing
+community during the past
+four months? In reply to this question,
+it will be very easy to prove that
+thus far, in the present year, they have
+been the reverse of remunerative.
+The following extract from the circular
+of Messrs M‘Nair, Greenhow, and
+Irving, of Manchester—one of the best
+published, although putting rather the
+best face upon things—dated the 31st
+of December last year, will show the
+prospects with which manufacturers
+entered upon the present year:—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r c017'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“<span class='sc'>Manchester</span>, <em>$1</em>.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Exactly twelve months ago we represented
+the transactions of the closing
+month as having been almost unprecedented
+in extent, considering the season
+of the year; and to-day we are happy to
+have in our power to communicate a
+pretty similar statement with regard to
+the present month, repeating what we
+have often remarked, that <em>$1</em> in
+ordinary years is generally marked by
+dulness and inactivity.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“The position of the market, as indicated
+in our last (monthly) circular, continued
+for about ten days afterwards
+gradually acquiring greater force and depression,
+and accompanied with a decline
+in the value of many descriptions of
+cloth and twist. At that period, from a
+very prevalent belief that the commencement
+of the new year would be characterised
+by improvement, an active and vigorous
+demand for export and the home
+trade ensued, which has, notwithstanding
+the interruption of the holiday season,
+continued up to the present time, rendering
+the stocks of all kinds of light goods,
+as well as of some numbers of mule twist,
+exceedingly light, and placing many
+manufacturers and spinners under contract
+for some time hence.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Another authority, Messrs Hollinshead,
+Tetley, &#38; Co., an old-established
+cotton firm of Liverpool, who are
+generally in the possession of the best
+information, remarked upon the prospects
+of the district in their circular
+of the first of January as follows:—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Prospects for the general trade of the
+country, at least as regards the principal
+articles of export, more particularly cotton
+fabrics, were perhaps never more promising;
+and it is evident that the late disturbing
+causes, political and social, in
+Europe and India, with the effects produced
+upon other countries, reducing the
+consumption of cotton to 22,230 weekly
+in 1847, and 27,602 in 1848, (previously
+upwards of 30,000 bales weekly,) created
+a vacuum which has not been filled up by
+the increased consumption of 30,512 bales
+weekly in the present year; indeed it
+would seem that this large quantity (and
+it has been proportionately great in other
+cotton manufacturing countries) has only
+been sufficient to supply the increasing
+wants of the world, as we no longer hear
+of glutted markets, but the report is of
+light stocks almost everywhere. And
+when we take into consideration the low
+price of all articles of food, corn particularly,
+(a questionable advantage, perhaps,
+when unnaturally low, if the home market
+is to be considered of any value,) the
+great abundance of money, its low value,
+not exceeding, perhaps, 2½ per cent per
+annum in the London market, with a
+larger amount of gold, &#38;c. (£17,000,000)
+in the Bank of England than was ever
+known before, it is evident that a great
+stimulus may be given to the trade of the
+country, and that with the disfavour
+shown to railway property it is most
+likely the usual effects will follow—viz.,
+extensive speculation and greatly enhanced
+prices of all articles of import,
+and of cotton in particular.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The whole of the trade circulars,
+indeed, both from Liverpool and Manchester
+houses, expressed similar
+views with respect to the prospects of
+the present year; and seemed to expect
+an increase in the aggregate manufactures
+of the country. In reviewing
+the actual state of things which has
+taken place, I would direct your attention
+particularly to the fact of spinners
+and manufacturers being “under
+contract” at this period, as stated in the
+first circular from which I have quoted.
+Such contracts could only have been
+entered upon, consistently with prudence
+at least, in the anticipation of
+a continuance of the then existing
+prices of the raw material, or upon
+the assurance of a stock already in
+hand. To a considerable extent spinners
+did hold stock sufficient for the
+fulfilment, profitably, of a portion of
+their contracts, as is shown by the circumstance
+that they have, since the
+commencement of the year, worked up
+about 40,000 bales of cotton more
+than they have drawn from the Liverpool
+market. That in the majority of
+cases, however, the stocks held were
+only sufficient to complete a portion
+of the contracts entered into is a fact
+which is quite beyond dispute; and
+these parties have consequently been
+driven into the market to purchase
+the raw material at the ruling prices of
+the day. In order to ascertain their
+position, it will be necessary to trace
+the relative prices of cotton and of
+goods during the interval between
+December 1849 and the present time.
+Up to the commencement of that
+month, the prices of the raw material
+had been gradually rising; and the
+almost universal complaint of spinners
+and manufacturers had been of the
+unwillingness of buyers to pay a proportionate
+advance upon goods.
+Thus, on the 1st of June last year, the
+price of fair bowed cotton was 4¼d.
+per lb., from which it advanced gradually,
+owing to reports of a short
+yield of the crop in America, until on
+the 1st of January this year it stood at
+6⅜d., being an advance of 2⅛d. per lb.
+The price of best seconds water twist,
+No. 20 was on the 1st of June 6¾d.,
+and on the 1st of January 8¼d. The
+price of best second mule, No. 40,
+was at the same dates respectively
+8½d. and 10½d. We had therefore—</p>
+
+<table class='table1'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>Advance</td>
+ <td class='c011'>upon cotton, .</td>
+ <td class='c011'>2⅛d.</td>
+ <td class='c014'>per lb.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>Do.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>upon yarn, No. 20,</td>
+ <td class='c011'>1½d.</td>
+ <td class='c014'>„</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013'>Do.</td>
+ <td class='c011'>upon yarn, No. 40,</td>
+ <td class='c011'>2d.</td>
+ <td class='c014'>„</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c008'>This was obviously a losing trade;
+and it is acknowledged that, during
+the whole of this period business was
+only profitably carried on by the fortunate
+few who had laid in stocks at
+the low prices. On the 1st of February
+the highest price was attained,
+fair bowed cotton being quoted at 6⅞d.,
+with No. 20 yarn at 8¾d., and No. 40
+at 11¼d.—being an advance of ½ on
+the raw material, ½d. on the No. 20
+yarn, and ¾d. on No. 40. To counteract
+the upward tendency of the market, a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_600'>600</span>resort to the working of short time
+was resolved upon, principally by the
+spinners of coarse numbers; and the
+consumption was thus materially reduced,
+spinners and manufacturers
+drawing upon their stocks on hand,
+and thus keeping out of the markets
+for the raw material. A gradual decline
+in the price of cotton was the result—goods,
+however, sharing in the
+depression; and on the 1st of April
+fair bowed was quoted at 6⅛d., or ¾d.
+per lb. lower than in February. No.
+20 yarn, the stocks having been
+reduced by short-time working, had
+declined only <a id='t600'></a>½d. per lb.; No. 40, however,
+had fallen to the same extent as
+cotton. There was therefore no
+increase of prosperity brought about
+thus far by the short-time movement,
+the price of goods remaining at the
+same unsatisfactory point as compared
+with the raw material.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>At this date, Messrs Robert Barbour
+and Brother of Manchester, in
+their monthly circular, speak as follows
+with respect to the general trade
+of the cotton manufacturing districts:—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“We have to report a very dull and
+unsatisfactory state of business in this
+district during the month. There has
+been a gradual decline in prices varying
+from 2½ to 7½ per cent, so that some
+kinds of goods can now be bought fully
+10 to 12 per cent under the rates which
+were demanded in January. These reduced
+quotations have induced some parties
+to enter the market, but still the
+demand has been much under the average
+of what is usually experienced at this
+season of the year. The working of
+‘short time’ is now generally adopted
+by the producers of coarse yarn and heavy
+goods, and several large mills continue
+closed. The drooping tendency of some
+descriptions of the finer fabrics has been
+slightly counteracted during the last week
+by more favourable intelligence from Calcutta
+and China; still, however, our market
+is unsteady, and it is more than
+usually difficult to form any idea of what
+is likely to be the future course of prices.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“In the goods market a general quietness
+has prevailed throughout the month,
+buyers acting with extreme caution, purchasing
+only in small parcels for the supply
+of their more pressing wants: prices,
+consequently, have been irregular, and
+some considerable sales have been made
+by needy manufacturers at very low
+rates.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The dulness here spoken of is particularly
+observable in the staple articles
+consumed by the home trade.
+Messrs Barbour and Brother state
+that—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“36-inch shirtings have participated in
+the general depression, and stocks are
+beginning to accumulate. 66-reeds, 7¾
+lb., have receded in value 6d. to 9d. per
+piece, having been sold in February at 8s.
+to 8s. 4½d., whilst now they are worth
+only 7s. 6d. to 7s. 9d.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Again:—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Domestics T cloths and stout long
+cloths continue neglected, notwithstanding
+the curtailed production, and can now
+be bought on easier terms. Average qualities
+of domestics have been sold at 9d.
+per lb., which is by no means remunerative
+to the maker.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The concluding paragraph of the
+circular is very decisive as to the comparatively
+profitless nature of the manufacture:—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Cotton has now declined about 1d.
+per lb. during the last three months. It is
+still, however, much higher than is warranted
+by the prices which can be obtained
+for the manufactured article. Indeed,
+<em>$1</em>.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Since the date of the circular containing
+these gloomy accounts, an
+important change has taken place,
+and the tide has set in strongly
+against the manufacturing community.
+Immediately subsequent to its
+publication, the arrival of the American
+mail-steamer brought news confirmatory
+of the anticipations of a
+short crop of cotton, and prices immediately
+advanced, leaving the spinners
+and manufacturers to recruit their
+exhausted stocks at a further loss, as
+compared with the prices of goods.
+On the 5th of April, the receipts of
+cotton at the ports of America were
+shown to be 310,000 bales less than
+at the same period of the preceding
+year; whilst the stock computed to be
+held in Liverpool was 511,000 bales,
+as compared with 447,300 bales held at
+the same date in 1849, or only 63,700
+bales more than last year, although
+spinners had decreased their consumption
+by 6300 bales per week, and taken
+40,000 bales from their own stocks.
+The total crop of the United States,
+which had been estimated in the beginning
+of the year at from 2,250,000
+to 2,300,000 bales, was only estimated
+in the advices by the steamer
+at 2,100,000 bales.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>I fear that, to some readers, these
+statistics may be rather tedious.
+They are necessary, however, to
+enable us fully to understand the position
+in which this important branch
+of the manufactures of the country,
+and the large population dependent
+upon it, have been placed by the intelligence
+brought by another later
+mail from the United States, which
+arrived in the Mersey on the morning
+of the 16th ult. I have stated that
+the estimates formed of the probable
+crop in America, at the beginning of
+the year, varied from 2,250,000 to
+2,300,000 bales. These had been
+reduced, up to the arrival of the
+steamer in the first week of April, to
+2,100,000 bales. With this progressive
+decline going on in the amount of
+the crop, as estimated by competent
+judges upon the spot, and with the
+fact of decreased receipts at the American
+ports before their eyes, the spinners
+of this country have, with few
+exceptions, resolutely refused to give
+credit to the representations made to
+them, and kept further exhausting
+their stocks on hand, or buying only
+to supply their immediate wants. The
+arrival of the Niagara, however, has
+put the question at rest, and not only
+confirmed the statements as to the
+crop being a short one, but established
+the fact that it is likely to be much
+shorter than was by anybody anticipated.
+The following is the startling
+disclosure made by Mr T. J. Stewart
+of New York, one of the best authorities
+in the United States, upon the
+subject, in his circular of the 2d
+ult.:—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“The crop proves to be a short one—and
+if measured by the ability of the
+world to consume, the shortest one since
+’41–’42. The falling off in the receipts
+regularly exceeds the progressive estimate
+I made some time since, and on
+which I made up my table of 2,100,000
+bales. It will close <em>$1</em>. How far below, I cannot at present
+say, but the interior of the country
+is exhausted of supplies to so great a
+degree, that it is evident that such a figure
+is totally impracticable.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The decrease in the stocks arrived
+at the ports of America is put down
+by him now at 470,000 bales. Of
+this very insufficient crop of less than
+2,000,000 bales—that of the preceding
+year, I may remark, was 2,728,000—Mr
+Stewart reminds us that <em>$1</em>. This, of itself, is a
+somewhat startling fact, and proves
+the rapid strides which America is
+making toward depriving this country
+of its manufacturing pre-eminence.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>It is obvious, from the above circumstances,
+that the American planters,
+and the holders of cotton in that
+country and in Liverpool, have the
+manufacturer at this moment within
+their grasp, and will be enabled to
+extort from his necessities still higher
+prices than those which have for
+months past rendered his business a
+losing one. The stocks of cotton held
+in the manufacturing districts are unprecedentedly
+light, and those of goods
+have been of late considerably reduced.
+But can an advance be secured
+on the manufactured article, corresponding
+with that demanded for the
+raw material? Few people believe
+this to be practicable. With the exception
+of a little temporary activity
+in the demand of goods for the East
+Indian market, towards the middle of
+last month, the gloomy feeling existing
+in every branch of the trade had
+deepened, and the demand for nearly
+every article perceptibly lessened.
+The accounts received by export
+houses from foreign markets are not
+of a character to encourage further
+operations; and the demand for the
+home trade remains very limited. In
+broad terms, <em>$1</em>. With respect to the foreign
+trade, the worst feature is the falling
+off in the demand from the United
+States, to which I showed that, in the
+first two months of this year, we had
+shipped goods equal to the one half of
+last year’s exports. The returns for
+these shipments may be expected to
+be very unsatisfactory. On this subject,
+the last steamer (the Niagara)
+brought the following report:—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“The spring trade of New York <em>$1</em>. Early in January
+there was an unusually active demand.
+High prices were obtained, and
+large sales were made; since then business
+had fallen off, and <em>$1</em>. The stock of
+British and other foreign dry goods was
+not large, but the demand was small.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>From this market, expectations of
+the most sanguine character had been
+previously indulged in, which are thus
+rudely dashed to the ground.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>As yet the manufacturing community,
+stunned by the conviction which
+has been forced upon them of their
+desperate position, have formed no
+definite resolution as to the course to
+be pursued. For a week or two longer,
+it is possible that a portion of them
+may make further fruitless efforts to
+keep down the market for the raw
+material, which will now be held by
+speculators, aided by the abundant
+funds in the hands of bankers, with
+the certainty of ultimately realising
+higher rates. In the opinion of parties
+acquainted intimately with the
+whole circumstances of the trade, the
+only available course for spinners is
+to decrease consumption still further,
+by an extension of the system of
+working short time, or by closing a
+considerable portion of the mills altogether.
+Profitable working, even
+without an increase in the price of
+the raw material, is out of the question,
+with markets in their present
+depressed condition. But with such
+an advance as must be paid, if even
+the present reduced rate of consumption
+is to go on, the business would
+be perfectly ruinous.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>It is painful to reflect upon the
+severe suffering which must be entailed
+upon the operative and middle
+classes, throughout the manufacturing
+districts, by a general suspension of
+operations, or even by an increase of
+short-time working. These classes,
+greatly reduced as their wages have
+been during the past two years, have
+not, I may repeat, recovered as yet
+from the effect of the suspension of
+manufacturing activity to which they
+were forced in 1847 and 1848; and are
+consequently in a much worse position
+to be thrown again upon their own
+resources. The neatly furnished cottage
+no longer remains to be dismantled
+for the purpose of providing
+food for their families. The little
+savings’ bank hoards disappeared in
+those years, and have not since been
+replaced. A few employers, no doubt,
+may be disposed to allow to their
+hands a pittance sufficient to provide
+against actual deprivation; but it is
+to be feared that the mass will act
+with no such humane considerateness.
+Another result of such a course must
+be still farther to decrease the consumption,
+and depress the prices, of
+our large stocks of imported produce,
+and thus to inflict heavy losses upon
+their holders.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>It is to me perfectly clear, and the
+fact is tacitly admitted by a large
+portion of the community engaged in
+mercantile and manufacturing pursuits,
+that a most trying and fearful
+crisis is at hand; and that the present
+summer will not end without her
+Majesty’s Ministers, and the Free
+Trade party, being compelled to acknowledge
+that the speech from the
+Throne, and the representations of
+prosperity made by them at the
+opening of Parliament, were, if not
+deliberate perversions of the truth, at
+all events most ill-considered and
+hasty. We had in February last, it
+is now evident, no such thing as even
+prosperous manufactures, or a healthy
+state of commerce. Whilst these representations
+were being made, and
+agricultural pursuits alone pointed to
+as being in a state of temporary depression,
+the leading manufacture of
+the country was being carried on
+without profit, and our merchants and
+traders were feeling the ground shake
+beneath their feet. It is of no use,
+however, to refer to the past. The
+questions for the nation now to consider
+are—first, What is it which has
+brought about this general prostration
+of the country? and next, Where is
+the remedy to be applied? It is idle
+for the Free-traders to point any
+longer to potato rots, to railway
+manias, or to high prices of cotton, as
+the cause of the failure of their predictions
+of coming general prosperity.
+The truth is palpably before the world
+that the foreign trade, stimulate it as
+we may, will not employ the industry
+of the country; and that a prosperous
+home trade is indispensably necessary
+to render the foreign trade a profitable
+one. It is equally idle to tell us that
+the present state of things is only temporary,
+and that a different result of
+our recent policy will be attained by
+and by. In what direction are we to
+look for the change? Is any new
+world about to be discovered? Is
+there a single outlet to be found for
+our manufactures, which we cannot
+close up in a month? I confess that
+I cannot discern a gleam of hope for
+the future, or a prospect of the restoration
+of this great nation to its wonted
+prosperity, except in a total reversal
+of the legislation of the past few
+years, by which, and by which alone,
+has been caused that prostration of its
+industry and enterprise, which we are
+now witnessing on every side—in our
+own once happy land, and throughout
+the length and breadth of that vast
+colonial empire, once the pride of
+Great Britain, and the envy of the
+world, but now her shame, ruined
+and robbed as it has been by the legislation
+of designing or incapable statesmen.
+With our agricultural population
+fast sinking into pauperism and
+insolvency, or taking flight from our
+shores, as from those of an infected
+land, to fertilise with their capital and
+enterprise other soils, which own protective
+governments and a kindred
+people; with the landed aristocracy of
+the kingdom, and squirearchy and the
+yeomen, stripped of half their possessions—the
+baronial hall no longer
+distributing its hospitality to thousands,
+and pinching poverty and thrift
+marking the household arrangements,
+where of old there was plenty, a cup
+for the needy, and consolation and
+succour for the afflicted; with the
+middle classes in our towns forced
+down in the social scale, and hovering
+over the gulf of insolvency and ruin,
+and the labourer turned out, a desperate
+man, to wrest with the strong
+hand the food which we deny him the
+means to purchase, whilst we mock
+him with its cheapness—the manufacturing
+body will strive in vain for the
+consummation of that object which,
+in their selfishness, they proposed to
+themselves as the result of the boasted
+Free-trade policy—viz. the setting up
+of their houses over those of the time-honoured
+names of the land. Blindly
+and madly they have detached the
+handful of snow from the summit of
+the mountain; with mocking jeers of
+hideous and idiotic glee, they have
+seen its gathering bulk, and watched
+its progress as it rolled, prostrating
+the cottage and the farmstead, and
+spreading devastation over the vineyard
+and the waving corn; and they
+stand now shuddering at the mighty
+avalanche which is thundering above
+the tall chimney and the smoky town,
+and will shortly involve themselves
+in the general calamity and devastation.
+Yes, the fears of these men are
+at length beginning to be effectively
+roused by the contemplation of the
+work of their own hands. I say
+<em>$1</em>, because the day of retribution
+is only now coming upon them,
+and making itself felt. The philosophers
+of the loom and spindle talk
+now “with bated breath” of the
+efficacy of their universal specific.
+There are doubting anxious faces on
+‘Change, gloomy greetings as they
+meet in the streets, and idle hands in
+the once busy salerooms and warehouses.
+Many, whose voices were
+lately loud in cheering the flattering
+tales and sophistries of their Cobdens
+and Brights—some of those even
+whose subscriptions enabled the former
+to buy his Woodland farm, and
+whose votes and influence hoisted the
+blustering Quaker into a seat in the
+Legislature, are now ready to acknowledge,
+in private, that “there is some
+mistake;” that they have, perhaps,
+gone too far; and that, after all, Free
+Trade is “only an experiment.”
+Alas! it is one whose fatal effects
+will have to be deeply deplored, and
+from which the country will not recover
+for years to come. A quarter
+of a century of toil will scarcely replace
+the capital which has been swept
+away, up to the present period. More
+remains to be swept away; but now
+it will be the capital of the authors of
+the calamity.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>And this portion of these philosophers
+are busily and eagerly striving
+to persuade the farmer that he is foolishly
+nervous under the apprehension
+of permanent low prices; and that
+these have now reached the level at
+which the foreigner can no longer
+supply us profitably. Unfortunately,
+whilst they are sagely assuring the
+world of this fact, grain and flour keeps
+steadily pouring into our ports, at still
+further reduced prices; and additional
+evidence is daily being afforded of the
+total ignorance of the subject displayed
+in their statistics and calculations:
+supplies are reaching us daily from
+countries which were left altogether
+out of the catalogue of those from
+whose growers we were led to anticipate
+competition. Thus from France,
+a country which it was always said was
+not able to grow sufficient for its own
+consumption, the receipts at the port
+of Liverpool during two weeks, in
+which alone the quantity is quoted
+separately, were as follows:—</p>
+
+<table class='table1'>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='c011'></th>
+ <th class='c011'>&#160;</th>
+ <th class='c014'>French flour.</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>Week ending</td>
+ <td class='c011'>March 19,</td>
+ <td class='c030'>6000 barrels.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c011'>April 9,</td>
+ <td class='c030'>6166</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c011' colspan='2'>and 2419 American.</td>
+ <td class='c030'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c031'>And from that country, and the whole
+of the ports of the North of Europe,
+distant from us by only a few days’
+sail—by a voyage made in less time
+than the average consumed in those
+made from port to port on our own
+coasts—supplies will continue to come,
+at rates with which the British grower
+can never hope to compete. In fact,
+the farmer of the North of Europe may
+in future be treated as a British subject—enjoying
+all the immunities of
+one, without contributing towards his
+burthens. He is nearer the London
+or the Liverpool markets than a Norfolk
+or a Lincolnshire farmer; and
+that he frequently pays less for the
+conveyance of his produce than it
+will be seen from the following table,
+which contains the rates actually paid
+in Liverpool by importing houses
+during the years beginning in 1847 to
+this year, such farmer pays:—</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='10'><span class='sc'>Coasting</span> and <span class='sc'>Foreign Freights</span> of <span class='sc'>Wheat</span> to <span class='sc'>Liverpool</span>.</td></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='bbt blt c032'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='bbt c032'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='bbt blt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='bbt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='bbt blt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='bbt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='bbt blt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='bbt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='bbt blt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='bbt brt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='bbt blt c032'></th>
+ <th class='bbt c032'>&#160;</th>
+ <th class='bbt blt c034' colspan='2'>1847.</th>
+ <th class='bbt blt c034' colspan='2'>1848.</th>
+ <th class='bbt blt c034' colspan='2'>1849.</th>
+ <th class='bbt blt brt c034' colspan='2'>1850.</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='blt c032'></th>
+ <th class='c032'>&#160;</th>
+ <th class='blt c034' colspan='2'>Per quarter.</th>
+ <th class='blt c034' colspan='2'>Per quarter.</th>
+ <th class='blt c034' colspan='2'>Per quarter.</th>
+ <th class='blt brt c034' colspan='2'>Per quarter.</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='blt c032'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c032'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'><em>$1</em></td>
+ <td class='c033'><em>$1</em></td>
+ <td class='blt c033'><em>$1</em></td>
+ <td class='c033'><em>$1</em></td>
+ <td class='blt c033'><em>$1</em></td>
+ <td class='c033'><em>$1</em></td>
+ <td class='blt c033'><em>$1</em></td>
+ <td class='brt c033'><em>$1</em></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='blt c032'>From</td>
+ <td class='c032'>Stettin,</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>5 0</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>4 0 to</td>
+ <td class='c033'>2 9</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>3 0</td>
+ <td class='brt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='blt c032'>„</td>
+ <td class='c032'>Dantzig,</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>4 6</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>4 0</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>4 0</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>3 0</td>
+ <td class='brt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='blt c032'>„</td>
+ <td class='c032'>Rostock,</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>6 0</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>4 0</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>4 0</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='brt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='blt c032'>„</td>
+ <td class='c032'>Hamburg,</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>4 0 to</td>
+ <td class='c033'>3 6</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>4 0 to</td>
+ <td class='c033'>3 0</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>3 0</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>1 9</td>
+ <td class='brt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='blt c032'>„</td>
+ <td class='c032'>Rotterdam,</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>2 6</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>2 0 to</td>
+ <td class='c033'>1 9</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>1 9</td>
+ <td class='brt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='blt c032'>„</td>
+ <td class='c032'>Antwerp,</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>3 0 to</td>
+ <td class='c033'>2 6</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>2 6 to</td>
+ <td class='c033'>1 6</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>1 3 to</td>
+ <td class='brt c033'>1 0 !</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='blt c032'>„</td>
+ <td class='c032'>Bremen,</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>3 3 to</td>
+ <td class='c033'>3 0</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>1 6</td>
+ <td class='brt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='blt c032'>„</td>
+ <td class='c032'>Bruges,</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>1 6</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>1 6</td>
+ <td class='brt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='blt c032'>„</td>
+ <td class='c032'>Ghent,</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>1 6</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>1 6</td>
+ <td class='brt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='blt c032'>„</td>
+ <td class='c032'>New York, (last rates,)</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>3 0</td>
+ <td class='brt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='blt c032'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c032'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='brt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='blt c032' colspan='2'><em>$1</em></td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='brt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='blt c032'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c032'>Colchester,</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>2 0</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>2 0</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>1 6</td>
+ <td class='brt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='blt c032'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c032'>Woodbridge,</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>2 6</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>2 6</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>1 9</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>1 6</td>
+ <td class='brt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='blt c032'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c032'>Salcombe,</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>2 6</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>2 6</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>2 0</td>
+ <td class='brt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='blt c032'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c032'>Kingsbridge,</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>2 6</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>2 6</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>2 0</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='brt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='blt c032'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c032'>Lynn,</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>2 6</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>2 1</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='brt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='blt c032'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c032'>Ipswich,</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>2 3</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>1 9</td>
+ <td class='c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>1 9 to</td>
+ <td class='c033'>1 6</td>
+ <td class='blt c033'>1 6</td>
+ <td class='brt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='bbt blt c032'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='bbt c032'>Yarmouth,</td>
+ <td class='bbt blt c033'>2 1</td>
+ <td class='bbt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='bbt blt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='bbt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='bbt blt c033'>1 10</td>
+ <td class='bbt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='bbt blt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='bbt brt c033'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c031'>Yet the freight on wheat was to be
+a sufficient protection for the farmer!</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>I must here, sir, leave the subject
+to your own powerful pen. I have
+given you the facts as I have collated
+them from the most authentic sources,
+and the observations which I have
+made personally; and they have more
+than confirmed the impressions with
+which I entered upon this inquiry.—
+have the honour to be, &#38;c.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_605'>605</span>
+ <h2 class='c002'>ALISON’S POLITICAL ESSAYS.<a id='r5'></a><a href='#f5' class='c018'><sup>[5]</sup></a></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>The collection of scattered periodical
+essays, especially such as are of
+a strictly political character, is an
+adventure far more perilous to the
+reputation of an author than the
+issue of any single work deliberately
+planned, and laboriously executed in
+the closet. The historian, dealing
+solely with the records of the past,
+reviving or recreating pictures which
+have long ago appeared upon the ancient
+canvass, may without difficulty
+arrange his scattered portraits and
+groups in such an order, that they
+shall impress the public mind with a
+feeling of absolute novelty. A historical
+paradox, if ingeniously conceived
+and plausibly conveyed, is
+sure to command attention. The
+fickleness of the Athenians was by
+no means idiosyncratic to that volatile
+nation. All men weary of hearing
+the same phrase and the same
+judgment invariably repeated. They
+suspect the justice of Aristides, or
+the perfidy of Crookback Richard, on
+account of the unanimous verdict,
+and are by no means displeased when
+any daring casuist steps forward,
+armed with a tolerable array of
+proof, to detract from the rigid virtue
+of the one, or to palliate the vices of
+the other. In truth, the materials of
+all history are so various and conflicting
+in their character, that an
+artist of consummate skill, who is
+withal not over-scrupulous, may
+easily pass off fictions under the disguise
+of broad reality. Historical
+sketches, therefore, which relate to
+past events, may be viewed in the
+light either of lively episodes or of
+profound commentaries; and their
+republication, after a term of years,
+can in no way affect the soundness of
+the author’s judgment.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>To republish criticisms, especially
+such as relate to the works of cotemporaries,
+is certainly a more delicate
+task. It is easy to comment upon an
+author whose works have been long
+before the public, and frequently and
+diligently scanned. High criticism
+may discover beauties or detect faults
+which have escaped the notice of less
+keen and scrutinising observers; but,
+in the aggregate, certainly in the majority
+of cases, the broad opinion
+which has been expressed by others
+is allowed to remain unchallenged. The
+influence of previous judgment invariably
+sways the critic. None are rash
+enough to deny the genius of Shakspeare;
+at the same time, nothing is
+more certain than that, were another
+Shakspeare to arise amongst us at
+this moment, there would be no kind
+of unanimity as to his deserts. In
+all ages and in all countries this has
+been the rule. Personal spite, unacknowledged
+and possibly unperceived
+envy, party difference of
+opinion, disparity of station, prejudice
+of education—all these, in their
+turn, have passed, like so many
+clouds, between the sun of living
+genius and the critics who surveyed
+its orbit. Nor ought we to overlook the
+fact that, in many instances, meteors
+have been mistaken for suns, and the
+eyes of the critic been dazzled by a
+glare, to which his own willing imagination
+lent at least one half its brilliancy.
+Therefore it is that contemporary
+criticism, when republished in
+an abiding form, rarely satisfies the
+expectation of the reader. His own
+judgment has been formed, apart
+from the considerations and prejudices
+which are so apt to beset the critic;
+and he conceives an unfavourable impression
+of the literary acuteness of
+the writer, when he finds a gross
+discrepancy between the older and the
+later estimate.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But far more trying to an author
+is the republication of political essays,
+composed during the progress of great
+national events. This branch of
+composition is peculiar to our own
+age, in which periodical literature is
+so marked and eminent a feature.
+Pamphleteering is of venerable date.
+Sir Thomas More, Milton, Marvell,
+Swift, and Defoe, were all notable
+pamphleteers; but periodical writing,
+in the highest sense of the term,
+is the invention of the present century.
+That great and influential organs
+of public opinion, ranking among
+their contributors the men of the
+highest intellect and the most laborious
+acquirements, should have been
+established in our time, marks not
+only the development of the influence
+of the press, but the importance
+of the events which such men are imperatively
+summoned to discuss. It
+marks even more, for it has established
+a power beyond the boundaries
+of the old constitution, which, as it is
+used or misused, cannot fail to affect
+materially the destinies of Great
+Britain.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Every political treatise referring to
+events which have engrossed the attention
+of the day, either as modifications
+or as changes of our social system,
+must be valuable in later years.
+It must necessarily recommend or
+condemn measures on account of
+their probable operation in the time
+to come; it must in some degree be a
+prophecy, or else it is practically
+worthless. The politician studies the
+past merely as his guide for the
+future. If he is learned, wise, and at
+all an adept in the science which he
+professes—than which no other is of
+so momentous an import—he will
+consider past history as the barometer
+which must guide him in predicating
+the approach either of a tempest or a
+calm. Temporary clamour or occasional
+obstruction will not lead him
+to forsake clear principles of action, or
+to recommend a grand constitutional
+remedy in the case of a trifling local
+disease. He must look forward
+beyond the sphere of immediate
+action—resolute in this belief, that
+one false step, however small, may
+upset the equilibrium of the State.
+Expediency, the modern idol, finds
+little favour in the eyes of the true
+and sagacious statesman. He tests
+measures by their intrinsic value,
+regardless of the “pressure from
+without;” and he looks upon Parliamentary
+majorities as of less
+moment than the maintenance of the
+real interests of his country.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>If we apply these remarks to our
+later political history, and to the conduct
+of those men whom circumstances
+have elevated to the highest
+stations in Government, we shall at
+once perceive that the first great
+principles of practical statesmanship
+have been abandoned. The welfare
+and integrity of the Empire has been
+made a subsidiary object to the
+triumph of party ambition; and
+accordingly, <span class='fss'>CONSISTENCY</span>, that grand
+test of a politician’s sincerity and
+soundness, is the very quality which
+is wanting. To consistency, indeed,
+neither Lord John Russell nor Sir
+Robert Peel, for many years the rival
+chiefs of party, can lay the slightest
+claim. They have been playing a
+long, and, doubtless, an interesting
+game, with the map of Britain and
+its dependencies before them as a
+chess-board: they have directed the
+whole of their energies to giving
+checkmate to one another; and with
+this view they have again and again
+altered the relative positions of king
+and queen, bishops, knights, castles,
+and pawns. To counteract the last
+move of his adversary was the great
+object of each of these ingenious
+players. It was a pretty trial of
+dexterity and finesse; but we trust,
+for the sake of the chessmen, that the
+match is finally concluded. Talent
+of this kind may, indeed, be available
+when it is necessary to contend with
+a foreign adversary; but it is worse
+than mischievous when practised
+systematically at home.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>To have surveyed the political events
+of the last twenty years with a calm
+and dispassionate eye—to estimate
+the consequences of each concession
+to popular clamour, and each move
+for party purposes—to form inductions
+as to the future from the indelible
+history of the past—to trace the
+causes of social misery and disquiet
+to their remote and recondite source—to
+discern the coming cloud of
+adversity in the midst of apparent
+abundance—required more than common
+thought, learning, sagacity, and
+prescience; and the man who has
+done all this, cannot fail to be ranked,
+in the estimation of those whose judgment
+is of real value, among the first
+masters of political and economic
+science. Many brilliant commentaries
+upon passing events, which at
+the first blush were received as absolute
+oracles of wisdom, have utterly
+failed in their predictions, and are
+now consigned to oblivion. They
+failed—if from no other cause, at least
+assuredly from this—that they flowed
+from the pens of partisans, whose whole
+energies were devoted to the advancement
+of themselves and their faction.
+Party spirit, indeed, has of late years
+almost entirely overshadowed that
+patriotism which was once our
+highest boast. Truth may be spoken
+of an opponent—and very often
+more than truth; but it is seldom
+expressed with regard to the political
+conduct of those whom men are accustomed
+to regard as their friends.
+Private motives are allowed to interfere
+with the more rigorous functions
+of the censor; the moralist is
+changed into the apologetic rhetorician;
+the judge becomes the interested
+advocate.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Were the present crisis of our political
+history less momentous than it
+truly is—were not the great and
+final struggle for a return to the principles,
+by means of which our national
+greatness was achieved, so near at
+hand—we might, from motives and
+considerations easily appreciable, have
+left this volume of Mr Alison’s collected
+political essays without any special
+notice. For a long period of years,
+embracing the most important changes
+which have been made in the institutions
+and relations of this country,
+Mr Alison has been a constant contributor
+to the Magazine, adopting his
+own views, enforcing his own opinions,
+without reference to the distinctions
+of party or the position of individual
+statesmen. We believe that, in some
+respects, the attitude of the Magazine
+has differed from that assumed by any
+periodical publication in the country.
+It has never been the organ of a Party,
+and never subservient to a Government.
+Many times we have been
+compelled to differ from those whose
+political opinions have been thought
+most closely to approximate to our
+own; and never have we hesitated to
+express that difference in clear and
+unambiguous terms, knowing that a
+true and honourable conviction never
+ought to be concealed, or can be without
+affecting the integrity of those who
+entertain it.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The present publication sufficiently
+discloses the part which Mr Alison
+has taken in the political discussions
+which have arisen during that eventful
+period. They are valuable to the
+rising generation for two especial
+reasons. In the first place, they are
+a faithful record of the impressions
+which passing events made upon the
+mind of a highly-gifted, generous, and
+independent man, the object of whose
+life was apart from those pursuits
+which inflame the passions, whilst
+they warp the judgment, of the mere
+partisan. In the second place, they
+will enable the reader to trace, step
+by step, the innovations which modern
+Liberalism has made upon the older
+limits of the constitution; and to estimate
+the consistency of those who at
+one time affected to be the opponents
+of that Liberalism, and at another,
+whether through weakness, or treachery,
+or ambition, came forward to
+assist in its blind and infatuated progress.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Perhaps the most interesting papers
+in the present volume are those which
+refer to the memorable and exciting
+era of the Reform Bill. They are not
+only interesting, but highly instructive
+in a constitutional point of view, as
+showing the utter disregard of the
+Whig faction to the maintenance of
+that political framework which, when
+in power, they affect to worship with
+almost superstitious veneration.
+Never, probably, was there a period
+in our history when the passions of
+the populace were more dexterously
+and deliberately excited by men of
+high station, and by no means contemptible
+intellect. Treason was
+then in vogue: sedition openly encouraged.
+Most of us can recollect the
+ugly and ominous emblems which
+were paraded through the streets of
+the larger towns, and the violence
+with which every one supposed to be
+hostile to the popular measure was
+assailed. Haughty aristocrats, like
+the late Earl Grey, condescended to
+treat with Jacobin clubs and political
+unions; the physical power of the
+masses was appealed to as an argument
+of irresistible weight, and Whig
+officials were privy to the plan of a
+projected Birmingham insurrection.
+The voice of reason was entirely stifled
+amidst the general democratic howl,
+and all suggestions as to a modification
+of the grand electoral scheme
+were treated with fierce hostility.
+The framers of the measure had no
+wish that its details should be narrowly
+sifted, or submitted to the test
+of principle. There was a deep meaning
+in the phrase, which at that time
+passed into a proverb, “The Bill—the
+whole Bill—and nothing but the Bill!”
+No other method of reform, however
+large and comprehensive, would have
+suited the junta who then deemed
+themselves secure of an interminable
+lease of power. And why? Because
+any other measure which might have
+embraced the claim of the Colonies to
+a share in the Imperial representation,
+would have interfered with their special
+project of lowering the landed
+interest, and giving a decided preponderance
+in Parliament to the votes of
+the urban population.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>We are far from wishing to maintain
+that the spirit which animated
+the councils of the Conservative leaders
+of the day was in all respects the
+most prudent; or that they did not to
+a certain extent accelerate the movement
+by withholding minor concessions,
+which might have been gracefully
+and advantageously given. But
+in justice to them it must be remembered,
+that they had a great principle
+to contend for—a principle too little
+understood then, and perhaps only
+now becoming generally appreciated on
+account of the pernicious effects which
+have resulted from its violation. The
+older Representative system of Great
+Britain might appear to the casual
+eye artificial, unequal, and therefore
+unjust; but it had this grand and wholesome
+advantage, which we look for in
+vain in its successor, that, by means
+of it, not only were the great classes
+of the community at home adequately
+represented, but our fellow-subjects of
+the Colonies could, and did, exercise a
+direct influence within the walls of St
+Stephen’s. To allow this influence to
+be encroached on, however covertly
+or plausibly, seemed tantamount to
+an abandonment of the principle by
+which the Conservative party had
+been guided throughout; and subsequent
+events have shown that no
+exaggerated estimate was formed of
+the tendencies of democratic rule.
+This conviction of the prospective
+danger of the Reform measure to the
+integrity of the British Empire was,
+we know, the main cause of that early,
+though perhaps injudicious, resistance
+to the extension of the electoral suffrage,
+which finally gave way before
+the impulse added to popular excitement
+by the example of foreign revolution.
+As regarded the welfare of
+our Colonies, the Reform Bill was
+virtually a death-blow. It laid the
+foundation for a rapid succession of
+measures, selfish in their tendency
+and grossly impolitic, which have
+already gone far to pervert the loyal
+feelings of the Colonists, by teaching
+them that the mother country has
+decided upon a policy altogether injurious
+to their interests as subjects of
+the British Crown. They have had
+no voice, no direction in the legislative
+enactments which have since
+that time so deeply affected their
+prosperity; they have been governed
+rather as tributaries than as portions
+of the Empire; and their complaints
+have been too often treated with
+undisguised contumely, or, at best,
+with haughty indifference. Our
+opinion as to the importance of the
+maintenance of our Colonial dominions,
+and the imminent necessity which
+exists of securing that maintenance
+by giving them some effective
+voice in the legislative councils of
+Great Britain, has been repeatedly
+expressed. No other step will suffice
+to stay the tide of disaffection; and
+happy will it be for all of us, if the
+practical refutation of the Free-trade
+delusion, now becoming every day
+more obvious and acknowledged, shall
+lead to such prudent measures, with
+regard to our dependencies, as may
+again consolidate into one great and
+united mass, inspired by the same
+feelings and actuated by the same
+interests, the scattered elements of
+British greatness and renown.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But apart altogether from Colonial
+considerations, the Reform Bill has
+been productive of the most serious
+consequences to the internal economy
+of this country. Under its benign
+operation the National Debt, instead
+of being diminished, is augmented;
+whilst, at the same time, by a system
+of ruinous cheapness, induced by the
+free admission of foreign produce to
+compete in the home market with our
+own, incomes have been lowered by
+nearly a half, and the means of paying
+the increased taxation have been
+proportionably curtailed. We do
+not believe that the Whigs, while
+straining every energy to carry the
+Reform Bill, meditated the possibility
+of any such results. We have their
+own statements—at least those of
+Lords Melbourne and John Russell—to
+the contrary; and even were it
+otherwise, we are not disposed to
+attribute to that party so great a
+share of political prescience, as to
+assume that they foresaw the consequences
+of their own deliberate act.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>It was, however, foreseen by others.
+In 1831, Mr Alison, arguing from
+historical precedents, predicted that
+the natural effect of the passing of the
+Reform Bill would be the repeal of
+the Corn Laws.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“When it is recollected,” wrote he, “that
+300 English members of the Reformed
+house are to be for the boroughs, and only
+150 for the counties, it may easily be anticipated
+that this effect is certain. And in
+vain will the House of Peers strive to
+resist such a result: their power must
+have been so completely extinguished before
+the Reform Bill is past, that any resistance
+on their part would be speedily
+overcome.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“This first and unavoidable consequence
+of this great change will at once
+set the manufacturing classes at variance
+with the agricultural interest; and then
+will commence that fatal war between
+the different classes of society, which has
+hitherto been only repressed by the
+weight and authority of a stable, and, in
+a certain degree, hereditary government,
+composed of an intermixture of the representatives
+of <em>$1</em> interests. When it
+is recollected that wheat can be raised
+with ease in Poland at prices varying
+from 17s. to 20s. a quarter, and that it
+can be laid down on the quay of any
+harbour in Britain at from 33s. to 40s.,
+it may easily be anticipated what a revolution
+in prices will, in the <em>$1</em>,
+be effected by this measure. We say in
+the <em>$1</em> instance—for nothing seems
+clearer than that the <em>$1</em> effect will
+be, by throwing a large portion of British
+land out of cultivation, and in its stead
+producing a more extensive growth of
+grain on the shores of the Vistula, to
+restore the equilibrium between the supply
+of corn and its consumption, and, by
+means of destroying a large portion of
+British agriculture, raise the prices again
+to their former standard.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>We have lately been favoured, from
+certain quarters, with ingenious disquisitions
+touching the probable future
+price of grain in this country—disquisitions
+to which we by no means
+object, as, apart altogether from their
+truth or their falsity, they manifest a
+growing uneasiness as to the possibility
+of maintaining the Free-trade
+system for many months longer. We
+may perhaps be allowed to take some
+credit to ourselves for having effected
+this change in the tone and sentiments
+of gentlemen who, not long ago, were
+clamorous in their praise of cheap food
+and diminished agricultural prices.
+In our January Number, by the aid of
+the most intelligent, skilful, and experienced
+agriculturists of Scotland,
+we proved, beyond the power of refutation,
+that no British farmer could
+stand his ground against the present
+influx of foreign corn, and that no
+possible reduction of rent, short of its
+annihilation, would enable him to meet
+the deficiency. We were met, as
+might naturally be expected, by the
+double weapons of rancorous abuse
+and deliberate falsification.<a id='r6'></a><a href='#f6' class='c018'><sup>[6]</sup></a> But these
+having utterly failed in their purpose,
+our antagonists have since changed
+their ground altogether, and are now
+attempting to argue, against the experience
+of each successive week, that
+the present fall of prices is merely
+temporary, and that wheat must
+again rise to something like its former
+level. How long they may continue
+in their endeavours to propagate this
+fresh delusion we know not. They
+cannot mislead the farmers, at whose
+door ruin is at present knocking with an
+unmistakeable sound. The only men
+they can mislead are their unhappy
+dupes, who have been taught to believe
+that the prosperity of Britain depends
+solely upon one of the weakest, most
+unstable, and most precarious of its
+manufactures.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the same article from which we
+have just quoted, Mr Alison wrote as
+follows:—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Now, the misery arising from the
+reduction of the resources of the farmer
+could not be confined to his own class in
+society; it would immediately and
+seriously affect the manufacturing and
+commercial interests. The great trade
+of every country, as Adam Smith long ago
+remarked, is between the town and the
+country: by far the greatest part of the
+produce of our looms is consumed by those
+who, directly or indirectly, are fed by the
+British plough. Not the haughty aristocrat
+only, who spends his life in luxurious
+indolence among his hereditary trees, but
+the innumerable classes who are maintained
+by his rents and fed by his expenditure—the
+numerous creditors who draw
+large parts of his rents through their
+mortgages, and live in affluence in distant
+towns upon the produce of his land—the
+farmers, who subsist in comparative
+comfort on the industry which they exert
+on his estates—the tradesmen and artisans,
+who are fed by his expenditure or
+the wants of his tenantry—all would suffer
+alike by such a change of prices as should
+seriously affect the industry of the cultivators.
+Every shopkeeper knows how
+much he is dependent on the expenditure of
+those who directly or indirectly are maintained
+by the land, and what liberal purchasers
+landlords are, compared to those
+who subsist by manufactures; and it is
+probable that the first and greatest sufferers
+by the repeal of the Corn Laws would be
+many of those very persons whose blind
+cry for Reform had rendered it unavoidable.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Now, the discouragement of British
+agriculture consequent on a free-trade in
+corn would be <em>$1</em>, although the
+benefit to the inhabitants of towns could
+only be temporary. After the destruction
+of a large portion of British agriculture
+had been effected, by the immense inundation
+of foreign grain, prices would rise
+again to their former level, because the
+monopoly would then be vested in the
+hands of the foreign growers; and the
+bulky nature of grain renders it <em>$1</em>
+impossible to introduce an <em>$1</em> supply
+of that article by sea transport. But the
+condition of British agriculture would
+not be materially benefited by the change;
+because prices would rise <em>$1</em> in consequence
+of the British grower being,
+for the most part, driven out of the field;
+and could be maintained at a high level
+only by his being <em>$1</em> from an extensive
+competition with the foreign cultivator.
+Should the British farmers, recovering
+from their consternation, recommence the
+active agriculture which at present maintains
+our vast and increasing population,
+the consequence would be, that prices
+would immediately fall to such a degree,
+as speedily to reduce them to their
+natural and unavoidable state of inferiority
+to the farmers of the Continent.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“In considering this subject, there are
+two important circumstances to be kept
+in view, proved abundantly by experience,
+but which have not hitherto met with
+the general attention which they deserve.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“The first of these is, that, in agriculture—differing
+in this respect from
+manufactures—the introduction of machinery,
+or the division of labour, can
+effect <em>$1</em> in the price
+of its produce, or the facility of its production;
+and perhaps the best mode of
+cultivation yet known is that which is
+carried on by the greatest possible application
+of human labour, in the form of
+spade cultivation. The proof of this is
+decisive. Great Britain, with the aid of
+the steam-engine, can undersell the
+weavers of Hindostan with muslins manufactured
+out of cotton grown on the
+banks of the Ganges; but it is undersold
+in its own markets by the wheat-grower
+on the banks of the Vistula, or in the
+basin of the Mississippi. It is in vain,
+therefore, for a state like England, burdened
+with high prices and an excessive
+taxation—the natural consequence of
+commercial opulence—to hope that its
+industry can, in agriculture as in manufactures,
+withstand the competition of
+the foreign grower. Machinery, skill,
+and capital can easily counteract high
+prices in all other articles of human consumption:
+in agriculture, they can produce
+no such effect. This is a law of
+nature which will subsist to the end of
+the world.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“The second is, that a comparatively
+small importation of grain produces a
+prodigious effect on the prices at which
+it is sold. The importation of a tenth
+part of the annual consumption does not,
+it is calculated, lower prices a tenth, but
+<em>$1</em>—and so on with the importation
+of smaller quantities. This has always
+been observed, and is universally acknowledged
+by political economists. Although,
+therefore, the greatest possible importation
+of foreign grain must always be a
+part only of that required for the consumption
+of the whole people, yet still
+the effect upon the current rate of prices
+would be most disastrous. The greatest
+importation ever known was in 1801,
+when it amounted, in consequence of the
+scarcity, to an <em>$1</em> part of the
+annual consumption; but the free introduction
+of much less than that quantity
+would reduce the price of wheat in the
+first instance, in an ordinary year, to 45s.
+the quarter.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“The repeal of the Corn Laws, therefore,
+is calculated to inflict a <em>$1</em>
+wound on the agricultural resources of
+the empire, and permanently injure all
+the numerous classes who depend on that
+branch of industry, and confer only a
+<em>$1</em> benefit, by the reduction of
+prices, on the manufacturing labourers.
+The benefit is temporary, and mixed up,
+even at first, with a most bitter portion of
+alloy; the evil lasting, unmitigated by
+any benefit whatever.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We are now in the course of enduring
+that precise phase of suffering,
+arising from the repeal of the Corn
+Laws, which was predicted by Mr
+Alison more than eighteen years ago;
+and it is solely from the extent of that
+suffering that we are inclined to form
+a better augury for the future than
+we could have ventured to have done
+in the course of the bygone year.
+Three months have not passed since,
+at the opening of Parliament, the
+Whig Ministry with unparalleled audacity
+ventured to congratulate the
+country on its general prosperous
+condition! Themselves indeed they
+might congratulate, that, by means of
+an income and property tax, imposed
+under false pretences by a former
+Premier, the public revenue was still
+sufficient to meet its ordinary engagements;
+but what other ground of
+congratulation there was, no host of
+witnesses could tell. Could they
+venture to congratulate the country
+<em>$1</em> on the state of the manufacturing
+districts? Has this little interval of
+three months, at a time of universal
+peace and unparalleled cheapness,
+sufficed to change universal prosperity
+into widespread and acknowledged
+depression? Not so. The depression
+had begun long before—it commenced
+so soon as falling prices
+warned the agricultural consumers of
+the fate which was in store for them;
+and if Ministers did not know this,
+they are utterly unfit to retain their
+places longer. The continuance of
+that depression can be only measured
+by the existence of the Free-trade system.
+If that is allowed to go on, and
+if there be indeed, as is now the common
+cant of the Liberal journalists, no
+possibility of retracing our steps, the
+next move will be one of plunder.
+No foreign trade can compensate for
+the tithe of the loss sustained by the
+depreciation of property at home.
+That cheapness which means nothing
+else than curtailment of individual
+profits, from the highest to the lowest,
+cannot possibly coexist with expensive
+government and enormous taxation.
+The public creditor will be
+marked for the next blow; and his
+situation is the more precarious from
+the peculiar monetary history of the
+country, and the first important measure—pity
+also that it had not been
+the last!—which Sir Robert Peel was
+instrumental in carrying through the
+House of Commons.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>We are not only hopeful but sanguine
+as to the power of Great Britain
+in extricating herself from a difficulty,
+not transient as before, but settled in
+its character, because we believe that
+the downfal of a wretched, presuming,
+and ignorant faction cannot be much
+longer delayed. We have been
+cursed, for many years back, by the
+predominance of a race of quacks, impostors,
+sham economists, and political
+adventurers, who, through favour of
+the Reform Bill, have forced their
+way into Parliament, after having
+failed in the ordinary occupations of
+trade, and have succeeded in palming
+their crude and pestilential doctrines
+upon Ministers too occupied with
+individual ambition to care much for
+the public welfare. Does any one
+believe that such men have any interest
+in maintaining the public credit,
+or that they would not, did an opportunity
+occur, attempt to defraud the
+creditor, as they have already succeeded
+in diminishing the means of
+the debtor? Surely a thoughtful
+review of the political events which
+have occurred within the last five
+years is enough to remove any lingering
+credulity on this point. We do not
+ask any one to adopt our views, or to
+accept our construction. Let him deliberately
+reflect upon the language of
+these men in 1845, when the political
+and commercial fever was at its height—when
+private individuals were persuaded
+that they might rear fortunes
+without the drudgery of industry, and
+when statesmen were preparing to
+recommend the same false principle
+for the general guidance of the nation.
+How the upstart economists swaggered,
+strutted, and cackled then! Not
+a whit less incompetent and treacherous,
+as guides in their own path, than
+were the mushroom clerks and pimpled
+adventurers of the Stock Exchanges
+in another, they stood forth
+like so many political John Laws,
+proclaiming that unbounded wealth,
+increased demand for labour, and
+endless influx of capital would be the
+immediate result of their magnificent
+free-trading schemes. They had
+figures and blue-books, returns, calculations
+and balance-sheets, painfully
+concocted by plodding theorists, ready
+at hand to back up their asseverations,
+and to satisfy the doubts of the most
+sceptical. This is peculiarly an age
+in which men are befooled by figures.
+A century ago, it was enough that a
+statement should pass from writing
+into print, and be included in the
+columns of a journal, in order to secure
+its currency as a point of popular belief.
+The increase of journalism has in
+some respects remedied this, most
+men being now alive to the fact that
+typography possesses no peculiar immunity
+from falsehood. But figures
+are—or at least were a few years ago—untainted
+in their reputation. Few
+people were cautious enough to resist
+a tempting calculation. It never entered
+into their heads to suppose that
+there lay gross error, radical fallacy,
+and often deliberate fraud, in the imposing
+array of cyphers which were
+ostentatiously paraded for their inspection.
+If half-a-dozen unscrupulous
+swindlers determined to start a railway,
+nothing more was required to
+secure a rush for the scrip, than a
+summary of phantom traffic, exhibiting
+a clear return of some fifteen or
+twenty per cent after deduction of
+the working expenses. We all know
+what has been the result of that widespread
+infatuation. In precisely the
+same manner did the economists concoct
+their accounts, when they issued
+their Free-trade prospectus. Less
+honest, or perhaps more daringly
+fraudulent than the railway projectors,
+they did not propose to grant
+any compensation for the land at all,
+but their traffic tables were undoubtedly
+an arithmetical <em>$1</em>!
+Two millions per week of clear gain was
+about the smallest estimate; and to
+this result various persons, whose previous
+biography, now that they have
+emerged as public characters, might
+be interesting, pledged their valuable
+reputations!</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>That they imposed upon the leaders
+of party, as well as upon a large section
+of the nation, is no matter of
+marvel. Statesmen are not exempt
+from folly, imprudence, or delusion,
+any more than private persons. One
+may be cold, selfish, and greedy;
+another rash, unscrupulous, and obstinate;
+but, as there are few fish which
+will not take a bait, so there seem to
+be few modern statesmen proof against
+the temptation of altering their policy,
+if, by doing so, they believe that they
+can secure possession of an unlimited
+lease of power. In the present case
+the bait was dexterously spun between
+the two rivals, and the anxiety
+of both to secure it was so
+great, that neither took the precaution
+of examining curiously into the
+nature of its actual texture.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>There is hardly a man in the country,
+from the peer to the artisan, who
+is not asking himself at this moment,
+what he has gained by Free-trade.
+So far as the agricultural interest is
+concerned, there is no dubiety on the
+point. The landlord is dunned for
+reduction of rent, is discontinuing his
+improvements, reducing his establishment,
+and setting his house in order
+for an altered style of living. The
+tenant is wellnigh ruined, furious
+that he has been betrayed, economising
+labour as he best can, or seriously
+meditating emigration. The labourer
+finds his wages reduced, his small
+comforts curtailed or abolished, work
+scarce, and the workhouse at no great
+distance. Let them all take comfort.
+According to our hopeful economists,
+this is a mere “transition state of
+suffering.” What the next state is to
+be, no prophet of them all can foretell.
+Meantime certain Solons advocate
+a wholesale emigration—rather a
+strange panacea for a nation about to
+be so prosperous!</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Go to the towns or the manufacturing
+districts, and ask how they are prospering.
+The cotton trade is threatening
+to shut up. The travellers are
+returning disconsolate to their employers
+with the news that orders are
+every day becoming more scarce, and
+money payments even scarcer. There
+is no joy or exultation now in Leeds
+or Bradford. The journeymen operatives
+are combining against the slop
+system. The <cite>Morning Chronicle</cite>
+harrows up the feelings of its readers,
+by tearful tales of the misery and
+destitution which prevails throughout
+the large towns of the empire, and no
+human being can deny the truth of
+the appalling statements. Scottish
+philanthropists, on their midnight
+visits to the wynds of Edinburgh, are
+struck with amazement at the squalor
+and vice which they encounter, and
+not less with the shoals of destitute
+creatures who are hurrying, with perverse
+infatuation, from the free open
+country to the fated atmosphere of a
+loathsome city garret. They want to
+check the stream, and drive the current
+back again. But whither? In
+the country there is no work for these
+people. Machinery has forced the
+hand-loom from the villages; Free
+Trade is reducing the wages of the
+spade to nothing. From the Western
+Highlands, and from Ireland, those
+who have money enough left to secure
+a passage on ship-board are emigrating
+by thousands—it is, we are told
+by a correspondent, the briskest trade
+in Liverpool. Those who have no
+money left are trooping to the towns,
+with the prospect before them of a
+fate which might rend the heart of the
+most callous. Who would wish to be
+a statesman, if for the consequences
+of all his deeds he must be held accountable
+hereafter?</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Ask the master-manufacturers
+themselves how they are getting on,
+now that they have succeeded in their
+darling scheme of securing cheap
+food, and paralysing the home trade?
+You may ask if you will, but you will
+hardly obtain an answer, save through
+the medium of the trade circulars, all
+filled with dismal forebodings. Were
+another Cobden testimonial to be proposed
+just now, the subscriptions
+would scarcely purchase many shares
+in the most depreciated of the lines.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Ask the gentlemen of the railway
+interest, what cause is in operation to
+crush down their traffic and annihilate
+their dividends? They will tell
+you to a man that it is the universal
+agricultural depression. Ask the
+iron-masters how they are thriving?
+At this moment they are trembling
+for the stability of their colossal
+fortunes.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>It is utterly impossible that this
+state of matters can continue much
+longer. If we do not reverse our
+mad and desperate policy—and that
+soon—the pressure of taxation, still
+retaining its former money-level,
+whilst the production which contributes
+to it is depreciated by a half,
+will become so unendurable, that any
+remedy, however desperate, will find
+numerous advocates; and amongst
+the foremost and most clamorous of
+these will be the leading sham economists.
+The stateliest ship, when the
+water is gaining upon her hold, must
+perforce part with her guns—the
+parallel case is being practically exhibited
+just now, by the efforts of the
+financial reformers to get rid of our warlike
+establishments. If we cannot part
+with our defences, we must do without
+something else. There is in the
+mean time a talk of reducing salaries,
+paring down judicial emoluments,
+and retrenching diplomatic expenses.
+Lord John Russell, with no very
+good grace, has been forced to refer
+these matters to a committee, for the
+evident purpose of securing the longest
+possible period of delay. But the
+tax-gatherer will not be idle in his
+function, and still the clamour will
+increase. Superfluities will go first—but
+no surrender of superfluities
+will meet the exigency. Men, when
+pressed to the last extremity, become
+reckless of their personal obligations;
+and we have already heard from various
+quarters intimations that, if the
+land is to be permanently depreciated,
+the creditor who has lent his money
+on the security of that land must be
+prepared to share the burden of the
+loss with the owner. There is a
+smack of wild justice in this, not at
+all unpalatable to the taste of a burdened
+debtor. Sir Robert Peel’s
+favourite question, “What is a
+pound?” will be argued afresh, after a
+fashion little likely to secure the approval
+of the original propounder of
+the query. We shall be told, truly
+enough, that the pound is the mere
+conventional representation of a certain
+amount of produce; and a very
+large body of men will begin to talk
+of paying off their debts, both private
+and public, upon a principle which, if
+once adopted, would destroy the whole
+credit of the country. Three years
+ago, Mr Doubleday demonstrated
+that, if the repeal of the Corn Laws
+should have the effect of reducing the
+price of wheat on the average to 4s.
+or 4s. 6d. per bushel, only two courses
+are left—either to repeal the taxes
+down to five-and-twenty millions at
+most; or to alter the currency law of
+1819, and reduce the value of money
+to half the present value. We have
+now almost touched the mark.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>All this was clearly foreseen and
+foreshadowed by Mr Alison, in his
+memorable paper of 1831; and we
+beg of our readers to peruse with attention
+the following extract, as of
+primary importance at the present
+juncture of affairs:—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Such a change of prices might be
+innocuous, if individuals and the public
+could begin on a new basis, and there
+were no subsisting <em>$1</em>,
+which must be provided for at a reduced
+rate of incomes. But how is such a
+state of things to go on, when individuals
+and the State are under so many engagements,
+which cannot be averted without
+private or public bankruptcy? This is
+the question which, in a complicated
+state of society such as we live in, where
+industry is so dependent on credit, is
+the vital one to every interest.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“There is hardly an individual possessed
+of property in the country who is not
+immediately or ultimately involved in
+money engagements. The landlords are
+notoriously and proverbially drowned in
+debt, and it is calculated that <em>$1</em>
+of the produce of the soil finds its way
+ultimately into the pocket of the public
+or the private creditor. Farmers are all
+more or less involved in engagements
+either to their landlords or to the banks
+who have advanced their money; merchants
+and manufacturers have their bills
+or cash-accounts standing against them,
+which must be provided for, whatever
+ensues with regard to the prices of the
+articles in which they deal; and private
+individuals, even of wealthy fortunes,
+have provisions to their wives, sisters,
+brothers, or children, which must be made
+up to a certain money amount, if they
+would avert the evils of bankruptcy.
+Now, if the views of the Reformers are
+well founded, and a great reduction is
+effected in the price of grain, and consequently
+in the money-income of every
+man in the kingdom, through the free
+trade in corn, how are these undiminished
+money-obligations to be made good out
+of the diminished pecuniary resources
+of the debtors in them? Mr Baring
+has estimated that the change in
+the value of money, consequent on the
+resumption of cash-payments, altered
+prices about 25 per cent; and everybody
+knows what widespread, still existing,
+and irremediable private distress <em>$1</em>
+change produced. What, then, may be
+anticipated from the far greater change
+which is contemplated as likely to arise
+from a free-trade in grain?</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“But, serious as these evils are, they
+are nothing in comparison with the
+dreadful consequences which would result
+to <em>$1</em> from the change, and
+the widespread desolation which must
+follow a serious blow to the national
+faith.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“It is well known with what difficulty
+the payment of the annual charge of the
+National Debt is provided for, even under
+the present scale of prices; and how
+much those difficulties were increased by
+the change of prices, and the general
+diminution of incomes, consequent on
+the resumption of cash-payments. Indeed,
+such was the effect of that change
+that, had it not been counterbalanced by
+a very great increase, both of our
+agricultural and manufacturing produce
+at the same time, it would have rendered
+the maintenance of faith with the
+public creditor impossible. Now, if such
+be the present state of the public debt,
+even under the unexampled general
+prosperity which has pervaded the empire
+since the peace, and with all the
+security to the public faith which arises
+from the stable, consistent, and uniform
+rule of the British aristocracy, how is the
+charge of the debt to be provided for
+under the diminished national income
+arising from the much hoped-for change
+of prices consequent on the Reform Bill
+and repeal of the Corn Laws, and the
+increased national impatience, arising
+from the consciousness of the power to
+cast off the burden for ever?—Great and
+reasonable fear may be felt, whether,
+under any circumstances, the maintenance
+of the national faith inviolate is practicable
+for any considerable length of
+time: no doubt can be entertained that,
+under a Reform Parliament, and a free
+trade in grain, it will be impossible.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We forbear quoting the picture
+which our author has drawn of the
+awful consequences which must instantly
+follow on a crash of the
+national credit—not because we consider
+it in any degree overcharged,
+but because we are now satisfied that
+the country is alive to its danger. We
+are too well accustomed to the braggadocio
+of modern journalism to attach
+much weight to the expiring
+vociferations of men who have done
+their utmost to lead us into the present
+dilemma; and who now, finding
+themselves powerless to advise, are
+vainly attempting to keep up a delusion
+which the experience of each
+succeeding week is dissipating with
+extraordinary rapidity. The most talented
+of the Free-trading journals virtually
+confess that the experiment has
+altogether failed. They are not able
+to point out one single iota of advantage
+which has resulted from it, beyond
+the purely supposititious one
+that, for a time, it secured the tranquillity
+of Great Britain. This is at
+best an ignoble argument in behalf
+of a bad measure; but we believe it
+to be utterly without foundation, inasmuch
+as there probably never was a
+great question agitated in which less
+interest was evinced by the masses of
+the nation than in that of the Corn
+Laws. But we should be sorry, indeed,
+to rank the loyalty of the British
+people so low, or to suppose that
+the crown of these realms rested upon
+so weak a foundation, as the adoption
+of such a view as this must necessarily
+infer. The journals to which we
+allude are by no means unconscious
+of the loss which we have incurred,
+or of the danger in which we presently
+stand. The insane boast of Mr Villiers,
+at the opening of the session,
+that a depreciation of ninety-one millions
+had taken place in the annual
+produce of British labour, found no
+echo in the columns of our more
+sharp-sighted contemporaries. They
+are now attempting to show that this
+calculation was an utter mistake; that
+importations are gradually diminishing;
+and that prices must necessarily
+rise. Most glad should we be if their
+views upon this subject were sound;
+but, unfortunately, stern experience
+points to a different result. We complain,
+and that with perfect justice,
+that they will not face the difficulty,
+and tell us what is to be done, supposing
+prices remain as they are.
+Agricultural quackery has done its
+utmost, and has been extinguished
+by the shout of general derision. No
+man in his senses believes that production
+can be artificially stimulated,
+or the earth so manured as to yield
+double crops to supply the frightful
+deficiency in the annual balance-sheet
+of the farmer. Both arms of husbandry
+are shattered. Cattle-feeding
+has been made, by Sir Robert Peel’s
+tariff, as profitless as tillage; and all
+countries have been invited, and are
+availing themselves of the invitation,
+to inundate our markets with their
+produce. Under such a state of
+things, what hope is there of recovery—what
+chance of manufactures reviving,
+so long as the best customers
+for manufactures are borne down?
+Are they not borne down? Let us see.
+The depreciation of food was stated
+by Mr Villiers at £91,000,000. The
+whole land rental of the United Kingdom
+is, according to a late statistical
+authority, £58,753,615. Let us suppose
+that rents are reduced by one-third—a
+reduction which, considering
+that mortgages and public burdens still
+remain undiminished, will cripple the
+means of most of the proprietors in
+the kingdom—and the rental will fall
+to about £39,169,000. Still there will
+remain a loss of nearly £52,000,000
+annually, to be borne by the tenantry;
+in other words, low prices will
+have to that extent affected their
+power of purchase. The real case is
+even stronger than the hypothetical
+one, because the farmers, who constitute
+the larger consuming body, are
+at present receiving no such remission
+of rent. Of £178,000,000, the estimated
+amount of British manufactures,
+we export £58,000,000, and
+there remain for home consumption
+goods to the value of £120,000,000.
+Upon the sale of these depends not
+only the prosperity, but the existence
+of the manufacturers; and yet people
+are astonished that their wares do
+not go off as formerly! How, in the
+name of common sense, can they be
+expected to go off, when no margin
+of profit is left, in his own trade, to
+the great consumer? What these
+reasonable gentlemen anticipate is
+this—that the proprietor shall have
+no surplus from his rent, or the farmer
+any remuneration from his toil
+and capital; and yet that they shall
+continue to purchase all articles of
+manufacture as before!</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>We observe that a contemporary
+journal, which naturally feels rather
+sore on the subject of the Corn Laws,
+has twitted Mr Alison with a failure
+of prophecy, in not having allowed for a
+sufficient lapse between the passing of
+the Reform Bill and the notable era
+when the lion and the lamb coalesced—when
+Sir Robert Peel finally became
+a convert to the dazzling discoveries
+of Mr Cobden. Our respected brother
+seems to think that Mr Alison must
+feel disappointed that the march of
+democracy has been so slow; that the
+avatar of Free-trade was so long in
+coming; and that our fields were not,
+several years ago, abandoned by the
+disappointed husbandman. For the
+satisfaction of the kindly critic, we
+shall quote the following passage,
+penned in 1832, immediately after
+the passing of the Reform Bill, and
+then, perhaps, refresh his memory as
+to the manner in which the later measure
+was carried:—</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Dark and disastrous, however, as is
+the future prospect of the British empire,
+we do not think its case hopeless, or that,
+after having gone through the degradation,
+distraction, and suffering which
+must follow the destruction of the Constitution,
+it may not yet witness in the
+decline of its days some gleams of sunshine
+and prosperity. The laws of nature
+have now come to aid the cause of order;
+its usual suffering will attend the march
+of revolution; experience will soon dispel
+the fumes of democracy; the reign
+of Political Unions, of Jacobin Clubs,
+and tricolor flags, must ere long come to
+an end; the suffering, anxiety, and distress
+consequent on their despotic rule,
+the suspension of all confidence, and the
+ruin of all credit, must consign them to
+the dust, amidst the execrations of their
+country, if they are not subverted by the
+ruder shock of civil warfare and military
+power. The distress, misery, and stagnation,
+in every branch of industry,
+already consequent on the Reform Bill,
+have been so extreme, that they must
+long ago have led to its overthrow, not
+only without the resistance, but with
+the concurrence, of all the Reformers
+who are not revolutionists, had it not
+been for the delusion universally spread
+by the revolutionary journals, that the
+existing distress was not owing to Reform,
+but to the resistance which it had
+experienced, and that the danger of
+revolution, great in the event of the
+measure being thrown out, was absolutely
+nugatory in the event of its being
+passed. These two sophisms have alone
+carried the bill through the resistance
+it experienced from the property, education,
+and talent of the country, and
+blinded men’s eyes to the enormous evils
+which not only threatened to follow its
+triumph, but attended its progress. But
+these delusions cannot much longer be
+maintained. Reform is now victorious:
+the bill is passed unmutilated and unimpaired;
+and its whole consequences
+<em>$1</em>. When it is discovered
+that all the benefits promised from it are
+a mere delusion; that stagnation, distress,
+and misery have signalised its
+triumph; that trade does not revive with
+the contracted expenditure of the rich,
+nor confidence return with the increased
+audacity of the poor; that the ancient
+and kindly relations of life have been
+torn asunder in the struggle, and the
+vehemence of democracy has provided
+no substitute in their stead; that interest
+after interest, class after class, is successively
+exposed to the attacks of the
+revolutionists, and the ancient barrier
+which restrained them is removed: the
+eyes of the nation must be opened to
+the gross fraud which has been practised
+upon it. Then it will be discovered that
+the aristocratic interest, and the nomination
+boroughs, which supported their
+influence in the Lower House, were the
+real bulwark which protected all the
+varied interests of the country from the
+revolutionary tempest, and that every
+branch of industry is less secure, every
+species of property is less valuable, every
+enterprise is more hazardous, every disaster
+is more irretrievable, when its
+surges roll unbroken and unresisted into
+the legislature.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“It is upon this very circumstance,
+however, that our chief, and indeed our
+only hope of the country is founded.
+Hitherto the great body of the middle
+classes have stood aloof from the contest,
+or they have openly joined the reforming
+party. They were carried away by the
+prospect of the importance which they
+would acquire under the new Constitution,
+and did not perceive that it was
+their own interests which were defended,
+their own battle which was fought, their
+own existence which was at stake, in
+the contest maintained by the Conservative
+party. Now the case is changed.
+The old rampart is demolished, and,
+unless these middle ranks can create
+a new one, they must be speedily themselves
+destroyed. From the sole of their
+feet to the crown of their head, the
+middle classes of England at present
+stand exposed to the revolutionary fire;
+every shot will now carry away flesh
+and blood. Deeply as we deplore the
+misery and suffering which the exposure
+of these unprotected classes to the
+attacks of revolution must produce, it
+is in the intensity of that suffering,
+in the poignancy of that distress, that
+the only chance of ultimate deliverance
+is to be found. Periods of suffering are
+seldom, in the end, lost to nations, any
+more than to individuals; and it is years
+of anguish that expiate the sin, and tame
+the passions, of days of riot and licentiousness.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“The Constitution, indeed, is destroyed,
+but the men whom the Constitution formed
+are not destroyed. The institutions which
+protected all the classes of the state, the
+permanent interests which coerced the
+feverish throes of democracy, the conservative
+weight which steadied all the
+movements of the people, are at an end;
+the peril arising from this sudden removal
+of the pressure which hitherto regulated
+all the movements of the machine is extreme,
+but the case is not utterly hopeless.
+It is impossible at once to change
+the habits of many hundred years’ growth;
+it is difficult in a few years to root out
+the affections and interests which have
+sprung from centuries of obligation; it
+is not in a single generation that the
+virtues and happiness, fostered by ages
+of prosperity, are to be destroyed. As
+long as the British character remains unchanged;
+as long as religion and moral
+virtue sway the feelings of the majority
+of the people; as long as tranquil industry
+forms the employment of her inhabitants,
+and domestic enjoyments constitute
+the reward of their exertion,—the cause
+of order and civilisation is not hopeless.
+Revolutions, it is true, are always effected
+by reckless and desperate minorities in
+opposition to opulent and indolent majorities;
+but it is the ennobling effect of
+civil liberty to nourish a spirit of resistance
+to oppression, which outstrips all the
+calculations of those who ground their
+views upon what has occurred in despotic
+monarchies.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And so it happened. The reaction
+throughout the country was complete.
+The Conservative party rallied; and
+rallied so effectively, that, with many
+converts in its ranks, and the rising
+youth of the new generation to back it,
+a great majority in the House of Commons
+was secured, and the leadership
+intrusted to the hands of one who, in
+despite of previous lapses, appeared
+at that time to have earned the distinction
+by his zeal, and who gained
+it by the force of his protestations.
+Had the leader been true to the cause
+which he then professed, we should
+have been spared the ungracious duty
+of commenting upon a solemn treachery,
+to which history affords no
+parallel, and the memory of which
+will live long after the grave has closed
+above the head of the principal delinquent.
+How was it possible that such
+an event could fail again, for a time,
+to disunite a party, formed out of the
+ruins of the old one by a rapid and
+indiscriminate conscription? That
+dependence and faith which high and
+chivalrous spirits are so ready to place
+in one beneath whose colours they
+have fought—the ready trustingness
+of youth—the great prestige which
+surrounds the name of a veteran and
+successful statesman—the belief in
+his superior sagacity—the recollection
+of blandishments and flattery, so
+prized by the young when proceeding
+from the lips of honoured age,—all
+these things combined to break up
+the Conservative party, and to place
+the reins of government once more in
+the hands of the eager Whigs. Perhaps
+it is better so. There is no risk
+now of a second betrayal, whatever
+may be the future fortunes of the
+Country Party; and on the head of
+him who caused the social change let
+the whole consequences rest. England’s
+political annals have at least
+gained one character more by the act.
+The future historian who shall chronicle
+the transactions of the last five
+years, whatever be his creed or his
+politics, will speak with veneration
+and honour of <span class='sc'>Lord George Bentinck</span>,
+for whose early fate more
+honest tears were shed, than have
+often been paid as a tribute to the
+patriot who has fallen in battle, the
+defender of his country’s cause.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>We have not left ourselves much
+room to glance at the three interesting
+papers in this volume, on the
+subject of the two French Revolutions
+of 1830 and 1848. They will be read
+with profound attention by thousands
+who may have passed them over
+cursorily in their anonymous original
+form; because Mr Alison’s profound
+and intimate knowledge of the working
+of French diplomacy, of the turbulent
+and dangerous element which
+lies, like molten lava, beneath the
+surface of French society, and of the
+secret causes of those outrages which,
+from time to time, have shaken that
+unhappy country, must needs give an
+additional assurance of their value.
+It is curious to observe how entirely
+the speculations of the author, as to
+the consequences which might arise
+from the first of those sudden revolutions,
+are borne out by the marvellous
+issue of the second. The falsity
+of the system which made the stability
+of a government and the existence of
+a dynasty mainly depend upon the
+doubtful adherence, and still more
+doubtful valour, of a civic National
+Guard, was clearly pointed out and
+exposed at the time when the Liberal
+press of England was loud in its
+approbation of the citizen soldiers
+who had violated their oaths, and the
+citizen king, who, more fortunate than
+his worthless father, had succeeded in
+supplanting his kinsman and rightful
+sovereign.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Of the numerous delusions,” wrote
+Mr Alison in 1831, “which have overspread
+the world in such profusion during
+the last nine months, there is none so
+extraordinary and so dangerous as the
+opinion incessantly inculcated by the
+revolutionary press, that the noblest virtue
+in regular soldiers is to prove themselves
+traitors to their oaths; and that a
+<em>$1</em> is the only safe and constitutional
+force to which arms can be
+intrusted. The troops of the line, whose
+revolt decided the three days in July in
+favour of the revolutionary party, have
+been the subject of the most extravagant
+eulogium from the Liberal press throughout
+Europe; and even in this country, the
+Government journals have not hesitated
+to condemn, in no measured terms, the
+Royal Guard, merely because they adhered,
+amidst a nation’s treason, to their
+honour and their oaths.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Hitherto it has been held the first
+duty of soldiers to adhere, with implicit
+devotion, to that <em>$1</em> which is the
+foundation of military duties. Treason
+to his colours has been considered as
+foul a blot on the soldier’s scutcheon as
+cowardice in the field. Even in the most
+republican states, this principle of military
+subordination has been felt to be the
+vital principle of national strength. It
+was during the rigorous days of Roman
+discipline, that their legions conquered
+the world; and the decline of the empire
+began at the time that the Prætorian
+Guards veered with the mutable populace,
+and sold the empire for a gratuity
+to themselves. Albeit placed in power
+by the insurrection of the people, no men
+knew better than the French Republican
+leaders that their salvation depended on
+crushing the military insubordination to
+which they had owed their elevation.
+When the Parisian levies began to evince
+the mutinous spirit in the camp at St
+Menehould in Champagne, which they
+had imbibed during the license of the
+capital, Dumourier drew them up in the
+centre of his intrenchments, and, showing
+them a powerful line of cavalry in front,
+with their sabres drawn, ready to charge,
+and a stern array of artillery and cannoneers
+in rear, with their matches in
+their hands, soon convinced the most
+licentious that the boasted independence
+of the soldier must yield to the dangers
+of actual warfare. ‘The armed force,’
+said Carnot, ‘is essentially obedient;’
+and in all his commands, that great man
+incessantly inculcated upon his soldiers
+the absolute necessity of implicit submission
+to the power which employed them.
+When the recreant Constable de Bourbon,
+at the head of a victorious squadron of
+Spanish cavalry, approached the spot
+where the rearguard, under the Chevalier
+Bayard, was covering the retreat
+of the French army in the valley of
+Aosta, he found him seated, mortally
+wounded, under a tree, with his eyes
+fixed on the cross which formed the hilt
+of his sword. Bourbon began to express
+pity for his fate. ‘Pity not me,’ said
+the high-minded Chevalier; ‘pity those
+who fight against their king, their
+country, and their oath!’</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“These generous feelings, common
+alike to republican antiquity and modern
+chivalry, have disappeared during the
+fumes of the French Revolution. The
+soldier who is now honoured is not he
+who keeps, but he who violates his oath;
+the rewards of valour are showered, not
+upon those who defend, but on those who
+overturn the government; the incense of
+popular applause is offered, not at the
+altar of fidelity, but at that of treason.
+Honours, rewards, promotion, and adulation,
+have been lavished on the troops of
+the line, who overthrew the government
+of Charles X. in July last; while the
+Royal Guard, who adhered to the fortune
+of the fallen monarch with exemplary
+fidelity, have been reduced to <em>$1</em> from the bounty of strangers in a
+foreign land. A subscription has recently
+been opened in London for the most destitute
+of these defenders of royalty; but
+the Government journals have stigmatised,
+as ‘highly dangerous,’ any indication
+of sympathy with their fidelity or
+their misfortunes.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“If these ancient ideas of honour,
+however, are to be exploded, they have
+at least gone out of fashion in good company.
+The National Guard who took up
+arms to overthrow the throne, have not
+been long of destroying the altar. During
+the revolt of February 1831, <em>$1</em>,
+the emblem of salvation, was taken down
+from all the steeples in Paris by the
+citizen soldiers, and the image of our
+Saviour effaced, by their orders, from
+every church within its bounds! The
+two principles stand and fall together.
+The Chevalier ‘without fear and without
+reproach’ died in obedience to his
+oath, with his eyes fixed on the Cross;
+the National Guard lived in triumph,
+while their comrades bore down the venerated
+emblem from the towers of Notre
+Dame.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Singular was the retribution which
+awaited France. The “Ulysses” of
+Europe, as he has been styled—the
+old, crafty, insincere, penurious, yet
+plausible and half-sagacious man,
+sate in apparent peace upon his
+throne for wellnigh eighteen years,
+negotiating alliances, maintaining a
+fair outward character, pandering to
+popularity, identifying himself with
+the <em>$1</em>, and identifying his
+sons with the army—and all this to
+fall at last before the worst planned
+and most poorly contrived insurrection
+which was ever attempted in the
+streets of a European capital. Surrounded
+by his citizens, the citizen
+king went down. We know now,
+from the revelations of De la Hodde
+and others, what was the true nature
+and commencement of that beggarly
+conspiracy. We know that a few
+hundred suspected and ill-organised
+Socialists, along with a handful of
+newspaper editors, not two of whom
+possessed sufficient personal courage
+to lay hand on a loaded musket, contrived
+to overawe Paris, to bully the
+redoubted National Guard, and to send
+poor old Ulysses again upon his
+travels, without much chance of finding
+a second imperial Ithaca. Farce
+and tragedy are here so closely interwoven
+that it is wellnigh impossible
+to separate their texture. The dethronement
+of such a king may be a
+grand European disaster, but it militates
+nothing against the principle
+or the sanctity of royalty. It was
+but a simple Presidency gone a-begging.
+The King of the Bourse or the
+Railway Monarch had about them
+nearly as much of that divinity which
+should surround the royal character
+as Louis Philippe, the chosen of the
+shopkeepers, and the veteran dabbler
+in the funds. No true greatness, no
+high nobility of soul, elevated him to
+the throne of France—ignoble beyond
+all precedent was the manner in which
+he was compelled to leave it. The
+retreat of Charles X. was a triumph
+compared with his panic-stricken and
+unfollowed flight.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The following are Mr Alison’s remarks
+upon the last of these Revolutions.
+The reader will not fail to
+observe the extreme similarity between
+the two astounding Revolutions,
+and the precise nature of the
+cause which enabled both of them to
+be successfully carried through by an
+otherwise contemptible rabble.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Who is answerable for this calamitous
+Revolution, which has thus arrested
+the internal prosperity of France, involved
+its finances in apparently hopeless embarrassment,
+thrown back for probably half
+a century the progress of real freedom in
+that country, and perhaps consigned it to
+a series of internal convulsions, and
+Europe to the horrors of general war for
+a very long period? We answer without
+hesitation, that the responsibility rests
+with two parties, and two parties only—the
+King and the National Guard.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“The King is most of all to blame, for
+having engaged in a conflict, and, when
+victory was within his grasp, allowing it
+to slip from his hands from want of resolution
+at the decisive moment. It is too
+soon after these great and astonishing
+events to be able to form a decided opinion
+on the whole details connected with
+them; but the concurring statements from
+all parties go to prove that on the <em>$1</em>
+day the troops of the line were perfectly
+steady; and history will record that the
+heroic firmness of the Municipal Guard
+has rivalled all that is most honourable in
+French history. The military force was
+immense; not less than eighty thousand
+men, backed by strong forts, and amply
+provided with all the muniments of war.
+Their success on the first day was unbroken;
+they had carried above a hundred
+barricades, and were in possession
+of all the military positions of the capital.
+But at this moment the indecision of the
+King ruined everything. Age seems to
+have extinguished the vigour for which
+he was once so celebrated. He shrank
+from a contest with the insurgents, paralysed
+the troops by orders not to fire on
+the people, and openly receded before the
+insurgent populace, by abandoning Guizot
+and the firm policy which he himself
+had adopted, and striving to conciliate
+revolution by the <i><span lang="fr">mezzo termini</span></i> of
+Count Molé, and a more liberal cabinet.
+It is with retreat in the presence of an
+insurrection, as in the case of an invading
+army; the first move towards the rear is
+a certain step to ruin. The moment it
+was seen that the King was giving way,
+all was paralysed, because all foresaw
+to which side the victory would incline.
+The soldiers threw away their muskets,
+the officers broke their swords, and the
+vast array, equal to the army which
+fought at Austerlitz, was dissolved like
+a rope of sand. Louis Philippe fell without
+either the intrepidity of the royal
+martyr in 1793, or the dignity of the
+elder house of Bourbon in 1830; and if it
+be true, as is generally said, that the
+Queen urged the King to mount on horseback
+and die as ‘became a King’ in
+front of the Tuileries, and he declined,
+preferring to escape in disguise to this
+country, history must record, with shame,
+that royalty perished in France without
+the virtues it was entitled to expect in
+the meanest of its supporters.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“The second cause which appears to
+have occasioned the overthrow of the
+monarchy in France, is the general, it
+may be said universal, defection of the
+National Guard. It had been openly announced
+that 20,000 of that body were
+to line the Champs Elysées <em>$1</em>
+on occasion of the banquet; it was
+perfectly known that that banquet was
+a mere pretext for getting the forces
+of this Revolution together; and that the
+intention of the conspirators was to
+march in a body to the Tuileries after it
+was over, and compel the King to accede
+to their demands. When they were called
+out in the afternoon, they declined to act
+against the people, and by their treachery
+occasioned the defection of the troops of
+the line, and rendered farther resistance
+hopeless. They expected, by this declaration
+against the King of their choice,
+the monarch of the barricades, to secure
+a larger share in the government for
+themselves. They went to the Chamber
+of Deputies, intending to put up the
+Duchess of Orleans as Regent, and the
+Count of Paris as King, and to procure a
+large measure of reform for the constitution.
+What was the result? Why, that
+they were speedily supplanted by the rabble
+who followed in their footsteps, and who,
+deriding the eloquence of Odillon Barrot,
+and insensible to the heroism of the
+Duchess of Orleans, by force and violence
+expelled the majority of the deputies from
+their seats, seized on the President’s
+chair, and, amidst an unparalleled scene
+of riot and confusion, subverted the Orleans
+dynasty, proclaimed a Republic, and
+adjourned to the Hotel de Ville to name
+a Provisional Government!...</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Here, then, is the whole affair clearly
+revealed. It was the timidity of Government,
+and the defection of the National
+Guard, which ruined everything,—which
+paralysed the troops of the line, encouraged
+the insurgents, left the brave Municipal
+Guards to their fate, and caused
+the surrender of the Tuileries. And what
+has been the result of this shameful treachery
+on the part of the sworn defenders
+of order—this ‘<em>$1</em>’ prætorian guard
+of France? Nothing but this, that they
+have destroyed the monarchy, ruined industry,
+banished capital, rendered freedom
+hopeless, and made bankrupt the
+State! Such are the effects of armed men
+forgetting the first of social duties, that
+of fidelity to their oaths.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Of the other papers contained in
+this volume, that on the subject of
+“the British Peerage,” written at a
+time when certain worthy fellows out
+of doors seemed to be determined that
+crown, mitre, and coronet should go
+together into one blazing bonfire,
+similar to that which lately received
+the state chair of Louis Philippe—and
+when certain peers within testified
+their respect for the dignity and privileges
+of their order, by doing their
+best to have it swamped by new creations—will
+especially challenge notice
+as a stately, dignified, and elaborate
+composition. Other essays, such as
+those on Crime and Transportation,
+Ireland, the Navigation Laws, and
+the Commercial Crisis of 1837, evince
+the care and attention which Mr Alison
+has bestowed on the leading topics
+of economy and government with
+which modern statesmen are inevitably
+compelled to grapple. Of their
+intrinsic merit we shall say nothing.
+They have often been cited as the
+ablest expositions of the peculiar views
+which they advocate, and all of them
+bear the impress of a mind earnest in
+its convictions, and thoroughly practical
+in its tendency. Mr Alison does
+not, like too many writers of the day,
+content himself with finding out what
+is faulty, or defective, or radically
+vicious in any branch of our social
+economy—he indulges in no vague
+and pointless declamation; but while
+he lays bare the wound, distinctly and
+emphatically inculcates the proper
+remedy. Many persons there are, of
+course, who will not subscribe to his
+doctrines, but we believe there are
+very few who will question the sincerity
+or deny the philanthropy of his
+views. And when it is considered
+that the three massive volumes, of
+which this is the first, were composed
+at intervals of short respite from the
+toil of an engrossing profession, and
+form but a small portion of the literary
+labours of the author, it may be questionable
+which is most to be wondered
+at—the largeness of his information,
+or the unwearied energy of his mind.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>These certainly are not the columns
+in which this work of Mr Alison can
+be discussed with absolute impartiality,
+nor is the writer of this article
+free from a pardonable bias. Where
+affection, veneration, and gratitude
+for many wholesome lessons, conveyed
+with a kindliness which has made those
+lessons still more valuable, are warm
+at the heart, criticism is impossible;
+and it would be absurd and false to
+feign that we approach this book with
+any idea of fulfilling the critical
+function. Yet thus much may we
+be allowed to say, that for integrity
+of purpose, honesty of design,
+clear and unvarying adherence to
+principles, laboriously sought for and
+conscientiously adopted—for the virtue
+and total absence of selfishness
+which distinguish the patriot, and for
+the grace and accomplishment which
+adorn the scholar and the gentleman,
+it would be difficult to find within
+the four seas that encircle Britain
+a superior to the author of these
+Essays, and of the famous History
+of Europe.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_621'>621</span>
+ <h2 class='c002'>OVID’S SPRING-TIME<br> <span class='large'>FROM THE TRISTIA.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c017'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>For once the zephyrs have removed the cold:</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>One year is over, and a new begun.</div>
+ <div class='line'>So short a winter, I am daily told,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Never yet yielded to this northern sun.</div>
+ <div class='line'>I see the children skipping o’er the green,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Plucking the faint unodorous violet,</div>
+ <div class='line'>A gentle stranger, rarely ever seen.</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>With other flowers the mead is sparsely set—</div>
+ <div class='line'>Brown birds are twittering with the joy of spring:</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>The universal swallow, ne’er at rest,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Aye chirping, glances past on purple wing,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>And builds beneath the humble eaves her nest.</div>
+ <div class='line'>The plant, which yester-year the share o’erthrew,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Looks up again from out the opening mould;</div>
+ <div class='line'>And the poor vines, though here but weak and few,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Some scantling buds, like ill-set gems, unfold.</div>
+ <div class='line in52'>W. E. A.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_622'>622</span>
+ <h2 class='c002'><span class='blackletter'>Dies Boreales.</span></h2>
+</div>
+<p class='c007'>No. VII.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>CHRISTOPHER UNDER CANVASS.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><em>$1</em></p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='sc'>Scene</span>—<em>$1</em> <span class='sc'>Time</span>—<em>$1</em> <span class='fss'>A.M.</span></p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='sc'>North—Talboys.</span></p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Perturbed Spirit! why won’t you rest? What brings thee here?</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Seward snores.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Why select Seward?</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>I do not select him—he selects himself—singles himself out from the whole
+host; so that you hear his Snore loud over that of the Camp—say rather
+his Snore alone—like Lablache singing a Solo in a chorus.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>It must be Buller.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Buller began it——</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>List! How harmonious in the hush the blended Snore of Camp and Village!
+How tuned to unison—as if by pitch-pipe—with the dreamy din of our
+lapsing friend here, who by and by will awake into a positive Waterfall.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>The Snore of either army stilly sounds. At this distance, the Snore disposes
+to sleep. Seward must have awakened himself—there goes Buller——</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Where?</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Shriller than Seward—quite a childish treble—liker the Snore of a female—</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Females never snore.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>How do you know? I won’t answer for some of them. Lionesses do—not
+perhaps in their wild state—but in Zoological Gardens.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Not quite so loud, Chanticleer—you will disturb my people.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Disturb your people! Why, he has already stirred up the Solar System.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c035'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“The Cock that is the Trumpet of the Morn,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Doth, with his lofty and shrill-sounding throat,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Awake the God of Day.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c031'>Taking the distance of the Earth from the Sun, in round numbers, at Ninety-Five
+Millions of Miles, pretty well for a bird probably weighing some six
+pounds not merely to make himself heard by the God of Day, but by one
+single crow to startle Dan Phœbus from his sleep, and force him <em>$1</em>
+to show his shining morning face at Cladich.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Out of Science, we seldom think of the vastness of the System of the Universe.
+Our hearts and imaginations diminish it for the delight of love. In
+our usual moods we are all Children with respect to Nature; and gather up
+Stars as if they were flowers of the field—to form a coronet for Neæra’s hair.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>What ailed poor dear Doctor Beattie at Cocks in general? I never could
+understand the Curse.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c035'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in18'>“Proud harbinger of Day,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Who scarest my visions with thy clarion shrill,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Fell Chanticleer! who oft hath reft away</div>
+ <div class='line'>My fancied good, and brought substantial ill!</div>
+ <div class='line'>Oh, to thy cursed scream discordant still</div>
+ <div class='line'>Let Harmony aye shut her gentle ear;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Thy boastful mirth let jealous rivals spill,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Insult thy crest, and glossy pinions tear,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And ever in thy dreams the ruthless fox appear.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c031'>You Poets, in your own persons, are a savage set.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>I am not a Poet, sir; nor will I allow any man with impunity to call me so.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>But Doctor Beattie was, and a Professor of Moral Philosophy to boot, at
+Aberdeen or St Andrews, or some other one of our ancient Universities—for
+every stone-and-lime building in Scotland is ancient; and. goodness me!
+hear him cursing cocks, and dooming the whole Gallic race to every variety
+of cruel and ignominious deaths, in revenge for having been disturbed from
+his morning dreams by a Gentleman with Comb and Wattles crowing on his
+own Dunghill, in red jacket, speckled waistcoat, and grey breeks, the admiration
+of Earochs and How-Towdies.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Doctor Beattie was a true Poet—and had an eye and an ear for Nature.
+Yet now and then he shut both—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c035'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Hence the scared owl on pinions grey</div>
+ <div class='line in2'><em>$1</em>;</div>
+ <div class='line'>And down the lone vale sails away</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>To more profound repose.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c031'>I have seen that Stanza quoted many thousand times as exquisite. It is criminal.
+An owl was never heard, scared or unscared, to “break from the
+rustling boughs.” Silently as a leaf he leaves his perch; you hear no rustle,
+for he makes none—any more than a ghost.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Nor are the other lines good—for they present the image of a long rectilinear
+flight, which that of an owl in no circumstances is; and, in a fright,
+he would take the first blind shelter.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Poets seldom err so—yet I remember a mistake of Coleridge’s about that
+commonest of all birds, the Rook.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c035'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“My gentle-hearted Charles! when the last Rook</div>
+ <div class='line'>Bent its straight path along the dusky air</div>
+ <div class='line'>Homewards, I blest it! deeming its black wing</div>
+ <div class='line'>(Now a dim speck, now vanishing in light)</div>
+ <div class='line'>Had crossed the mighty orb’s dilated glory,</div>
+ <div class='line'>When thou stood’st gazing; or, when all was still,</div>
+ <div class='line'><em>$1</em>; and had a charm</div>
+ <div class='line'>For thee, my gentle-hearted Charles, to whom</div>
+ <div class='line'>No sound is dissonant which tells of life!”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>There is much silliness in the Sibylline Leaves. For Charles read Charlotte.
+’Tis more like Love than Friendship—effeminate exceedingly; and,
+“no sound is dissonant which tells of life,” reminds one of the Sunday Jackasses
+on Blackheath.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>“‘<em>$1</em>’ Some months after I had written this line,” says Coleridge
+in a note, “it gave me pleasure to find that Bartram had observed the
+same circumstance of the Savanna Crane. ‘When these birds move their
+wings in flight, their strokes are slow, moderate, and regular; and even when
+at a considerable distance, or high above us, we plainly hear the quill-feathers;
+their shafts and webs, upon one another, creak as <em>$1</em>.’” That a Rook may fly “creaking” when moulting,
+or otherwise out of feather, I shall not take upon me to deny; but in
+ordinary condition, he does not fly “creaking.” Coleridge was wont, in his
+younger days, to mistake exceptions for general rules. In such a case as this,
+a moment’s reflection would have sufficed to tell him that there could not have
+been “creaking” without let or hindrance to flight—and that the flight
+of a rook is easy and equable—“The blackening train o’ craws to their repose.”
+What creaking must have been there! But Burns never heard it.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>One Burns, as an observer of nature, is worth fifty Coleridges.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Not an arithmetical question. Why, even dear Sir Walter himself occasionally
+makes a slip in this way.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c035'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Beneath the broad and ample bone,</div>
+ <div class='line'>That buckled heart to fear unknown,</div>
+ <div class='line'>A feeble and a tim’rous guest</div>
+ <div class='line'>The field-fare framed her lowly nest!”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c031'>The Field-fare is migratory—and does not build here; in Norway, where it
+is native, it builds in trees—often high up on lofty trees—and in crowds.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>I believe, sir, they have been known to breed in this country—and perhaps
+here they build on the ground.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Don’t be nonsensical. Our Great Minstrel knew wood-craft well; and
+hill-craft and river-craft; yet in his fine picture of Coriskin and Coolin,</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c035'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“The wildest glen but this can show</div>
+ <div class='line'>Some touch of nature’s genial glow:</div>
+ <div class='line'>On high Benmore green mosses grow,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And heath-bells bud in deep Glencroe,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And copse on Cruachan Ben;</div>
+ <div class='line'>But here, above, around, below,</div>
+ <div class='line'>In mountain or in glen,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Nor tree, nor shrub, nor plant, nor flower,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Nor aught of vegetative power</div>
+ <div class='line'>The weary eye may ken.</div>
+ <div class='line'>For all is rocks at random strewn,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Black waves, bare crags, and banks of stone,</div>
+ <div class='line'>As if were here denied</div>
+ <div class='line'>The summer’s sun, the spring’s sweet dew,</div>
+ <div class='line'>That clothe with many a varied hue</div>
+ <div class='line'>The bleakest mountain’s head;”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c031'>would you believe it, that he introduces Deer—<em>$1</em> Deer!</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c035'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Call it not vain, they do not err</div>
+ <div class='line'>Who say that, when the Poet dies,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Mute nature mourns her worshipper,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And celebrates his obsequies;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Who say tall cliff and cavern lone</div>
+ <div class='line'>For the departed bard make moan;</div>
+ <div class='line'>That mountains meet in crystal rill,</div>
+ <div class='line'>That flowers in tears of balm distil;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Through his loved groves that breezes sigh,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And oaks in deeper groan reply,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And rivers teach their rushing wave</div>
+ <div class='line'>To murmur dirges round his grave.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>And there the Last Minstrel should have ceased. What follows spoils all—fanciful,
+fantastic—not imaginative, poetical. The Minstrel is at pains to let
+us know that</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c035'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Mute nature does <em>$1</em> mourn her worshipper!”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c031'>that not</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c035'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in16'>“O’er mortal urn</div>
+ <div class='line'>These things inanimate can mourn.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c031'>What, then, is the truth? To explain the mystery of flowers distilling tears
+of balm, we are told that</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c035'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“The maid’s pale shade, who wails her lot,</div>
+ <div class='line'>That love, true love, should be forgot,</div>
+ <div class='line'>From rose and heather shakes the tear</div>
+ <div class='line'>Upon the gentle Minstrel’s bier—”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c031'>The Phantom Knight shrieks upon the wild blast—and the Chief, from his
+misty throne on the mountains, fills the lonely caverns with his groans—while
+his</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c035'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Tears of rage impel the rill!</div>
+ <div class='line'>All mourn the minstrel’s harp unstrung,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Their name unknown, their praise unsung!”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c031'>Had Sir Walter been speaking in his own person he never would have written
+thus—nor thus contradicted and extinguished the Passion in the stanzas you
+so feelingly recited. But he puts the words into the lips of an old Harper
+improvising at a Feast—on which occasion anything will pass for poetry—even
+to the mind of the true Poet himself—but, believe me, it is sheer nonsense—and
+by power of contrast recalls Wordsworth’s profound saying—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c035'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“The Poets, in their elegies and lays</div>
+ <div class='line'>Lamenting the departed, call the groves—</div>
+ <div class='line'>They call upon the hills and streams to mourn</div>
+ <div class='line'>And senseless rocks; nor idly; for they speak</div>
+ <div class='line'>In these their invocation, with a voice</div>
+ <div class='line'>Obedient to the strong creative power</div>
+ <div class='line'>Of human passion. Sympathies there are</div>
+ <div class='line'>More tranquil, yet perhaps of kindred birth,</div>
+ <div class='line'>That steal upon the meditative mind,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And grow with thought. Beside yon spring I stood,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And eyed its waters till we seemed to feel</div>
+ <div class='line'>One sadness, they and I. For them a bond</div>
+ <div class='line'>Of brotherhood is broken; time has been</div>
+ <div class='line'>When, every day, the touch of human hand</div>
+ <div class='line'>Dislodged the natural sleep that binds them up</div>
+ <div class='line'>In mortal stillness; and they ministered</div>
+ <div class='line'>To human comfort.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Are all these the Cladich Cock and his echoes? No, surely. Farm crows to
+Farm, from Auchlian to Sonnachan. You might almost believe them bagpipes.
+And so it is—that is a bagpipe. On which side of the Loch? Why, on
+neither—beg pardon—on both; forgive me—on the Water;—incredible—in
+the Camp! No snore can long outlive that—the People are up and doing.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>In my mind’s eye I see women slipping easily into petticoats—men laboriously
+into breeches——</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>My more Celtic imagination sees chiefly kilts. But pray, may I ask again,
+Talboys, what brought you here at this untimeous hour of the Morn?</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>I feel that I ought to apologise for my unwelcome intrusion on your privacy,
+sir; but on my honour I believed you were in the Van. Yesterday I was so
+engrossed by you and Shakspeare, that during our colloquy I had not a moment
+to look at the Wren’s Nest.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Its existence is believed in by few of the natives. I know no such place
+for a murder. There would be no need to bury the body—here at this Table
+he might be left sitting for centuries—a dead secret in a Safe.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>No need to bury the body! You have no antipathy, I trust, sir, to me?</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>We are not responsible for our antipathies——</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>I allow that—but we are for every single murder we commit; and though
+there may be no need to bury the body, murder will spunk out——</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>We are willing to run the risk. What infatuation to seek the Lion in his
+Den—the Wren in his Nest! Sit down, sir, and let us have, in the form of
+dialogue, your last speech and dying words on Othello.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Hamlet, sir?</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Othello.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Romeo and Juliet?</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Othello.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Well—Lear let it be.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Mind what you are about, Talboys. There are limits to human forbearance.
+Swear that after this morning’s breakfast you will never again utter the
+words Othello—Iago—Cassio—Desdemona——</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>I swear. Meanwhile, let us recur to the Question of Short and Long
+Time.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>When Shakspeare was inditing the Scenes of the “Decline and Fall”—“The
+Temptation”—“The Seduction”—or whatsoever else you choose to call
+it—the Sequence of Cause and Effect—the bringing out into prominence and
+power the successive <span class='sc'>Essential Movements</span> of the proceeding transformation
+were intents possessing his whole spirit. We can easily conceive that they
+might occupy it absolutely and exclusively—that is to say, excluding the
+computation and all consideration of actual time. If this be an excessive
+example, yet I believe that a huddling up of time is a part of the poetical state;
+that you must, and, what is more, may, crowd into a Theatrical or Epic Day,
+far more of transaction between parties, and of changes psychological, than
+a natural day will hold—ay, ten times over. The time on the Stage and in
+Verse is not literal time. Not it, indeed; and if it be thus with time, which
+is so palpable, so selfevidencing an entity, what must be the law, and how
+wide-ranging, for everything else, when we have once got fairly into the Region
+of Poetry?</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>The usefulness of the Two Times is palpable from first to last—of the
+Short Time for maintaining the tension of the passion—of the long for a
+thousand general needs. Thus Bianca must be used for convincing Othello
+very potently, positively, unanswerably. But she cannot be used without supposing
+a protracted intercourse between her and Cassio. Iago’s dialogue with
+him falls to the ground, if the acquaintance began yesterday. But superincumbent
+over all is the <em>$1</em> that Iago begins the
+Temptation, and that Othello extinguishes the Light of his Life all in
+one day.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>And observe, Talboys, how this concatenation of the passionate scenes
+operates. Marvellously! Let the Entrances of Othello be four—A, B, C, D.
+You feel the close connexion of A with B, of B with C, of C with D. You
+feel the coherence, the nextness; and all the force of the impetuous Action and
+Passion resulting. But the logically-consequent near connexion of A with C,
+and much more with D, as again of B with D, you <em>$1</em>. Why? When
+you are at C, and feeling the pressure of B upon C, you have lost sight of the
+pressure of A upon B. At each entrance you go back one step—you do
+not go back two. The suggested intervals continually keep displacing to
+distances in your memory the formerly felt connexions. This could not so
+well happen in real life, where the relations of time are strictly bound upon your
+memory. Though something of it happens when passion devours memory. But
+in fiction, the conception being loosely held, and shadowy, the feat becomes
+easily practicable. Thus the Short Time tells for the support of the Passion,
+along with the Long Time, by means of virtuous instillations from the hand or
+wing of Oblivion. From one to two you feel no intermission—from two to
+three you feel none—from three to four you feel none; but I defy any man to
+say that from one to four he has felt none. I defy any man to say honestly,
+that “sitting at the Play” he has kept count from one to four.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>If you come to that, nobody keeps watch over the time in listening to
+Shakspeare. I much doubt if anybody knows at the theatre that Iago’s first
+suggestion of doubt occurs the day after the landing. I never knew it till you
+made me look for it—</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>For which boon I trust you are duly grateful.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>’Tis folly to be wise.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Why, Heaven help us! if we did not go to bed, and did not dine, which of us
+could ever keep count from Monday to Saturday! As it is, we have some of
+us hard work to know what happened yesterday, and what the day before.
+On Tuesday I killed that Salmo Ferox?</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>No—but on Wednesday I did. You forget yourself, my dear sir, just like
+Shakspeare.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Ay, Willy forgets himself. He is not withheld by the chain of time he
+is linking, for he has lost sight of the previous links. Put yourself into
+the transport of composition, and answer. But besides, every past scene—or
+to speak more suitably to the technical distribution of the Scenes, in our
+Editions—every past <em>$1</em>, (which different occupation, according to the technicality of the
+French Stage, of the Italian, of the Attic, of Plautus, of Terence, constitutes
+a Scene)—every such past marked moment in the progress of the Play has
+the effect for the Poet, as well as for you, of protracting the time in retrospect—throwing
+everything that has passed further back. As if, in travelling fifty
+miles, you passed fifty Castles, fifty Churches, fifty Villages, fifty Towns,
+fifty Mountains, fifty Valleys, and fifty Cataracts—fifty Camels, fifty Elephants,
+fifty Caravans, fifty Processions, and fifty Armies—the said fifty
+miles would seem a good stretch larger to your recollection, and the five
+hours of travelling a pretty considerable deal longer, than another fifty miles
+and another five hours in which you had passed only three Old Women.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>My persuasion is, sir, that nobody alive knows—of the auditors—that the first
+suggestion of doubt and the conclusion to kill are in one Scene of the Play. I
+do, indeed, believe, with you, sir, that the goings-out and re-enterings of
+Othello have a strangely deluding effect—that they disconnect the time more
+than you can think—and that all the changes of persons on the stage—all
+shiftings of scenes and droppings of curtains, break and dislocate and dilate
+the time to your imagination, till you do not in the least know where you
+are. In this laxity of your conception, all hints of extended time sink in
+and spring up, like that fungus which, on an apt soil, in a night grows to a
+foot diameter.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>You have hit it there, Talboys. Shakspeare, we have seen, in his calmer
+constructions, shows, in a score of ways, weeks, months; that is therefore
+the true time, or call it the historical time. Hurried himself, and hurrying
+you on the torrent of passion, he forgets time, and a false show of time, to the
+utmost contracted, arises. I do not know whether he did not perceive this
+false exhibition of time, or perceiving, he did not care. But we all must see
+a reason, and a cogent one, why he should not let in the markings of protraction
+upon his dialogues of the Seduced and the Seducer. You can conceive
+nothing better than that the Poet, in the moment of composition, seizes
+the views which at that moment offer themselves as effective—unconscious or
+regardless of incompatibility. He is whole to the present; and as all is
+feigned, he does not remember how the foregone makes the ongoing impracticable.
+Have you ever before, Talboys, examined time in a Play of Shakspeare?
+Much more, have you ever examined the treatment of time on the
+Stage to which Shakspeare came, upon which he lived, and which he left?</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>A good deal.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Not much, I suspect.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Why, not at all—except t’other day along with you—in Macbeth.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>He came to a Stage which certainly had not cultivated the logic of time
+as a branch of the Dramatic Art. It appears to me that those old people,
+when they were enwrapt in the transport of their creative power, totally forgot
+all regard, lost all consciousness of time. Passion does not know the clock
+or the calendar. Intimations of time, now vague, now positive, will continually
+occur; but also the Scenes float, like the Cyclades in a Sea of Time, at
+distances utterly indeterminate—Most near? Most remote? That is a Stage
+of Power, and not of Rules—Dynamic, not Formal. I say again at last as at
+first, that the time of Othello, tried by the notions of time in <em>$1</em>, or tried, if
+you will, by the type of prosaic and literal time, is—<span class='sc'>Insoluble</span>.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>To the first question, therefore, being What is the truth of the matter? the
+answer stands, I conceive without a shadow of doubt or difficulty, “The time
+of Othello is—as real time—<span class='fss'>INSOLUBLE</span>.”</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>By heavens, he echoes me!</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Or, it is proposed incongruously, impossibly. Then arises the question,
+How stood the time in the mind of Shakspeare?</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>I answer, I do not know. The question splits itself into two—first,
+“How did he <em>$1</em> the time?” Second, “How did he conceive it in
+the progress of the Play?” My impression is, that he projected extended
+time. If so, did he or did he not know that in managing the Seduction he
+departed from that design by contracting into a Day? Did he deliberately
+entertain a double design? If he did, how did he excuse this to himself?
+Did he say, “A stage necessity, or a theatrical or dramatic necessity”—namely,
+that of sustaining at the utmost possible reach of altitude the tragical passion
+and interest—“requires the precipitation of the passion from the first breathing
+of suspicion—the ‘Ha! Ha! I like not that,’ of the suggesting Fiend to the
+consecrated ‘killing myself, to die upon a kiss!’—all in the course of fifteen
+hours—and this tragical vehemency, this impetuous energy, this torrent of
+power I will have; at the same time I have many reasons—amongst them the
+general probability of the action—for a dilated time; and I, being a magician
+of the first water, will so dazzle, blind, and bewilder my auditors, that they
+shall accept the double time with a double belief—shall feel the unstayed
+rushing on of action and passion, from the first suggestion to the cloud of
+deaths—and yet shall remain with a conviction that Othello was for months
+Governor of Cyprus—they being on the whole unreflective and uncritical
+persons?”</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>And, after all, who willingly criticises his dreams or his pleasures?</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>And the Audience of the Globe Theatre shall not—for “I hurl my dazzling
+spells into the spungy air,” and “the spell shall sit when the curtain has fallen.”
+Shakspeare might, in the consciousness of power, say this. For this is that
+which he has—knowingly or unknowingly—done. Unknowingly? Perhaps—himself
+borne on by the successively rising waves of his work. For you
+see, Talboys, with what prolonged and severe labour we two have arrived at
+knowing the reality of the case which now lies open to us in broad light.
+We have needed time and pains, and the slow settling of our understandings,
+to unwind the threads of delusion in which we were encoiled and entoiled.
+If a strange and unexplained power could undeniably so beguile us—a possibility
+of which, previously to this examination, we never have dreamt, how
+do we warrant that the same dark, nameless, mysterious power shall not
+equally blind the “Artificer of Fraud?” This is matter of proposed investigation
+and divination, which let whoever has will, wit, and time, presently
+undertake.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Why, we are doing it, sir. He will be a bold man who treats of Othello—after
+Us.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Another question is—What is the Censure of Art on the demonstrated
+inconsistency in Othello? I propose, but now deal not with it. Observe that
+we have laid open a new and startling inquiry. We have demonstrated the
+double time of Othello—the Chronological Fact. That is the first step set in
+light—the first required piece of the work—<em>$1</em>. Beyond this, we have
+ploughed a furrow or two, to show and lead further direction of the work in
+the wide field. We have touched on the gain to the work by means of the
+duplicity—we have proposed to the self-consciousness of all hearers and
+readers the psychological fact of their own unconsciousness of the guile used
+towards them, or of the success of the fallacy; and we have asked the solution
+of the psychological fact. We have also asked the Criticism of Art on the
+government of the time in Othello—supposing the Poet in pride and audacity
+of power to have designed that which he has done. Was it High Art?</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Ay—was it High Art?</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>I dare hardly opine. Effect of high and most defying art it has surely; but
+you ask again—did he know? I seem to see often that the spirit of the Scene
+possessed Shakspeare, and that he fairly forgot the logical ties which he had
+encoiled about him. We know the written Play, and we may, if we are
+capable, know its power upon ourselves. There <em>$1</em> the Two Times, the Long
+and the Short; and each exerts upon you its especial virtue. I can believe
+that Shakspeare unconsciously did what Necessity claimed—the impetuous
+motion on, on, on of the Passion—the long time asked by the successive
+events; the forces that swayed him, each in its turn, its own way.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Unconsciously?</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Oh heavens! Yes—yes—no—no. Yes—no. No—yes. What you will.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c035'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Willingly my jaws I close,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Leave! oh! leave me to repose.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Consciously or unconsciously?</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Talboys, Longfellow, Perpetual Præses of the Seven Feet Club, we want
+Troy, Priam, Achilles, Hector, to have been. Perhaps they were—perhaps
+they were not. We must be ready for two states of mind—simple belief,
+which, is the temper of childhood and youth—recognition of illusion with self-surrender,
+which is the attained state of criticism wise and childlike. At
+last we voluntarily take on the faith which was in the goldener age. The
+child believed; and the man believes. But the child believes <em>$1</em>; and the
+man who perceives how <em>$1</em> is a shadow, believes <em>$1</em> beyond. <em>$1</em> he
+believes in play—<em>$1</em> in earnest. The child mixed the two—the tale of the
+fairies and the hope of hereafter. Union, my dear Boys, is the faculty of the
+young, but division of the old. I speak of Shakspeare at five years of age;
+not of Us, whom, ere we can polysyllable men’s names, dominies instruct how
+to do old men’s work and to distinguish.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>My dear sir, I do so love to hear your talkee talkee; but be just ever so
+little a little more intelligible to ordinary mortals—</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>You ask what really happened? The Play bewilders you from answering—accept
+it as it rushes along through your soul, reading or sitting to hear and
+see. The main and strange fact is, that these questions of Time, which, reading
+the Play backwards, force themselves on us, never occur to us reading
+straight forwards. Two Necessities lie upon your soul.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Two Necessities, sir?</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Two Necessities lie upon your soul. You cannot believe that Othello,
+suspecting his Wife, folds his arms night after night about her disrobed bosom.
+As little can you believe that in the course of twelve hours the spirit of
+infinite love has changed into a dagger-armed slayer. The Two Times—marvellous
+as it is to say—take you into alternate possession. The impetuous
+motion forwards, in the scenes and in the tenor of action, which belong to the
+same Day, you feel; and you ask no questions. When Othello and Iago speak
+together, you lose the knowledge of time. You see power and not form. You
+feel the aroused Spirit of Jealousy: you see, in the field of belief, a thought
+sown and sprung—a thought changed into a doubt—a doubt into a dread—a
+dread into the cloud of death. Evidences press, one after the other—the
+spirit endures change—you feel succession—as cause and effect must succeed—you
+do not compute hours, days, weeks, months;—yet confess I must,
+and confess you must, and confess all the world and his wife must, that the
+condition is altogether anomalous—that a time which is at once a day of the
+Calendar and a month of the Calendar, does not happen anywhere out of
+Cyprus.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>It has arisen just as you say, sir—because Two Necessities pressed. The
+Passion must have its torrent, else <em>$1</em> will never endure that Othello shall
+kill Desdemona. Events must have their concatenation, else—but I stop at this
+the incredible anomaly, that for <cite>Othello</cite> himself you require the double time!
+You cannot imagine him embracing his wife, misdoubted false; as little can
+you his Love measureless, between sunrise and sunset turned into Murder.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Even so.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>My dear sir, what really happened?</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Oh! Talboys, Talboys. Well then—<em>$1</em> that Othello killed her upon the
+first night after the arrival at Cyprus. The Cycle could not have been so
+run through.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>How then in reality did the Weeks pass?</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>That’s a good one! Why, I was just about to ask you—and ’tis your indisputable
+duty to tell me and the anxious world—how.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>I do not choose to commit myself in such a serious affair.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Suppose the framing of the tale into a Prose Romance. Surely, surely,
+surely, no human romancer, compounding the unhappy transactions into a
+prose narrative, could, could, could have put the first sowing of doubt, and
+the smothering under the pillows, for incidents of one day. He would have
+made Othello for a time laugh at the doubt, toss it to the winds. Iago would
+have wormed about him a deal slowlier. The course of the transactions in the
+Novel would have been much nearer the course of reality.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>In Cinthio’s Novel—</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Curse Cinthio.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>My Lord, I bow to your superior politeness.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Confound Chesterfield. My dear friend, Reality has its own reasons—a
+Novel its own—and its own a Drama. Every work of art brings its own
+conditions, which divide you from the literal representation of human experience.
+Ask Painter, Sculptor, and Architect. Every fine art exercises its
+own sleights.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>In the Novel, I guess or admit that they would have been a month at
+Cyprus ere Iago had stirred. What hurry? He would have watched his
+time—ever and anon would have thrown in a hundred suggestions of which we
+know nothing. Let any man, romancer or other, set himself to conceive the
+Prose Novel. He cannot, by any possibility, conceive that he should have
+been led to make but a day of it. Ergo, the Drama proceeds upon its own
+Laws. No representation in art is the literal transcript of experience.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>The question is, what deviations—to what extent—does the particular Art
+need? And why? The talked Attic Unity of Time instructs us. But
+Sophocles and Shakspeare must have one view of the Stage, in essence. You
+must sit out your three or four hours. You must listen and see with expectation
+<em>$1</em>, like a bow drawn. To which intent Action and Passion must
+press on.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Compare, sir, the One Day of Othello to the Sixteen Years of Hermione!
+There, intensest Passion sustained; here, the unrolling of a romantic adventure.
+Each true to the temper imposed on the hearing spectator.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Good. The Novel is not a Transcript—the Play is not a Transcript. Ask
+not for a Transcript, for not one of those who could give it you, will. A
+<em>$1</em> and demand—and we have it in Othello.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>And put up we must with Two Times—one for your sympathy with his
+tempest of heart—one for the verisimilitude of the transaction.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Think on the facility with which, in the Novel, Iago could have strewn an
+atom of arsenic a day on Othello’s platter, to use him to the taste; and how,
+in the Play, this representation is impossible. Then, the original remaining
+the same, each manner of portraiture <em>$1</em>, and each, after <em>$1</em>.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Did not Shakspeare know as much about the Time which he was himself
+making <em>$1</em>, as much and more?</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>I doubt it. I see no necessity for believing it. We judge him as we judge
+ourselves. He came to his Art as it was, and created—improving it—from
+that point. An Art grows in all its constituents. The management of the
+Time is a constituent in the Art of “feigned history,” as Poetry is called by
+Lord Bacon. But I contend that on our Stage, to which Shakspeare came,
+the management of Time was in utter neglect—an undreamed entity; and I
+claim for the first foundation of any Canon respective to this matter, acute
+sifting of all Plays <em>$1</em>.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Not so very many—</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Nor so very few. Shakspeare took up the sprawling, forlorn infant, dramatic
+Time. He cradled, rocked, and fed it. The bantling throve, and crawled
+vigorously about on all-fours. But since then, thou Tallometer, imagine
+the study that <em>$1</em> have made. Count not our Epic Poems—not our Metrical
+Romances—not our Tragedies. Count our Comedies, and count above all our
+Novels. I do not say that you can settle Time in these by the almanac.
+They are the less poetical when you can do so; but I say that we have with
+wonderful and immense diligence studied the working out of a Story. Time
+being here an essential constituent, it cannot be but that, in our more exact
+and critical layings-out of the chain of occurrences, we have arrived at a
+tutored and jealous respect of Time—to say nothing of our Aristotelian lessons—totally
+unlike anything that existed under Eliza and James, as a
+general proficiency of the Art—as a step gained in the National Criticism.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Ay, it must be difficult in the extreme for us so to divest ourselves of our
+own intellectual habits and proficiency as to take up, and into our own, the
+mind of that Age. But, unless we do so, we are unable to judge what might
+or might not happen to any one mind of that age; and when we affirm that
+Shakspeare must have known what he was doing in regard to the Time of
+Othello, we are suffering under the described difficulty or disability—</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Why, Talboys, you are coming, day after day, to talk better and better
+sense—take care you do not get too sensible—</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>We must never forget, sir, that the management of the Time was on that
+Stage a slighted and trampled element—that what Willy gives us of it is
+gratuitous, and what we must be thankful for—and finally, that he did not
+distinctly scheme out, in his own conception, the Time of Othello—very far
+from it.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>I verily believe that if you or I had shown him the Time, tied up as it is,
+he would have said, “Let it go hang. They won’t find it out; and, if they
+do, let them make the best, the worst, and the most of it. The Play is a good
+Play, and I shall spoil it with mending it.” Why, Talboys, if Queen Elizabeth
+had required that the Time should be set straight, it could not have been
+done. One—two—six changes would not have done it. The Time is an
+entangled skein that can only be disentangled by breaking it. For the fervour
+of action on the Stage, Iago could not have delayed the beginning beyond
+the next day. And yet think of the Moral Absurdity—to begin—really as if
+the day after Marriage, to sow Jealousy! The thing is out of nature the
+whole diameter of the globe. His project was “after a time t’ abuse Othello’s
+ear,” which is according to nature, and is <em>$1</em> the impression made—strange
+to say—from beginning to end. But the truth is, that the Stage three
+hours are so soon gone, that you submit yourself to everything to come within
+compass. Your Imagination is bound to the wheels of the Theatre Clock.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Yet, in our conversation on Macbeth, you called your discovery an “astounding
+discovery”—and it is so. The Duplicity of Time in Othello is a hundred
+times more astounding—</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>And the discovery of it will immortalise my name. I grieve to think that
+the Pensive Public is sadly deficient in Imagination. I remember or invent
+that she once resisted me, when I said that “Illusion” is one constituent
+of Poetry. Illusion, the Pensive Public must be made to know,
+is <span class='fss'>WHEN THE SAME THING IS, AND IS NOT</span>. Pa—God bless him!—makes
+believe to be a Lion. He roars, and springs upon his prey. He at once
+believes himself to be a Lion, and knows himself to be Pa. Just so with the
+Shakspeare Club—many millions strong. The two times at Cyprus <em>$1</em>;
+the reason for the two times—to wit, probability of the Action, storm of the
+Passion—<em>$1</em>; and if any wiseacre should ask, “How do we manage to
+stand the <em>$1</em> together-proceeding of two times?” The wiseacre is answered—“We
+don’t stand it—for we know nothing about it. We are held in a confusion
+and a delusion about the time.” We have effect of both—distinct knowledge
+of neither. We have suggestions to our Understanding of extended time—we
+have movements of our Will by precipitated time.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>We have—we have—we have. Oh! sir! sir! sir!</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Does any man by possibility ask for a scheme and an exposition, by
+which it shall be made luminous to the smallest capacity, <em>$1</em> we are able
+distinctly all along to know, and bear in mind, that the preceding transactions
+are accomplished in a day, and at the same time and therewithal,
+distinctly all along to know and bear in mind that the same transactions
+proceeding before our eyes take about three months to accomplish? Then,
+I am obliged—like the musicians, when they are told that, if they have
+any music that may not be heard, Othello desires them to play it—to
+make answer, “Sir, we have none such.” It is to ask that a deception
+shall be not only seemingly but really a truth! Jedediah Buxton, and Blair
+the Chronologist, would, “sitting at <em>$1</em> play,” have broken their hearts.
+You need not. If you ask me—which judiciously you may—what or how
+much did the Swan of Avon intend and know of all this astonishing legerdemain,
+when he sang thus astonishingly? Was he the juggler juggled by
+aërial spirits—as Puck and Ariel? I put my finger to my lip, and nod on
+him to do the same; and if I am asked, “Shall a modern artificer of the
+Drama, having the same pressure from within and from without, adopt this
+resource of evasion?” I can answer, with great confidence, “He had better
+look before he leap.” If any spectator, upon the mere persuasion and power
+of the Representation, ends with believing that the seed sown and the harvest
+reaped are of one day, I believe that he may yet have the belief of extended
+time at Cyprus. I should say by <em>$1</em>! Or if you wish this more intelligibly said, that he shall
+continually <em>$1</em> the past notices. Once for all, he shall <em>$1</em> that the <em>$1</em>.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Inquire, sir, what intelligent auditors, who have not gone into the study,
+have thought; for that, after all, is the only testimony that means anything.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Well, Talboys, suppose that one of them should actually say, “Why, upon
+my word, if I am to tell the truth, I did take note that Iago began ‘abusing
+Othello’s ear’ the day after the arrival. I did, in the course of the Play,
+gather up an impression that some good space of time was passing at Cyprus—and
+I did, when the murder came, put it down upon the same day with the
+sowing of the suspicion, and I was not aware of the contradiction. In short,
+now that you put me upon it, I see that I did that which thousands of us do
+in thousands of subjects—keep in different corners of the brain two beliefs—of
+which, if they had come upon the same ground, the one must have annihilated
+the other. But I did not at the time bring the data together. <em>$1</em>”</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Assume, sir, for simplicity’s sake, that Shakspeare knew what he was doing.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Then the Double Time is to be called—an Imposture.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Oh, my dear sir—oh, oh!</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>A good-natured Juggler, my dear Talboys, has cheated your eyes. You
+ask him to show you how he did it. He does the trick slowly—and you see.
+“Now, good Conjuror, <em>$1</em>.” “I can’t. I cheat you by
+doing it quickly. To be cheated, you must <em>$1</em> see what I do; but you must
+<em>$1</em> that you see.” When we inspect the Play in our closets, the Juggler
+does his trick slowly. We sit at the Play, and he does it quick. When you
+see the trick again done the right way—that is quick—you cannot conceive
+how it is that you no longer see that which you saw when it was done
+slowly! Again the impression returns of a magical feat.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>I doubt, if we saw Othello perfectly acted, whether all our study would
+preserve us from the returning imposture.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>I will defy any one most skilful theatrical connoisseur, even at the tenth,
+or twentieth, or fiftieth Representation, so to have followed the comings-in and
+the goings-out, as to satisfy himself to demonstration, that interval into
+which a month or a week or a day can be dropped—<em>$1</em>.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>When do you purpose publishing this your “astounding Discovery?”</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Not till after my death.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>I shall attend to it.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>In comparing Shakspeare and the Attic Three, we seem to ourselves, but
+really do not, to exhaust the Criticism of the Drama. Is Mr Sheriff Alison
+right, when he said that the method of Shakspeare is justified only by the
+genius of Shakspeare? That less genius needs the art of antiquity? Our
+own art inclines to a method between the two; and we should have to account
+for the theatrical success, during a century or more, of such Plays as the
+Fair Penitent, Jane Shore, &#38;c.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Why, sir, does Tragedy displace often from our contemplation, Comedy?
+Not when we are contemplating Shakspeare. To me his method, in reading
+him, appears justified by the omnipotent Art, which, despite refractoriness,
+binds together the most refractory times, things, persons, events <em>$1</em>.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Most true. We feel, in reading, the self-compactness and self-completeness
+of each Play. Thus in Lear—</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>In Lear the ethical ground is the Relation of Parent to Child, specifically
+Father and Daughter. If the treatment of that Relation is full to your satisfaction,
+that may affect you as a Unity. Full is not exhaustive; but one part
+of treatment demands another. Thus the violated relation requires for its
+complement the consecrated relation.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>In Hamlet?</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>The ethical ground in Hamlet, sir, is the relation of Father and Son, very
+peculiarly determined, or specialtied. Observe, sir, how the <em>$1</em> relation
+between Father and Daughter, the <em>$1</em> between Father and Son occurs in
+Polonius’s House. Here, too, a slain Father—a part of the specialty. Compare,
+particularly, the dilatory revenge of Hamlet, and the dispatchful of
+Laertes. Again, the relation of Gertrude the Mother and Hamlet the Son—so
+many differences! And the strange discords upon the same relation—my
+Uncle-Father and Aunt-Mother—the tragic grotesque.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Eh?</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Then in Lear the House of Gloster counterparts Lear’s. And compare the
+ill-disposed Son-in-law Cornwall, and the well-disposed Son-in-law Albany.
+The very Fool has a sort of <em>$1</em> relation to Lear—“Nuncle”—and “come
+on, my Boy.” At least the relation is in the same direction—old to young—protecting
+to dependent—spontaneous love to grateful, requiting love, and an
+intimate, fondling familiarity. Compare in Hamlet, Ophelia’s way of taking
+her father’s death—madness and unconscious suicide—the susceptible girl,—and
+the brother’s to kill the slayer, “to cut his throat i’ the church”—the energetic
+youthy man, <i><span lang="la">ferox juvenis</span></i>—fiery—full of exuberant strength;—all variations
+of the grounding thought—relation of Parent and Child.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Of Othello?</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>The moral Unity of Othello can be nothing but the Connubial Relation.
+How is this dealt with? Othello and Desdemona deserve one another—both
+are excellent—both impassioned, but very differently—both frank,
+simple, confiding—both unbounded in love. But they have married against
+the father’s wish—privily, and—he dies—so here is from another sacred quarter
+an influence thwarting—a law violated, and of which the violation shall be
+made good to the uttermost. So somebody remarks that Brabantio involves
+the fact in the Nemesis, “She has deceived her Father, and may thee.” Then
+the pretended corrupt love of her and Cassio is a reflection in divers ways of
+the prevailing relation—for a corrupt union of man and woman images <i><span lang="la">ex
+opposito</span></i> the true union—and then it comes as the wounding to the death.
+Again, Rodrigo’s wicked pursuit of her is an imperfect, false reflection. And
+then there is the false relation—in Cassio and Bianca—woven in essentially
+when Iago, talking to Cassio of Bianca, makes Othello believe that they are
+speaking of Desdemona. Then the married estate of Iago and Emilia is
+another image—an actual marriage, and so far the same thing, but an
+inwardly unbound wedlock—between heart and heart no tie—and so far not
+the same thing—the same with a difference, exactly what Poetry requires.
+Note that this image is also participant in the Action, essentially, penetratively
+to the core; since hereby Iago gets the handkerchief, and hereby, too, the
+knot is resolved by Emilia’s final disclosures and asseverations sealed by her
+death. Observe that each husband kills, and indeed stabs his wife—motives
+a little different—as heaven and hell.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>The method of Shakspeare makes his Drama the more absolute reflection
+of our own Life, wherein are to be considered two things——</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>First—if the innermost grounding feeling of all our other feelings is and
+must be that of Self—the next, or in close proximity, Sympathy with our
+life—then by the overpowering similitude of those Plays to our lives—of the
+method of the Plays to the method of our life—that Sympathy is by Shakspeare
+seized and possessed as by no other dramatist—the persuasion of reality being
+immense and stupendous. Elements of the method are, the mixture of comic
+and tragic—the crossing presentment of different interests—presentment
+of the same interests from divided places and times—multiplying of agents,
+that is number and variety—being of all ranks, ages, qualities, offices—coming
+in contact—immixt in Action and Passion. This frank, liberal, unreserved,
+spontaneous and natural method of imitation must ravish our sympathy—and
+we know that the Plays of Shakspeare are to us like another world of our
+own in its exuberant plenitude—a full second humanity.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Opposed to this is the severe method of the Greek Stage—selecting and
+simplifying.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Of the modern craftsmen, to my thinking Alfieri has carried the Attic severity
+to the utmost; and I am obliged to say, sir, that in them all—those Greeks
+and this Italian—the severity oppresses me—I feel the rule of art—not the
+free movement of human existence. That I feel overpoweringly, only in
+Shakspeare.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Ay.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Alfieri says that the constituent Element of Tragedy is Conflict—as of
+Duty and Passion—as of conscious Election in the breast of Man and Fate.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>He does—does he?</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>There is Conflict—or Contrast—or Antithesis—the Jar of two Opposites—a
+Discord—a Rending—in Lear; between his misplaced confidence and its
+requital—between his misplaced displeasure and the true love that is working
+towards his weal. And, again, between the Desert and the Reward of Cordelia—with
+more in the same Play.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Schiller says of Tragic Fate,</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c035'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in8'>“The great gigantic Destiny</div>
+ <div class='line'>That exalts Man in crushing him.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c031'>Welcker has, I believe, written on the Fate of the Greek Tragedy, which I
+desire to see.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Are Waves breaking against a Rock the true image of Tragedy?</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Hardly; any more than a man running his head against a post, or stone
+wall is. The two antagonistic Forces, Talboys, must each of them have, or
+seem to have, the possibility of yielding; the Conflict or Strife must have a
+certain play. Therefore I inquire—Is the Greek Fate the most excellent of
+Dramatic means? and is the Greek Fate inflexible? And, granting that the
+Hellenic Fate is thoroughly sublime and fitting to Greek Tragedy, and withal
+inflexible—does it follow that Modern Tragedy must have a like overhanging
+tyrannical Necessity?</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>No.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>No. The Greek Tragedy representing a received religious Mythology, we
+may conceive the poetical, or esthetical <em>$1</em> of a Fate known for unalterable,
+to have been tempered by the inherent Awe—the Holiness. There is a
+certain swallowing-up of human interests, hopes, passions—this turmoiling,
+struggling life—in a revealed Infinitude. Our Stage is human—built on the
+Moral Nature of Man, and on his terrestrial Manner of Being. It stands
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_638'>638</span><em>$1</em> the Heavens—<em>$1</em> the Earth. In Hamlet, the Ghost, with his command
+of Revenge, represents the Impassive, Inflexible—with a breath
+freezing the movable human blood into stillness—everything else is in
+agitation.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Say it again, sir.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Beg my pardon and your own, fully and unconditionally, Talboys, this very
+instant, for talking slightingly of the Greek Drama.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Not guilty, my Lord. Of all Dramas that ever were dramatised on the
+Stage of this unintelligible world, the Greek Drama is the most dramatic, saving
+and excepting Shakspeare’s.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Ay, wonderful, my dear Talboys, to see the holy affections demonstrated
+mighty on the heathen Proscenium. Antigone! Daughter and Sister. Or
+in another House, Orestes, Electra.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Macbeth murders a King, who happens to be his kinsman; but Clytemnestra
+murders her husband, who happens to be a King—the profounder and
+more interior crime.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>We see how grave are the undertakings of Poetry, which engages itself to
+please, that it may accomplish sublimer aims. By pleasure she wins you
+to your greater good—to Love and Intelligence. The heathen Legislator,
+the heathen Philosopher, the heathen Poet, looks upon Man with love and
+awe. He desires and conceives his welfare—his wellbeing—<span class='sc'>his Happiness</span>.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>And the Poet, you believe, sir, with intenser love—with more solemn awe—with
+more penetrant intuition.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>I do. And he has his way clearer before him.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>The Legislator, sir, will alchemise the most refractory of all substances—Man.
+His materials are in truth the lowest and grossest, and most external
+relations of Man’s life.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>They are.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>And these he would, with instrumentality of low, gross, outward means,
+subjugate or subdue under his own most spiritual intuitions.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>A vain task, my dear Talboys, for an impossible. He must lower his
+intuition—his aim—to his means and materials. The Philosopher walks in a
+more etherial region. Compared to the Legislator, he is at advantage. But
+he has his own difficulties. He must <em>$1</em>!</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>He might as well try, sir, to trace outline, and measure capacity of a mist
+which varies its form momently, and, without determinate boundary loses
+itself in the contiguous air. His work is to define the indefinite.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>And then he comes from the Schools, which in qualifying disqualify also—from
+the Schools of the Senses—of the Physical Arts—of Natural Philosophy—of
+Logical, Metaphysical, Mathematical Science. These have quickened,
+strengthened, and sharpened his wit; they have lifted him at last from emotions
+to notions; but—Love is understood by loving—Hate by hating—and
+only so! Sensations—notions—<span class='sc'>Emotions</span>! I say, Talboys, that in all these
+inferior schools you may understand a part by itself, and ascend by items
+to the Sum, the All. But in the Philosophy of the Will, you must from the
+centre look along the radii, and with a sweep command the circumference.
+You must know as it were Nothing, or All.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Ay, indeed, sir; looking at the Doctrines of the Moral Philosophers, you
+are always dissatisfied—and why?</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Because they contradict your self-experience. Sometimes they speak as
+you feel. Your self-intelligence answers, and from time to time, acknowledges
+and avouches a strain or two; but then comes discord. The Sage
+stands on a radius. If he looks along the radius towards the circumference,
+he sees in the same direction with him who stands at the centre; but in every
+other direction, inversely or transversely. Every work of a Philosopher gives
+you the notion of glimpses caught, snatched in the midst of clouds and of
+rolling darknesses. The truth is, Talboys, that the Moral Philosopher is in the
+Moral Universe a schoolboy; he is gaining, from time to time, information by
+which, if he shall persevere and prosper, he shall at last understand. Hitherto
+he but prepares to understand. If he knows this, good; but if the schoolboy
+who has mastered his Greek Alphabet, will forthwith proceed to expound
+Homer and Plato, what sort of an <em>$1</em> may we not expect? Rather,
+what expectation can approach the burlesque that is in store!</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>All are not such.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>The Moral Sage may be the Schoolboy in the Magisterial Chair. With
+only this difference, that he of the beard has been installed in form, and the
+Doctor’s hat set on his head by the hand of authority. But the ground of
+confusion is the same. He will from initial glimpses of information expound
+the world. He will—and the worst of it is that—he must.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>A Legislator, a Philosopher, a Poet, all know that the stability and welfare
+of a man—of a fellowship of men—is Virtue. But see how they deal with
+it.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Don’t look to me, Talboys; go on of yourself and for yourself—I am a
+pupil.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>The Legislator, sir, can hardly do more than reward Valour in war; and
+punish overt crime. The Philosopher will have Good either tangible, like an
+ox, or a tree, or a tower, or a piece of land; or a rigorous and precise rational
+abstraction, like the quantities of a mathematician. For Good, <em>$1</em>, go to the Poet. For Good—for Virtue—<em>$1</em>, go to the
+Poet.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>The Philosopher separates Virtue from all other motions and states of the
+human will. The Poet loses or hides Virtue in the other motions and states
+of the human will. Orestes, obeying the Command of Apollo, avenges his
+Father, by slaying his Mother, and her murderous and adulterous Paramour.
+So awfully, solemnly, terribly—with such implication and involution in human
+affections and passions, works and interests and sufferings, the Poet demonstrates
+Virtue.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>And we go along with Orestes, sir; the Greeks did—if our feebler soul
+cannot.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Yes, Talboys, we do go along with Orestes. He does that which he <em>$1</em>
+do—which he is under a moral obligation to do—under a moral necessity
+of doing. Necessity! ay, an <a id='t638'></a>Αναγκη—stern, strong, adamantine as that
+which links the Chain of Causes and Events in the natural universe—which
+compels the equable and unalterable celestial motions beheld by our
+eyes—such a bounden, irresistible agency sends on the son of the murdered,
+with hidden sword, against the bosom that has lulled, fed, <em>$1</em> him!—<span class='sc'>He
+must.</span></p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Love, hate, horror—the furies of kinned shed blood ready to spring up
+from the black inscrutable earth wetted by the red drops, and to dog the heels
+of the new Slayer—of the divinely-appointed Parricide! So a Poet teaches
+Virtue.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Ay, even so; convulsing your soul—convulsing the worlds, he shows you
+<span class='sc'>Law</span>—the archaic, the primal, sprung, ere Time, from the bosom of Jupiter—<span class='sc'>Law</span>
+the bond of the worlds, <span class='sc'>Law</span> the inviolate violated, and avenging her
+Violation, vindicating her own everlasting stability, purity, divinity.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Divine Law and humble, faithful, acquiescent human Obedience! Obedience
+self-sacrificing, blind to the consequences, hearing the God, hearing the
+Ghost, deaf to all other Voices—deaf to fear, deaf to pity!</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Now call in the Philosopher, and hear what he has to preach. Something
+exquisite and unintelligible about the Middle between two Extremes!</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Shade of the Stagyrite!</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>The pure Earth shakes crime from herself, and the pure stars follow their
+eternal courses. The Mother slays the children of a brother for the father’s
+repast. And the sun, stopt in the heavens, veils his resplendent face. So
+a Poet inculcates Law—Law running through all things, and binding all
+things in Unity and in Sympathy—Law entwined in the primal relations of
+Man with Man. To reconcile Man with Law—to make him its “willing
+bondsman”—is the great Moral and Political Problem—the first Social need
+of the day—the innermost craving need of all time since the Fall. The Poet
+is its greatest teacher—a wily preceptor, who lessons you, unaware, unsuspecting
+of the supreme benefit purposed you—done you—by him, the Hierophant
+of Harmonia.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>You ordered me, sir, some few or many hours ago—some Short or Long
+Time since—to swear that after this Morning’s Breakfast I would never more
+so much as confidentially whisper into a friend’s ear the words—Othello!
+Desdemona! And I swore it. I am now eager to swear it over again; but
+I begin, sir, to entertain the most serious apprehensions that that time will
+never arrive.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>What time?</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'><em>$1</em> Breakfast. We have been sitting here, sir, <em>$1</em> Breakfast for ages,
+in the Wren’s Nest. During our incubation, what a succession of changes
+may there not have been in Europe! Revolution on Revolution—blood poured
+out like water——Hark, the Tocsin!</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>NORTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>The Gong.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>TALBOYS.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>The <em>$1</em> Gong! The tremulous thunder meets an answering chord
+within me. Six o’Clock in the Morning—and no victuals have I gorged since
+Eleven Yestreen. Good-by to the Wren’s Nest—the very Cave of Famine.
+This is Turkey-egg—Goose-egg—Swan-egg—Ostrich-egg day. I see Buller
+eyeing open-mouthed, with premeditating mastication, my pile of muffins.
+Gormandising sans Grace. Take care you don’t trip, sir, over the precipice—’twould
+be an ugly fall—into the basin. Now we are out of danger. But
+don’t skip, sir—don’t skip—till we emerge—on the open ground—then we
+may dance among the daisies.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_640'>640</span>
+ <h2 class='c002'>LETTER FROM MAJOR-GENERAL SIR WILLIAM NAPIER.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r c019'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Clapham, London</span>, <em>$1</em>.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='sc'>Sir</span>,—The writer of the article headed “<cite>The Ministerial Measures</cite>,” in your
+Magazine, has been so complimentary to me that I feel ashamed of pointing
+out an error.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>He says I wrote my History on <em>$1</em>. Had he said <em>$1</em>, I should not have winced, though I really endeavoured to write it
+on the principles of truth and knowledge of the subject. But for Whig principles!
+God save the mark!—I never thought of them save to censure; and
+really my History is throughout, by implication, and in many places directly,
+condemnatory of the Whigs’ policy, and of their extreme arrogance, and
+presumptuous, erroneous views of the Peninsular War.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>I trust the writer will, therefore, acquit me of any such foolish, factious
+design as writing a history upon Whig principles.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>I remain, Sir, your obedient Servant,</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><span class='sc'>W. Napier</span>, <em>$1</em>.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'><em>$1</em></p>
+
+<p class='c009'>[We gladly give place to the gallant General’s communication. The writer
+of the article in question meant simply to convey his impression, that the able
+and eloquent History of Sir William Napier was not constructed on <em>$1</em>
+principles; and consequently, that the letter which he embodied in his paper
+was to be regarded as the testimony of a political opponent.]</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c019'>
+ <div><em>$1</em></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='c036'>
+<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
+<p class='c008'><a href='#r1'>1</a>. <cite>Correspondence respecting the demands made upon the Greek Government, and
+respecting the Islands of Cervi and Sapienza.</cite> Presented to both Houses of Parliament,
+by command of Her Majesty. February 1850.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
+<p class='c008'><a href='#r2'>2</a>. Protestant heresy.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f3'>
+<p class='c008'><a href='#r3'>3</a>. This is now the case in Germany.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f4'>
+<p class='c008'><a href='#r4'>4</a>. <cite>Journal de la Campagne de Russie en 1812.</cite> Par M. <span class='sc'>de Fezensac</span>, Lieutenant-General.
+Librairie Militaire, Paris 1850.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f5'>
+<p class='c008'><a href='#r5'>5</a>. <cite>Essays; Political, Historical, and Miscellaneous.</cite> By <span class='sc'>Archibald Alison, LL.D.</span>
+Author of “The History of Europe,” &#38;c. Three vols. 8vo. William Blackwood &#38;
+Sons, Edinburgh and London.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f6'>
+<p class='c008'><a href='#r6'>6</a>. Vide the <cite>Economist</cite> newspaper of January 19, 1850.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c005'>
+</div>
+<div class='tnotes x-ebookmaker'>
+
+<div class='chapter ph2'>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c006'>
+ <div>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<table class='table0'>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='c013'>Page</th>
+ <th class='c013'>Changed from</th>
+ <th class='c014'>Changed to</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c012'><a href='#t600'>600</a></td>
+ <td class='c011'>declined only ½ per lb.; No. 40, however,</td>
+ <td class='c030'>declined only ½d. per lb.; No. 40, however,</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c012'><a href='#t638'>638</a></td>
+ <td class='c011'>of doing. Necessity! ay, an Αναζκη—stern, strong, adamantine as that</td>
+ <td class='c030'>of doing. Necessity! ay, an Αναγκη—stern, strong, adamantine as that</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+ <ul class='ul_1'>
+ <li>Typos fixed; non-standard spelling and dialect retained.
+
+ </li>
+ <li>Used numbers for footnotes, placing them all at the end of the last chapter.
+ </li>
+ </ul>
+
+</div>
+
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75515 ***</div>
+ </body>
+ <!-- created with ppgen.py 3.57e (with regex) on 2025-02-10 00:40:39 GMT -->
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+
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+
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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #75515 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/75515)