On this page
- Departments (1)
- Pictures (1)
-
Text (6)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Untitled Article
enough—unhappily heeded no more than sermons commonlyare 1 Something of the mystery ia revealed by the strange mingling of my books , typical of my mingled life . Plato happens to stand between Lafontajne and Lope de Vega , Comte is pressing against Leigh Hunt and Keats , Hegel squeezes Calderon into the corner ^ Mulder ' s Organic Chemistry is next to Macaulay and Theocritus , and Spinoza and Goethe are underneath Scribe and Balzac ! Such a pell-mell of Philosophy , Science ,
Novels , Plays , —books that alarm all but steadfast students , and books that excite the scorn of the grave—" so frivolous !¦"• I cannot help it—I have a natural turn for frivolity : the specific levity of my disposition will not be without its satisfaction . Voltaire , who had the same twofold tendency , regretted the absence of a like Catholic manysidedness in Newton . " Je voiidrais que Newton eut fait des vaudevilles , " he says ; "je Ten estimerais d * advantage / ' Fancy Newton writing vaudevilles , and getting his Principia accepted by grave ProfessorsT _ » This mention of vaudevilles brings me by an easy transition to the Theatres , where my professional duly calls me . Instead of pacing up and down my study , suffering myself to be bullied by my own conscience , I had better take my opera glass and see what is to be seen . Well , what is there to be seen ? First and foremost in beauty , elegance , and general attractiveness , is the burlesque at THE LYCEUM
which has the merit of being the most tasteful as well as the most gorgeous of spectacles . If genuine Fairy Land is anywhere , it is there . That " Pleasure Garden of Peerless Pool , " With its exquisite background and groups of children and flowers , is like' the realization of a dream ; and as to the " Golden Pinery , " which concludes the piece , it surpasses ail the last scenes even of . this Theatre . The music is pretty ; the dresses are splendid ; the story is interesting , and the whole enchanting . Madame , as a suivante , has some neat speeches to deliver , and her st ill magnificent contralto is effectively brought in . Julia St . George never
looked so charming as she does in the piquant little Prince , and only wants a little gaiety of manner for Happy hand . Frank Matthews as the Duke is wonderfully made up ; but I must tell him of a fault in his acting—a fault I think which increases , I allude to a perpetual change of key which mars the effect of many passages : passing from rhythmic elevation to the colloquial level , and suddenly ascending again . Let me not omit a word of praise to the amazing Pell , who , with his Ethiopian Serenaders , makes a pleasant variety in the music . Pell ' s management of the bones is something truly wonderful .
DREAKYLANE ! O Dreary Lane ! O Dreary Lane J I cannot be seduced into your precincts , because the magniloquent , but not strictly grammatical , Mr . Bunn assures us ( see Play-bills ) that there is no room Ah I those Play-bills—so veracious ! "In consequence of the great success of Macbeth" it iswithdrawn !! what it is to be a Poet as well as Manager , and write your own bills I In one of these poetical , but not grammatical , productions , the public was informed that , " in consequence of the overflow from every part of the house , " something
or other would be repeated J in the next line something else was announced for repetition , " in consequence of the complete overflow . " You are a Poet , Mr . Bunn , and , like Bayes in the Rehearsal , disdain ' * to creep servilely after sense , " otherwise I should ask you what a complete overflow was ? Empty benches ? An incomplete overflow " is , probably , one of those " hollow hearts " which " wear a mask " in the Bohemian Girl . But in all seriousness , I recommend the attention of the Drurv Lane bills to those who regard the Drama as Literature .
OLYMPIC . Mrs * Mead , a new aspirant , has appeared here in the character of Portia . I have not yet seen her , and merely record the fact . The Pantomime , which is exceedingly amusing , draws , and will draw , good audiences for some time . Talking of Pantomimes , an occasional deputy of mine reports excellently of doings in the distant regions of MAItYLEBO NE , where Tom Matthews , or "Tommy , " as he is fondly known to the delighted " Gods , " is nightly w the ascendant as Ckwn , and the Harlequin twnoae name the deponent atateth not ) it " all that
can be desired . " The fun will " amply repay' ? the distance . I speak by " good" report . The same cause obliges me to limit myself to a mention of the .
MABIONNETTE THEATRE , now flourishing at the Adelaide Gallery , and exciting considerable curiosity in the public . AH who have been in Italy will remember what a " rage " there isibr Marionnettes there , among all classes , and it becomes a matter of speculation whether our public can be roused to a similar enjoyment . I have not yet been there ; but next week I promise to tell you " all about" these wooden actors—not by any means the only actors of that material ; and , as to their being puppets , how few actors are much more ! Vivian .
Untitled Article
There is no learned man but will confess he hath much profited by reading controversies , his senses awakened , toid hia judgment sharpened . If , then , it be profitable for him to read , why shpuld it not , at l east , be tolerable for his adversary to write . —Milton .
Untitled Article
POLAND . — . London , January 6 , 1852 . Sib , — -In your number of the 5 th , page 17 , I read with sorrow that your literary critic , apropos of a tale related in a pamphlet entitled New Poland , or the Infant Hero , repeats the old story , which our enemies have so assiduously spread by the bribery of newspapers , historians , and other authors , thus endeavouring , if not to justify , at least to palliate , their crime of robbery ; viz .: — ' That Poland is not altogether guiltless in her suffering and degradation ; for it was her own internal misgovernment , dissensions , and oppressions which rendered her an easy prey to foreign conquest and enslavement . Serfdom was the plaguespot , the festering sore , of ' his' own native land . Had the nobles , the priests , and the crown regulated their royal and seignorial privileges , so as to have secured to their vassals the fruits of their toil , —had they offered to the exiled of Jerusalem a home and a country , instead of pursuing them from , city to city like beasts of prey , &c , —the barbarous cohorts of Russia would have been poured into Poland in vain . " The critic is even '' glad " thaf the authoress of the little book did not overlook that trumped-tip story by the three spoliators , which he is pleased to call a fact . Now , Sir , as your valuable journal has amply convinced me that you are commonly well informed both as to historical facts and current
events , and that your judgment thereupon has always been sound , and based upon truth and justice , I crave your permission of allowing me to address , through your columns , the few following words ( which my love of truth and wounded national feelings dictate to me ) to your literary critic , I would first beg leave to ask him whether , at the same epoch to which he alludes , misgovernment , dissensions , oppressions , serfdom , were not prevalent throughout Europe ; and that all those truly condemnablo vices , especially oppression , were not far more atrocious in Germany and France than they ever were in Poland ? Was not the oppression of the serfs in France carried to such an extent that in the fourteenth century it provoked the famous jacquerie , and in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries
in . Germany the sanguinary war of the German peasants ( Bauernkdeg ) ? And now , because Poland became the prey of her rapacious neighbours , she is to bo considered more guilty than the other European countries ! Is Poland alone to be accused of intolerance , although her history reveals no trace of anything like a St . Bartholomew ' s massacre , or the horrors of the thirty years' war , the Holy Inquisition , or the atrocious persecutions , for instance , of the Protestants in England , several hundred *) of whom , men , women , and children , under Mary ' s short reign , were burnt in Smithfield , roeroly because they were Proteatants , not even an Alien Act , 8 co . Sco . i Is Poland to be accused , X repeat , of oppression and , intolerance , only became she was more unfortunate than the other oouatiiw , who , if they <* e * p « d hor
fate , it . was merely because they had not the misfortune to be like her ( Poland ) surrounded on all sides by three despotic spoliators ? And it is a matter of doubt what would have been the fate of even England herself , if those same despots had surrounded her instead of the sea . That Poland nev . er refused , to the exiled of Jerusalem a home and a country , and that they were never "hunted from city to city like beasts of prey , " is sufficientl y proved by the incontestable fact that no other Christian country has ever had so many of them as Poland ; their number only now , under Russian oppression , begins to
considerably diminish . To thus insinuate that Poland was intolerant is point blank to repudiate both historical evidence and existing facts , which tell us that even the Socinians , or Unitarians , who were " everywhere , even in Protestant countries , oppressed and violently persecuted , found only in Poland and Transylvania , —where they were allowed to establish communes of their own creed , —admission and security . " It was only when Poland did what England is now in the course of doing , that religious persecution against the Dissenters and the Greeks began , viz ,, when the Polish kings offered ** a home and a country" to the Jesuits . —— - _
In conclusion , may I be allowed to quote a few paragraphs corroboratory of my assertions from M . Michelet ' s pamphlet , Pologne et Russia ; Legend * de Kosciusz&Oy PartS i 1852 i" The eighteenth century , which witnessed her ( Poland ' s ) downfal , was an epoch of Poland ' s gentleness of manners . The foreigners who then visited that country tell us that there neither police nor gensd ' armes were to be seen : a traveller could cross the enormous forests , his pockets laden with gold , in the utmost security . There were scarcely any criminals . The register * of several tribunals testify that , duringr thirty years , no one was brought before their bar but Gipsies and Jews ; , not one Pole , not one nobleman , not one peasant , accused of murder or theft . .
* ¦*¦« The Poles had serfs , ' they , say . And the Russians , had they none ? And the Gerrnans , had they no serfs ? The German serfdom was very oppressive , even in our century . A friend of mine once saw , in a German state , a young female serf chained up in a dog ' s kennel ! We Frenchmen ourselves , who delight in speaking so much of our beautiful laws , have still negroes , not to speak of the white negroes , or of the industrial slavery , which very often is worse than serfdom itself . " The Polish serf is now taxed ten times more than he was under the Polish Republic . Add to this , that he was exempt from that most terrible tax , military service : itThere
the nobility alone was obliged to perform ; was not then to be seen long rows of young peasants , the Chain round their necks , dragged by the Cossacks to serve the enemy of Poland in the Caucasus , in Siberia , up to the frontiers of China , the half of which die on their way ; the levying of others is carried on uninterruptedly , all Of whom are for ever lost to their country , as they never return . " In the sixteenth century Poland was the most tolerant country in the world , the asylum of religious liberty ; all Freethinkers took refuge thither . At length the Jesuits came , and the Polish clergy , following their impulse , became persecuting . "—( Pp . 21—23 . ) Respectfully yours , A Poi . b .
Untitled Article
NEW DAILY PAPER . 20 , Great Coram-street , January 7 . 1852 . " If to do were as easy as to know what to do , chapels had been churches , and poor men ' s cottages . princes ' palaces . " Sin , —On returning to town last Friday night , my attention was drawn to two letters in your " Open Council" proposing the establishment of an unstamped daily paper , as the best means to get rid of the stamp law . Doubtless it would be so ; but to establish a daily paper in earnest , and to Write a letter about it in the Leader , are totally distinct achievements . I propose in this letter to discuss the following questions :- —lBt . Can a daily unstamped paper be established ? 2 nd . If that is impossible , what can be established in that direction ? And , first , the daily , paper must sell , or it will do no good ; if it does not rival the existing daily press in quantity , quality , and circulation , it will be of little use in itself , and of no use in the way of getting rid of the law . There are weekly papers now which are newspapers according to the doctrine laid down at the Stamp-office , and no doubt Baron Parkc would cull them newspapers , though perhaps Bsiron Pollock would not , because ** nobody thought of prosecuting them . " Among thest ; the Racing Times and the . Legal Obaervipr , both weekly papers , are flagrant cases ; but as . they como in nobody's way ,
•• npbody thinks of prosecuting them . " In the same Way , a daily paper , if an insignificant ono , would be let alone , and nothing gained by the transaction . Mr . Stevens ' e daily paper must therefore , as ht proposes , be a good ono ; ho proposes threepence aa the price . The Daily News , at threepence , sold annually 3 , 500 , 000 copies , hut nt a 1 <» bk ; h «<* the pro prietois been ublo to |> ut into thoir pockets the £ 14 , 000 which thty paid for stamp duty , . they might perhaps have made a profit . But to carry on such a pnpor a very largo capital ta indispensable , say £ 20 , 000 , though I believe £ 100 , 000 would be nearer the mark . Now , it is an unfortunate peculiarity of moneyed men that they do not like to
Untitled Article
| - —^** r # 47 ^ 352 r)— '¦ ¦ ' - Wttt ^ W ^ f ^ V ^ ^ ~~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~ 65
Untitled Article
Untitled Article
[ IN THI 3 DEPARTMENT , A 8 ALL OPINIONS , HOWBVStt SXTfcBMB , ARE ALLOWED AN EXPRESSION , THE EDITOR NECESSARILY HOLDS HIM 8 ELF RESPONSIBLE FOR NONE . ] .
Untitled Picture
-
-
Citation
-
Leader (1850-1860), Jan. 17, 1852, page 65, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1918/page/21/
-