On this page
- Departments (1)
-
Text (5)
-
Untitled Article
-
- ynrtfnliD.
-
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
stood pondering defeat instead of organizing victory ; he stood meditating treachery instead of thinking how best he could serve Hungary and live , or serve Hungary and die . While Guy on was fighting , Gorgei was asking himself , with a cold-blooded egotism , whether it would not have been better , " although thousands looked up to me with firm confidence that I would not let them be destroyed , " to have forborne that step which had led him so far as to prevent him from returning ; whether it would not have been better to have issued " a pacific summons to a voluntary laying down arms" instead of the " defying proclamations" of Waizen ? And he asked himself this question , not for the first time , at Leutschau ; he had asked it three months before at Presburg ; when also he was speculating on the chances of making himself a dictator . And while he was reckoning with the past , his own officers were holding a soiree dansante ,
he being too much " racked with incertitude " to join them . When he was at Waizen he believed that " the contest would be a fruitless one "he writes this and italicises the word ; yet he resolves , probably within the range of the dance music , certainly out of the range of the enemy ' s cannon , that " those who looked up to me with firm confidence , that I would not allow them to perish in the desperation of fruitless efforts , did well in trusting me . " The small capitals are his own . And that was the way , and those were the circumstances under which he cried " quits with the past . " General Kmety , who was stationed in position on the river Hernad close by , has a right to his bitter sarcasm , that "the perception of great dangers near at hand , " instead or urging Gorgei , as he says it did , to " the height of intellectual activity , " should have urged him to the height of the Branyiszko pass .
Guyon ' s victory \ ipset Schlick ' s combinations , forced him to retreat , and enabled Gorgei to effect a junction with Klapka shortly after , at Kaschau , on the 10 th of February , 1849 . Dembinski was soon appointed commander-in-chief ; Gorgei ' s corps d ' armee was absorbed into the main army ; and henceforth he had to share his glories and his power with a Pole—he hated the Poles- ^ an d submit his haughty spirit to the orders of a superior . In , vain . He did not submit ; insisted on having his own corps separately supplied with provisions ; commanded out of his place in the two days ' ' fight at Kapolna ; and when the army under Dembinski retreated on the Thciss , after a series of disasters , Gorgei declined _ to retreat when ordered , and insisted on retreating when ordered to maintain his groiind .
But there the army had no confidence in Dembinski . He was in a measure deposed by the army—Gorgei declaring beforehand that he had no objection to the appointment of one of his juniors , E , epasy or Klapka ; a clumsy way of hinting a strong desire for the baton of command . Vetter , after much negotiation , was appointed to the coveted post ; but he , unfortunately , fell sick , and the chief command was provisionally transferred to Gorgei . But he who censures and ridicules the plans of others for the continuation of the war , had too much sense to think of forming one of his own . Again , the chief of the general staff of the seventh army corps
devised a plan by which , executed by the skill of Aulich , the sturdy bravery of Damjanics , the coolness of Klaplca , and the valour of Visoscki , Kmety , and Nagy Sandor , carr ied the Hungarian army to victory four times in eight days—at Hat van , at Tapio 13 ickse , at Isaszeg , at Waizen . Windisch Grata , by the 2 Gth of April , was in full retreat for the Vienna frontier , and Komom relieved . But "here ends Hungarian successes . Gorgei , for once , declined to follow the advice of the chief of his staff , and pursue the Austrians while they were demoralized by five or six victories . He followed his own inclinations , lie wasted time in
storming the fortress of Ofen , which could never be regained . He kept up his intrigues in the army and at Debreczin , and thought more of humbling Kossuth , dissolving the Diet at the point of the bayonet , and treating with the Austrians , not for independence , but for the constitution of 1848 ; than of his duties as the head of the fighting army of Hungary . The [ Russians were . silently marching through the Dukla Pass , while Gorgei was weighing and balancing the probabilities of making himself a kind of prime minister of Hungary , under the house of Hapsburgh .
By the declaration of the Diet on the j 4 Ui of April , 1841 ) , Hungary was declared independent of Austria , and the house of JFapsburg was deposed . Oiorgei , a servant of the nation , instead of receiving this news as became an honest man , either by accepting it , or throwing up the command , boasts that he sent back a message to the Diet by the courier who 'brought him the news , that " it was high time they ceased to be cowardly in adversity and insolent in prosperity . " And w liile -heprivately and niaong his creatures entertained these opinions , the , better to mask his designs ho published , on the 2 !) th of April , a stirring address to his army , attacking the Jli'ipslmrgli dynasty , adopting the 1 . 4 th of April , andgiviag the watchword of " forward , comrades , forward ! " Vet in writinir an account of his
conduct immediately after , he coolly tells us that political motives induced liini to abandon the idea of an uninterrupted offensive ! . Me' was offered I lie 1 V 1 inistry ol'War , and accepted it , for the express purpose of deceiving . Kossuth and the Diet , of purging the latter of those who passed the declaration of independence , and ( he army of those officers not devoted to hiii'i . . He deliberately tells us lit ! " overcame his moral aversion" to do this ; he describes ninny steps in deceit consequent upon it . ; and being once entangled in the meshes of his own Irrnchery , he did not escape from the net until the . Russians carved an outlet for him at Villages . Kroni the capture of Ofen , in June , to thai , fatal surrender in August ,
Gorgei , and no other , lost tho ea . uue . Mo was plotting when he should have been lighting , engaged in eircinnveiitiii << KossuUi when he should have been serving the nation ; a laggard when he should pursue ; and lighting fierce battles when the chance of benefiting |> y the victory had slipped by . Having made up liis mind to destroy t . lie ( jlovernnient of the 14 lh of April , he deceived Kossuth , deceived Klapkn , deceived everybody . jle led thu army by circuitous routes , purposely between the Russians and AiiHtrii'ins , resolved to surrender to the former , and ( at leji . nl , ho says so ) to light I he UtiU-r to the lanl .. He obtained tho dictatorship from KosKuth 2 it ( in ; last hour , made no terms with the enemy , but surrendered at discretion . The other gcnerald who guvo themselves up wore ahol and hung ; but
Gorgei was escorted to Klagenfurth , supplied with money from the purse of Paskiewitch . The characteristics of Arthur Gorgei Were not those which form a great man or save a great country . We are almost inclined to accept the sarcastic estimate of General Kmety , who says that Gorgei had the mind of a sergeant , and was amnestied with all the sergeants of the Hungarian , army . He had the pedantry of a bureaucrat in the council , and the valour of a dragoon in the field , but he had not the foresight of a statesman , or the unerring judgment of a great soldier . With the pride of the Magyar he had none of the patriotism of that race ; and having learned in Austria to despise representative institutions , he never regarded with any affection those of his native land . Indeed , he was ignorant of her laws , her customs , her rights—of the genius of her people and of hpr
glorious past . He did not even know the geography of the country ; and this he naively confesses himself , with the air of a man who is above it . His ambition was as boundless as las ' envy of other men ; his capacity was scarcely above the average ; his self-esteem inordinate . Throughout the whole of the period he spent in the service of his country he sought first his own glory and his own power , and through them bniy the glory and power of Hungary . He was not a vulgar traitor ; he did not , he had not the wit to scheme the betrayal of his country , but , setting himself first and her second , he brought disgrace upon her flag , he carried chains and misery to her children , and he earned , even from his enemies , the crowning distinction of infamy . We write these words in sorrow , not in anger , for to us Arthur Gorgei is as much a thing of the past as the rack and the thumb-screw .
His one redeeming quality was his impassable valour ; he knew not what fear is . His one hateful defect was envy ; he never revered or loved a superior man . And now at Klagenfurth , his proud heart inwardly bleeding from a wound time cannot stanch—his sense of a mighty failure —a wound which we can scarcely hope that penitence will ever heal ; he lives unpitied , unfriended , unmourned , and Alone .
Untitled Article
BOOKS ON OUR TABLE . JPreciosa . A Tale . John Chapman Religion and Education in Relation to fhe People . JJy J . A . Langford . John Chapman . Headingfor Travellers . Sfagie ' and Witchcraft . ¦ , ' . Chapman and Hall . Reminiscences of an Emir / rant Milesian . 3 vols . Kichard Bentley , Ah Astronomical Voeabnlarij . ' 'By J . K . Hind . J . W . Parker and Son . Freedom and Independence for tfye Golden . Lands ofAustralia . By J . D . Lang , . Longman , Brown , Green , and Co . JBohn ' s Illustrated Library—Life of the Duke of Wellington . By an Old Soldier . H . Gr . Bonn .
- Ynrtfnlid.
- ynrtfnliD .
Untitled Article
We should do our utmost to encourage the Beautiful , for the Useful encourages itself . —Goethe .
Untitled Article
THE HA ¥ TH © i ^ E PAPEHS . No . V . G R A C E F II L N E S S . K ^ kHE doctrine that the term Beauty is our general expression for those Wffl « aspects and properties of things which habitually give us pleasurable Mr feelings , or that our notion of beauty is a result of accumulated plea-4 * & surablc experiences , —a doctrine with which , under a certain expanded form , I wholly agree , —has not , I think , been applied to that quality of form and movement which we term Grace . There can be no doubt that the attribute to which we apply this term is some perfection in the thing possessing it , —that graceful movement is movement having some essential superiority over that which is ungraceful , and that the like is true of form . We do not see this attribute in clowns , cart-horses , tortoises and hippopotami ; but we do see it in antelopes , racehorses , and human beings who have been developed under the most favourable conditions . "What peculiar superiority is it , then , which we see in these more highl y organized beings ? One nig ht whilst watching a dancer , and inwardly ( iOnuVmning her pirouettes and tours da force , as barbarisms which' would be 'hissed , wero not people such cowards : is always to applaud what they think it the fashion to applaud , —whilst , as I say , inwardly condemning these ungainly feats of strength , it occurred to mo that the truly graceful motions which were occasionally introduced , were those performed with (^ imperatively little effort ; and , after watching awhile , and being reminded of sundry confirmatory facts , 1 came to the general conclusion , that , given a certain cllimge of attitude to be gone through—a certain action to be achieved , then it isiiidst gracefully achieved when achieved with the least expenditure ' of force . 1 » other words , grace , as ' applied to motion , ( leseril ) Os motion that is ( . 'fleeted with an economy of muscular power ; grace , as applied to animal forms , describes forms capable of this economy ; grace , as applied to postures , describes postures that may be maintained with this economy ; and gince us applied to inanimate objects , describes such as possess certain analogies to these attitudes and forms . That this generalization , if not the whole truth , contains , at least , a large part of it , will , I think , become obvious , on considering how habitually we couple the words easy and rac ( j ' ul , ; and . ' ¦ till . more , on calling to mind Komi ! of tin ; facts on which this associsition is bused . A soldier , drawing himself bolt upright when his serjeant shouts " attention , " is more remote from gracefulness than when he relaxes at the words " stand at case . " i lie ( jauchc visitor , sitting stiflly on the edge of his chair , and his self-poNSOSsed host , whose limbs and body dispose themselves as convenience dictates , are contrasts as much in eilort as in elegance . When stjniding , we commonly economise our strength by throwing our weight eh icily on one leg , wnu'li We straighten to make it serve us a column , whilst we ; relax the other ; to
Untitled Article
w 1238 THE LEADER . [ Saturday ,
-
-
Citation
-
Leader (1850-1860), Dec. 25, 1852, page 1238, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1966/page/18/
-