On this page
- Departments (1)
-
Text (7)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
IPfhvrirhtri*- 3LU£IUUU£* • .'. >.— . . ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ' .- ¦ ¦
-
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
We have many examples of Italians writing English with remarkable purity and elegance—some of them , Ugo Foscolo and Rtjfinx for instance , writing like the most accomplished Englishmen . ^ How well Pahiszi , Pra-ndi , Gam ^ enga , Arbivabene have written , and how rare it is to find an Englishman who could compete -with them in Italian ! The rarity gives all the greater value to the success of the Countess Pepoxj—by birth an Englishwoman—who , as our Italian letters inform us , has just published at Florence a translation , of Mrs . Somerviij £ e ' s Physical Geography ., a task requiring not only great mastery over Italian , but also some scientific culture . "We have carefully read the countess ' s translation , " writes our correspondent , an Italian , " and feel the greatest admiration for the talent with which she has surmounted the difficulty of rendering into a foreign language the scientific terminology of the original . Her style as simple , clear , and faithful ; and while her version shows thorough mastery of the language , she has not imitated that pompous exaggeration of expression , and swelling pride of phrase , to which Italians themselves are too often ready to sacrifice the simplicity of their sweet tongue . "
Untitled Article
Few subjects would more amply reward the conscientious labour of a philosophic writer than a really true picture of the condition of the working classes in Europe . The treatise by M . Le Play , which the present French Government has taken under its protection , and by that very act stamped the work with an indelible mark of suspicion in all tout imperial minds , is ably analyzed and exposed in the North British Review to which we refer all our readers , not simply for the object of ascertainining M . Le Pxat ' s errors , but also to read there some curious facts . Here is a sample on the Russian artele :- — ' ¦'¦ ¦ ' . . '' . ' ¦' . ¦ ¦ ¦ . ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ¦¦ '¦ ' ¦ . . v . ' ¦ ¦ • • ' V ¦ '• • '¦ ¦ - ¦ - ¦ ...
A number of men , chiefly from the ' valley of the Oka , emigrate yearly to St . Petersburg as boatmen , porters , wheelwrights , and handy day-labourers generally . The term of their emigration is from April to November . About sixty or seventy join together in this association ; they form the artele—placing themselves under the control of an artelchick , a cloutchnik , and two starchi . The artelchickis the business man of the troupe ; he finds the work , and regulates the price of payment , &c .: the cloutchnik is the treasurer ; he keeps the accounts and the cash , pays the bills , markets for the artele , and does all that the housekeeper would do in large families ; while the starchi , men of weight and experience , are the magistrates of the association , controlling the artelchick and the cloutchnik , settling disputes , calming passions , and doing the work of citizen priests . These emigrant workmen do all the rough handy jobs in St . Petersburg . They are the porters and ironworkers :
It is the tone of his novel which has been most offensive . While doh 7 his utmost to make every form of religious opinion ridiculous except h ? own , and while endeavouring to pander to the Mtterness already existin against free thought , the effect he produces on religions minds is well ex pressed by the reviewer in the North British . — The infidels ia the book are , we think , not so bad as many of the profess **/ rehgious people . An infidel might have written a considerable part of the book 3 called it "Hypocrisy , or the causes and consequences of religious belief" \ Ye kn of no work , written by an enemy of Christianity , tkat presents us with such mT favourable pictures of religious preachers and teachers .
they load and unload boats ,, saw and deliver firewood , shape and-drive in the stakes for the foundations of buildings , and rough-dig gardens in the city and the suburbs . But their favourite employment is iron work—this being the best paid . They take their food in brigades 6 f from thirty to thirty-five ; the expenses are paid out of the common fund , and generally cost about fourteen francs a month each . Sometimes a woman is hired by the artele to do the cooking ; sometimes , and most generally , a traiteur supplies them with certain meals at so much a head . Tea , brandy , clothes , and private luxuries are paid by each out of hia own private purse ; but not much is generally spent in that way ; all else is paid by the association . Sixteen days are given to each member during the campaign for extra work , to be paid by extra wages , and at the end all the money is divided . It generally comes to about one franc sixty centimes a day , or thirty-six francs eighty centimes a month . Fifteen
generally start together from the same village , making their own commencement . They borrow , says M . Le Play , 240 francs from a peasant in good circumstances , for which they pay no interest . But the peasant indemnifies himself by selling them a horse , worth ninety francs , at the sum of 115 francs . Each takes with him a certain amount of coarse meal or bread , and they go from twenty-five to thirty miles a day . They keep the horse for a week at St . Petersburg , at the common expense , and then sell him for thirty-five francs . All this time the wife stays at home with the father , or the eldest brother , if the father be dead . When the husband goes home again , rich , for him , he burieB his money in the woods . Untold heaps of wealth lie at this moment buried , no man knows where , in the forests of the Oremburg Steppes ; for as each man must be secret as the grave , for fear of pilferers and robbers , it of ten happens that the grave closes over his secret , and that his hard-earned gold lies to this hour mouldering in the ground .
The man best fitted for such a work as the one we have suggested is Bieiil , whose admirable monographs , Land und Lezite and Die Biirgcrliche Geselschqft , were recently noticed in the Westminster Review . He has the requisite breadth and acuteness , without the passion of system-making , which perverts his countrymen , and without the inaccuracy and love of paradox which destroy confidence in Trench writers . In the same number of the North British there is a heavy , but instructive article , on " The Sight and how to See , " from which we may borrow this fact to astound the reader , namely , that in the crystalline lens of the eye of a codfish ( which is composed of a series of fibrous layers , one over the other like the coats of an onion , each fibre having teeth like those of a saw , and these teeth dovetailing into each other ) there are estimated to be no less than five millions of fibres , and sixty-two thousand five hundred million of teeth 1 Did you ever ?
There is also a good article , grave and not satirical , on " Religious JNovels , the ineptitude and unchristian tendency of which the writer properly rebukes . He also justly estimates the low worth—intellectual and moral--of Perversion . If the writer of Perversion , is capable of learning a lesson , he will have learned from tlie unanimity of the graver and more auth oritative cr . t . cs , that the better part of th e public regards with unfeigned dwgust his coarseness and dishonesty redeemed by no remarkable ability .
Untitled Article
The " Photographic Portraits of Living Celebrities" which Messrs . Madll' and Polybank . are issuing , give us this month the portrait of Samtjei , Wabren—one of the best photographs of the series . The author of Ten Thousand a Year is the son of the Rev . Dr . Wabren , Incumbent of All Souls , Manchester , and was born in Denbighshire , May 23 , 1807 . He was originally destined for the medical profession , but did not complete his studies . He learned enough of Medicine to write the Diary of a Late Physician , which was commenced in 1830 , when ho was only three-and-twenty . In 1839 , appeared Ten , Thousand a Year j in 1847 , Now and Then ; and in 1851 , The ' Lily and the Bee . .
Untitled Article
COLERIDGE ON SHAKSPEARE AND MILTON . Seven Lectures on Shakespeare and Milton . By the late S . T . Coleridge . \ A List of all the MS . Emendations in Mr . Collier ' s Folio , 1632 ; and an Introductory Pref ace by J . Payne Collier , Esq . Chapman and Hall ! To a certain class of readers the announcement of seven new Lectures , or notes of Lectures , by Coleridge , on the topic on which he was strongest , namely , poetical criticism , will be full of expectant interest ; and we do not think that expectation will be disappointed by this publication . But the public at large has by this time pretty well mad * up its mind not to expect much from Coleridge , and certainly this volume will in nowise alter that disposition . It contains very little not previously published—often with
scarcely verbal differences , as in the following example , which might easily be multiplied b y reference to the " Literary Remains . '" In the-JJiograyMa Literaria , Coleridge writes : — " In times of old , books were as religious oracles ; as literature , advanced , they next became venerable preceptors ; they then descended to the rank of instructive friends ; a . nd as their numbers increased , they sank still lower to that of entertaining companions ; arid at present they seem degraded into culprits to hold up their hands at the bar of every self-elected yet not less peremptory judge , "vrho chooses to write from humour or interest , from enmity or arrogance , and to abide the decision of him that reads in malice or him that reads after dinner . " Thiswhich , by the way , is eminently untrue , as any calm consideration will detect—is thus repeated in the Lectures now published : —
In older times writers were looked up to almost as intermediate beings , between angels and men ; afterwards they -were regarded as -venerable and , perhaps , inspired teachers ; subsequently they descended to the level of learned and instructive friends ; but in modern days they are deemed culprits more than benefactors : as culprits they are brought to the bar of self-erected and self-satissued tribunals . If a person be now seen reading a new book , the most usual question is— " What trash have you there ? " . These Lectures have the Coleridgean tone , half-querulous , half-apologetic , and the Coleridgean impossibility of restricting ; what is said to the matter in hand : it is a mass of digressions ^ on Shakspeare and Milton , sometimes good , often poor , always apologetic . Of the good let us borrow . Here , for example , is a passage vyell worth repeating from week to week in every critical journal : —
As a third permanent cause of false criticism we may notice the vague use of terms . And here I may take the liberty of impressing upon , my hearers the fitness , if not the necessity , of employing the most appropriate "words and expressions , even in common conversation , and in the ordinary transactions of life . If you want a substantive do not take the first that comes into your head , but that which most distinctly and peculiarly conveys your meaning : if an adjective , remember the grammatical use of that part of speech , and be careful that it expresses some quality in the substantive that you wish to impress upon your licarer . lieflect for a moment on the vague and uncertain manner in which the word ' taste' has been often employed ; and how such epithets as ' sublime , ' ' majestic , ' grand , ' ' striking , ' ' picturesque , ' &c , have been misapplied , and how they have been , used on the most unworthy and inappropriate occasions . This again is noticeable : —
A second permanent cause of false criticism is connected with the habit of not taking the trouble to think : it is tlie custom whicli some people have establishe of judging of books by books . —Hence to such the use and value of reviews . Why has nature given limbs , if they are not to be applied to motion and action ; why abilities , if they are to lie asleep , while wo avail ourselves of the eyes , ears , and understandings of others ? As men often employ servants , to spare them the nuisance of rising from their seats and . walking across a room , so men employ rovie \ vs in order to save them-• elves the trouble of exercising their own powers of judging : it is only mental slothfulness and sluggishness that induce so many to adopt , and take for granted the opinions of others . I may illustrate this moral imbecility by a case which came within my own knowledge . A friend of xnine had seen it stated somewhere , or had heard it said , that Shakespeare had not made Constance , in King John , speak the langungo of nature , when she exclaims on the loss of Arthur ,
" Grief fills the room up of my absent child , Lies in his bed , walks up and down with mo ; Puts on his pretty lookg , repeats liis woTds , Remembers me of nil his gracious parts , Stuffs out hia vacant garments with his form : Then have I reason to bo fond of grief . " King John , Act III ., Scene 4 . Within three months after ho had repeated the opinion ( not thinking for him self ) , that these linos were out of naturo , my friend died . I called upon his mothor , « i > affoctionato , but ignorant woman , who had scarcely licard the name of Shakespea re , much loss road any of hia plays . Liko Philip , I endeavoured to console hor , nna
Ipfhvrirhtri*- 3lu£Iuuu£* • .'. ≫.— . . ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ' .- ¦ ¦
ICtmatur ^ ¦ ¦ — ' + - . — . ¦ . ' . ¦ ¦ ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ¦
Untitled Article
Critics are not the legislators , but the judges and police of literature . They do not make laws—they interpret and try to enforce them . —Edinburgh Reviewa ¦ '
Untitled Article
1096 THE L ^ DEK __ ^ N ^ 3 ^; Satijkda ^
-
-
Citation
-
Leader (1850-1860), Nov. 15, 1856, page 1096, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2167/page/16/
-