On this page
- Departments (1)
-
Text (6)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
LITERATTJRE. SCIENCE, ART, Etc
-
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
beautiful . The " Coneiliatore " had the credit of putting an end to inere verbiage , and terminating the age of literary nullity . Its first number was issued Sept- 3 , 1 . 818 . It was discontinued in 1820 , in consequence of the censorship to which it was subjected , and which'left , as its writers complained , little more than the titles of the articles and signatures of the authors . It appears to have been mainly in consequence of the political views expressed by him in the " Conciliatore" that Silvio 1 ejlico was arrested at Milan , Oct . 13 , 1820 . The particulars of the ten years' imprisonment which succeeded have become world-renowned through his book , "LeMie Prigioni . " Released August 1 st , 1830 , he lived chiefly in his native land , Piedmont , until June 31 , 1854 , when he quitted
this life . His fellow labourer , Berehet , wrote for his own age , and for the enslaved provinces of his country . His poems produce home-sickness in the exile , and kindle the fire of independence in the bosoms of those who breathe the air of the Peninsula . Though lie may have done little for art , according to the severe rules of Italian criticism , he did a vast deal for his country . Gratitude and veneration are due to him jn that , with the capacity to do much more , he willingly sacrificed a portion of his fame to his endeavours to secure the libertv of his native land .
Carlo Troya , by his historical and political writings , and Giuseppe Giusti , by his political poetry , sought to shake oppression and free their country fromtheyoke of the foreigner . The former presided over ' the Constitutional Ministry at Xaples in 1848 . Among the most meniorable of the writings of the latter is a , satirical poenx , written on occasion of the visit of the Emperor of Austria to Milan in 1838 , when nearly all the Sovereigns of the Peninsula—the high-minded and independent King oi Sardinia excepted- ^ vent to offer him their homage : Giusti died March 31 . 1850 .
Untitled Article
A Birmingham paper states that four pairs of shoes have been taken from the shop of a shoemaker at Broseley , in the execution of a distress warrant for the non-payment of a church rate . Two cl * eeses were also weighed by the executors of the law in the Jiouse of a widow , who resolutely refused to compound for her goods ; but her daughter ultimately was induced to pay the money . The LUn reports a curious sentence which has been passed at Unturwalden , Switzerland . One Melchior Risi , accused of disturbing the public order , has been condemned to a month ' s imprisonment , and to a regular attendance for two years at the morning and afternoon religious services !
A correspondent of the Australian Mail , writing from Auckland , mentions that Dr . Selwyn , Bishop of HJqw Zealand , has taken his departure in his little yacht , the Southern Cross , on a tour through a number of the MHtntssiivn Islands . " It Is , I believe , his lordship ' s intention to pay a first visit , to some now groups for the purpose of conveying to the natives ' the glad tidings of the Gospel , ' nnd to endeavour to induce sonic of them to accept of the advantages of an education in the College of St , John , so as to fit them to become in their turn instructors of their fellow men . He ia expected tocall at Worfolk Island . "
" TitYiNG it ON . " - ~ -Bullicr ' ii Lithographic Sheet gives the , following curious letter as having been addressed to the Emperor Napoleon . It ' was detained at the Office for Examining Petitions to His Majesfcy i-T- Sire , ' —Being the ppsscssor of a small property in the Beaujoles , favoured by a good soil for wine and turnips , and , on Wednesday , two days before Christmas , my wife having made us a soup of tlioso turnips , I found the taste so exquisite and so sweet , that the idea of our dear Emperor instantly occurred to me , and I said to my wife and my two sons , their Majesties have not perhaps a bettor soup . Then a happy inspiration passed through the mind
of my oldest son , and ho said , ' Father , you ought to send a cask to their Majesties . ' Sire , we aro giving eflbct to the idea . May the vegetables bo agrooablo to you , and wo shall esteem ourselves so fortunate to have procured you that trifling pleasure . ( We have more of them still . ) --1 am , with the most profound respect , sire , your very humble and very dovoted subject ; , J \ Borrow , shirtmaker at KoiBPay Aim ) . This letter wna followed hv a second , in wfolQh P . Bolniorxt prayed that hie oldest son ( ho wjio hod . conceived aiich an excellent ideu ) might bo exempted ft . Qin military service . It ia not stated wn ^ tbor hja . Majesty has approved the soup or ex-OI Wfytn . o , « on A ; , _ 7
Untitled Article
- •> ¦ . ¦ "TXTI TII regard to the rectorship of the "University \ V of Edinburgh , we understand that the election will be between Mr . Gladstone and Lord Neaves . The committee which had been formed for Lord Campbell and Lord John Russell have united with the Gladstone committee . It i 3 reported at St , Andrew ' s that the principalship of the United College , vacant by Sir David Brewster ' s removal to Edinburgh , has been conferred on Dr . Wordsworth , Bishop of St . Andrew ' s ; and the report has been so far credited that both the senatus and the provost and magistrates have memorialised Government against the appointment .
The matriculation examination of the Bombay " University commenced on the 3 rd of October , simultaneously at tlie town-hall in Bombay , and at the assembly rooms in l ' oonah . . It is satisfactory to notice that eighty-eight ; candidates presented themselves for examination at Bombay , and forty at Poonah , making a total of 128 candidates . A statue has been decreed by the City of Mexico to the illustrious Alexander Von Humboldt . The statue is to be executed in marble by an Italian sculptor . It will be placed in the interior of the V School of Mines , " and will bear the inscription" A Alexandre de Huniboldt , le Mexujue reconnaissant . "
A commission , appointed by the French Academy of Sciences to draw up a report on the results of the scientific expedition undertaken to observe the late total eclipse in Brazil , calls attention to the very important total eclipse which will occur in July next year , and will be visible in Spain and Algeria . The commission believe that at least forty astronomers , from France , England , Germany , Russia , and Italy , will assemble in Spain . or Africa to -witness this eclipse . A great deal of the attention both of , the Tuscan Government and the population turns upon matters connected with the Ministry ot Public Education . The Mirquis Ridolfi is thought to have been an } r - thing but felicitous in his new appointments . The vacations are drawing to an end , and the Universities of Pisa and Siena are soon to feel the benefit
of their enlarged endowment and the newly-added professorships . The same activity in the same branch of administration is exhibited by all the Governments of Central Italy . Whole batches of new professors are seated on newly-erected chairs at Farma , Modena , and Bologna , In the latter place Count Carlo Pepoli , long a resident in England , and well known as a poet and scholar , was offered the dignity of Rettor MagniflcQ , or President , of that eldest of all Alma Maters . He answered , he would only accept on one condition , and that was that he should be allowed to open the University in the morning , to close it again immediately , in the evening of the same day , after distributing to all students applying tor a certificate of matriculation billets of admission into the ranks of the various corps of the national armies .
M . Philoxene Boyer has interrupted his course of l
to general principles of liberty an indirect but tolling application , cons tantly drew from the closelypacked audience the most ; enthusiastic applause . M . Ainedeo Xicnee the well-known French journalist ia just dead . M . Renoo was the author of several works . The last were , " The Nieces of Mossurin , " and " Manners and Characters of the Eighteenth Century . " He formerly contributed to the lievua da Paris , nnd to the Encyclopedia das yens dn Monde . In the spring of 1857 he roplacod M . do OGsena ns reductenr-en-oh a / of the ConsLUutionnct nnd of the Pays , but was not acting in that capacity at the time of hid death .
Untitled Article
shadows in which memory invests the past . Mr . Trollope's pencil , however ^ suffers no such inconvenience . He begins his book on board the brig ; describes the state of the wind and the wave , and proceeds to Cien l ' ue «» os , to resume his pen and his voyage . In truth , the book opens with great s pirit , and a touch of character in the everlasting poor " blue-nosed skipper , " which demonstrates at once that a quick-eyed observer is on his travels . But to come to more special matters . Jamaica is not so thriving now as it was once ; and Kingston , adds Mr . Trollopc , " is a disgrace to the country that owns it . " Ugly buildings are a continual eyesore . Spanish town is even worse : —
" It is like the city of the dead . There are long streets there in which no human inhabitant is ever seen . In others a silent old negro woman may be sitting at an open door , or a child playing , solitary , in the dust . The Governor ' s house—King's House , as it is called—stands on one side of a square ; opposite is the house of the Assembly ; on the left , as you come out from the Governor ' s , are the executive offices and the liouse of the Council , and on the right
some other public buildings . jL lie place would have some pretension about it did it not seem to be stricken with an eternal death . All the walls are of a dismal dirty yellow , and a stranger cannot but think that the colour is owing to the dreadfully prevailing disease of the country . In this square there are no sounds ; men and women never frequent it ; nothing enters it but sunbeams ; and such sunbeams ! The glare from those walls seem to forbid that men and women should come there . ¦
" The parched , . dusty ,- deserted streets are all-hot , and perfectly without shade . The crafty Italians have built their narrow streets so that the sun can hardly enter them , except when he is in the mitl heaven ; but there has been no such craft at Spanish Town . ' The houses are very low , and when there is any sun in the , heavens it can enter those streets ; and in those heavens there is always a burning :, broiiing sun . " But the place is not vholly de . * ertcd . There is here the most frightfully hideous race of . pigs that ever made a man ashamed to own himself a
baconeating biped . I have never done much in pi . i ^ s myself , but I believe that pigly grace -consists -in plumpness and cqmparativo shortness—in shortness , above all , of the face and nose . The Spanish Town pigs are never plump . They are the very ghosts ot swine , consisting entirely of bones and bristles . Their backs are long , tlieir ribs are long , their legs are long , but , above all ,, their heads and noses are hideously long . These brutes prowl about in the sun , and glare at tjie ' unfrequent stran-ri-rs with their starved eyes , as though doubting themselves whether , by some little oxertion , tlicy might not bicoiue beasts
ot prey . Such is a specimen of the style ol this spirited book ; hero is a penman who can llmiriah away , without being tedious ; copious , nnd yet witty . Homlrtt , in Denmark , thought it strange to hear that " the world'had grown honest , " nnd feared that " doomsday was near . " Hut Mr . 'J rollone had no such four in Jamaica ; though In ? speaks in high terms ol * the honesty of the people . Another comfort ho had , that though he had been compelled to speak disparagingly of the principal town , the country round about deserved ( he highest praise . Ho found , too , the people exceedingly comfortable . . .
Though the augar-onno is the chief production of Jamaica , Mr . Trollopo tolls us that " one may travel for days in the iaiand and only see n cano piece here and there . " Mr / Trollops has a chapter devoted to the case , of Black Men , which will bo read with interest . Tho Creolo has no country of his own ; none of h \ s adoption . He has no language of his own ; none o Ins adoption . With no idea of country , no m-ulo ol race , no religion of his own , tho Creole linfl , nevertheless , developed tastes of his own , halms , aptitudes , and faults , tlwvt peculiarly imlivnluu wo him . He" is capable , too , of tho hardest bodily labour . Intellectually , he is ambitious , ami buy " to be roffurclod as a scholar , llulitfioufl teaching
TUB WX 1 ST INDIM 8 AND THJO SPANISH MAIN . IJy Anthony TroUopQ . — CJinpiuan nml Hall , The picture painted in presence of its objects ia most likely to be correct , though in tho literal rendering there may be a want of tho spiritual
has not been inoperative for good with hun ;}>}" Mr . Trollopo does not seem to have much Imtii in missionary success . Tho following , contusion * —for in Mr . Trollopo tUoy arc . ooncossioiw- — n ™ important . "But tho groat point to bo suttlod is thifli whether this roco of nuilattoa , quadroons , i »» fltos ; and wluvt not , are capable of manuring niuUur ? iw themselvosj of undertaking tho higher walks ot liioi of Hvinor . in shortaa an indanOndonfc people wltn ft
, proper share of mastordom t aiul not noecfisuniy »» a eorvilo people , ns howoia of wood niul UraworB oi
Untitled Article
LITERARY NOT ^ S OF THE WEEK .
Literattjre. Science, Art, Etc
LITERATTJRE . SCIENCE , ART , Etc
Untitled Article
1252 THE LEADER . [ No . 503 . Inov . 12 , 1859 .
-
-
Citation
-
Leader (1850-1860), Nov. 12, 1859, page 1252, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2320/page/16/
-