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HElNTtY IV. OF PBANCE.*
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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.
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March 31 , I 860 . ] The Leader and Satttrday Analt / sL 307
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' ¦ . . - . - . . ¦ : ' : ¦ - ¦ ¦ ¦ - ; " 1 » 46 . " The abilities of one of the * * * princes was the subject of conversation , and the general opinion was , that they were of a very ordinary kind . Humboldt . contradicted . ' I must dispute- that , ¦ said he ; ' the young- prince lately spoke with ""*; , > & met me waiting in his mother ' s apartments , and asked , " Who are you ? X replied , "My name is HtrarBOtDT / ' " And what are you ? I : "I am the chamberlain of His Majesty the King :. " "Is that all ? curtly broke off the Prince , turned on his heel , and went his way . ¦ Th at is unquestionably a proof of understanding . " « Feb . 21 , 1847 .
" At the request of Prince Axbert when be was at Stolzenfels , I caused a copy of the Kosmos to be laid upon his table . He had -the politeness not to thank me for ifc . Now , the Black Eagle has made him polite , that , as well as—— he makes me talk about ' circling oceans of light' and ' star terraces , ' a . Coburg-iau variation upon my text , quite JEnglis 7 i , from Windsor , where every thingis full of terraces / In the Kosmos , page 159 , is the star canopj-, to explain , by openings , the starless spots . The book upon the Mexican Monuments which he has presented me I bought two years ago . An edition of Lord Bteou ' s works would have been more delicate . It is singular , too , that no mention is made of Queen "Victoeia , who , perhaps , deems my books upon Nature not Christian . You see , ! judge severely when princes write . ''
Prince Albert to JTum 7 joldt . " Windsor Castle , Feb . 7 th , 1847 . " Respected Baron , —I have , during 1 the gradual reading of the first volume of your Kosmos , continually felt myself impelled to express to yon my repeated thanks for the great intellectual enjoyment which this , study has afforded me . , To be sure I am not able to bestov / tipon you in this case , as a return present , a sententious judgment on your excellent wox-k , Avhich I received out of your own Lands .
"But , however , in want of such , to lend at least a certain external weight to the expression of my thanks , I send you the enclosed work , Catherwood ' 0 Views on Central America , which , as a supplement to your own great work oh Spanish America , might perhaps engage your attention * I need not say with what lively expectation I am looking forward to the appearance of the second volume of the Kosmos . . " May it please Heaven , * whose circling seas of light and star terraces' you depict so gloriously , to keep you yet many years in undisturbed health of body and soul , for the fatherland , the world , and the Kosmos . " This is the sincere wish of " Yours truly , *• Albebt . "
Humftoldt to VarnJiagen . " February 27 th , 1847 . " You . were right to scold me for my harshness towards the man of the star terraces . I am only severe with the mighty ; and with this man , while at stolzenfels , I did not feel at ease . I know you sympathize with the misfortunes of the Eussian Poles , but , unfortunately , ' tlie Poles deserve our sympathy as little as do the Irish . — Mild dixii , and he is the handsome husband of the Queen of Great Britain . " " November 4 th , 1849 .
" How important is the news from Paris ! The imprudent , thoughtless Louis Napoleon will , probably , obtain the eonsulat a vie ; hut he will fall , and awake the slumbering lion . Freedom -will not lose by it ; and German statesmen ( are there any except Ton . Gage » n ?!) will then perceive that the France of 17 ^ 9 still exists in Europe—that France , whose nullity . has been a by-word this year past . The centres of gravitation are changing 1 places , " > . " July 2 nd , 1850 ,
"I am glad , in tin ' s gloomy period of reaction , to receive so pleasant a token from your hand . My dear friend , I am happy to hear of . your journey to Kiel—to that little region , where German sentiments find utterance so consistent and , free , —The ptato of the nations resembles the bottle of water which D'AI / Emjjekt shook to produce a maze of bubbles of different angles . Ho thqn said , in ridicule of that science in which ho himself was bo great , Qalcndezmoi cela ! ' Many of the bubbles will burst before . their transitory forms can be diplomatically calculated .
Vamhagoji ' s Diary , " January 29 th , 1852 . *• At one o ' clock , Huiuiboldt camo . Wonderfully active for his years . Is exasperated at the coiyp d'&at in Prance , at the daring 1 violence , the arbitrary banishments , particularly the robbery of the Ojimsans family . The King * was at first oveajoye / I at the hows . The deed of villany perpetrated against the people , against their representatives , against right and his , . solemn oath , is iiofc so uonrtouttnat tno adventurer
obnoxious to the Jiving and the ; jeans ujpon the people , exercises socialism , and will bo Emperor besides , that makes him detestable !*•** # Humbqwpt says it is an undoubted fact that Louis Napoleon is the son of Admiral VEBijctrpx , his brother Mpbny a son of General Fi-ahaum !? , who lived with both sisters- —the Queen of Holland and the Queen of . Naples . ' Of Pkrsicwy— --Fiawcn djj Peusignt—ho spooks with the utmost contemptj lie is a coarse , uncultivated subaltern , who nevertheless has the presumption to pretend to produce something « ew about the pyramids . "
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T E BEARjSTAIS is one of the most favourite figure ' s of European -L' history ; and those who like him least , must inake up their minds to ^ he avowal that no amount of evidence which may be brought forward to prove liim unworthy of that favour , will succeed in depriving him of it . He is exactly the monarch in whom the whole world can take an interest—an interest which scarcely reaches with the majority to the great political schemes attributed to the king , or the valuable administrative l-efornis effected by Sully , and other ministers in his name , but centres around the man * his
exploits and his peccadilloes . It is that scampishriess which forms so large an element in his character , indeed , that makes him such a favourite . It is , we will not say a sad , but an unflattering- truth , that great and inflexible virtue seldomor ever , makes Ms possessor popular . He is esteemed and respected ; but people shun his society , and prefer that , of some clever scapegi'ace known to be always up to mischief , and quite as lilcely tp make them his next victims as anybody else . The virtuous man is so far above Ijis fellows , that they can feel no sympathy with or for him ; the scamp , whose misdeeds are redeemed by wit and good humour , comes down to the general level , and will always find persons to extenuate his follies , and lend him a helping 1 hand out of his scrapes . Just so ifc is in historv . The great kjnfcrs and potentates who have kept
themselves free from all fojlies are remembered for the deeds they have , accomplished , and the influence they have exerted upon national or general history ; but rip one cares to trace the details of their career , ajrid study the decorous dnlness of their private life . But let the great king have beem a good companion ,, a man of .. easy morals and easy manners , and at onco his history becomes . interesting , and chroniclers without number fasten upon him . We must not be unjust , however , to that much-suffering lay figure , the world . It tnkos no interest in vice itself when unredeemed by valour and wit . It reads with pleasure the story of Henri Quatre , —his fickleness , Ins ingratitude , and his amours ; it likes to hear even of the pranks of our own Charles II . ; but it cares nothing at all for information about Louia Quinze or George tho Fourth , fiinnors and nothing
As the world will therefore hei \ r of Henry IV ., it naturally follows that histories of him abound , some written by partisans and some by enemies , but all , however strong the prty bias of the writer , iniluoncod , somewhat to indulgence and admiration , by that happy manner , that dashing 1 , adventurous spirit wliioh majjo even those ho had most eUainefully deserted still cling ? tp the long with affectionate attachment . Tho most valuable contributionot later years to tho history of Henry ' s reign w undoubtedly the exhaustive work of M . Poinsou , tlio result of more tbjin Uneen years' intense devotion to the sjibjoct ; but able as the book is it possesses comparatively little interest for tho general roador . Twothirds of it are occupied iu a history of tho political , adinnuatrative , religious , libeftiry , and indusfcrial condition of Franco ufc the time ,
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Part X . Bmvy IV . una tho loaguo . By Martha W . F « KKft . Two ^ ol » . Hurst and Blttojtett .
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" August 11 th , 1855 . "Of the Piince of Prussia , Humboidt said , the Prince had asserted ; at St . Petersburg , as he had formerly done at Berlin , that the war might have been avoided if Prussia had at the outset taken a decided step , for . then the Emperor Nicholas would have given way . The Imperial , family lived happily together , the Grand I ) uke Constantine included , who did not appear so dangerous as represented . The Empress mother had said they were all mere children , she had to remain with them to maintain order . The war is severely felt , everything at a standstill ; the country nearly destitute of men , though not so numerous either ; Poland , the Baltic provinces , and Finland feebly supplied with troops , the main part of the army being in the Crimea ; the losses are tremendous ^ and impossible to be supplied ; GoetsChajkioff reports the daily combats cost him from 180 to 200 men , a frightful number in a month ; . NesseIiKODE thinks of fresh negotiations , but first heavy blows must fall upon one side or the other ; they are riot without fears for Sebastopol . " " March 7 th , 1858 . "I presume , dear friend , you have not yet come into possession of the indiscreet , I may say , almost inane work of Noemakbt's . " " March 8 th . " HuirBOiiJDT sends me , with a friendly line , the book written by the Marq uis of Noejianiy upon the Revolution of 1848 . He terms it an indiscreet and almost inane work j I call ifc a stupid one , and , judging by the contents , a treacherous one ; it proves how injurious ifc is to allow diplomatic interference , more especially non-official , as was that of the Marquis . Oavaigjstac as well as Laxiaetine gave too much ear to his counsels . He is one of the dullest and most irksome of Englishmen . March 9 th : Head moi ' e of Normanby . He is a sorry wight , but the meanness of IiOtris PiriiiPPE , the wickedness of GyizoT , the ruinous influence of the cring'ei '' s and cheats , we may learn from his bad book . For the rest lie is a master in the . art of levelling everything . that is animating- and sparkling in the mightiest events to a deadening wearisomeness . " We hear that this work is already out of print in Germany ; 15 , 000 copies paving been sold . The interest in it contimies unabated , arid is likely to do so .
Helntty Iv. Of Pbance.*
HE 1 S EY IV . OF PBANCE . *
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), March 31, 1860, page 307, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2340/page/15/
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