On this page
-
Text (3)
-
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
document on the same subject . In the course of his researches amongst . the ' treasures of the Imperial library at Paris , M . 1 . Mesnard , lately engaged upon a -history " , of the I > uc de Bourgogne , found a most valuable MS . volume entitled , "Pn > j « ts tie Gouvernement resolus par Mgr . le Duo de Bourgogiie , Panphin , apiSa . y avoir inurement pense . " * This political ineinoiiynow foi' the first time published , deserved the greatest '' attention , fust on account of the subject treated in iI , and also from the fact that it Is ¦ satisfactorily proved to be a work of the celebrated memoir Wi-iter . the Due de Saint Simon .
M . Mesnard ' s preface , extending to nearly 120 closely-printed octavo pages , is in itself a most curious and interesting production . The editor begins by settling the difficulty relating to the authorship , for the MS . is anonymous , and al though any one acquainted with French literature must recognise' at once- Saint Simon ' s style , yet this point requires to lie established beyond the limits of a doubt : then , coming to topics of a more general nature , he examines the viewa which Fenelon and his noble friend respectively entertained touching the political reforms so
imperatively called for , and he shows how these reforms were likely to act , had they been curried out . Feuelon has hitherto been appreciated too exclusively as a divine , or sis a mere litterateur ; but there was also to be found in him all the foresight of an accomplished and enlightened politician ; and M . Mesnard ' s essay , or introductory disquisition , enables us to study him perfectly from that point of view . A number of quotations furnished by the " Telemaqtie" and other published writings of the Archbishop are introduced by way of illustration , and give us a complete key to the scheme he had proposed for the Dauphin ' s adoption .
The new edition of Saint Simon ' s Memoirs has once again led critics to exarnino more closely the ohai'acter of that extraordinary man , who , like another Tacitus , has painted in the most repulsive colours the excesses of despotic government . Acertain School of writers , recently sprung into 'notoriety , has asserted the proposition , that the beau ideal of a body politic is the reduction of the whole nation to : v dead level , tinder the supreme authority , of -one'individual . These writers , pf course , pooh-pooh Saint Simon , and affect- to consider him merely as a disappointed and jealous man—a Frondeur , a one-sided , untrustworthy historian . M . Mesnard refotes admirably this opinion , iii a page-which we should like to quote entire , did time and Bpace permit ; He says : —
" XSxxe monarchie aristocratique , telle _ que Saint Simon la voulait , e * tablie sur des principes de justice , 'd ' e droit , de patribtTsme . ' p-substituaiit a un capricieux arbitraire des garanties d'institutions nationales , fixes et respectees , ne doit pas tstte confondu ayec l ' oliginchie , et contient riaturellement les germes d ' une liberte plus large et plus generate ; que le temps lie peut manque de znurir et de fecondeiv " It is now the fashion of some people in . France to . denounce ,-as aristocratic and Oppressive , every tenet , every fact that interferes with their favourite system of'centralisation , and to invoko the
principles of 1789 , as they term them , against the slightest manifestation of Liberalism . Such people would blot out , if possible , Saint Simon from tlie catalogue of Fi * ench writers , and certainly M . Mesnard ' s book will lrieet with no good treatment at . -their hands . It is nevertheless an important publication , and throws the greatest light upon a momentous epoch in the reign of Louis XIV . The learned ' editor has addeda copious selection of notes , which elucidate the home policy of the King and the condition of the various branches of the administrative aei'vice at the time when the projet de gouvernement was drawn up .
In one of . its last sittings , the Academie Fraugaiae has awarded the prix Gobert ( value 10 , 000 fi \ or £ 400 ) , to M . Wai Ion , professor of Modern History at the Sorbonue , for his biography of Joan of Arc . ? A great many works have already been written on this illustrious champion of French independence , but we know of not one which might make us qualify M . Wallon ' s volumes as superfluous or valueless . In the first place , the really important publications treating of that subject are almost exclusively collections of documents relating to the life , exploi ts , and condeinnation of ILa Pucelle ; Stale papers , charters and chronicles , which ave of immense value , but which cannot , of course , lay claim to the title of literary performances . They constitute , so to say , the materials from which the edifice might be raised . Historians are bound to study and discuss them ; but to the
generality of readers , m their original form , they would be inaccessible . Then the popular accounts which exist in such plentiful numbers of Joan of Arc are simply narratives reproducing the traditional facts given by the historians of tlie last century , such an Millot , Anquetil , Vell y ; utterly devoid of critical knowledge , and composed by inefficient book wrights , who , satisfied with the information they could secure at second-hand , did not think it worth while referring to original sources . Between these two classes of works there was a middle course to follow , and we think that M . Wallou lias been particularly happy in his treatment of the biography , —Hiniirat volume-oontaiiiH-the--life-of—Lu-JPneelle down to her trial at Rouen ; Iho second being entirely occupied by an account both of the trial and of the proofs de rehabilitation which war subsequently instituted .
In writing the volumes M . Wullon had to overdomon , difficulty which , if . we may believe M . Quioherat , was almost inaur-* Projets do Gouvernement du Duo de JJourgogne , Dauphin ; nr > 6 iroire attribue au Duo de Saint Simon , ct public pour lu premiere fois d ' aprea un mauusorit de la Bibllothequo Imp 6 rialo . Par M . T . Mesnard . 8 vo . London and Paris : Haohettu . t Jeanne d'Aro . Par 11 . Wallon , Mcmbre del'Inatitut . 2 vols . 8 vo . Paris and London j Haohetto .
nioun table .- Two distinct series of documents compose the sources from which the work was to be done ,-and accord ing to the erudite author of the " Apereus nouveaux sur ' rH-isto . ire da Jeanne d'Arc , " these two series were of a contradictory character . '¦? ' Le proces de rehabilitation , " he says , ¦ vint ensuite donner une torunure de coininande , aux souvenirs , qu'il eut au morns le roerite de fixer . II est la source de tout ce qu ' ont ecrtt les cbrpniqueurs ' " favorables a la Pucelle , il a fourni les traits de cette image qui a trop longtemps defraye 1 'histoire . .... . " Whilst giving his preference to the fust class of pieces justifi catives , tlioso belonging to the procesde condamnation , lslL . Wai Ion expresses his opinion that they must necessarily be completed with the nssistance of the documents supplied by the proces de
rehabilitation . This last inquest was conducted and terminated from the evidence of the individuals most interested iujsupportin < r the validity of the former , such as J . Beaupere , P . Cauchon , H . de Courcelies , &e ., &e . Our . liistorian has accordingly mad « equal use of lioth sources of infoi'in ' ation , and the result is a work carefully written , imbued with a religious , solemn spirit , and which will subsist as a masterpiece of biogr . ipliical composition , equally free from any heavy display of learning , and from that mere -rhetorical verbiage which too often disfigures resumes intended for general reading . At the end of each volume M . Wallon has affixed a few explanatory quotations , and a variety of notes-enabling the students to refer at once to the original texts . With " M . Perrons we are taken back to the fourteenth century , that is to to one of the darkest epochs in the history of
say , ^ France .- Elieiine Marcel , the chief of the Revolution , the vicissitudes of which are described in the volume we are now noticing , has been variously appreciated by historians and political writers , some representing him as a mere revolutionist , anxious for popularity at any cost , whilst others admire in him a generous patriot , who saw all the evils of the feudal system , and who wished to ensure for tlie bourgeoisie their legitimate share- "in the government of tlie kingdom . The States-General , convened under King Jean II ,, must they be cmisulered as an attempt to bring about the results . obtained in 1789 % Was the Prevot des Marchands , a kind of mediaeval Bailly , lnisivnderstood by his contemporaries and maligiijed by posterity . 1 The revolt of the jacquerie , in shoiii , wasit an unjustinable . rising , ov wJiat Lafavettfl would have calleil le plus saint des devoirs ? - M . Perrens
takes the favourable vieyv ofthe case , aud--l » , is book , written , as the anth 6 r says , by the advice ami almost under tire inspiration of the fnte'Angustin ^ iircrry , is _ an avowed apology of the part which the Commons played . during the civil wars of the iourteenth century . The nobles , we believe , ^ yere most to blame ¦ : ¦— . " Preiiant examplF de ses ^ maetr ^ -, elle ( tfie ^ nobility ) gou ^ vernait , e ' est a dire opprimait ses vassaux comme ie rot ses sujets . L ' art du gouvernant consistait pour elle u faire rendre le plus possible aux miserables , au risque d ' epuiser . la source et de son opulence , de tuer la poule aux oeufs d ' or . "
Much fault , we believe , can justly be found with the feudal barons for their cruelty and rapacity ; but M . Perrens has darkened the pictvu-e in an unnecessary manner , and he lias adopted ( though without premeditation , we grant ) utatements which care not substantiated by facts . Former I"B « - <> r" »» 8 . j " ? accustomed us to consider King Jean and tlie Due de JNorniandie , who afterwards ascended the throne under the name of Charles " V ., as wise princes , anxiously wishing for the good ot their subjects , though sometimes led to adopt meaaurefr which they were tlie first to regret . ISTow , the case is quite different ; and the conclusions endorsed by the panegyrists of Mieiin . o Marcel are so entirely opposed to those of his predecessor . ^ tbiit we might almost believe we ave introduced to altogether dittererits personages . Thus , of the former of the two monarchs , M .
Perrens says : — " Tout porte ucroire que nous disons Jean le bon , parce qu ' un Froissart a dit une fois le bon roi Jean , comme Virgile a ditle pieux E » 6 e , ou plutot pour faire entendre qu'il etait Jdger , confiant , etonrdi , prodigue , et mdme , peutfitre , bon liomme i sea heures , co qui ne l ' empechait pua de tuer quelquefbis ses aujets et de les ruiner toujours . " Charles le Mauvais , King of Navarre , is , of course , pourtrayed , on . the contrary , as a prince whose character has been designedly aspersed by prejudiced annalists : — " S'ils njoutent qu'il caohait un naturel pervers sous ces dehora aimables et son nir d ' eujouement , et qu'il ddtournu plusieurs personnen considi'srables de I ' obdissunce et de la fidelite * qu ' clles devuient au roi , lla sc font l'dcho des accusations dont on poursuivit ce jeuno prince . " Indeed , if we would believe M . Perrens , it often happens that a Hort of combination is made by chroniclers and other writers to
suppiess the truth or to disfigure it . Perverse men enter upon an entente cordiale , the object of which is to make posterity believe that black once upon a time was white , and towards ao desirable an end all things work with admirable harmony—State papers , official records , chronicles , pamphlets , punquilH , squlBST "" Now ; TtfitSriSa , ' tne-6 I-y'WUt ( Sh ~ wrcffitmi ) tbrh )^ 0 UTaBrye « 1 >»> credit , even liuokod as it is by tlie authority of the aoooiupn ^ hod historian we are now considering . . . In conclusion , M- Perrww seems to us . to have oywr ^ liot tno mark whilut composing his narrative of tho dunigiiH of Mmmiiio-Marcol and of . the Paris bourgooiwie duriiitf tlie < iuiirlojntu century : attlio same time he has with all liiirnowi H-proiliioml tliq nruumonta of his opponents , and his history in written with a simplicity and a dignity which cannot ba too much pnused .
Untitled Article
Jiily 28 , I 860 . ] The Saturday Analyst and Leader , 687
Untitled Article
* J 2 tienne Marcel ot lo Gouvornemcnt de In Bour « coi « io « u qiwtoraiemo Siicle . Par F . T . Perron * . 8 vo . P « n » and London , iluuhtte .
-
-
Citation
-
Leader (1850-1860), July 28, 1860, page 687, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2358/page/7/
-