On this page
-
Text (2)
-
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
recollections . Our eternal classifications have cut up the common feeling , and kept down or perverted the common taste , by which a national anniversary should be prompted and celebrated . Wo cannot endure the needful commingling of ranks , and obliteration of station , even for the day and the hour . At our public feasts , the peer must be at the head of the table , and Hobson below the salt .
As to the Marchioness and Mrs . Hobson sitting at the same table , even if it were a mile long , that never entered the wildest conceptions of an English imagination . Then , who ever saw a public banquet well got up in this country ? A stiff portrait of the hero of the day , with two boughs of withered laurel stuck on each side , at the upper end of the room ; at the other end , a transuarencv of the uncouth and unmeaning figures called his * arms i parency of the uncouth and unmeaning figures called his * arms ; 1
wind instruments blowing away over the door ; a fellow with a stentorian voice behind the chair , bawling away all meaning or feeling from what are called toasts or sentiments : that ' s what we reckon getting up a public dinner . As for all the rest , the rejoicings of our men , are like the education of our boys , cram , cram for ever . In France , open theatres mark public holidays : but do
you think Mr . Middle-class Wiggins would go to an open theatre , to say nothing of his wife and family , ( he has daughters , ) with all the riff-raff , on a no-pay night ? And then a procession ; only think of the English nation as now constituted , walking in a procession ! Why , it would require as many marshals and heralds at arms , to arrange them for the purpose , as there now are parsons and lawyers . It would be a great loss of time besides . We
will do nothing that can level distinctions . But whatever is national , must level distinctions ; therefore , any national festivity is as intolerable as eating fish at Dover on a Saturday . All fish cau ght near Dover , comes to London on every day in the week , except Saturday , when , as Sunday in London holds no fish-market , you may have it at Dover , fine , fresh , and cheap ; and consequently , no respectable person eats it , as it would be no distinction
from the commonalty ; and distinctions must be kept up . We see no prospect of great national anniversaries and festivals , till two changes shall have taken place , one of which is going on , and the other is coming on . We shall specify : first , there must be a wider diffusion amongst us , of enjoy ment in the arts ; of taste ; of poetical appreciation of the grand and the pictorial . Public celebrations , to be worth any thing , are the poetry which expresses
a nation ' s feeling , and which reacts upon that feeling . They have hitherto obtained most in a state of society which precedes the one in which we are at present . The civilisation which results from commerce , and the greater division of labour , is not poetical in its character . It puts poetry and nationality in abeyance together . Were the modern Jews possessed of Palestine , there would be no such doings , as in the days of their ancestors . The temple processions ; the chorueses of the Levites ; the grand
Untitled Article
National Anniversaries . 751
Untitled Article
3 E 2
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Nov. 2, 1834, page 751, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2639/page/3/
-