Imatges de pàgina
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Page

264

311

Horse, How to Fall from,

Humble Origin of Eminent Law-
yers,
144 Hydrophobia,

304 Ignorance and Error,

248 Immense Concern Mania,

152 Indian Mode of Training Horses,

88 Industry,
136 Inquiry,

296 Insanity cured,
240 Insolvent Negro,
280 Insolvent's Plea,

176 Intellectual Companions,
40 Intemperance in Steamers,
176 Irish Labourers in Paris,
23 "It is Vulgar,"

56 Jebb, Sir Richard,

360 Job for Younger Sons,

184 Jupiter, Taking Care of,

288 King's Cock-Crower, the

288 Labour a Blessing,

160 Ladies, Advice to,
120 Lard Oil,

56 Laundresses, Dutch,
264 Law of Wagers,

24 Lawyers,

304 Lawyers, Origin of,
240 Length of Days,

264 Literature in France,
232 Lodging-house Servants,
112 Lunatic, Cunning of,

232 Making a Mystery of Nothing,
240 Manchester, Gambling in,
272 Manners, American,
288 Mansions of Paris,

416 Manufacturing Old Pictures,
272 Manures,

320 Maxims,

264 Mechanic, Extraordinary,

96 Medicines, Patent,

192 Memory,

392 Mistaken Generosity,

96 Moors, the,

32 Mustard,

344 Napoleon's Compass,

112 Navy Captains,

392 Noble Bankers,

-

392 Noble Conduct,

40 Gassendi,

400 Norway Deal,

176 German Exiles,

239 Nothing, Making a Mystery of,

192 Generosity, Mistaken,

128

Object Worthy of Pursuit,

Clay Maps,

240 Gentlemen, English and German,

160

Oil of Cod's Liver,

Clay's Plantation,

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Cleansing the Skin,

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Clock, Astronomical,

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Cloth, New Manufacture of,

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64 Other Irons in the Fire,

399 Over-Educating,

32 Paper, Bad, Qualities of,

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232 Paris, Mansions of,

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296 Horses, Indian Mode of Training,

128 People of Colour at Belize,

303 Philanthropy of Medical Men,
400 Pictures,

200 Pleasant Story,

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DINBURGA

CONDUCTED BY WILLIAM AND ROBERT CHAMBERS, EDITORS OF "CHAMBERS'S INFORMATION FOR THE PEOPLE," "CHAMBERS'S EDUCATIONAL COURSE," &c.

NUMBER 521.

SATURDAY, JANUARY 22, 1842.

COMICALITIES OF NATURE. THERE are some objects in animated creation which irresistibly provoke a smile. It is different with inanimate nature, which is variously beautiful, sublime, tame, desolate, wild, or whatever else, but always respectable. There is nothing frisky in the characters of mountains or precipices, plains, lakes, rivers, or seas-unless, indeed, we are to make an exception for some little burns in our own northern land, which the imagination may very readily suppose to be of a tricksy, gambolsome humour, seeing with what deft antics they tumble and trip along their pebbly way, as if to amuse the gowans that ogle them as they pass, from the fairy-befooted sward. But, upon the whole, inorganic creation is not at all funny. Animated nature, on the contrary, presents to us an immense deal that we cannot help feeling to be so.

To begin with the next creatures below ourselvesthere are the monkeys, whose whole appearance and movements are grotesque. Who could ever look in the face of one of these animals without that same stirring of the risible faculties which we experience in perusing a caricature or parody, or witnessing a pantomime? The wretch never laughs itself, but its every gesture is provocative of mirth in us. See it taking care of one of its young, or allaying some temporary irritability in one of its sides, or inspecting any suspicious-looking morsel which may have been given to it, and the perfect whimsicality of the creature must be acknowledged. So thoroughly is this the case, that no one could ever speak of a monkey gravely the name is never mentioned without a smile or a laugh. The appearance of the sloth is ludicrous, but in a different way. "There," remarks Cuvier, "nature seems to have amused herself with producing something imperfect and grotesque." The mirth excited by this animal is of the derisive kind. We smile to see a miserable-looking creature crawling so abjectly, unable to use its fore-legs for support, and only able to move when it can get something to lay hold of, whereby to pull itself along. The sloth may be, as later naturalists allege, fully accomplished for all the ends of its being; yet it is not less true that, constituted as we are, we cannot help smiling at an object which strikes our minds as so uncouth.

So, also, the peculiar feature of the marsupial tribes is no doubt appropriate to the circumstances in which they live. Yet is it in the power of any human being to think of that feature with the same feelings as those with which, for instance, he would regard the gracile limb of the antelope, or the shaggy mane of the lion? To think of a creature having a pouch in which to carry her young family, and from which they may occasionally be seen peeping like so many juvenile bipeds from a huckster's panniers, is surely a most whimsical idea. Think of what a monstrous crime pocket-picking must appear to a female kangaroo with a charge of children. Australia presents another good living joke in her celebrated ornithorhyncus, where we see a creature like a rat, but a good deal larger, furnished with a duck's bill and webfeet an association exactly of the same character with those which human conceit has occasionally formed for emblematical devices, or in the way of buffoonery.

Amongst the feathered tribes there are also numerous traces of comicality. The choler of the turkeycock never fails to excite mirth. Domesticated ravens come to enter into the humours of the families they live with, and sometimes prove amazingly funny. The whole race of parrots is amusing. Not altogether mechanical is that power they have of repeating droll VOL. XI No I.

expressions, under the instruction of human masters and mistresses. By timing their jokes, they often show that they enjoy them. This tribe, as well as the monkeys and mocking-birds, are unquestionably possessed of that same power of imitation which men employ to the excitement of mirth in mimicry and comic theatricals. The mocking-bird is the very Monsieur Alexandre of American ornithology. It can simulate the cry of almost all birds, and the name we give it expresses the purposes for which it employs the gift. One of its favourite waggeries, as is well known, is to gather other birds near it by imitating their cries, and then to disperse them, like a set of schoolboys at the approach of the master, by uttering the cry of the bird of which they stand most in fear.

PRICE 14d.

curious, if not ludicrous, resemblances to other objects. The natural order Orchidaceae are remarkable for this property. The flower of the Oncidium papilio presents an extraordinary resemblance to a tortoise-shell butterfly, as that of the Phalaenopsis amabilis does to a white one. Peristeria pendula looks like a dove crouching in its nest, and Coryanthes micrantha resembles a skeleton's head, with the vertebræ of the neck, finished off with a pair of bat's wings!* The flower of the bee orchis is like a piece of honeycomb, and, strange to say, the bees delight in it. Then there is the snap-dragon, the corolla of which is cleft and turned back so as to look like a rabbit's mouth, especially if pinched on the sides, when the animal appears as if nibbling. If, in like manner, the two petals or nectaries of another well-known plant are pinched, they peep from under the coloured calyx, like two great eyes looking out under the cowl of a monk-hence its name of monk's-hood. The flower of the cock's-comb and seed-pod of the Mostynia proboscidea bear equally curious resemblances to the objects which have suggested their names. Some kinds of Medicago have also curious seed-pods, some being like bee-hives, some like caterpillars, and some like hedgehogs-the last being itself an essentially ludicrous natural object.

There are many whimsical things in the vegetable world, though the British Flora is perhaps a more serious goddess than some of her foreign sisters. If we go abroad, we shall find many quaint things in this department of nature. The broussonetia papyrifera of Japan and India, from which the article called India paper is made, has leaves all different in form, and each of which seems as if it had had a piece rent out of it, and as if it had been afterwards sewed up again to repair the damage. Here there is as complete an appearance of a familiar human action being A certain grotesqueness of form belongs to the whole imitated in nature, as there is in the junction of the order of Cactaceae. The Cactus senilis would arrest the duck's bill to the water-rat's body in the ornithorhyn- most unobservant eye in an exhibition of plants, by cus. There is exactly that disarrangement of the the ludicrous peculiarity from which it derives its fibres of the leaf, and that appearance of puckering at name. Being simply a kind of stump, covered with the seam, which would be seen in a piece of checkered long white streaming hair, it exactly resembles the cloth, worn by a mendicant, which, having had a head of an old man! In its native country, this cactus narrow section taken out of it, had been hastily based puts on considerably different, but not less ludicrous, together without any regard to the joining of the appearances. It there grows to the height of ten or chequers or to smoothness of surface. The well- twelve, sometimes even to twenty or thirty, feet, and known fly-trap strikes the mind with all the effect of when it approaches a flowering state, a circlet of short a joke. The leaf stands temptingly open; a poor fly brown fur appears round the summit, which gradually pops in for shelter or food; no sooner has it set its increases till it takes the very form and appearance of foot on the bottom, than some sensitive fibres are a lady's fur muff! Mr Lambert, the President of the affected, and the cilia at the top close in upon the Linnæan Society, has preserved in glass-cases, in his intruder, empounding him as effectually as if a boy drawing-room, two specimens taken from full plants; had taken him and closed him up in a box. The and a person who has seen them reports to us, that doings of a human economy are also curiously coin-one in particular, about eighteen inches high, precisely cident with those of the pitcher-plant of the east. To the footstalk of each leaf of this plant, near the base, is attached a kind of bag, shaped like a pitcher, of the same consistence and colour as the leaf in the early state of its growth, but changing with age to a reddish purple. It is girt round with an oblique band or hoop, and covered with a lid neatly fitted, and moveable on a kind of hinge or strong fibre, which, passing over the handle, connects the vessel with the leaf. By the shrinking or contracting of this fibre, the lid is drawn open whenever the weather is showery, or dews fall, which would appear to be just the contrary of what usually happens in nature, though the contraction is probably occasioned by the hot and dry atmosphere, and the expansion does not take place till the moisture has fallen and saturated the pitcher. When this is the case, the cover falls down, and it closes so firmly as to prevent any evaporation taking place. The water having gradually absorbed through the handle in the footstalk of the leaf, gives vigour to the leaf itself, and sustenance to the plant. As soon as the pitchers are exhausted, the lids again open, to admit whatever moisture may fall; and when the plant has produced its seed, and the dry season fairly sets in, it withers with all the covers of the pitchers standing open.*

looks like an old sable muff. The flowers of the cactus senilis are crimson, and are produced in a ring. The reader may therefore judge what a curious figure our old gentleman plant cuts in his native woods, with his body all covered with long white hair, surmounted by a black muff, and above all a wreath of crimson flowers.

Our minds naturally recognise the tall straight stems of the beech and elm as elegant objects. The trunk of the oak is thick, but it conveys the idea of manly robustness and vigour. Most flowering plants in this country have elegant stalks, to which the flower parts are in general neatly and fittingly joined. We never think of smiling mirthfully at any of these objects, but, on the contrary, are disposed to regard them with a musing and serious admiration. How different are these cactuses, with their incomprehensible lumpy angular stems, masses of green vegetable matter, decorated quaintly along the edges with prickles, while here and there a flower sticks out, looking as oddly placed as would a man's head if it projected from his side or stuck upon his knee. It is the Cactus speciosissimus which is so particularly liable to this description. To the dark crimson flowers which ornament its stem, succeeds the fruit, a thing which one would at first suppose to be an egg, till tasting it There are some plants, the flowers of which bear he would imagine it a gooseberry! In their native

*This description of the pitcher-plant is from Barrow's Cochin China

*There is a figure of this flower in the Botanical Register, vol. xxii., but it gives no idea of the horrible grotesque of the living plant.

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country, they rise thirty or forty feet high, without a single branch or a single leaf, and it is generally upon the tops of mountains that they grow. Pæping, a German botanical traveller in Brazil, says that, in that country, a hill top bristling with the cactus speciosissimus, resembles nothing so much as a hog's back!

whimsical in their forms, since long before there was
such a thing as the human mind to regard them either
in one light or another. We see jocularities and
merriments in animals which existed long before man,
and to which no moral error can be imputed. Finally,
we see man himself organised so thoroughly for mirth,
that his very health is liable to be improved by it.*
Well, indeed, might Grecian imagination include
Thalia amongst the children of Jove.

POPULAR INFORMATION ON FRENCH
LITERATURE.

ELEVENTH ARTICLE.-SULLY.

increased to upwards of three thousand, which obliged the French to fly for an asylum into the house of the ambassador. I at last imagined something extraordinary had happened, and having questioned Terrail and Gadancourt, they informed me of the particulars.

The honour of my nation, my own in particular, and the interest of my negotiation, were the first objects that presented themselves to my mind. I was also most sensibly grieved that my entry into London should be marked at the beginning by so fatal an accident; and at that moment, I am persuaded, my countenance plainly expressed the sentiments with which I was agitated. Guided by my first impulse, I arose, took a flambeau, and ordering all that were in the house (amounting to about a hundred) to range themHAVING described the early warlike portion of Sully's selves round the walls, hoped by this means to discareer, we now take him up as a grave and calculating cover the murderer, which I did without any difficulty minister of state. The section of his Memoirs devoted by his agitation and fear. He was for denying it at to this part of his history presents a picture of politi- first, but I soon obliged him to confess the truth. He cal sagacity remarkable for that age, leaving us scarcely was a young man, and the son of the Sieur de Comroom to wonder that his royal master, though his baut, principal examiner in Chancery, very rich, and senior, was often checked, when about to do a foolish a kinsman likewise of Beaumont, who entering at thing, by the consideration, "What will Sully say to that moment, desired me to give young Combaut into all this?" He commenced his career as a minister in his hands, that he might endeavour to save him. "I 1594, in the capacity of secretary of state. Four years do not wonder,' replied I to Beaumont, with an air of after, he was appointed superintendant of finances, authority and indignation, that the English and you having displayed as much ability in that department are at variance, if you are capable of preferring the as he had previously shown military fire and skill in interest of yourself and your relations to that of the the time of war. Many important negotiations were king and the public; but the service of the king my conducted by him. One is very remarkable, as show-master, and the safety of so many gentlemen of good ing the liberties which Sully took with the king, and the families, shall not suffer for such an imprudent stripstate of feeling existing between the two. The king, ling as this.' I told Beaumont, in plain terms, that his master, had given a rash and unworthy promise Combaut should be beheaded in a few minutes. How, of marriage in one of his fits of passion. Sully was sir,' cried Beaumont, behead a kinsman of mine, posin confidence consulted by Henry. On reading the sessed of two hundred thousand crowns, an only son ! document, he slowly and gravely tore it in pieces. "Are you mad?" cried the infuriated monarch. "Yes," answered Sully, "I am mad, sire, and I wish I were the only madman in France!" Sully's firmness had the result of making Henry enter into a marriage with the person whose alliance in those times was best suited to the exigencies of the state. As regards mutual liking and individual feelings, these are seldom held of consequence in such affairs.

Then we have the creeping cereus (cereus flagelliformis), which looks like a number of cats' tails tied together, and hung over a flower-pot, with a few crimson flowers stuck into them irregularly. The spines with which these hanging stems are completely covered are what give them the cats' tail appearance: they have no leaves, but the tails are sometimes forked. The leaf cactus (Epiphyllum phyllanthoides) is of totally different but equally quaint form, the stems appearing to consist of a series of leaves stuck into each other, and having notches in the sides from which spring the flowers. The porcupine cactus (echinocactus) has a round ball-like stem, often with projecting angles like a lady's reticule, covered with hard sharp spines. The flowers of this genus appear thrown carelessly on the stem, and not to belong to it. We might expatiate upon the eccentricities of this order of plants for half a day, but shall content ourselves with adverting to that crowning conceit manifested by one of the family, of blowing in the middle of the night-emblem apt and true of a certain class of whimsical mortals. Every one has heard of lusus naturæ-sports of nature-things which she was supposed to produce in the way of freak, and as exceptions from her ordinary laws. Fossil shells, for example, were considered as lusus naturæ, no one being able to understand how, if they had been originally real shells of marine molluscs, they could ever have got into those deep-seated rocks where they were found embedded. It is now believed that there are no such things as lusus naturæ, every one of her organic creations being formed after a disThe many important negotiations in which Sully was engaged at home, exclusively of mere financial tinct type, and designed for a particular purpose in affairs, had reference chiefly to the maintenance of creation, just as there is no character used in a printed the Protestant interests, and to the suppression of book but what there is a type for in the compositor's the petty feudal sovereigns yet existing in France, case, and is liable to appear accordingly in other printed and possessing sufficient power to brave and embarrass books of the same language. The true sports of natheir liege lord. It was through the able management of matters in Henry's days, that this anomalous and ture are to be seen in the many grotesque forms of perilous state of things was brought to an end, and her legitimate and recognised children, animals and the real authority lodged in the hands of a single plants, and in the whimsical powers and properties monarch. Besides aiding his master powerfully in which she has assigned to many of at least the former such domestic concerns, Sully was employed in many class. With regard to grotesque forms in plants and foreign missions and negotiations. As ambassador animals, it may be said that these things are perhaps from Henry, he had a confidential interview with not absolutely grotesque, and that it is only in conse- Queen Elizabeth at Dover in 1601; and two years quence of some law of our minds that we think them afterwards, he went to London on a mission to her so. This, we conceive, may be the case without in successor, James I. Of the account given of the latter visit, we shall pre some incidental snatches. the least detracting from the force of what has been Sully, whose instructions chiefly related to the consaid; for how can we judge of any thing but by virtue junction of France and England against the Spanish of and in accordance with the habits of our minds? interests, found at Calais the vice-admirals of France, Undoubtedly, if the cheek of the fair young maiden Holland, and England, all of them anxious for the affects us with the sense of beauty, as truly does the honour of conveying him across the channel. By way figure of the Barbary ape affect us with the sense of of a compliment, he accepted the seemingly courteous comicality. So, also, of the powers and properties of offer of the English, and his going on board led to remany animals. The chatter of the parrot, the strut sults which prove that the English sailors of that day and crow of the cock, the wretched bray of the ass, the were just the English sailors of the present. The capers of the young goat, and the pranks of the kitten, French admiral, "De Vic, who only sought an opporall affect us with the same risibility as the humour of a tunity of showing the English his resentment of the Mathews or the wit of a Sheridan. To come finally violences committed by their pirates, advancing, bearto man, he has been endowed with both the power ing the French flag on his maintop-gallant mast, 1 of creating mirth and the power of enjoying it. found these complaisant English were enraged at an He has a faculty of the ludicrous in his mental offence which, according to them, was equally injuriorganisation, and muscles in the face whereby to ex- ous to the King of England, and the King of France, press the sensation in its well-known form of laughter. whom I represented; and I had reason to think them Some are born with such a predominance of the still more rude and impolite, when, without deigning ludicrous in their nature, and such wonderful powers to consult me, fifty shot were immediately fired into of awakening risibility in their fellow-creatures, as to De Vic's ship." Sully thought it wise to explain that seem to have been mainly designed, as far as the the flag was raised in honour of Henry's ambassador; worldly utility of their existence is concerned, for this and he also deemed it prudent to make a signal for its purpose. This is a class of men particularly apt at being lowered, which was done just in time, as appears perceiving the comicalities of the lower animal and from another broadside having been prepared by the vegetable worlds. While others see only what is English, which they fired at "random." Sully and his painful and melancholy in the scene around them, extensive suite, notwithstanding this untoward openthey are conscious only of what is merry and ridi- ing incident, were received with great honours at culous, and spend the part of their lives that is devoted Dover, whence they went by land to Gravesend, and, to common sensation in a constant flow of self-gene-entering a rich royal barge, sailed up the Thames. rated humour. The Tower gave him a salute of three thousand guns, the finest thing of the kind (he says) that he had ever heard. He had scarcely reached London, and taken up a temporary residence in a house there, when another untoward business occurred, of which he gives

We would fain, from all that has been said, establish the importance of the comical in the mundane economy. It seems to us that it cannot be necessarily a reprehensible frivolity-to however absurd purposes it may be occasionally perverted--when we see traces of it springing directly from the common Origin of all things. Time and place may be necessary for its proper development amongst assembled human beings, but this is no more than what may be said of all things There is a time to laugh and a time to weep. Man, it is true, in his blind zeal for what his higher sentiments dictate, has sometimes acted as if to smile were a sin. He has, strange to say, thought that an invariable gloom and sadness was the proper habit of mind in which to live, as being more agreeable to the Deity. But when we look into the book of nature, we see these ideas completely contradicted. We there find types of being which must have been grotesque and

an account.

His people went out to houses of entertainment,
and "at the same place they met with some English,
with whom they quarrelled, fought, and one of the
English was killed. The populace, who were before
prejudiced against us, being excited by the family of
the deceased, who was a substantial citizen, assembled,
and began loudly to threaten revenge upon all the
French, even in their lodgings. The affair soon be-
gan to appear of great consequence, for the number
of people assembled upon the occasion was presently

merriment is good for digestion.
*Dr Hufeland of Berlin has expressed his opinion that light

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it is but an ill recompense for the trouble he has given himself, and the expense he has been at to accompany you.' I again replied, in as positive a tone, I had no occasion for such company;' and, to be short, I desired Beaumont to quit my apartment, for I thought it would be improper to have him present in the council, which I intended to hold immediately, in order to pronounce sentence of death upon Combaut.

In this council I made choice only of the oldest and the wisest of my retinue; and the affair being presently determined, I sent Arnaud to inform the mayor of London of it, and to desire him to have his officers ready the next day, to conduct the culprit to the place of execution, and to have the executioner there ready to receive him."

The mayor, however, to whose justice Sully finally delivered the culprit, let him escape at the instance of the relative, and, satisfied with Sully, the people seem to have done nothing further in the matter. Justice, it would seem, had not then come to the state in which Oliver Cromwell placed it, when Don Pontoleon Sa, the very brother of the Portuguese ambassador, was sent to the scaffold by the stern Protector, in spite of all entreaties, individual and national. Sully is induced by what passed on this occasion to give the following picture of our nation-not a very flattering one, but tinged to some extent with truth. "It is certain that the English hate us, and this hatred is so general and inveterate, that one would almost be tempted to number it among their natural dispositions: it is undoubtedly an effect of their arrogance and pride, for no nation in Europe is more haughty and insolent, nor more conceited of its superior excellence. Were they to be believed, understanding and common sense are to be found only among them: they are obstinately wedded to all their own opinions, and despise those of every other nation; and to hear others, or suspect themselves, is what never enters into their thoughts. Their self-love renders them slaves to all their capricious humours. What they at one time believe to have wisely performed, or firmly resolved, is at another time destroyed without their knowing, or being able to give a reason: they are accordingly so undetermined in themselves, that frequently one would not take them for the same persons, and from hence they themselves sometimes appear surprised on perceiving their own continued irresolution. If we examine what are called their maxims of state, we shall discover in them only the laws of pride itself, adopted by arrogance or indolence." Admitting the correctness of the charge of national vanity, we must observe that Sully's national prejudice has prevented him from seeing that it is probably in a great measure to this belief in our superiority that we owe our actual greatness in arms and

arts.

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Sully's account of accidental particulars connected with his embassy, is much more interesting than his description of his interviews with James I., of whose personal demeanour he says little. Their first meeting, however, must have been striking. Sully, attended by one hundred and twenty selected gentlemen of his large suite, and a party of the royal guards, went to see the king at Greenwich. His majesty having sent to desire my appearance in his presence, I was above a quarter of an hour before I could get to the foot of his throne, occasioned both by the great numbers that were already there, and because I made all my retinue walk before me. The prince no sooner perceived me than he descended two steps, and would have descended them all, so very desirous he appeared to receive and embrace me, had not one of his ministers, who stood next him, whispered softly in his ear that he ought to go no farther. If,' said he aloud, ‘I

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