Imatges de pàgina
PDF
EPUB

A MEDIUM OF INTER-COMMUNICATION

FOR

LITERARY MEN, ARTISTS, ANTIQUARIES, GENEALOGISTS, ETC.

[blocks in formation]

Music of the Spheres

165

Origin of various Books

167

Monumental Brasses abroad, by W. Sparrow Simpson

167

Notes on Old London

168

Proverbs from Fuller

169

Misprint in Prayer-books, by W. Sparrow Simpson

170

Minor Notes: - Remarkable Epitaph - Deferred Execution in Spain - More Gold: Meaning of "Nugget" - Acrostic on the Napoleon Family-Literati-Names

of Places

170

[blocks in formation]

MUSIC OF THE SPHERES.

"How sweet the moon-light sleeps upon this bank !
Here will we sit, and let the sounds of music
Creep in our ears; soft stillness, and the night,
Become the touches of sweet harmony.
Sit, Jessica: Look how the floor of heaven
Is thick inlaid with patines of bright gold;
There's not the smallest orb, which thou behold'st,
But in his motion like an angel sings,

Still quiring to the young-eyed cherubins:

Such harmony is in immortal souls;
But whilst this muddy vesture of decay
Doth grossly close it in, we cannot hear it."

Merchant of Venice, Act V. Se. 1.

For anything I know to the contrary, Pythagoras was the first who advanced this doctrine of the music of the spheres; and Fenton, in his observations appended to Tonson's edition of Waller's Poems (page xcii. Lond. 1730), supposes him to 173 have grounded his belief on the words of Job literally understood: "When the morning stars sang together, and all the sons of God shouted for joy," chap. xxxviii. 7. I shall have to refer to Milton more than once; but his "Christmas Hymn" is here quite to my purpose :

175

176

176

177

177

Royal Arms in Churches, by Wm. Sydney Gibson, &c. 178
The Gregorian Tones, by Matthew Cooke and William

Sparrow Simpson, B.A.

The True Maiden-hair Fern

"The Good Old Cause"

Mémoires d'une Contemporaine

Fishing by Electricity, by W. Fraser

Maturin Laurent, by James Cornish

Replies to Minor Queries: - The Man in the Moon Collar of SS. - Reverence to the Altar Spanish Vessels wrecked on Irish Coast - Dress of the Clergy Virgilian Lots - General Lambert-"Sic transit gloria mundi "-Lines on the Succession of the Kings of England - Aghindle or Aghendole - Sinking Fund -Punch and Judy - Rhymes on Places - Sleep like a Top-More recent Corruptions - KnightsbridgeWedgwood Family-" Vox populi, vox Dei"-" Dieu et mon Droit"- Coral Charms, &c.

MISCELLANEOUS:

Books and Odd Volumes wanted

Notices to Correspondents
Advertisements

VOL. VI. - No. 147.

178

180

180

181

191

181

182

186

186

187

XII.

"Such music (as 'tis said)
Before was never made,

But when of old the sons of morning sung,

While the Creator great

His constellations set,

And the well-balanc'd world on hinges hung,

And cast the dark foundations deep,

And bid the welt'ring waves their oozy channel keep.

XIII.

"Ring out ye crystal spheres,

Once bless our human ears,

(If ye have pow'r to touch our senses so ;)

And let your silver chime

Move in melodious time,

And let the base of Heaven's deep organ blow;

And with your ninefold harmony

Make up full consort to th' angelic symphony."

Milton speaks also of the "mystical dance" of

the spheres, and further adds:

" And in their motions harmony divine

So smooths her charming tones, that God's own ear

Listens delighted."- Par. Lost, lib. v. 620.

[blocks in formation]

"Quales (crediderim) divum edidit auribus olim
Concentus mundi sacer, et dulcissimus ordo,
Cum lites elementorum Natura diremit,
Disposuitque modis divinitus omnia justis."

Planturum, lib. v. page 306. Lond. 1688, 8vo. And though in the notes to his Pindaric "Ode on the Resurrection" he seems to think such Pythagorean ideas as more befitting poetry than sound philosophy, I must adduce a very quaint passage from his Davideis likewise :

"Th' ungovern'd parts no correspondence knew,
An artless war from thwarting motions grew;
Till they to number and fixt rules were brought
By the Eternal Mind's poetique thought:
Water and Air he for the Tenor chose,
Earth made the Base, the Treble Flame arose,
To th' active Moon a quick brisk stroke he gave,
To Saturn's string a touch more soft and grave.
The motions strait, and round, and swift, and slow,
And short and long, were mixt and woven so,
Did in such artful Figures smoothly fall,
As made this decent measur'd Dance of all.
And this is Musick." - Lib. i. p. 13. 1668, folio.

In the notes to Grey's edition of Hudibras there is some learning collected in a short compass, and some references are given on the subject. The reason assigned by Butler for our not hearing the music of the spheres is this:

"Her voice, the music of the spheres,
So loud, it deafens mortals' ears;
As wise philosophers have thought,
And that's the cause we hear it not."

Part II. canto i. 1.617. vol. i. pp. 316-7.
Dublin, 1744.

Shakspeare, as already quoted, has assigned a different reason; and Milton closely follows him in the "Arcades."

"After the heavenly tune, which none can hear
Of human mould, with gross unpurged ear."

Indeed Milton had written an academic exercise at Cambridge, "De Concentu Sphærorum," in which he explains the theory of Plato. Thomas Warton gives much additional information in his notes upon the "Arcades," and illustrates Milton by himself: he gave some further description of this music, Par. Lost, lib. vii. 558. And as Beaumont's Psyche is less known, I may as well extract a passage from it:

294.

"With that the musick of the spheres burst out,
Pouring a deluge of soul-ravishing layes :
With which a while tho' David's fingers fought,
His mortal strings so high he could not raise;
My harp must yield,' he cry'd, but yet my heart
Shall in your loftiest accents bear her part.'

295.
"Indeed those airs are so refin'd, that none
But purest hearts' spiritual strings can be
Stretch'd to their chords' full compass; this alone
That consort is, to which the melody
You with the name of musiek honour here
Is only learned gratings of the ear."

Page 241: Cambridge, 1702, folio.

I have one quotation more to make, but it must be a long one, as it seems to contain almost all that can be said upon the subject. It is from Bishop Martin Fotherby, and includes the opinions of the more ancient writers, as well as of Bede, St. Anselm, Boethius, and Du Bartas. It is strange to find such an argument pressed into the controversy with atheists: but the whole chapter is worth reading. He says:

"And therefore, divers of them, as they ascribe a rythmical motion unto the starres; so doe they an harmonicall unto the heavens; ymagining that their inoving produceth the melodie of an excellent sweete tune. So that they make the starres to be dancers, and the heavens to be musitians. An opinion which of old hath hung in the heads, and troubled the braines of many learned men: yea, and that not onely among the heathen philosophers, but also even among our Christian divines. The first author and inventor of which conceited imagination was the philosopher Pythagoras. Who broched his opinion with such felicitie and happinesse, that he wonne unto his part divers of the most ancient and best learned philosophers, as Plutarch reporteth. Plato, whose learning Tullie so much admireth, that hee calleth him The God of all Philosophers, Deum Philosophorum, he affirmeth of the heavens, that every one of them hath sitting upon it a sweet-singing syren, caroing out a most pleasant and melodious song, agreeing with the motion of her own peculiar heaven. Which syren, though it sing of itselfe but one single part, yet all of them together, being eight in number (for so many heavens were onely held by the ancients) doe make an excellent song, consisting of eight parts: wherein they still modulate their songs, agreeable unto the motions of the eight celestial spheres. Arist., 1. ii. De Cœlo, c. ix. to. i. p. 588.; Cic., l. iii. De Nat. Deor., p. 229.; Plut., 1. De Musica, to. ii. p. 707.; Cic., l. ii. De Nat. Deor., p. 205.; Plato, 1. x. De Rep., p. 670. Which opinion of Platoes is not only allowed by Macrobius (lib. ii. De Som. Scip., c. iii. p. 90.), but he also affirmeth of this syren's song, that it is a psalme composed in the praise of God. Yea, and he proveth his assertion out of the very name of a syren: which signifieth (as he saith) as much as Deo cunens, A singer unto God. But Maximus Tyrius (Serm. xxi. p. 256.) he affirmeth of the heavens, that (without any such helpe of these celestial syrens) they make a most sweete harmonie, even by their proper motions, wherein they doe omnes symmetriæ numeros implere; contrarioq; nisu, divinum sonum perficere: They by their contrary moving doe fill up a'l the parts of a most divine and heavenly song. Which hee affirmeth to be most pleasant unto the eares of God, though it cannot be heard by the eares

of men. Yea, and the sages of the Greekes (Lucian,

lib. De Astrologia, p. 166. B.) insinuate also as much, by placing of Orpheus his harpe in heaven: implying, in the seaven strings of his well turned harpe, that sweete tune and harmonie which is made in heaven by the divers motions of the seaven planets, as Lucian interprets it. Unto which his opinion there may seeme to be a kinde of allusion in the Booke of Job, as the text in the vulgar translation is rendered (xxxviii. 37.): Concentum cæli quis dormire faciet? Who shall make the harmony of the heavens to seepe? For so, likewise, the divines of Doway translate it." - Atheomastix, pp. 315, 316: London, 1622, fol.

The lovers of Milton will be reminded of the
"celestial Syrens' harmony,
That sit upon the nine enfolded spheres."
Arcades, 63.

Or of
"That undisturbed song of pure concent
Aye sung before the saphire-colour'd throne,
To him that sits thereon."

[blocks in formation]

a

as

Thus, Milton's Comus was suggested by the circumstance of Lady Egerton losing sing herself herse in wood. The origin igin of Paradise Lost has been scribed by one to the poet having read Andreini's drama of L'Adamo Sacra Representatione, Milan, 1633; by another, to his perusal of Theramo's Das Buch Belial, &c., 1472. Dunster says that the prima stamina of Paradise Lost is to be found in Sylvester's translation of Du Bartas's Divine Weekes and Workes. It is said that Milton himself owned that he owed much of his work to Phineas Fletcher's Locusts or Appolyonists. Paradise Regained is attributable to the poet having

been asked by Elwood the Quaker, what he could say on the subject. Gower's Confessio Amantis was written at the command of Richard II., who, meeting Gower rowing on the Thames, invited him into the royal barge, and after much conversation, requested him to "book some new thing." Chaucer, it is generally agreed, intended, in his Canterbury Tales, to imitate the Decameron of Boccaccio. When Cowper was forty-five he was induced by Mrs. Unwin to write a poem, that lady giving him for a subject The Progress of Error. The author of The Castle of Otranto says in a letter, now in the British Museum, that it was suggested to him by a dream, in which he thought himself in an ancient castle, and that he saw a gigantic hand in armour on the uppermost banister of the great staircase. Defoe is supposed to have obtained his idea of Robinson Crusoe by reading Captain Rogers' Account of Alexander Selkirk in Juan Fernandez. Dr. Beddoes' Alexander's Expedition down the Hydaspes and the Indus to the Ocean originated in a conversation in which it was contended that Darwin could not be imitated. Dr. Beddoes, some time afterwards, produced the MS. of the above poem as Darwin's, and completely succeeded in the deception. UNICORN.

MONUMENTAL BRASSES ABROAD.

A list of all the brasses existing on the continent has long been a great desideratum to the archæologist: if you will devote some little space in your columns to notices of any examples which may fall under the observation of your correspondents, I have no doubt but that a complete list might soon be formed; foreign brasses being comparatively few in number. During a recent tour in France and Belgium, I added rubbings of the following memorials to my own collection: France. Amiens Cathedral. Belgium; Ghent. St. Bavon.

Bishop John Avantage, 14...

Franchoys Van Wychhuus, 1599 (with the arms of the family connexions coloured).

Belgium; Bruges. St. Sauveur.

Magistr. Bernardinus de Curia, and others, 1517.

[blocks in formation]
[blocks in formation]

St. Mary.

Beck, Mayor, 1521.

Stralsund. St. Nicholas, 1357.
Thom. Knight and Lady, fourteenth century.

This list was sent me by a friend, who omitted to state the name of the magazine from which he derived it. Other brasses worthy of note are:

Sweden. Upsala Cathedral. St. Henry in episcopal vestments, with a bishop kneeling at his feet. Engraved in Perings-kiold, Mon. SuioGothorum, lib. i. (Stockholm, 1710).

Seville. Don Perafau de Ribera, 1517.
Funchal. Madeira.

Doubtless, your correspondent who dates from Bruges will kindly complete the list for that interesting city. And I hope, ere long, that all the existing memorials may be duly registered in your columns. Query, Who are commemorated by the brasses at Dublin and Glasgow? It is supposed that no others exist in Ireland and Scotland than these three, two of which are at the former place. W. SPARROW SIMPSON.

NOTES ON OLD LONDON.

The reading public are much indebted to Mr. Cunningham for his valuable and most entertaining Handbook for London, in which he has collected a multitude of records of persons

and localities, which but for his diligence and perseverance must have been lost to posterity. Nevertheless, some facts and incidents have escaped his inquiries, which an old inhabitant of this metropolis, during the latter end of the last and beginning of the present century, is able to supply; and which may interest such as are still cotemporaries with the writer. If the following notices be found worthy of insertion in your pages, they may occasionally be succeeded by others of a

similar nature.

Pall Mall. - On the south side, a few doors from Marlborough House, is that which was occupied by the bookseller Edwards, the Murray of his day; and where all the wits and notabilities of that period used to assemble, to discuss literature and the arts.

Schomberg House. - The centre part, which is stated to have been fitted up by Astley, was subsequently occupied by a celebrated empyric, Dr. Graham, who there delivered his philosophical lectures, in which he introduced as the goddess of health a lady named Prescott. The doctor fitted up the attics of the house for his private residence, which could only be approached by a moveable staircase. It contained a bed-room, study, kitchen, and the usual appendages; and here he withdrew when not inclined to be disturbed: the staircase being removed, prevented all access. The same house was subsequently occupied by R. Cosway, R.A., the fashionable miniature painter of his day; and here his accomplished wife, Maria Cosway, was accustomed to receive the taste and talent of the lay, including the nobles of the land and the representatives of foreign powers; the young and gay Prince of Wales, afterwards George IV., being frequently among the visitors of her musical parties, which were rendered attractive by the combined talents of the best performers of the day. These were, Schroeter, Dussek, Clementi, Tenducci, Marchesi, &c. Mrs. Cosway, who was herself an able artist, converted Dr. Graham's study into a painting room, from the large window of which she enjoyed the beautiful prospect of St. James's Park, Westminster Abbey, &c. The kitchen was converted into a green-house, filled with rare plants, and adorned with a fountain in the middle. This lady afterwards made a pilgrimage to the shrine of the Virgin, at Loretto, in pursuance of a vow made that she would do so, if blessed with a living child. After she left England, Mr. Cosway removed to the western corner of Stratford Place, Oxford Street; and two or three years after to a house two doors higher, where he resided till the time of his death, which took place suddenly while in a carriage with his friend Mrs. Udney.

Towards the end of last century, the E. wing of Schomberg House was converted into fashionable millinery rooms by Dyde and Scribe, which are now occupied by their successors, Harding and Co.

In a house nearly adjoining was the original establishment of Mr. Christie the auctioneer (father to the present Mr. C.), who was the originator of what may be termed the puffing system of auction; and who was remarkable for the elegance of language and manner, which far surpassed that of his imitators

in later times.

Next door to the residence of the Duke of Buckingham was the Golden Bull, well known as a shop for all kinds of articles for ladies' work.

A few doors still farther on was the residence of Mr. Angerstein, where was deposited the fine collection of pictures by the ancient masters, which after his death was purchased by government, and formed the nucleus of the present National Gallery.

Χ.

Lambert's Mews. - The name of Lambert was accidentally recalled to my memory this morning by seeing in Field's Memoirs of the Botanical Garden at Chelsea, 1820, that in 1732, he had made an agreement, with the Apothecaries' Society, to build a green-house and two hot-houses at the gardens for 1550l.

Lambert and Phillips took a plot of ground in May Fair, many years ago, upon a building lease; some of the houses were in Queen Street, many in Clarges Street; an intermediate strip of ground reached from Queen Street to Clarges Street, in which were Lambert's workshops: and this vacant ground was long known by the name of "Lambert's Mews," and these words were painted upon the crown of the arch which forms the entrance into the Mews from Queen Street.

Possibly this was the only memorial of a man, who in his day had covered many an acre of ground with brick and mortar; and there seems to be no reason why the appropriate name of Lambert should have been changed after his death to "Lambeth," which, as there placed, has no meaning at all. The change was probably made by a superficial reasoner, who thought that Lambert must be wrong, and Lambeth might be right.

Brook Street.

PROVERBS FROM FULLER.

S. M.

On glancing over the Collection of Proverbs by Thomas Fuller, M.D., a number of them relate to persons and places all seemingly of English extraction, and in many points not quite so edifying to Scotch readers. Take the following as examples, in connexion with whose spirit it may be observed, that each appears to have had an origin in some particular incident, circumstance, or fact which might now be curious as far as possible to trace out; and such investigations might also elicit other glimpses, in reference to local and personal history of a past and present character, not altogether uninteresting. In the collector's Preface (London, 1732), he says:

" All of us forget more than we remember, and therefore it hath been my constant custom to note down and record (a good rule still to be practised) whatever I thought of myself, or received from men or books, worth preserving."

And further:

" I picked up these sentences and sayings at several times, according as they casually occurred, and most of them so long ago that I cannot remember the particulars, and am now (by reason of great age and ill sight) utterly unable to review them," &c.

What this indefatigable collector, through inability, was prevented from "reviewing" and elucidating at the rather affecting close of a literary

life, may yet to some extent be supplied in respect to

"A Burston horse and a Cambridge Master of Arts will give the way to nobody. As crooked as Crawley Brook.

As hasty as Hopkins, that came to jail overnight, and was hanged the next morning. As lame as St. Giles's, Cripplegate. As lazy as Ludlam's dog, that leaned his head against the wall to bark.

As long as Meg of Westminster.

As mad as the baited bull at Stamford.

As much as York excels foul Sutton.

As true steel as Ripon spurs.

As wise as Waltham's calf, that ran nine miles to suck a bull.

Among the people Scoggin's a doctor.

Bate me an ace, quoth Bolton.
Carry coals to Newcastle.
Canterbury's the higher rack, but Winchester's the

better manger.

Dine with Duke Humfrey.
Ducks fare well in the Thames.
God help the fool, quoth Pedley.

Great doings at Gregory's; heat the oven twice for a custard.

He came safe from the East Indies, and was drowned in the Thames.

He cannot demand a flitch of bacon at Dunmow. He claws it as Clayton clawed the pudding, when he eat bag and all.

He looks like the devil over Lincoln,

He sailed into Cornwall without a bark.

He sendeth to the East Indies for Kentish pippins. He that takes a wife at Shrewsbury must carry her to Staffordshire, else she will drive him to Cumberland.

He travelled with Mandevile.

He was born within the sound of Bow-bell.
He's like Garby, whose soul neither God nor the
Devil would have.

Hell and Chancery are always open.
Hertfordshire kindness.

Hope well and have well, quoth Hick well.
It is a good knife; it was made at Dull-edge.
It is as long a-coming as Cotswold barley.
Like Banbury tinkers, that mend one hole and make
three.

Like Wood's dog; he will neither go to the church nor stay at home.

Manners make a man, quoth Will of Wickham.
My name is Twyford, I know nothing of the matter.
Nay, stay, quoth Stringer, when his neck was in the
halter.

Neither in Kent nor Christendom.

Pigs play on the organ at Hogs-Norton.
Right, Roger, your sow's good mutton.
Shake a Leicestershire man by the collar, and you

shall hear the beans rattle in his belly.
She simpers like a Frumenty kettle.
Slow and sure, like Pedley's mare.
Tenterden steeple was the cause of Goodwin's Sands.
The Isle of Wight hath no monks, lawyers, or foxes,
The vicar of Bray will be vicar of Bray still.

« AnteriorContinua »