Born: Dr. John Gregory,
miscellaneous writer, 1724, Aberdeen; Dr. James
Hutton, one of the founders of geology, 1726,
Edinburgh; Robert Tannahill, Scottish poet, 1774,
Paisley; Sir William C. Ross, artist, 1794, London.
Died: Bishop (John)
Aylmer, 1594, Fulham; William Harvey, discoverer of
the circulation of the blood, 1657, buried. Hempstead,
Essex; Admiral Opdam, blown up at sea, 1665; Dr.
Edmund Calmly, nonconformist divine, 1732; Jethro Tull,
speculative experimenter in agriculture, 1740.
Feast Day: St. Cecilius,
confessor, 211. St. Clotildis or Clotilda, Queen of
France, 545. St. Lifard, abbot, near Orleans, 6th
century. St. Coemgen or Keivin, bishop and confessor
in Ireland, 618. St. Genesius, bishop and confessor,
about 662.
JETHRO TULL
Jethro Tull was the inventor
and indefatigable advocate of 'drill-sowing and
frequent hoeing,' two of the greatest improvements
that have been introduced into the modern system of
agriculture. He was educated for the profession of the
law, but an acute disease compelled him to relinquish
a sedentary life. During his travels in search of
health, he directed his attention to the agriculture
of the various countries he traversed; and, observing
that vines grew and produced well by frequently
stirring the soil, without any addition of manure, he
rashly concluded that all plants might be cultivated
in a similar manner.
On his return to England, Tull
commenced a life-long series of experiments on his own
farm at Shalborne, in Berkshire; and in spite of a
most painful disease, and the almost forcible
opposition of besotted neighbours and brutally
ignorant farm-labourers, he succeeded in gathering
remunerative crops from the hungriest and barrenest of
soils. His great invention was that of drill-sowing;
the saving of seed effected by this practice is
incalculable. From the scarcely numerable millions of
acres that have been drill-sown since Tull's time,
one-third at least of the seed has been saved. Nor is
this all; the best informed agriculturists assert that
this saving is of less importance than the facility
which drill-sowing affords for the destruction of
weeds and loosening of the soil by the hoe. It is
true, that like many other speculative inventors, Tull
arrived at conclusions scarcely justified by the
results of his experiments, and principal among these
was the erroneous notion that loosening and
pulverizing the soil might supersede the use of manure
altogether; but he lived long enough to discover his
mistake, and he was honest and manly enough to
acknowledge it.
Panegyrical inscriptions,
graven on ponderous marble and perennial brass, point
out the last resting-places of the destroyers of the
human race; but, strange to say, no man can tell where
the remains of Jethro Tull, the benefactor of his
kind, were deposited. Mr. Johnson, speaking of Tull,
says, 'His grave is undetermined; if he died at
Shalborne, there is no trace of his burial in its
parish register. The tradition of the neighbourhood
is, that he died and was buried in Italy. His deeds,
his triumphs, were of the peaceful kind with which the
world in general is little enamoured: but their
results were momentous to his native land. His drill
has saved to it, in seed alone, the food of millions;
and his horse-hoe system, by which he attempted to
cultivate without manure, taught the farmer that deep
ploughing and pulverization of the soil render a much
smaller application of fertilizers necessary.'
KING JAMES
AND THE TOWER LIONS
On the 3rd June 1605, King
James and his family went to the Tower of London, to
see the lions. From the time of Henry III, who placed
in the Tower three leopards which had been sent him as
a present from the Emperor Frederick, in allusion to
the three leopards on the royal shield, there had
always been some examples of the larger carnivora kept
in this grim old seat of English royalty. It came td
be considered as a proper piece of regal magnificence,
and the keeper was always a gentleman. In the
fourteenth century, to maintain a lion in the Tower
cost sixpence a day, while human prisoners were
supported for one penny. It cost, in 1532, �6,13s. 4d.
to pay for and bring home a lion. To go and see these
Tower lions became an indispensable duty of all
country visitors of London, insomuch as to give rise
to a proverbial expression, 'the lions' passing as
equivalent to all kinds of city wonders which country
people go to see. Travelling menageries did not long
ago exist, and wild animals were great rarities. In
such circumstances, the curiosity felt about the lions
in the Tower can be readily appreciated. Even down to
the reign of William IV, the collection of these
animals was kept up in considerable strength; but at
length it was thought best to consign the remnant of
the Tower lions to the Zoological Gardens in the
Regent's Park, where they have ever since flourished.
The taste of King James was
not of the most refined character. It pleased him to
have an addition made to the Tower lion-house, with an
arrangement of trap-doors, in order that a lion might
be occasionally set to combat with dogs, bulls, or
bears, for the diversion of the court. The arena was
now completed; so the monarch and a great number of
courtiers came to see a fight. The designed gallery
for their use was not ready; but they found seats on a
temporary platform. When the under-keepers on this
occasion got a couple of the lions turned out into the
place of combat, they acted much like Don Quixote's
lions: more amazed and puzzled than anything else,
they merely stood looking about them till a couple of
pieces of mutton were thrown to them. After a live
cock had also been devoured by the savage creatures, a
live lamb was let down to them by a rope. 'Being come
to the ground, the lamb lay upon his knees, and both
the lions stood in their former places, and only
beheld the lamb. Presently the lamb rose up and went
unto the lions, who very gently looked upon and
smelled on him, without any hurt. Then the lamb was
very softly drawn up again, in as good plight as he
was let down.'
Afterwards, a different lion,
a male one, was brought into the arena by himself, and
a couple of mastiffs were let in upon him; by which he
was fiercely attacked, but with little effect. 'A
brended dog took the lion by the face, and turned him
upon his back�but the lion spoiled them all; the best
dog died the next day.'
In this and other combats of
the same kind, the conduct of the lions was generally
conformable to the observations of modern naturalists
regarding the character of the so-called king of
beasts. The royal family and principal courtiers
having come to the Tower on the 23rd June 1609, a bear
which had killed a child, a horse, and six strong
mastiffs, was let in upon a lion, with only the effect
of frightening the creature. 'Then were divers other
lions put into that place one after another; but they
showed no more sport nor valour than the first, and
every of them, so soon as they espied the trap doors
open, ran hastily into their dens. Lastly, there were
put forth together the two young lusty lions which
were bred in that yard, and were now grown great.
These at first began to march proudly towards the
bear, which the bear perceiving came hastily out of a
corner to meet them; but both lion and lioness skipped
up and down, and fearfully fled from the bear; and so
these, like the former lions, not willing to endure
any fight, sought the next way into their den.'
Such were amongst the
amusements of the English court 250 years ago.
THE
EMPRESS JOSEPHINE AND HER HOROSCOPE
On the 3rd of June 1814, a
distinguished company of mourners assembled in the
church of Ruel, in France, the parish in which the
palace of Malmaison is situated. There were the Prince
of Mecklenburg, General Sacken, several marshals of
France, senators, general officers, ecclesiastics,
prefects, sub-prefects, maires, and foreigners of
note; and there were eight thou-sand townspeople and
peasants from the neighbourhood, come to pay the last
tribute of respect to one who, in the closing years of
her life, had won their esteem and affection.
It was the funeral of the
ex-Empress Josephine, a lady whose sixty years of life
had been chequered in a most remarkable way. Josephine
appears, as a woman, to have been actuated in some
degree by a prediction made concerning her when a
girl. Mademoiselle Ducrest, Madame Junot, and others
who have written on Josephine's career, mention this
prediction. Josephine�or, with her full name, Marie
Josephine Rose Tascher de la Pagerie�was the daughter
of a French naval officer, and was born in the French
colony of Martinique, in 1763. When a sensitive,
imaginative girl of about fifteen, her 'fortune was
told,' by an old mulatto woman named Euphemie, in
words somewhat as follows:
'You will marry a fair man.
Your star promises you two alliances. Your first
husband will be born in Martinique, but will pass
his life in Europe, with girded sword. An unhappy
lawsuit will separate you. He will perish in a
tragical manner. Your second husband will be a dark
man, of European origin and small fortune; but he
will fill the world with his glory and fame. You
will then become an eminent lady, more than a queen.
Then, after having astonished the world, you will
die unhappy.'
The writers on whose authority
this mystic horoscope is put forward, do not fail to
point out how perfectly the events of Josephine's life
fit into it. By an arrangement between the two
families,
Mademoiselle de la Pagerie was married to the
Comte de Beauharnois,
a fair man, and a native of Martinique. The young
people never liked each other; and when they went to
Paris, each fell into the evil course of life which
was likely to result from such aversion, and to which
the state of morals in France lent only too much
temptation. In a fit of jealousy, he went to
Martinique to rake up evidence concerning his wife's
conduct before marriage, and on return raised a suit
against her: this was 'the unhappy lawsuit' that
'separated them.' From 1787 till 1790 she lived at
Martinique with her two children, Eugene (afterwards
one of Napoleon's best
generals) and Hortense
(afterwards mother of Napoleon III)
On their return to Paris, a
reconciliation took place between her and her husband;
and a period of comparative happiness lasted till
1793, when the guillotine put an end to his career. He
'perished in a tragical way.' Madame Beauharnois was
imprisoned; she contrived to send her son and daughter
away from home; but the Terrorists would not consent
to let loose one who had been the wife of a count, and
who for that reason was one of the aristocracy. While
in prison, she showed that she did not forget the old
mulatto woman's prediction. She and three other ladies
of note being imprisoned in the same cell, they were
all alike subject to the brutal language of the
gaolers placed over them; and once, when the others
were tearfully lamenting their fate, and anticipating
the horrors of the guillotine, Josephine exclaimed �
'I shall not die: I shall be queen of France!'
The Duchess d'Aiguillon, one
of her companions, with a feeble attempt at banter,
asked her to 'name her future house-hold;' to which
Josephine at once replied, 'I will make you one of my
ladies of honour.' They wept, for they feared she was
becoming demented. Robespierre's
fall occurred in time
to save the life of Josephine. After three years more
of successful adventurous life, she was married to the
young victorious general, Napoleon Bonaparte: 'a dark
man, of European origin and small fortune.' Napoleon
proceeded in his wonderful career of conquest,
military and political, until at length he became
emperor in 1804. Then was Josephine indeed ' an
eminent lady, more than a queen;' and her husband
'filled the world with his glory and fame.' But the
wheel of fortune was now turning. Napoleon. had no
children by Josephine, and he began to fear for the
succession to his great empire. His ambition led him
to propose marriage to the Archduchess Marie Louise of
Austria, after his victorious campaign of 1809; ho
obtained poor Josephine's consent, in a heart-breaking
scene, and the church allowed him to annul his first
marriage, on grounds which would never have been
allowed but for his enormous power. Josephine did 'die
unhappy,' as a divorced wife; and thus fulfilled the
last clause of the alleged prediction.
SUPERSTITIONS
ABOUT DISEASES
Perhaps under this head may be
classed the notion that a galvanic ring, as it is
called, worn on the finger, will cure rheumatism. One
sometimes sees people with a clumsy-looking silver
ring which has a piece of copper let into the inside,
and this, though in constant contact throughout, is
supposed (aided by the moisture of the hand) to keep
up a gentle, but continual galvanic current, and so to
alleviate or remove rheumatism.
This notion has an air of
science about it which may perhaps redeem it from the
character of mere superstition; but the following case
can put in no such claim. I recollect that when I was
a boy a person carne to my father (a clergyman), and
asked for a 'sacramental shilling,' i. e., one out of
the alms collected at the Holy Communion, to be made
into a ring, and worn as a cure for epilepsy. He
naturally declined to give one for 'superstitious
uses,' and no doubt was thought very cruel by the
unfortunate applicant.
Ruptured children are expected
to be cured by being passed through a young tree,
which has been split for the purpose. After the
operation has been performed, the tree is bound up,
and, if it grows together again, the child will be
cured of its rupture. I have not heard anything about
this for many years; perhaps it has fallen into
disuse. There is an article on the subject in one of
Hone's books, I think, and there the witch elm is
specified as the proper tree for the purpose; but,
whether from the scarcity of that tree, or from any
other cause, I am not aware that it was considered
necessary in this locality.
Ague is a disease about which
various strange notions are prevalent. One is that it
cannot be cured by a regular doctor�it is out of their
reach altogether, and can only be touched by some old
woman's nostrum. It is frequently treated with spiders
and cobwebs. These, indeed, are said to contain
arsenic; and, if so, there may be a touch of truth in
the treatment. Fright is also looked upon as a cure
for ague. I suppose that, on the principle that
similia similibus curantur, it is imagined that the
shaking induced by the fright will counteract and
destroy the shaking of the ague fit. An old woman has
told me that she was actually cured in this manner
when she was young. She had had ague for a long time,
and nothing would cure it. Now it happened that she
had a fat pig in the sty, and a fat pig is an
important personage in a poor man's establishment.
Well aware of the importance of piggy in her eyes, and
deter-mined to give her as great a shock as possible,
her husband came to her with a very long face as she
was tottering down stairs one day, and told her that
the pig was dead. Horror at this fearful news
over-came all other feelings; she forgot all about her
ague, and hurried to the scene of the catastrophe,
where she found to her great relief that the pig was
alive and well; but the fright had done its work, and
from that day to this (she must be about eighty years
old) she has never had a touch of the ague, though she
has resided on the same spot.
Equally strange are some of
the notions about small-pox. Fried mice are relied on
as a specific for it, and I am afraid that it is
considered necessary that they should be fried alive.
With respect to
whooping-cough, again, it is believed that if you ask
a person riding on a piebald horse what to do for it,
his recommendation will be successful if attended to.
My grandfather at one time used. always to ride a
piebald horse, and he has frequently been stopped by
people asking for a cure for whooping-cough. His
invariable answer was, 'Patience and water-gruel;'
perhaps, upon the whole, the best advice that could be
given.
Earrings are considered to be
a cure for sore eyes, and perhaps they may be useful
so long as the ear is sore, the ring acting as a mild
seton; but their efficacy is believed in even after
the ear has healed.
-Warts are another thing
expected to be cured by charms. A gentleman well known
to me, states that, when he was a boy, the landlady of
an inn where he happened to be took compassion on his
warty hands, and undertook to cure them by rubbing
them with bacon. It was necessary, however, that the
bacon should be stolen; so the good lady tools it
secretly from her own larder, which was supposed to
answer the condition sufficiently. If I recollect
rightly, the warts remained as bad as ever, which was
perhaps due to the bacon not having been bona fide
stolen.
I do not know whether
landladies in general are supposed to have a special
faculty against warts; but one, a near neighbour of
mine, has the credit of being able to charm them away
by counting them. I have been told by boys that she
has actually done so for them, and that the warts have
disappeared. I have no reason to think that they were
telling me a down-right lie, but suppose that their
imagination must have been strong to overcome even
such horny things as warts. A more coincidence would
have been almost more remarkable.
There is a very distressing
eruption about the mouth and throat, called the
thrush, common among infants and persons in the last
extremity of sickness. There is a notion about this
disease that a person must have it once in his life,
either at his birth or death. Nurses like to see it in
babies; they say that it is healthy, and makes them
feed more freely; but, if a sick person shows it, he
is given over as past recovery, which is really indeed
extremely rare in such cases.
I am no doctor, and do not
know whether the disease is really the same in both
cases, but it appears to be so. C. W. J.
Suffolk.
The following conversation,
which took place in a Dorsetshire village, illustrates
the popular nosology and therapeutics of that county:
'Well, Betty,' said a lady,
how are you?'
'Pure, thank you ma'am; but
I has been rather poorlyish.'
What has been the matter
with yon?'
Why, ma'am, I was troubled
with the rising of the lights; but I tooked a dose
of shot, and that has akeepit them down.'
As a pendent to this take the
following, hitherto unprinted. An old cottager in
Morayshire, who had long been bed-rid, was charitably
visited by a neighbouring lady, much given to the
administration of favourite medicines. One day she
left a bolus for him, from which she expected
strengthening effects, and she called next day to
inquire for her patient, as usual.
'Well, John, you would take
the medicine I left with you?
Oh, no, ma'am,' replied
John; 'it wadna gang cast.'
The Scotch, it must be
understood, are accustomed to be precise about the 'airts'
or cardinal points, and generally direct you to places
in that way. This poor old fellow, constantly lying on
one side, had come to have a geographical idea of the
direction which anything took in passing into his
gullet.
June 4th