March 7th
Born:
Sir John Fortescue Aland, 1670; Antonio Sanchez, 1699.
Died: Antoninus Pius,
Roman Emperor, 162, Lorium; William Longsword, first
Earl of Salisbury, 1226; Pope Innocent XIII, 1724;
Bishop Thomas Wilson, 1755, Isle of Man; Blanchard,
aeronaut, 1809; Admiral Lord Collingwood, 1810.
Feast Day: Saints
Perpetua and Felicitas, martyrs at Carthage, 203. St.
Paul the Simple, anchoret, about 330. St. Thomas of
Aquino, Doctor of the Church and Confessor, 1274.
BISHOP WILSON
The benign and saintly Thomas Wilson was born at Burton, in
Cheshire, on the 20th of
December 1663. He was educated at Trinity College,
Dublin, whither most of the young gentlemen of
Lancashire and Cheshire were at that time sent. In
1692, the Earl of Derby chose him for his domestic
chaplain, and tutor to his son, Lord Strange, and in
1697 appointed him to the bishopric of Sodor and Man,
then in the gift of the Derby family. The episcopal
revenue was only �300 a-year, and he found his palace
in ruins, the house having been uninhabited for eight
years. The people of the island were ignorant and very
poor; but the bishop at once took measures to improve
their condition, He taught them to work, to plant,
dig, and drain, and make roads; he opened schools,
chapels, and libraries; he had studied medicine, and
was able to cure the sick. Nearly all that Oberlin did
in the Ban-de-la-Roche, Wilson anticipated in the Isle
of Man. His whole income, after providing for the
modest needs of his household, he expended in alms and
improvements. It was said that 'he kept beggars from
every door in Man but his own.'
He published several
devotional works and sermons, which are to this day
widely read and admired. Queen Anne offered him an
English bishopric, which he declined; George I
repeated the offer, with the same result. Queen
Caroline was very anxious to keep him in London, and
one day, when she had several prelates with her, she
said, pointing to Wilson, 'See, here, my lords, is a
bishop who does not come for translation.' 'No,
indeed, and please your Majesty,' said Wilson, 'I will
not leave my wife in my old age because she is poor.'
Cardinal Fleury wanted much to see him, and invited
him to France, saying he believed that they were the
two oldest and poorest bishops in Europe, and he
obtained an order from the government that no French
privateer should ravage the Isle of Man. Wilson's
goodness, like Oberlin's, overcame all differences of
creed. Catholics and Dissenters came to hear him
preach, and Quakers visited at his palace. He died at
the age of ninety-three, and in the fifty-eighth year
of his tenure of the office of bishop.
LORD COLLINGWOOD
The personal history of this
great naval commander furnishes a remarkable example
of everything sacrificed to duty. He might be said to
have lived and died at sea. The case becomes the more
remarkable, when we know that Collingwood, beneath
the panoply of the hero, cherished the finest domestic
and social feelings. Born at Newcastle-on Tyne in
1750, he was sent to sea as a midshipman at the age of
eleven. After twenty-five years uninterrupted
service, he returned to Northumberland, making, as he
says, acquaintance with his own family, to whom he had
hitherto been, as it were, a stranger. In 1793, the
war with the French Republic called him away from a
young wife and two infant daughters, whom he most
tenderly loved, though he was never permitted to have
much of their society. He bore a conspicuous part in
Lord Howe's victory, June 1, 1794, and in Jervis's
victory off Cape St. Vincent in 1797. In 1799, he was
raised to the rank of Rear-Admiral.
The peace of Amiens, for which
he had long prayed, restored him to his wife and
children for a few months in 1802, but the renewed war
called him to sea in the spring of 1803, and he never
more returned to his happy home. This constant service
made him frequently lament that he was hardly known to
his own children; and the anxieties and wear and tear
incidental to it, shortened his valuable life. Passing
over many less brilliant, but still very important
services, Collingwood was second in command in the
battle of Trafalgar. His ship, the Royal Sovereign,
was the first to attack and break the enemy's line;
and upon Nelson's death, Collingwood finished the
victory, and continued in command of the fleet. He was
now raised to the peerage. After a long and wearying
blockade, during which, for nearly three years, he
hardly ever set foot on shore, he sailed up the
Mediterranean, where his position involved him in
difficult political transactions; at length,
completely worn out in body, but with a spirit intent
on his duties to the last, Collingwood died at sea, on
board the Ville de Paris, near Port Mahon, on the 7th
of March 1810.
Nelson had a greater affection
for lord Collingwood than for any other officer in the
service. In command he was firm, but mild, most
considerate of the comfort and health of his men: the
sailors called him father. He was a scientific seaman
and naval tactician; of strong enlightened mind,
considering the circumstances of his life; the
official letters and dispatches of this sailor, who
had been at sea from his child-hood, are admirable,
even in point of style; and his letters to his wife on
the education of his daughters are full of good sense
and feeling. The people of Newcastle, reasonably proud
of so excellent a fellow-townsman as Lord Collingwood,
have erected, by public subscription, a portrait
statue of him in their town, and one of its leading
streets bears his honoured name.
MOLLY
MOGG
On the 7th March 1766, died
Mrs. Mary Mogg, of the Rose Tavern, Wokingham, who had
been, forty years before, the subject of a droll
ballad by Gay,
in association (as is believed) with
Pope and Swift. This ballad almost immediately
found
its way into print, through the medium of Mist's
Journal of August 27, 1726, prefaced with a notice
stating that ' it was writ by two or three men of wit
(who have diverted the public both in prose and
verse), upon the occasion of their lying at a certain
inn at Wokingham where the daughter of that house was
remarkably pretty, and whose name is Molly Mogg.'
The schoolboy delights
in a play-day,
The schoolmaster's joy is to flog;
The milkmaid's delight is in May-day,
But mine is in sweet Molly Mogg.
Will-a-wisp leads the
traveller a-gadding,
Through ditch and through quagmire and bog;
No light can e'er set me a-padding,
But the eyes of my sweet Molly Mogg.
For guineas in other
men's breeches
Your gamesters will palm and will cog;
But I envy them none of their riches,
So I palm my sweet Molly Mogg.
The hart that's
half-wounded is ranging,
It here and there leaps like a frog;
But my heart can never be changing,
It's so fixed on my sweet Molly Mogg.
I know that by wits 'tis
recited,
That women at best are a clog;
But I'm not so easily frighted
From loving my sweet Molly Mogg.
A letter when I am
inditing,
Comes Cupid and gives me a jog;
And I fill all my paper with writing,
Of nothing but sweet Molly Mogg.
I feel I'm in love to
distraction,
My senses are lost in a fog;
And in nothing can find satisfaction,
But in thoughts of my sweet Molly Mogg,
If I would not give up
the three Graces,
I wish I were hanged like a dog,
And at court all the drawing-room faces,
For a glance at my sweet Molly Mogg.
For those faces want
nature and spirit,
And seem as cut out of a log;
Juno, Venus, and Pallas's merit
Unite in my sweet Molly Mogg.
Were Virgil alive with
his Phillis,
And writing another Eclogue,
Both his Phillis and fair Amaryllis
He'd give for my sweet Molly Mogg.
When she smiles on each
guest like her liquor,
Then jealousy sets me a-gog:
To be sure, she's a bit for the Vicar,
And so I shall lose Molly Mogg.
It appears that the
ballad�perhaps to the surprise of its
authors�attained instant popularity. Molly and the
Rose at Wokingham became matter of public interest,
and literary historians have not since disdained to
inquire into the origin of the verses. We learn that
Swift was at this time on a visit to Pope at
Twickenham, while preparing for the publication of his
Travels of Lemuel Gulliver; that Gay joined his two
brother bards, and that the tuneful trio were
occasionally at the Rose in the course of their
excursions that summer. The landlord, John Mogg, had
two fair daughters, Molly and Sally, of whom Sally was
in reality the cruel beauty referred to in the ballad;
but 'the wits were too far gone to distinguish, and so
the honour, if honour it be, has clung to Molly, who,
after all, died a spinster at the age of sixty-six.'
The inn had in these latter days its Pope's Room, and
its chair called Pope's Chair, and there was an
inscription on a pane of glass said to have been
written by Pope. The house, however, is now
transformed into a mercer's shop.
UNDER THE SNOW
It is a well-ascertained fact
that snow affords a comparatively warm garment in
intensely cold weather. This is difficult for
non-scientific persons to understand; but it is based
on the circumstance that snow, on account of its loose
flocculent nature, conducts heat slowly. Accordingly,
under this covering, exactly as under a thick woollen
garment, the natural heat of the body is not
dissipated rapidly, but retained.
Instances are abundant to shew
that snow really protects substances from cold of
great intensity. Farmers and gardeners well know this;
and, knowing it, they duly value a good honest fall of
snow on their fields and gardens in winter. There are
not the same tests to apply in reference to the human
body; nevertheless, the fact is equally undeniable.
The newspapers every winter record examples. Thus the
Yorkshire papers contained an account, in 1858, of a
snow storm at or near Market Weighton, in which a
woman had a remarkable experience of the value of a
snow garment. On the 7th of March she was overtaken by
the storm on the neighbouring moors, and was gradually
snowed up, being unable to move either forward or
backward. Thus she remained forty-three hours. Cold as
she of course was, the snow nevertheless prevented the
cold from assuming a benumbing tendency; and she was
able to the last to keep a breathing place about her
head. On the second day after, a man crossing the moor
saw a woman's bonnet on the snow; he soon found that
there was a living woman beneath the bonnet; and a
course of judicious treatment restored her to health.
The remarkable case of
Elizabeth Woodcock is still more striking. In the
winter of 1799 she was returning on horseback from
Cambridge to her home in a neighbouring village; and
having dismounted for a few minutes, the horse ran
away from her. At seven o'clock on a winter evening
she sat down under a thicket, cold, tired, and
disheartened. Snow came on; she was too weak to rise,
and the consequence was that by the morning the snow
had heaped up around her to a height of two feet above
her head as she sat. She had strength enough to thrust
a twig, with her handkerchief at the top of it,
through the snow, to serve as a signal, and to admit a
little daylight. Torpor supervened; and she knew
little more of what passed around her. Night succeeded
day, and day again broke, but there she remained,
motionless and foodless. Not senseless, however, for
she could hear church bells and village sounds�nay,
even the voice and conversation of some of her
neighbours.
Four whole days she thus
remained�one single pinch of snuff being her only
substitute for food during the time, and this, she
found to her sorrow, had lost its pungency. On the
fifth day a thaw commenced, and then she suffered
greatly, but still without being able to extricate
herself. It was not until the eighth day that the
handkerchief was espied by a villager, who, with many
others, had long been seeking for her. Stooping down
he said, 'Are you there, Elizabeth Woodcock?' She had
strength enough to reply faintly, 'Dear John Stittle,
I know your voice. For God's sake, help me out!' She
died half a year afterwards, through mismanagement of
frost-bitten toes; but it was fully admitted that no
one, unless cased in snow, could have lived out those
eight days and nights in such a place without food.
Similar in principle was the
incident narrated by Hearne, the antiquary, in
the
last century, in a letter addressed to Mr. Charry, of
Shottesbrooke. In the severe winter of 1708-9, a poor
woman, near Yeovil, in Somersetshire, having been to
Chard, to sell some of her homespun yarn, was
returning home, when, falling ill by the wayside, she
requested to be allowed to sit by the fire in a
cottage. This being unfeelingly refused, she lay down
under a hedge in the open air, being too weak to
proceed farther. Snow soon came on. A neighbour passed
by, and helped for a few minutes to guide her steps;
but her strength soon failed her, and he, in like
manner, left her to her fate. Once more laid
prostrate, she became gradually covered with the snow.
Day after day passed, for a whole week, during which
time her friends made search and inquiry for her in
every direction. The only person who could give
information was the man who had abandoned her, after
her failure in the attempt to walk; and he remained
silent, lest his conduct should bring reproaches on
him.
There then occurred one of
those strange sleep-revelations which, explain them
how we may, are continually reported as playing a part
in the economy of human life. A poor woman dreamed
that the missing person lay under a hedge in a
particular spot denoted. The neighbours, roused by the
narration she gave, sallied forth with sticks, which
they thrust through the snow in various places. One of
them thought he heard a groan; he thrust again in a
particular spot, when a feeble voice cried out, Oh,
for God's sake, don't kill me! 'The poor, imprisoned
wayfarer was taken out, to the astonishment of all.'
She was found,' says the writer of the letter, 'to
have taken great part of her upper garment for
sustenance; but how she could have digested a textile
fabric of wool or flax is not easy to understand. She
surprised her neighbours by the assertion that she had
lain very warm, and had slept most part of the time.
One of her legs lay just under a bush, and was not
quite covered with snow; this became in consequence
frost-bitten, but not too far for recovery. Her
spirits revived, and she was able shortly to resume
her ordinary duties.'
In these two last-named
instances the person was a full week under the snow
blanket; and the covering evidently prevented the
natural warmth of the body from being abstracted to so
great a degree as to be fatal.
March 8th
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