April 12th
Born: Edward
Bird, eminent 'genre' painter, 1772, Wolverhampton;
Henry Clay, American statesman, 1777; Jolla George,
Earl of Durham, statesman, 1792, Durham.
Died: Seneca,
Roman philosopher, ordered to death by Nero, 65, Rome;
Jacques-Benique Bossuet, Bishop of Condom, orator,
philosopher, and historian, 1704, Meaux; Dr. George
Cheyne, eminent physician, 1742, Bath; William Kent,
painter, sculptor, and architect, 1748, Burlington
House, Chiswick; Pietro Metastasio, Italian poet,
1782, Vienna; Dr. Edward Young, poet, 1765, Welwyn.
Feast day: St.
Victor, of Braga, martyr. St. Julius, Pope, 352. St.
Sabas, the Goth, martyr, 372. St. Zeno, bishop of
Verona, 380.
LUCIUS ANN�US
SENECA
Lucius Ann�us Seneca,
the Roman philosopher, was born B.C. 6. His life may
be considered as an ineffectual protest against the
corruption of his time. At length the tyranny and
excesses of the emperors were indulged in unchecked,
where only a few opposed what the majority were not
sorry to reap the fruits of.
Seneca was educated
in all that was to be learned, and became a pleader at
the bar. This vocation he had to abandon through the
jealousy of Caligula, who deemed himself an able
orator. Nevertheless, the emperor took occasion to
banish him to Corsica; where he remained, till
recalled by Agrippina to educate her son Nero. After
being Nero's tutor, he became his minister, and
endeavoured to restrain his excesses. Suspecting
danger, he asked to be allowed to surrender to his
master all his wealth, and to go into studious
retirement. But the tyrant refused this request; and
taking hold of the first pretext, ordered him to put
an end to himself. This he did like a philosopher,
before his wife and friends. First his veins were
opened. Then he took a draught of poison. But still
dying slowly, he was put into a warm bath; and at
last, it is said, suffocated in a stove.
His manner of life
was abstemious and noble. His philosophy was somewhat
eclectic � a fusion of all the existing systems,
though the stoical predominated. His style was
somewhat florid and ostentatious, yet both the style
and the philosophy are frequently admirable, and often
filled with such a spirit as we are apt to think
Christianity alone has inculcated.
We subjoin, in
illustration, an extract from his essay On Anger,
which is a fair specimen of this spirit:
'Verily, what
reason is there for hating those who fall into the
hands of the law? or into sins of any kind? It is
not the mark of a wise man to hate those that err:
indeed, if he does, he himself should hate himself.
Let him think how much of what he does is base, how
many of his actions call for pardon. Will he hate
himself then? Yet a just judge does not give one
decision in his own case, another in a stranger's.
No one is found who can absolve himself. Whoever
says he is innocent, looks at the proof rather than
his conscience. How much more human is it to shew a
mild, kind spirit to those who do wrong; not to
drive them headlong, but to draw them back! If a man
wander out of his path through ignorance of the
country, it is better to set him right again, than
to urge him on further.' (Seneca, De Ira, i. 14.)
DR. GEORGE CHEYNE
Dr. George Cheyne, a
physician of considerable eminence in his day, was
born in Aberdeenshire, and educated at Edinburgh under
the celebrated Doctor Pitcairne. After a youth passed
in severe study and prudent abstinence, Cheyne came to
London, with the determination of entering on
practice. On his first arrival, being a stranger, and
having to make friends, he was compelled to conform to
the general style of life, which was to be described
as free. The consequence of the sudden change from
abstemiousness to epicurean indulgence, was, that
Cheyne increased daily in bulk, swelling to such an
enormous size, that he weighed no less than thirty-two
stones; and was compelled to have the whole side of
his carriage made open to receive him.
With this
increase of size came its natural concomitants,
shortness of breath, habitual lethargy, and a crowd of
nervous and scorbutic symptoms. In this deplorable
condition, having vainly exhausted the powers of
medicine, he determined to try a milk and vegetable
diet, the good effects of which speedily appeared. His
size was reduced almost to a third; and he recovered
his strength, activity, and cheerfulness, with the
perfect use of all his faculties.
And by a regular
adherence to a milk and vegetable regimen, he lived to
a good age, dying at Bath in his seventy-second year.
He wrote several works that were well received by the
medical and scientific world, two of which�An Essay
on, Health and Long Life, and The English Malady, or a
Treatise of Nervous Diseases, �contained the results
of his own experience, and, as may be supposed, met
with considerable ridicule from the free-living
doctors and critics of the day. On the publication of
the first work, W inter, a well-known physician of the
period, addressed the following epigram to Cheyne:
Tell me from whom,
fat-headed Scot,
Thou didst thy system learn;
From Hippocrate thou
hadst it not,
Nor Celsus, nor Pitcairne.
Suppose we own that
milk is good,
And say the same of
grass;
The one for babes is only food,
The other for an ass.
Doctor! one new
prescription try,
(A friend's advice
forgive;)
Eat grass, reduce
thyself, and die,
Thy patients then may
live.'
To which Cheyne made
the following reply:
My system, doctor, is
my own,
No tutor I pretend;
My blunders hurt
myself alone,
But yours your dearest friend.
Were you to milk and
straw confined,
Thrice happy might you be;
Perhaps you might
regain your mind,
And from your wit get free.
I can't your kind
prescription try,
But heartily forgive;
'Tis natural you
should wish me die,
That you yourself may live.'
KENT AND
HIS ST. CLEMENT'S ALTAR-PIECE
William Kent was a
distinguished mediocrity in a mediocre time. The
favour of the Earl of Burlington and some other men of
rank, enabled him, without genius or acquired skill,
to realize good returns, first for pictures,
afterwards as an architect. It is fully admitted that
he was deficient in all the qualities of the artist,
that his portraits were without likeness, his ceilings
and staircases coarse caricatures of Olympus�that he
was, in short, wholly a bad artist. And yet, in a
worldly point of view, Kent, to the discredit of the
age, was anything but a failure.
Amongst a few
pictures which Kent had interest to get bought and
introduced into London churches, was one which the
vestry of St. Clement's in the Strand�Johnson's
church�had unhappily placed above their
communion-table. It was such a muddle, in point of
both design and execution, that nobody could pretend
to say what was the meaning of it. The wags, at length
getting scent of it, began to lay bets as to what it
was all about; some professing to believe one thing
and some another. The Bishop of London became so
scandalised at what was going on, that�probably
feeling as much bewildered as anybody�he ordered the
picture to be taken down.
Then came in
Wag-in-chief,
William Hogarth, professing to clear up
the mystery, or at least to solve several dubious
points in it, by an engraving representing the
picture; which engraving being placed under
the piece, might, he said, enable the vestry to
restore it to its place, and so save 'the sixty
pounds which they wisely gave for it.' On this
engraving he had letters with references below for
explanation. Thus, said he, No. 1 is not the
Pretender's wife and children, as our weak brethren
imagine. No. 2 is not St. Cecilia,
as the connoisseurs
think, but a choir of angels playing in concert.' The
other explanations betray the fine secretive humour of
Hogarth: 'A, an organ; B, an angel playing on it. C,
the shortest joint of the arm; D, the longest joint.
E, an angel tuning a harp; F, the inside of his leg,
but whether right or left is not yet discovered. G, a
hand playing on a lute; II, the other leg, judiciously
omitted to make room for the harp. J and K, smaller
angels, as appears from their wings.'
Kent must have
writhed under this play upon his precious work; but
the sixty pounds secured in his pocket would doubtless
be a sort of consolation.
YOUNG'S NARCISSA
The 'Third Night' of
Young's Complaint is entitled 'Narcissa,' from its
being dedicated to the sad history of the early death
of a beautiful lady, thus poetically designated by the
author. Whatever doubts may exist with respect to the
reality or personal identity of the other characters
noticed in the Night Thoughts, there can be none
whatever as regards Narcissa. She was the daughter of
Young's wife by her first husband, Colonel Lee. When
scarcely seventeen years of age, she was married to
Mr. Henry Temple, son of the then Lord Palmerston.
Soon afterwards being attacked by consumption, she was
taken by Young to the south of France in hopes of a
change for the better; but she died there about a year
after her marriage, and Dr. Johnson, in his Lives of
the Poets, tells us that 'her funeral was attended
with the difficulties painted in such animated colours
in Night the Third.' Young's words in relation to the
burial of Narcissa, eliminating, for brevity's sake,
some extraneous and redundant lines, are as follows:
While nature melted,
superstition raved;
That mourned the
dead; and this denied a grave.
For oh! the curst
ungodliness of zeal!
While sinful flesh
relented, spirit nursed
In blind
infallibility's embrace,
Denied the charity of
dust to spread
O'er dust! a charity
their dogs enjoy.
What could I do? What
succour? What resource?
With pious sacrilege
a grave I stole;
With impious piety
that grave I wronged;
Short in my duty; coward in my
grief!
More like her
murderer than friend,
I crept With soft suspended
step, and muffled deep
In midnight darkness,
whispered my last sigh.
I whispered what
should echo through their realms,
Nor writ her name,
whose tomb should pierce the skies.'
All Young's
biographers have told the same story, from Johnson
down to the last edition of the Night Thoughts, edited
by Mr. Gilfillan, who, speaking of Narcissa, says,
'her remains were brutally denied sepulture as the
dust of a Protestant.'
Le Tourneur
translated the Night Thoughts into French about 1770,
and, strange to say, the work soon became exceedingly
popular in France, more so probably than ever it has
been in England. Naturally enough, then, curiosity
became excited with respect to where the unfortunate Narcissa was buried, and it
was soon discovered that
she had been interred in the Botanic Garden of
Montpellier. An old gatekeeper of the garden, named
Mercier, confessed that many years previously he had
assisted to bury an lean lady in a hollow, waste spot
of the garden. As he told the story, an English
clergyman came to him and begged that he would bury a
lady; but he refused, until the Englishman, with tears
in his eyes, said that she was his only daughter; on
hearing this, he (the gate-keeper), being a father
himself, consented.
Accordingly, the Englishman
brought the dead body on his shoulders, his eyes
'raining' tears, to the garden at midnight, and he
there and then buried the corpse. The dismal scene has
been painted by a French artist of celebrity; and
there cannot be many persons who have not seen the
engravings from that picture, which are sold as
souvenirs of Montpellier. About the time this
confession was made, Professor Gouan, an eminent
botanist, was writing a work on the plants in the
garden, into which he introduced the above story, thus
giving it a sort of scientific authority; and
consequently the grave of Narcissa became one of the
treasures of the garden, and one of the leading lions
of Montpellier.
A writer in the Evangelical Magazine
of 1797 gives an account of a visit to the garden, and
a conversation with one Bannal, who had succeeded
Mercier in his office, and who had often beard the sad
story of the burial of Narcissa from Mercier's lips.
Subsequently,
Talma, the tragedian, was so profoundly
impressed with the story, that he commenced a
subscription to erect a magnificent tomb to the memory
of the unfortunate Narcissa; but as the days of
bigotry in matters of sepulture had nearly passed
away, it was thought better to erect a simple
monument, inscribed, as we learn from Murray's
Handbook, with the words:
PLACANDIS NARCISSAE
MANIBUS
The Handbook adding,
'She was buried here at a time when the atrocious
laws which accompanied the
Revocation of Nantes,
backed by the superstition of a fanatic populace,
denied Christian burial to Protestants.'
Strange to say, this
striking story is almost wholly devoid of truth.
Narcissa never was at Montpellier; she died and was
buried at Lyons. That she died at Lyons, we know from
Mr. Herbert Crofts's account of Young, published
by Dr
Johnson; that she was buried there, we know by her
burial registry and her tombstone, both of which are
yet in existence. And by these we also learn that
Young's 'animated' account of her funeral in the Night
Thoughts is simply untrue. She was not denied a grave:
'Denied the
charity of dust to spread O'er dust;'
nor did he steal a
grave, as he asserts, but bought and paid for it. Her
name was not left unwrit, as her tombstone still
testifies.
The central square of
the Hotel de Dieu at Lyons was long used as a
burial-place for Protestants; but the alteration in
the laws at the time of the great Revolution doing
away with. the necessity of having separate
burial-places for different religions, the central
square was converted into a medical garden for the use
of the hospital. The Protestants of Lyons being of the
poorer class, there were few memorials to remove when
the ancient burying-ground was made into a garden. The
principal one, however, consisting of a large slab of
black marble, was set up against a wall, close by an
old Spanish mulberry-tree. About twenty years ago, the
increasing growth of this tree necessitated the
removal of the marble slab, when it was found that the
side that had been placed against the wall contained a
Latin inscription to the memory of Narcissa. The
inscription, which is too long to be quoted here,
leaves no doubt upon the matter. It mentions the names
of her father and mother, her connexion with the noble
family of Lichfield, her descent from Charles II, and
the name of her husband, and concludes by stating that
she died on the 8th of October 1736, aged eighteen
years.
On discovering this
inscription, M. Ozanam, the director of the Hotel de
Dieu, searched the registry of Protestant burial,
still preserved in the Hotel de Ville of Lyons, and
found an entry, of which the following is a correct
translation:
'Madam Elizabeth Lee,
daughter of Colonel Lee, aged about eighteen years,
wife of Henry Temple, English by birth, was buried at
the Hotel de Dieu at Lyons, in the cemetery of
per-sons of the Reformed religion of the Swiss nation,
the 12
th of October 1736, at eleven o'clock at
night,
by order of the Prevot of the merchants. Received 729
livres, 12 sols.
Signed, Para,
Priest and Treasurer.'
From this document,
the authenticity of which is indisputable, we learn
the utter untruthfulness of Young's recital. True,
Narcissa was buried at night, and most probably
without any religious service, and a considerable sum
charged for the privilege of interment, but she was
not denied the 'charity their dogs enjoy.'
Calculating according to the average rate of exchange
at the period, 729 livres would amount to thirty-five
pounds sterling. Was it this sum that excited a
poetical indignation so strong as to overstep the
bounds of veracity? We could grant the excuse of
poetical licence, had not Young declared in his
preface that the poem 'was real, not fictitious.' The
subject is not a pleasing one, and we need not carry
it any further; but may conclude in the words of Mr.
Cecil, who, alluding to Young's renunciation of the
world in his writings, when he was eagerly hunting for
church preferment, says: ' Young is, of all other men,
one of the most striking examples of the sad disunion
of piety from truth.'
RODNEY'S NAVAL VICTORY
The victory achieved
by Admiral Rodney over the French fleet in the West
Indies, on the 12th of April 1782, was brilliant in
itself, but chiefly remarkable for the service which
it rendered to Britain at a critical time. The English
military force had been baffled in America; France,
Spain, and Holland were assailing her in the weakness
to which her contest with the colonies had reduced
her; the very coasts of Britain were insulted by the
cruisers of her many enemies. There was at the best
before her a humiliating peace. Rodney's victory came
to hold up her drooping head, and enable her to come
respectably out of the war.
The French fleet,
consisting of thirty vessels, under Count de Grasse,
was placed at Martinique. It designed to make a
junction with the Spanish fleet, that the two might
fall with full force upon Jamaica. It became of the
first importance for the British fleet under Sir
George Rodney to prevent this junction. With a
somewhat greater number of vessels, but less aggregate
weight of metal, he followed the French for three or
four days, fighting a partial and inconclusive action
on the 9th of April; finally bringing it to a general
action on the morning of the 12th, in a basin of water
bounded by the islands of Guadaloupe, Dominique,
Saintes, and Marigalante.
The battle began at
seven in the morning, and consisted throughout the day
of a close hand-to-hand fight, in which the English
ships poured destruction upon the largely manned
vessels of the enemy. A little after noon, the English
admiral made a movement of a novel character; with
four vessels he broke through the enemy's line near
the centre, and doubled back upon it, thus assailing
it on both sides, and throwing all into confusion.
The French admiral's
vessel, the Ville de Paris, was a superb one of 110
guns, a present from the French capital to Louis XV at
the close of the preceding war. An English 74, the
Canada, grappled with it, and in a two-hours' combat
reduced it nearly to a wreck. It finally surrendered
to Sir Samuel Hood,
commander of the English van, when only two men
besides the admiral were left unhurt. The whole affair
was a series of hand-to-hand conflicts, in which the
English displayed all their characteristic audacity
and perseverance. When evening came with the
abruptness peculiar to the tropical regions, the
French obtained some advantage from it, as it
permitted some of their vessels to escape. Seven,
however, remained in the hands of the victors. The
killed and wounded on that side reached the astounding
amount of nine thousand, while that of the English was
under one thousand. Rodney also had the glory of
carrying the French commander as his prisoner to
London.
The British nation,
on receiving intelligence of this great victory, broke
out in a tumult of joy which had scarcely had a
precedent since the acquittal of the seven bishops.
Rodney, who previously had been in rather depressed
personal circumstances, was made a peer, and
pensioned.
April 13th
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