Born: Adam von Bartsch,
engraver, 1757, Vienna; Princess Amelia, daughter of
George III of England, 1783; John Ayrton Paris,
distinguished physician, 1785, Cambridge.
Died: Leonidas, Spartan
hero, slain at Thermoplae, 480
B.C.; Herod Agrippa,
persecutor of the Apostles, 44 A.D., Caesarea; Henry
VI the Great, Emperor of Germany, 1106, Liege;
Caroline of Brunswick, consort of George IV 1821,
Hammersmith.
Feast Day: St. Donatus,
bishop of Arezzo, in Tuscany, martyr, 361. St. Cajetan
of Thienna, confessor, 1547.
QUEEN CAROLINE
On the 7th of August 1821,
expired the ill-starred Caroline of Brunswick,
stricken down, as was generally alleged, by vexation
at being refused admission to Westminster Abbey in the
previous month of July, when she desired to
participate in the coronation ceremonies of her
consort George IV. The immediate cause, however, was
an illness by which she was suddenly attacked at Drury
Lane Theatre, and which ran its course in the space of
a few days.
The marriage of the Prince of
Wales with his cousin Caroline Amelia Elizabeth,
daughter of the Duke of Brunswick, was essentially one
of those unions in which political motives form the
leading element, to the almost entire exclusion of
personal affection and regard. By his reckless
prodigality and mismanagement, he had contracted debts
to the amount nearly of �650,000, after having had
only a few years before obtained a large parliamentary
rant for the discharge of his obligations. His father,
George III, who was determined that he should
contract this alliance, had engaged that, on his
complying with this requisition, another application
would be made to the Commons, and a release effected
for him out of his difficulties. The prince, thus
beset, agreed to complete the match, though he used
frequently to intimate his scorn of all mariages de
conv�nance.
A more serious impediment, such as in the
case of an ordinary individual, would have acted as an
effectual bar to the nuptials, existed in the union
which, a few years before, he had contracted with
Mrs. Fitzherbert, a Roman Catholic
lady, but which the
Royal Marriage Act rendered in his case nugatory. This
circumstance in his history was long a matter of
doubt, but is now known to be a certainty. With such
antecedents, it is easy to understand how his new
matrimonial connection would be productive of anything
but happiness.
Caroline herself is said to
have unwillingly consented to the match, her
affections being already engaged to another, but is
reported to have expressed an enthusiastic admiration
of the personal graces and generous qualities of her
cousin. Her portrait had been forwarded to him, and
he showed it to one of his friends, asking him at the
same time what he thought of it. The answer was that
it gave the idea of a very handsome woman. Some joking
then followed about 'buyin a pig in a poke;' but,
observed the prince, 'Lennox and Fitzroy have seen
her, and they tell me she is even handsomer than her
miniature.'
The newspapers lauded her charms to the
skies, descanting on the elegance of her figure, style
of dress, her intelligent eyes and light auburn hair,
and the blended gentleness and majesty by which her demeanour was characterised.
They also extolled her
performance on the harpsichord, and remarked that, as
the prince was passionately fond of music, the harmony
of the pair was insured. Great talk was made of the
magnificent dressing-room fitted up for the young
bride at a cost of twenty-five thousand pounds, and of
a magnificent cap, presented by the bridegroom,
adorned with a plume in imitation of his own crest,
studded with brilliants. Her journey from her father's
court to England was beset by many ill-omened delays
and mischances, and not less than three months were
consumed from various causes on the route. On the noon
of Sunday, the 5th of April 1795, she landed at
Greenwich, after a tempestuous voyage from Cuxhaven.
An enthusiastic ovation attended her progress to
London, where she was conducted in triumph to St.
James's Palace, and received by the Prince of Wales.
On his first introduction to her, his
nerves are reported to have received as great a shock
as Henry VIII experienced on meeting Anne of Cleves,
and according to a well-known anecdote, he turned
round to a friend, and whispered a request for a glass
of brandy. Outwardly, however, he manifested the most
complete satisfaction, and the rest of the royal
family having arrived to pay their respects, a
domestic party, such as George III delighted in, was
formed, and protracted till midnight. Three days
afterwards, on the 8th of April, the marriage took
place, evidently to the immense gratification of the
king, who ever testified the utmost respect for his
daughter-in-law, and acted through life her guardian
and champion.
But this blink of sunshine was
destined to be sadly evanescent. The honeymoon was
scarcely over ere rumours began to be circulated of
disagreements between the Prince and Princess of
Wales, and at the end of a twelvemonth, a formal and
lasting separation took place. One daughter had been
born of the marriage, the Princess Charlotte, whose
untimely end, twenty-two years afterwards, has
invested her memory with so melancholy an interest.
The circumstances attending the disunion of her
parents have never been thoroughly explained, and by
many the blame has been laid exclusively on the
shoulders of her husband. That he was ill fitted for
enjoying or preserving the felicities of domestic
life, is indisputable; but there can now be no doubt,
however much party zeal may have denied or extenuated
the fact, that Caroline was a woman of such coarseness
of mind, and such vulgarity of tastes, as would have
disgusted many men of less refinement than the Prince
of Wales. Her personal habits were even filthy, and of
this well-authenticated stories are related, which
dispose us to regard with a more lenient eye the
aversion, and in many respects indefensible conduct,
of her husband. His declaration on the subject was,
after all, a gentle one: 'Nature has not made us
suitable to each other.'
Through all her trials, her
father-in-law proved a powerful and constant friend,
but her own levity and want of circumspection involved
her in meshes from which she did not extricate herself
with much credit. On quitting her husband's abode at
Carlton House, she retired to the village of Charlton,
near Blackheath, where she continued for many years.
Here her imprudence in adopting the child of one of
the labourers in the Deptford dockyard, gave rise to
many injurious suspicions, and occasioned the issue of
a royal commission, obtained at the instance of the
prince, for the investigation of her conduct in regard
to this and other matters. The results of this inquiry
were to clear her from the imputation of any
flagitious conduct; but the commissioners who
conducted it, passed a censure in their report on the
'carelessness of appearances' and ' levity' of the
Princess of Wales. On being thus absolved from the
serious charges brought against her, the paternal
kindness of George III was redoubled, and he assigned
her apartments in Kensington Palace, and directed that
at court she should be received with marked attention.
With old Queen Charlotte, however, who is said to have
been thwarted from the first in the project of wedding
her son to Princess Louisa of Mecklenburg, afterwards
the amiable and unfortunate queen of Prussia,
Caroline never lived on cordial terms.
In 1814, the Princess of Wales
quitted England for the continent, where she continued
for six years, residing chiefly in Italy. Her return
from thence in 1820, on hearing of the accession of
her husband to the throne, and the omission of her
name from the liturgy of the English Church, with her
celebrated trial on the charge of an adulterous
intercourse with her courier or valet de place,
Bartolomo Bergami, are matters of history. The
question of her innocence or guilt is still a disputed
point, and will probably ever remain so. She was
certainly, in many respects, an ill-used woman, but
that the misforttmes and obloquy which she underwent
were in a great measure traceable to her own imprudent
conduct and want of womanly delicacy, there can also
exist no reasonable doubt.
In considering the history of
Queen Caroline, an impressive lesson is gained
regarding the evils attending ill-assorted marriages,
and more especially those contracted from motives of
state policy, where all questions of suitability on
the ground of love and affection are ignored. As a
necessary result of such a system, royal marriages
have been rarely productive of domestic happiness. It
is satisfactory, however, to reflect that in the case
of our beloved sovereign, Queen Victoria and her
family, a different procedure has been followed, and
the distinct and immutable laws of God, indicated by
the voice of nature, accepted as the true guides in
the formation of the nuptial tie. The legitimate
consequence has been, the exhibition of an amount of
domestic purity and happiness on the part of the royal
family of Great Britain which leaves nothing to be
desired. Whilst we write, the marriage festivities of
England's future king are being celebrated through the
length and breadth of the land. Long may our young
Prince, with the partner of his choice, enjoy that
true happiness and serenity which can only spring from
the union of two loving and virtuous hearts!
THE
FENMEM
The Fenmen, or inhabitants of
the Fens lying along the east coast of England, were
notorious for their obstinate opposition to all
schemes of drainage. The earliest inhabitants would
break down embankments, because the exclusion of the
water damaged their fishing; and the more enlightened
landowners of later days invariably dreaded trouble,
and change, and risk of expense, more than annual
destruction of property. The fact affords a curious
illustration of that indolent spirit, apparently
inherent in human nature, which clings, at any cost,
to what is familiar.
In one of those schemes for
improving matters, which were set on foot from time to
time, so far back as the time of the Romans, and which
usually assumed considerable importance whenever a
more destructive flood than ordinary had produced more
than ordinary complaints, we find James I writing
from Theobald's, and urging the undertakers of the
work to do their utmost; describing the cause as one
in which he himself was much interested, and enjoining
them, among other things, to inform him of 'any
mutinous speeches which might be raised concerning
this business, so generally intended for the public
good.' In any attempt of this kind, it seems, a fair
amount of opposition was of course anticipated.
On this occasion the
undertakers, four in number, began operations on the
7th of August 1605, with so important a person as Sir
John Popham, Lord. Chief-Justice, as one of the four;
yet, although the scheme was carefully organised, and
regularly arranged with the proper commissioners, the
Fenmen, after all, brought it to nothing.
The
undertakers engaged to drain 307,242 acres, in seven
years, and to accept in payment 130,000 acres, 'to be
taken out of the worst sort of every particular fen proportionably.' The
prospect of so handsome a reward
was too much for the Fenmen; and so many grievances
did they make out, so many objections had they to
raise to the scheme, that a commission of inquiry had
to be appointed. This commission decided against them;
declaring, amongst other plain truths, that 'whereas
an objection had been made of much prejudice that
might redound to the poor by such draining, they had
information by persons of good credit, that in several
places of recovered grounds, within the Isle of Ely,
&c., such as before that time had lived upon alms,
having no help but by fishing and fowling, and such
poor means, out of the common fens while they lay
drowned, were since come to good and supportable
estates.' Yet, although the king had taken up the
scheme, and the good of it was self-evident, the plan
duly laid, and the operations even commenced, the work
had to be discontinued; chiefly because of 'the
opposition which divers perverse-spirited people made
thereto, by bringing turbulent suits in law, as well
against the commissioners as those whom they employed
therein, and making of libellous songs to disparage
the work.'
This instance of the Fenmen's
stupid opposition was not peculiar: the following
song, which went under the title of
The Powte's
Complaint, will afford a specimen of the 'libellous'
effusions above alluded to:
'Come, brethren of the water,
and let us all assemble,
To treat upon this matter, which makes us quake and
tremble;
For we shall rue it, if 't be true, that the Fens be
undertaken,
And where we feed in Fen and reed, they'll feed both
beef and bacon.
They'll sow both beans and
oats, where never man yet thought it,
Where men did row in boats, ere undertakers bought
it:
But Ceres, thou behold us now, let wild-oats be
their venture,
Oh let the frogs and miry bogs destroy where they do
enter!
Away with boats and rudders;
farewell both boots and skatches,
No need of one nor th' other, men now make better
matches;
Stilt-makers all and tanners shall complain of this
disaster
For they will make each muddy lake for Essex calves
a pasture.
Wherefore let us entreat our
ancient winter nurses,
To shew their power so great as t' help to drain
their purses;
And send us good old Captain Flood to lead us out to
battle,
Then Twopenny Jack, with skales on's back, will
drive out all the cattle.
This noble captain yet was
never known to fail us,
But did the conquest get of all that did assail us;
His furious rage who could assuage? but, to the
world's great wonder,
He bears down banks, and breaks their cranks and
whirlygigs asunder.
Great Neptune (god of
seas!), this work must need provoke thee,
They mean thee to disease, and with fen-water choke
thee:
But with thy mace do thou deface and quite confound
this matter,
And send thy sands to make dry lands, when they
shall want fresh water.
GENERAL
PUTNAM'S TREATMENT OF A SPY
In the course of the
transactions of the second year of the American war of
independence, General Putnam caught a man lurking
about his post at Peekskill, on the Hudson. A flag of
truce came from Sir Henry Clinton, claiming the
prisoner as a lieutenant in the British service. The
answer of the old general was equally brief, and to
the point:
'HEAD-QUARTERS, 7th August
1777.
'Edmund Palmer, an officer
in the enemy's service, was taken as a spy lurking
within our lines. He has been tried as a spy,
condemned as a spy, and shall be executed as a spy;
and the flag is ordered to depart immediately.
ISRAEL PUTNAM. '
P. S.�He has, accordingly,
been executed.'
Diction somewhat similar to
this regarding the treatment of an offender in
Scotland fifty years earlier, is on record. It
proceeded from the Earl of Islay, who ruled Scotland
for Sir Robert Walpole, in the reign of George II,
and was, amongst other things, an extraordinary lord
of session:
'EDINBURGH, February 28,
1728.
'I, Archibald, Earl of Islay,
do hereby prorogate and continue the life of John
Ruddell, writer in Edinburgh, to the term of
Whitsunday next, and no longer, by . ISLAY, I.P.D.'
The letters following the
signature mean, 'In presentia Dominorum,' in the
presence of the Lords; i. e., the judges of the
criminal court over which Islay presided; so that we
must presume this trenchant rescript to have been
produced in sufficiently dignified circumstances.
LADY CLERK'S
DREAM-STORY
Lady Clerk, of Penicuick, ne�
Mary Dacre, who spent a long widowhood in Edinburgh
where some little singularities of dress made her
extremely well known, used to relate (and ultimately
communicated to Blackwood's Magazine) a dream-story,
of the general truth of which she was well assured. It
represented her father, a Cumberland gentleman, as
attending classes in Edinburgh about the year 1731,
and residing under the care of an uncle, Major
Griffiths, of the regiment then stationed in the
castle. The young man, who was accustomed to take
rambles with some companions, announced to his uncle
and aunt one night, that he and his friends had agreed
to join a fishing party, which was to go out in a boat
from Leith the next morning at six o'clock. No
objection being made, they separated for the night;
but during her sleep Mrs. Griffiths screamed out: 'The
boat is sinking; save, oh save them!'
To pursue Lady Clerk's
relation: 'The major awaked her, and said, "Were you
uneasy about the fishing-party?" "Oh, no," she said,
"I had not once thought of them." She then composed
herself, and soon fell asleep again; in about another
hour, she cried out, in a dreadful fright: "I see the
boat is going down! "The major again awoke her, and
she said: "It has been owing to the other dream I had;
for I feel no uneasiness about it." After some
conversation, they both fell sound asleep; but no rest
could be obtained for her; in the most extreme agony,
she again exclaimed: "They are gone�the boat is sunk
I" When the major awaked her, she said: "Now I cannot
rest: Mr. Dacre must not go, for I feel, should he go,
I would be miserable till his return; the thoughts of
it would almost kill me."' In short, on the strength
of this dream, Mrs. Griffiths induced her nephew to
send a note of apology to his companions, who, going
out, were caught in a sudden storm, and perished.
Unlike many stories of the
same kind, this one can be traced to an actual
occurrence, which was duly chronicled in the brief
records of the time. On the 7th of August 1734 (Lady
Clerk's suggested date being three years too early),
five men of respectable positions in life, including
Patrick Cuming, a merchant, and Colin Campbell, a
shipmaster, accompanied by two boys, one of whom was
'John Cleland, a nephew of Captain Campbell's,' went
out in a boat with two sailors, to fish in the Firth
of Forth. All was well till eleven o'clock, when a
squall came on from the south-west, and they were
forced to run for Prestonpans. On their way, Captain
Campbell, observing a fan coming on, called to a
sailor to loose the sail; but the man failed to acquit
himself rightly, and the boat went over on its side.
The party clung to it for a while, but one after
another fell off, or sunk in trying to swim to land,
all except Captain Campbell, who was taken up by a
boat, and brought ashore nearly dead with fatigue,
after being five hours in the water.
THE WELSH MAN'S
INVENTORY
In
one of the miscellaneous collections of the British
Museum Library, there is a quaint old broadside,
adorned with a coarse wood-cut, designed to burlesque
the goods and chattels of a Welsh gentleman or yeoman,
at the same time raising mirth at his style of
language and pronunciation. It is remarkable how
strong a resemblance the whole bears to the jeux
d'esprit indulged in by the Lowland Scots at the
expense of the simple mountaineers of the north, who
are a people kindred to the Welsh. The Infentory and
its quaint vignette are here reproduced:
-
Han Infentory of the Couds
of William Morgan, ap Ronald, ap Hugh, ap Richard,
ap Thomas, ap Evan, ap Rice, in the county of
Glamorgan, Shentleman.
-
Imprimis, in the Pantry of
Poultry (for hur own eating).�One treat pig four
week old, one coose, two black-puddings, three
cow-foot.
-
Item, in the Pantry of
Plate�One cridiron, one fripan, one tripan, three
wooden ladle, three cann.
-
Item, in the Napery�Two
towel, two table-cloath, four napkin, one for
hurself, one for hur wife Shone, two for cusen ap
Powell, and Thomas ap Hugh, when was come to hur
house.
-
Item, in the Wardrope�One
Irish rugg, one frize shirkin, one sheep-skin tublet,
two Irish stocking, two shooe, six leather point.
-
Item, in the Tary�One
toasting shees, three oaten-cake, three pint of
cow-milk, one pound cow-putter.
-
Item, in the Kitchen One
pan with white curd, two white pot, two red herring,
nine sprat.
-
Item, in the Cellar�One
firkin of wiggan, two gallon sower sider, one pint
of perry, one little pottle of Carmarden sack, alias
Metheglin.
-
Item, in the Armory of
Weapon to kill hur enemy�One pack-sword, two-edge,
two Welsh-hook, three long club, one cun, one
mouse-trap.
-
Item, in the Carden�One ped
carlike, nine onion, twelve leek, twelve worm, six
frog.
-
Item, in the Leas-way�Two
tun cow, one mountain calf.
-
THE WELSH MAN'S INVENTORY.
AUGUST 8. GEORGE CANNING.
-
Item, in the
Common-Field�Two Welsh nag, twelve long-leg'd sheep,
fourteen and twenty coat.
-
Item, in the Proom-close�Three
robin-run-hole, four hare: hur own coods, if you can
catch hur.
-
Item, in the Pamn�One half
heblet of oate, seven pea, two pean.
-
Item, in the Study (hur was
almost forgot hum!)�One Welsh Pible, two almanac,
one Erra Pater, one Seven Champions, for St. Taffy
sake, twelve pallat, one pedigree.
-
Item, in the Closet�Two
straw-hat, one pouse. Item, more Cattle apout the
house�Two tog, three cat, twelve mouse (hur was eat
hur toast cheese), 1000 white flea with plack pack.
-
Item, more Lumber about the
house�One wife, two shild, one call hur plack Shack,
and t'other little Morgan.
-
Item, in the Yard, under
the wall�One wheel, two pucket, one ladder, two
rope.
This Infentory taken Note in
the Presence of hur own Cusen Rowland Merideth ap
Howel, and Lewellin Morgan ap William, in 1749, upon
the Ten and Thirtieth of Shun.
The above-named William Morgan
dyed when hur had threescore-and-twenty years,
thirteen months, one week, and seven days.
A Note of some Legacy of a
treat deal of Goods bequeathed to hur Wife and hur two
Shad, and all hur Cusens, and Friends, and Kindred, in
manner as followeth:
Imprimis�Was to give hur teer
wife, Shone Morgan, all the coeds in the ped-room.
-
Item�Was to give hur eldest
sun, Flack Shack, 40 and 12 card to play at Whipper-shinny,
4 ty to shoat hur cusen; beside awl hur land to the
full value of 20 and 10 shillings 3 groats per
annum.
-
Item�Was to give to hur
second sun, little Morgan ap Morgan, hur short
ladder under the wall in the yard, and two rope.
-
Item�Was to give to hur
Cusen Rowland Merideth ap Howell and Lewellin
Morgan, whom was made hur executor, full power to
pay awl hur tets, when hur can get money.
Dealed and deilveed in the
presence of Eban ap Richard ap Shinkin ap Shone hur
Cusen the day and year above written
London: Licensed, entered,
printed, &c.' W.E.