Born: Dr. John Dee,
astrologer and mathematician, 1527, London; Zachary
Ursinus, celebrated German divine, 1534, Breslau; Dr.
Robert Hooke, natural philosopher, 1635, Freshwater,
Isle of Wight; Saverio Bettinelli, Italian author,
1718, Mantua; Gilbert White, naturalist, 1720,
Selborne.
Died: Pope John XVIII,
1009; Godfrey of Bouillon, king of Jerusalem, 1100;
Francesco Petrarca (Petrarch), great Italian poet and
sonneteer, 1374, Arqua, near Padua; Abraham Sharp,
mechanist and calculator, 1742, Little Horton,
Yorkshire; Thomas Sherlock, bishop of London, 1761,
Fulham.
Feast Day: St.
Symphorosa, and her seven sons, martyrs, 120. St.
Philastrius, bishop of Brescia, confessor, 4th
century. St. Arnoul, martyr, about 534. St. Arnoul,
bishop of Metz, confessor, 640. St. Frederic, bishop
of Utrecht, martyr, 838. St. Odulph, canon of Utrecht,
confessor, 9th century. St. Bruno, bishop of Segni,
confessor, 1125.
REV. GILBERT WHITE
Gilbert White is one of those
happy souls who without painful effort, in the quiet
pursuit of their own pleasures, have registered their
names among the dii minores of literature.
Biography scarcely records a finer instance of
prolonged peaceful and healthful activity. His life
seems to have been a perfect idyll.
Selborne, with which White's
name is indissolubly associated, is a village of one
straggling street, about fifty miles from London,
situated in a corner of Hampshire, bordering on
Sussex. In the house in which he spent his life and in
which he died, White was born on the 18th July 1720.
His father was a gentleman of comfortable income, who
educated him for a clergyman. He gained a fellow-ship
at Oxford, and served as a proctor, to the surprise of
his family, who thought it a strange office for one of
his habits, and that he would be more observant of the
swallows in the Christchurch meadows than the
undergraduates in the High Street. He had frequent
opportunities of accepting college livings, but his
fondness for 'the shades of old Selborne, so lovely
and sweet,' outweighed every desire for preferment. In
his native village he settled, and the ample leisure
secured from clerical duty he devoted to the minute
and assiduous study of nature. He was an outdoor
naturalist, and kept diaries in which the progression
of the seasons, and every fact which fell under his
eye, were entered with the exactness which a merchant
gives to his ledger.
The state of the weather, hot
or cold, sunny or cloudy, the variations of the wind,
of the thermometer and barometer, the quantity of
rain-fall, the dates on which the trees burst into
leaf and plants into blossom, the appearance and
disappearance of birds and insects, were all
accurately recorded. On the 21st of June, he tells us
that house-martins, which had laid their eggs in an
old nest, had hatched them, and got the start of those
which had built new nests by ten days or a fortnight.
He relates that dogs come into his garden at night,
and eat his gooseberries; that rooks and crows destroy
an immense number of chaffers; and that, but for them,
the chaffers would destroy everything. His neighbours'
crops, fields, and gardens, cattle, pigs, poultry, and
bees were all looked after. He chromcled his ale and
beer, as they were brewed by his man Thomas. The
births of his nephews and nieces were duly entered, to
the number of sixty-three.
Selborne was a choice home for
a naturalist. It is a place of great rural beauty, and
of thorough seclusion. The country around is threaded
with deep sandy lanes overgrown with stunted oaks,
hazels, hawthorns, and dog-roses, and the banks are
covered with primroses, strawberries, ferns, and
almost every English wild-flower. In White's time, the
roads were usually impassable for carriages in winter,
and Selborne held little intercourse with the world.
Once a year, White used to visit Oxford, leaving the
registration of the weather to Thomas, who was well
versed in his master's business. Happily, White's
brothers had an interest in natural history only
second to his own, and with them and other congenial
friends he kept up a lively correspondence. It was by
the persuasion of his brother Thomas, a fellow of the
Royal Society, that he was induced to overcome a
horror of publicity and reviewers, and to issue in
quarto, in 1789, the Natural History of Selborne,
compiled from a series of letters addressed to Thomas
Pennant and Daines Barrington. Four years after-wards,
he died, 26th June 1793, aged seventy-three. His
habits were regular and temperate, his disposition
social and cheerful; he was a good story-teller, and a
favourite with young and old, at home and abroad. His
autobiography is in his book, and ardent admirers who
have haunted Selborne for further particulars
concerning the philosophical old bachelor, have
learned little more than was spoken by an old dame,
who had nursed several of the White family: 'He was a
still, quiet body: there wasn't a bit of harm in him,
I'll assure ye, sir; there wasn't indeed!'
The paternal acres of White at
Selborne are, of course, to the great body of British
naturalists, a classic ground. By a happy chance, they
have fallen into the possession of an eminent living
naturalist, fully competent to appreciate the
sentimental charm which invests them, and of a social
character to banish envy among his brethren even for
such an extraordinary piece of good fortune�Mr. Thomas
Bell.
Long may they be in hands so
liberal, under an eye so discriminative, bound to a
heart so sympathetic with all the moods and pulses of
nature!
WAYLAND SMITHS CAVE
This now well-known monument
of a remote antiquity stands in the parish of Ashbury,
on the western boundaries of Berkshire, among the
chalk-hills which form a continuation of the Wiltshire
downs, in a district covered with ancient remains. It
is simply a primitive sepulchre, which, though now
much dilapidated, has originally consisted of a rather
long rectangular apartment, with two lateral chambers,
formed by upright stones, and roofed with large slabs.
It was, no doubt, originally covered with a mound of
earth, which in course of time has been in great part
removed.
It belongs to a class of monuments which is
usually called Celtic, but, if this be a correct
denomination, we must take it, no doubt, as meaning
Celtic during the Roman period, for it stands near a
Roman road, the Ridgway, which was the position the
Romans chose above all others, while the Britons in
the earlier period, if they had any high-roads at all,
which is very doubtful, chose in preference the tops
of hills for their burial-place. A number of early
sepulchral monuments might be pointed out in different
parts of our island, of the same class, and more
important than Wayland Smith's Cave, but it has
obtained an especial celebrity through two or three
circumstances.
In the first place, this is
the only monument of the kind which we find directly
named in an Anglo-Saxon document. It happened to be
on the line of boundary between two Anglo-Saxon
estates, and, therefore, became a marked object. In
the deed of conveyance of the estate in which this
monument is mentioned, of a date some time previous to
the Norman Conquest, it is called Welandes Smiththan,
which means Weland's Smithy, or forge, so that its
modern name, which is a mere slight corruption from
the Anglo-Saxon one, dates itself from a very remote
period. In the time of Lysons, to judge from his
account of it, it was still known merely by the name
of Wayland Smith, so that the further corruption into
Wayland Smith's Cave appears to be of very recent
date. It is also worthy of remark, that the
Anglo-Saxon name appears to prove that in those early
times the monument had been already uncovered of its
earth, and was no longer recognised as a sepulchral
monument, for the Anglo-Saxons would hardly have given
the name of a forge, or smithy, to what they knew to
be a tomb; so that we have reason for believing that
many of our cromlechs and monuments of this
description had already been uncovered of their mounds
in Anglo-Saxon times. They were probably opened in
search of treasure.
But, perhaps, the most curious
circumstance of all connected with this monument is
its legend. It has been the popular belief among the
peasantry in modem times, that should it happen to a
traveller passing this way that his horse cast a shoe,
he had only to take the animal to the cave,' which
they supposed to be inhabited by an invisible, to
place a groat on the copestone, and to withdraw to a
distance from which he could not see the operation,
and on his return, after a short absence, he would
find his horse properly shod, and the money taken
away. To explain this, it is necessary only to state
that, in the primitive Anglo-Saxon and Teutonic
mythology, Weland was the mythic smith, the
representative of the ancient Vulcan, the Greek
Hephaistos. We have a singular proof, too, of the
extreme antiquity of the Berkshire stouy, in a Grecian
popular legend which has been preserved by the Greek
scholiast on Apollonius Rhodius. We are told that one
of the localities which Hephaistos, or Vulcan,
especially haunted was the Vulcanian islands, near
Sicily; and the scholiast tells us, that 'it was
formerly said that, whoever chose to carry there a
piece of unwrought iron, and at the same time deposit
the value of the labour, would, on presenting himself
there on the following morning, find it made into a
sword, or whatever other object he had desired.' We
have here, at this very remote period, precisely the
same legend, and connected with the representative of
the same mythic character, as that of the Berkshire
cromlech; and we have a right, therefore, to assume
that the same legend had existed in connection with
the same character, at that far-distant period before
the first separation of the different branches of the
Teutonic family, and when Weland, and Hephaistos, and
Vulcan were one.
All our readers know how
skilfully our great northern bard, Sir Walter Scott,
introduced the Berkshire legend of Wayland Smith into
the romance of Kenilworth, and he has thus given a
celebrity to the monument which it would never
otherwise have enjoyed. Yet, although in his story the
mythic character of Wayland Smith is lost, and he
stands before us a rather common-place piece of
humanity, yet every reader must feel interested in
knowing something of the real character of the
personage, whose name is famous through all medieval
poetry in the west, and who held a prominent place in
the heathen mythology of our early Saxon forefathers.
His story is given in the Eddas.
Weland, as we have said, was
the Vulcan of the Teutonic mythology. He was the
youngest of the three sons of Wade, the all, or demi-god;
and when a child, his father intrusted him to the
dwarfs in the interior of the mountains, who lived
among the metals, that they might instruct him in
their wonderful skill in forging, and in making
weapons and jewellery, so that, under their teaching,
the youth became a wonderful smith. The scene of this
legend is placed by the Edda in Iceland, where the
three brothers, like all Scandinavian heroes, passed
much of their time in hunting, in which they pursued
the game on skates. In the course of these
expeditions, they settled for a while in Ulfdal,
where, one morning, finding on the banks of a lake
three Valkyrier, or nymphs, with their elf garments
beside them, they seized and took them for their
wives, and lived with them eight years, at the end of
which period the Valkyrier became tired of their
domestic life, and flew away during the absence of
their husbands. When the three brothers returned, two
of them set off in search of their fugitive spouses;
but Weland remained patiently at home, working in his
forge to make gold rings, which he strung upon a
willow-wand, to keep them till the expected return of
his wife.
There lived at this time a
king of Sweden, named Niduth, who had two sons, and a
daughter named. Baudvild, or, in the Anglo-Saxon form
of the name, Beadohild. The possession of a skilful
smith, and the consequent command of his labour, was
looked upon as a great prize; and when Niduth heard
that Weland was in Ulfdal, he set off, with a strong
body of his armed followers, to seek him. They arrived
at his hut while he was away hunting, and, entering
it, examined his rings, and the king took one of them
as a gift for his daughter, Baudvild. Weland returned
at night, and made a fire in his hut to roast a piece
of bear's flesh for. his supper; and when the flames
arose, they gave light to the chamber, and Weland's
eyes fell on his rings, which he took down and
counted, and thus found that one was missing. This
circumstance was to him a cause of joy, for he
supposed that his wife had returned and taken the
ring, and he laid him down to slumber; but while he
was asleep, King Niduth and his men returned, and
bound him, and carried him away to the king's palace
in Sweden.
At the suggestion of the
queen, they hamstringed him, that he might not be able
to escape, and placed him in a forge in a small
island, where he was compelled to work for the king,
and where anybody but the latter was forbidden to go
under severe penalties. Weland brooded over his
revenge, and accident offered him the first
opportunity of indulging it. The greediness of the
king's two sons had been excited by the reported
wealth of Weland's forge, and they paid a secret visit
to it, and were astonished at the treasures which the
wily smith presented to their view. He promised that
they should have them all, if they would cone to him
in the utmost secrecy early next morning; but when
they arrived, he suddenly closed the door, cut off
their heads, and buried their bodies in the marshy
ground on which the forge was built. He made of the
skulls, plated with silver, drinking-cups for the
king's table; of their eyes, gems for the queen; and
of their teeth, a collar of pearls, which he sent as a
present to the princess.
The latter was encouraged to
seek Weland's assistance to mend her ring, which had
been accidentally broken; and, to conceal the accident
from her father, she went secretly to the forge, where
the smith completed his vengeance by offering violence
to her person, and sent her away dishonoured. While he
had been meditating vengeance, Weland had also been
preparing the means of escape, and now, having fitted
on a pair of wings of his own construction, he took
flight from his forge. He halted for a moment on the
wall of the enclosure of the palace, where he called
for the king and queen, told then all the
circumstances of the murder of their sons and the
dishonour of their daughter, and then continued his
flight, and was heard of no more. The Princess
Baudvild, in due time, gave birth to a daughter, who
also was a celebrated hero of the early German
mythology. It will be remarked, that the lameness of
Weland is accounted for in a different manner from
that of Vulcan in the more refined mythology of the
classical ages.
As the various branches of the
Teutonic race spread towards the west, they carried
with them their common legends, but soon located then
in the countries in which they settled, and after a
few generations they became established as local
legends. Thus, among the Scandinavians, the scene of
Weland's adventures was laid in Iceland and Sweden;
while among the earlier Teutons, it appears to have
been fixed in some part of Germany; and the
Anglo-Saxons, no doubt, placed it in England. We have
found the name, and one of the legends connected with
it, fixed in a remote corner of Berkshire, where they
have been preserved long after their original import
was forgotten. It is one of the most curious examples
of the great durability of popular legends of all
kinds. We know that the whole legend of Weland the
smith was perfectly well known to the Anglo-Saxons to
a late period of their monarchy.
THE AUTHOR
OF 'BARON MUNCHAUSEN'
Who is there that has not, in
his youth, enjoyed The Surprising Travels and
Adventures of Barron Munchausen, in Russia, the
Caspian Sea, Iceland, Turkey, dc., a slim volume�all
too short, indeed�illustrated by a formidable portrait
of the baron in front, with his broad-sword laid over
his shoulder, and several deep gashes on his manly
countenance? I presume they must be few.
This book appears to have been
first published, in a restricted form, by one Kearsley,
a bookseller in Fleet Street, in 1786; a few years
afterwards, it was reprinted, with a considerable
addition of palpably inferior matter, by H. D. Symonds
of Paternoster Row. The author's name was not given,
and it has, till a very recent date, remained little
or not at all known. There can hardly be a more
curious piece of neglected biography.
The author of the baron's
wonderful adventures is now ascertained to have been
Rodolph Eric Raspe, a learned and scientific German,
who died in the latter part of 1794 at Mucross, in the
south of Ireland, while conducting some mining
operations there. Much there was of both good and ill
about poor Raspe. Let us not press matters too hard
against one who has been able to contribute so much to
the enjoyment of his fellow-creatures. But, yet, let
the truth be told. Be it known, then, that this
ingenious man, who was born at Hanover in 1737,
commenced life in the service of the land-grave of
Hesse Cassel as professor of archaeology, inspector of
the public cabinet of medals, keeper of the national
library, and a councillor, but disgraced himself by
putting some of the valuables intrusted to him in
pawn, to raise money for some temporary necessities.
He disappeared, and was advertised for by the police
as the Councillor Raspe, a man with red hair, who
usually appeared in a scarlet dress embroidered with
gold, but some-times in black, blue, or gray clothes.
He was arrested at Clausthal, but escaped during the
night, and made his way to England, where he chiefly
resided for the remainder of his days.
It will be heard with pain,
that before this lamentable downbreak in life, Raspe
had manifested decided talents in the investigation of
questions in geology and mineralogy. He published at
Leipsic, in 1763, a curious volume in Latin, on the
formation of volcanic islands, and the nature of
petrified bodies. In 1769, there was read at the Royal
Society in London, a Latin paper of his, on the teeth
of elephantine and other animals found in North
America, and it is surprising at what rational and
just conclusions he had d arrived. Raspe had detected
the specific peculiarities, distinguishing these teeth
from those of the living elephant, and saw no reason
for disbelieving that some large kinds of elephants
might formerly live in cold climates; being exactly
the views long after generally adopted on this
subject.
The exact time of the flight
to England is not known; but in 1776, he is found
publishing in London a volume on Some German Volcanoes
and their Productions�necessarily extinct
volcanoes�thus again shewing his early apprehension of
facts then little if at all understood, though now
familiar.
And in the ensuing year, he
gave forth a translation of the Baron Born's Travels
in Tameswar, Transylvania, and Hungary�a mineralogical
work of high reputation. In 1780, Horace Walpole
speaks of him as 'a Dutch savant,' who has come over
here, and who was preparing to publish two old
manuscripts 'in infernal Latin,' on oil-painting,
which proved. Walpole's own idea that the use of oil-colours
was known before the days of Van Eyck. 'He is poor,'
says the virtuoso of Strawberry Hill; the natural
sequel to which statement is another three months
later: 'Poor Raspe is arrested by his tailor." I have
sent him a little money,' adds Walpole, 'and he hopes
to recover his liberty; but I question whether he will
be able to struggle on here.'. By Walpole's patronage,
the book was actually published in April 1781.
In this year, Raspe announced
a design of travelling in Egypt, to collect its
antiquities; but while the scheme was pending, he
obtained employment in certain mines in Cornwall. He
was residing as 'storemaster' at Dalcoath Mines, in
that district, when he wrote and published his Travels
of Baron Munchausen. Previously to this time, his
delinquency at Cassel having become known, the Royal
Society erased his name from their honorary list; and
he threatened, in revenge, to print in the form of
their Philosophical Trans-actions the Unphilosophical
Transactions of the English sevens, with their
characters. This matter seems to have blown over.
And now we have to introduce
our hero in a new connection with English literature.
The facts are fully known to us, and there can be no
harm in stating them. Be it understood, then, that
Raspe paid a visit to Scotland in the summer and
autumn of 1789, for the professed purpose of searching
in various districts for minerals. It was announced in
the Scots Magazine for October, that he had discovered
copper, lead, iron, cobalt, manganese, &c.; that the
marble of Tiree, the iron of Glengarry, and the lead
on the Breadalbane property were all likely to turn
out extremely well. From Sutherland he had brought
specimens of the finest clay; there was 'every symptom
of coal,' and a fine vein of heavy spar had been
discovered. He had now begun his survey of Caithness.
From another source we learn that a white saline
marble in Icolmkill had received his attention. As to
Caithness, here lay probably the loadstone that had
brought him into Scotland, in the person of Sir
John
Sinclair of Ulbster, a most benevolent gentleman, who,
during a long life, was continually engaged in useful
projects, chiefly designed for the public benefit, and
of novel kinds. With him Raspe took up his abode for a
considerable time, at his spray-beaten castle on the
Pentland Firth; and members of the family still speak
of their father's unfailing appreciation of the
infinite intelligence and facetiousness of his
visitor's conversation. Sir John had, some years
before, discovered a small vein of yellow mrmdick on
the moor of Skinnet, four miles from Thurso. The
Cornish miners he consulted told him that the mumdick
was itself of no value, but a good sign of other
valuable minerals not far off. In
their
peculiar jargon, 'white mundick was a good horseman,
and always rode on a good load.'
Sir John now employed Raspe to
examine the ground, not designing to mine it himself,
but to let it to others if it should turn out
favourably. For a time, this investigation gave the
proprietor very good hopes. Masses of a bright heavy
mineral were brought to Thurso Castle, as foretastes
of what was coming. But, in time the bubble burst, and
it was fully concluded by Sir John Sinclair, that the
ores which appeared were all brought from Cornwall,
and planted in the places where they were found. Miss
Catherine Sinclair has often heard her father relate
the story, but never with the slightest trace of
bitterness. On the contrary, both he and Lady Sinclair
always said, that the little loss they made on the
occasion was amply compensated by the amusement which
the mineralogist had given them, while a guest in
their house.
Such was the author of Baron,
Munchausen, a man of great natural penetration and
attainments, possessed of lively general faculties,
and well fitted for a prominent position in life.
Wanting, however, the crowning grace of probity, he
never quite got his head above water, and died in
poverty and obscurity. It will be observed that, in
his mining operations in Caithness, he answers to the
character of Dousterswivel in the Antiquary; and there
is every reason to believe that he gave Scott the idea
of that character, albeit the baronet of Ulbster did
not prove to be so extremely imposed upon as Sir
Arthur Wardour, or in any other respect a prototype of
that ideal personage.
Of all Raspe's acknowledged
works, learned, ingenious, and far-seeing, not one is
now remembered, and his literary fame must rest with
what he probably regarded as a mere jet& d' esprit. It
may be remarked that a translation of the Baron into
German was published by the ingenious B�rger in 1787.
This was very proper, for most of the marvels were of
German origin. Some of those connected with hunting
are to be found, 'in a dull prosy form, in Henry
Bebel's Facetice, printed in Strasburg in 1508;
others of the tales are borrowed from Castiglioni's
Cortegians, and other known sources.'