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it is equally dear, and to be obtained only at the greatest peril of the adventurer. The law lord is called, particularly by himself, the Mi Tee Broom, and is accounted the best juggler in the kingdom. He can turn himself inside out, like an old glove, and is often employed by the House of Lords to tumble and throw summersets to keep the noblemen wide awake. He can write a book with his toes, and even after dinner can spell every speech he has made backwards. With all this, he is singularly independent, and "cannot fawn or glose" upon any body higher than a duke and a field marshal. He is a man of universal doings. There is, perhaps, no man in England who can better balance a straw upon his nose, or blow a new statute out of soap and water. When he would make a law to make a new place, he does it as carefully as a bird builds its nest; and for the like reason, it being for his own especial comfort and advantage.

CASE IX. A Shopkeeper. The shopkeepers -especially those who deal in silks, hosiery, and linens are a race of extraordinary people. Many of them write up over their shop-doors, "FROM FLINT's;" but this is only a pleasant contradiction to show the extreme softness of

The female child is taken at a very early age, and has its stomach compressed by a machine called Sta Iz, which is ribbed with steel and whalebone, (whence the South Sea fishery for whales,) and is corded tightly up the back. The Sta Iz is never, up to the time of womanhood, taken off; as is plain from the specimen here presented. The barbarians have a laughble notion of the use of this custom: they think that, by making the waist no thicker than the arm, it gives beauty to the female-a melancholy bigotry. They also believe that it keeps the blood in the face, and thereby improves the complexion. The women have also another strange custom. They wear, what, in their secret language, is called a Buss El. We have inquired of many of them the meaning of the word, but have always received a pouting, resentful evasion. We have, however, searched the dictionaries, and found a word somewhat like it-the word bustle, which means swagger, importance, fuss and in one dictionary it has no other interpretation than cheat.

CASE XI. A Bishop and a Beggar. The English bishop-unlike the priests of the "flowery country"-is a man chosen from the priesthood for the strength of his mind, and the

their hearts, and the benevolence of their excelling beauty of his life. Nothing is more natures. They are all of them oracles of common than to find the humble curate of totruth; and when you see it written up in their day the bishop of to-morrow. Officers, apwindows that they are "selling off at a great pointed by the government, travel in secret sacrifice," you may be sure that the shopkeep- through every part of the kingdom, to discover, touched by the misery of his fellow-crea- er hidden virtue in the church; and when tures, has resolved to almost give his goods they find it, it is straightway exalted. To away, that he may retire to "Bricks Town," every bishop a large salary is paid, which it or "Eye Gate," or some other suburb famous is his religion to lay out to the last penny

for hermits. Their shops, like those of the flowery country, are written over with moral sentences, such as "No abatement allowed," "For ready money only," and other choice maxims dear to the barbarian philosophers. The condition of the shopmen is also of the happiest kind; more than sufficient time being allowed them for the cultivation of their souls and the benefit of their health. Most of the masters keep libraries, and even billiard tables, for the improvement and recreation of their young men. And whereas, in the "flowery country," we say as "happy as a bird," the English exclaim, "as happy as a linendraper's shopman."

CASE X.-A Lady of Fashion. This is the wife of a nobleman, in full dress. It will be seen that the barbarian English have no notion whatever of "the golden lilies"* which adorn the "flowery country." The poor women of England are, almost from their cradles, made the victims of a horrible custom. It is supposed that thousands and thousands die yearly from a disease called Tite Lace In.

by the Chinese. The nests are chiefly obtained in the caves of Java. They are generally taken | by torch light from recesses of the rock, where "the slightest slip would plunge the nest-seeker" into the boiling surf below.

* The "golden lilies" are, poetically, the little distorted feet of the Chinese women.

among the poor and suffering. Remark the extreme simplicity of his dwelling-place. He has just returned from visiting a hospital, and his hat, cloak, and staff, are laid only a little way from him. Wherefore? Alas! although it is a cold wet night, he must out again to comfort a dying widow. He has a hundred orphans at school at his own charge, and often bestows dowries upon poor maidens. He has by right, a seat in the House of Lords, where he may be seen engaged in silent prayer that the law-makers may do the thing that is holy. When he speaks, it is to condemn war and injustice, and to turn the hearts of his hearers to peace and brotherly love. The English have a proverb which says "The words of a bishop are honey; they feed the poor." They have this other beautiful saying " The bishop carries the poor man's purse;" and this is the only beggar that, during the long sojourn of the writer in England, was ever seen by him. Therefore, he can give no description of the class from a solitary individual. In fact, after a minute inquiry, it was discovered that the above was not a beggar from necessity; but was really a nobleman begging for a wager. Thus, in England, there are no beggars!

ILLUSTRATED BOOKS.

From the Quarterly Review.

1. Monumens des Arts du Dessin chez les Peuples tant Anciens que Modernes. Recueilles par Vivant Denon, pour servir à l'histoire des Arts; décrits et expliqués par Amaury Duval. Paris, 1829. Folio.

4 vols.

2. Illuminated Ornaments, drawn from Ancient Manuscripts. By Henry Shaw; with Descriptions by Sir Frederick Madden. London, 1833. Quarto.

3. Catalogue of the Arundel Manuscripts in the British Museum, (with plates engraved and colored by Henry Shaw.) London, 1834. Folio.

4. Carteggio inedito d'Artisti dei Secoli XIV., XV., XVI., Publicato ed illustrato con documenti pure inediti dal D. Gio. Gaye. Firenze, 1839. 8vo. 3 vols. 5. The Pictorial Bible; being the Old and Illustrated with many hundred Woodcuts. London, 1839. Quarto. 4 vols.

New Testaments

trated' or 'Pictorial' editions of books. Be the books what they may, sacred or profane, old or new; good, bad, or indifferent -destined to remain as monuments to their

authors, more durable than brass, or to pass away and be forgotten like the last year's Annuals still all must be adorned with whatever the arts of engraving and fine printing can supply, to form what our Gallic neighbors call 'Editions de luxe'-or else, for the most part, be condemned to small type, and, perhaps double columns, as 'Editions for the people.' Nearly forty years since, when 'Illustrated' books were of comparatively rare occurrence, Professor Christian * querulously remarked, we do not grow wiser than our forefathers; the fury for prints proves the frivolty of the times, and our books, I fear, will shrink from a comparison with those of the age of Queen Anne, which were not adorned with such superfluous and meretricious decorations.' 'How would the professor lament over the Illustrations' of the present day!

The skill of the engraver has indeed been 6, Paléographie Universelle: Collection de singularly assisted by modern discoveries in fac-similes d'Ecritures de tous les peu- science and in art: the Formschneiders ples et de tous les temps, tirés des plus au- and the Intagliatori of the fifteenth and thentiques documents de l'art graphique, sixteenth centuries would start with surchartes, et manuscrits publiée prise at the stereotyped woodcuts and elecd'après les modèles écrits, dessinés et trotyped engravings of the present day. peints sur les lieux mêmes, par M. Sil- Maso Finiguerra and Albert Durer, Melvestre, et accompagnés d'explications historiques et descriptives par MM. Champollion-Figeac et Aimé Champollion fils. Paris, 1840-1842. Folio. 4 vols.

7. The Abbotsford Edition of the Waver-
ley Novels. Edinburgh and London,
1842-1844. Royal 8vo. Nos. 1-56.

8. Dresses and Decorations of the Middle
Ages from the Seventh to the Seventeenth
Centuries. By Henry Shaw, F. S. A.
London, 1842-3. Imperial 8vo. Parts

1-16.

9. The Keepsake. 1843. 8vo.

chior, Pfintzing and Raimondi (Marc Antonio) would, perhaps, be less astonished at the steam-engine and its wonders, than at the reproduction ad infinitum of their most labored and most finished efforts; their own handiwork remaining the while unsoiled by ink, uninjured by the press, and serving only to produce metallic copies for the printers' use.

Five lustres since, and a few hundreds only of impressions could be taken from a copper-plate engraving without its delicacy being materially injured; a 'retouching'

10. The Illustrated London News. Folio. almost amounting to a re-engraving-was

1843.

11. The Pictorial Times. Folio. 1843.

12. London: by Charles Knight. 6 vols. Royal 8vo. London, 1843.

necessary to produce some few copies of inferior beauty and debased value. Now the 'Art Union' can supply its twelve thousand subscribers with impressions from an engraving, of which the last shall be scarcely, if at all, inferior to the first, and could do the same were its numbers tenfold what they are. Five lustres since, and

AMONGST the characteristics of the literature of the present age there is one which, if neither the most striking from its novelty nor the most important in its tendency, is certainly the most familiar to us all, and silently exercises no little influence upon * Vindication of the Right of the Universities society; we allude to the rage for orna- of Great Britain to a copy of every New Pubmented, or as they are now termed, 'Illus- lication.'

a few small wood-cuts, mostly of very ques- | fringed as in the case of the kaleidoscope tionable design and execution-the works invented about the same time by Sir David of Bewick and two or three others being Brewster-'Sic vos non vobis.' It is a the alone exceptions were with difficulty very singular but well attested fact that, in'inked' with 'balls' and worked' by calculable as have been the effects prohand: the price of any book being materi- duced by the invention of printing (for who ally enhanced by the pains and labor ne- can estimate them?) no improvement was cessarily incurred in the printing of its made in the mechanical means employed woodcut 'embellishments '-for such was by the early printers, neither by the Manuzj then the term. In Johnson's 'Typo- or Giuntas, nor the Estiennes, Plantins, or graphia,' published in 1824, is a detailed Elzebirs, until the late Earl Stanhope inaccount of the difficulties experienced in vented the press which bears his name, and finding either a printing-press of sufficient Mr. Cowper the rollers which do not bear power, or proper ink, or the requisite skill his. Can we wonder that the Mazarine

to print a few copies of the very elaborate and most extraordinary engraving on wood, executed by Mr. William Harvey, of the Assassination of L. S. Dentatus, from a celebrated painting by Mr. B. R. Haydon.' This engraving was composed of eleven pieces of wood, 'through which passed four strong iron bolts with nuts at each end,' and measured fifteen inches by eleven and a half inches. We may now smile at this

Bible, the first complete book printed (certainly before 1455), has not been excelled, if even it has been equalled, in all that constitutes beauty in a printer's eyes, by any printed production of a later date? But to return to our subject.

Five lustres since, and, with the exception of Bewick's works, scarcely twenty books of modern date could be named having woodcut embellishments with any pre

difficulty, but the worthy typographer might tensions to merit. Amongst the few were then boast of his success in achieving such a small Shakspeare in seven volumes, with a task with the means at his command. A designs by Thurston; an edition of Fairfew months ago the 'Illustrated London fax's translation of Tasso; and especially News' circulated to its twenty or thirty or Rogers's Pleasures of Memory, with deforty thousand subscribers a well-executed signs of exquisite beauty by Stothard.*

and well-printed view of London, measuring four feet by two feet, having a superfices about six and a half times that of the Haydonian Dentatus; and, more lately, the 'Pictorial Times' put forth a wood-cut of Wilkie's 'Blind Fiddler,' of the same size with Burnet's line-engraving!

To produce great numbers of large engravings in cameo, whether in wood or metal, steam-power is of course employed; for smaller editions of works of less magnitude the Stanhope or Columbian (Clymer's) presses worked by hand are still used, and although 'balls' also are even now employed by some printers for 'fine work' and for delicate engravings of small size, yet the greater beauty of impression of the numerous 'illustrated' books of the present day, as compared with those printed at the beginning of the present century, is mainly due to the almost universal substitution of Mr. Cowper's inking rollers for the 'balls' which, until the year 1816, had remained unimproved from the time of Fust and Schoeffer; from the middle of the fifteenth century to the time of Bulmer and Bensley. This simple but most important invention was, we believe, patented, but the patent was as generally and as unblushingly in

The number of works with cuts steadily increased; but without doubt the greatest impulse was given by the publication of the Penny Magazine' of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge-followed, haud passibus æquis,' it must be confessed, by the 'Saturday Magazine' of the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge. The first still continues, we believe, in its original course; the second has been long since cast off by the Society which originated it, although it still bears a stamp resembling, in outward appearance, that Society's distinctive mark. There is no doubt that these two publications, each with many woodcuts weekly, have been the pioneers in the present march of woodcut illustration.

The improvements in the art of woodcutting, or of embellishment in relief, have been followed by their natural consequence -a great increase in the demand, greater means of supply, a lower price for 'the article,' and a corresponding increase in the 'factories,' some masters employing from

* Mr. Rogers, as it might be expected, has preserved some of these in the recent more elaborate

ly ornamented editions of his Poems. We, however, prefer the wood to the copper.

twenty to thirty, or even more hands. If real artists, and to their grotesque fertility the present taste continues to exist, and this most diverting paper owes at all events shall spread, as is not by any means improb-half of its attraction.

able, we may well anticipate that mechan- Five lustres since, and 'Illustration' had ical means will be found necessary, and a quite different meaning from that which something like a Brunel's block-machinery now obtains. A book was then called 'Il

in miniature be adapted to the xylographic process, to aid the engraver in his suburban garret, as the larger machinery does the rigger in Portsmouth-yard.

A natural effect of all this is, that those means, which at first were called in to aid, now bid fair to supersede much of descriptive writing: certainly they render the text of many books subsidiary to their socalled illustrations. In this partial return to baby literature to a second childhood of learning-the eye is often appealed to instead of the understanding, not so much on the ground that

Segnius irritant animos demissa per aurem, Quam quæ sunt oculis subjecta fidelibus, et quæ Ipse sibi tradit spectator,'

nor from an acute and accurate perception of beauty of design, as from a low utilitarian wish to give and receive the greatest possible amount of knowledge at the least possible expense of time, trouble, money, and, we may add, of intellect. Verily it is a superficial knowledge which now pervades the country from Berwick to the Land's-End-from Maidenkirk to John

O'Groats-wherever the English language is known, and where it is not known: we have seen the 'Penny Magazine' in Polish. One publisher has put forth a 'Pictorial Bible,' a 'Pictorial Shakspeare,' and a 'Pictorial' History of England. The Napoleon Museum is advertised as an 'Illustrated'

lustrated' which was crammed, like a candidate for honors, with all that related to all that the book contained. To this end, every portrait, in every state, etching, proof 'before letters,' finished proof, and reverses, of every person, every view of every place, was if possible procured; and where engravings did not exist, drawings were made, until the artist's skill and the collector's purse were alike exhausted. The germ of this system of illustration existed as early as the time of Charles I. The pious but ascetic Nicholas Ferrar had bought, says Dr. Peckard, during his travels on the Continent,

'A very great number of prints engraved by the best masters of that time, all relative to historical passages of the Old and New Testaments: indeed he let nothing of this sort that was valuable escape him.'

These prints Ferrar employed in ornamenting various compilations from the Scriptures; amongst others,

'He composed a full harmony, or concordance, of the four Evangelists, adorned with many beautiful pictures, which required more than a year for the composition, and was divided into 150 heads or chapters.'

The history of this 'illustrated' book, the first we believe of its kind, is curious :

'In May, 1633, his Majesty set out upon his journey to Scotland, and in his progress he stepped a little out of his road to view Little

History of Europe. The boards in the streets are placarded with puffs of some Gidding in Huntingdonshire, which by the refuse of American literature (?) called common people was called the Protestant Peter Parley's 'Illustrated' Histories, writ- Nunnery. The family having notice, met his ten, we suppose, by 'drab-colored' Phila- Majesty at the extremity of the parish, at a delphians, and savoring of democracy and place called from this event the King's Close, repudiation of honest debts. We have a and in the form of their solemn processions, conducted him to their church, which he viewWeekly 'Illustrated News,' and a 'Picto-ed with great pleasure. He inquired into, and rial Times;' besides scores and scores of baser newspapers 'illustrated' but unstamped. In all these cases it will be seen that the adjective is more prominent than the substantive. We do not know that it would be fair to say the same of 'Punch.' Mr. Punch has pens of no common mark at his orders, as well as pencils-very clever writers (we are sorry to see not so good-humored as they were at the start); yet George Cruikshank and his fellows are ed. 1839, vol. iv. p. 189.

was informed of the particulars of their public and domestic economy; but it does not appear that at this time he made any considerable stay. The following summer his Majesty and the Queen passed passed two nights at Apthorpe in Northamptonshire, the seat of Mildmay Fane, Earl of Westmoreland. From thence he sent one of his gentlemen to intreat (his Majesty's own word) a sight of The Concordance,

* In Wordsworth's Ecclesiastical Biography,

which, he had heard, was sometime since done King Charles's statues, pictures, jewels, at Gidding, with assurance that in a few days, and curiosities were sold and dispersed by when he had perused it, he would send it back the regicide powers: from this fate, happi. again. Mr. N. Ferrar was then in London, ly, the royal collection of manuscripts and

and the family made some little demur, not

thinking it worthy to be put into his Majesty's books was preserved; neither was it, like hands, but at length they delivered it to the the archiepiscopal library at Lambeth, doled messenger. But it was not returned in a few out, piecemeal, to Hugh Peters and his

days, or weeks: some months were elapsed when the gentleman brought it back from the king, who was then at London. He said he had many things to deliver to the family from his master:-first, to yield the king's hearty thanks to them all for the sight of the book, which passed the report he had heard of it;

brother fanatics. This good service was mainly owing to Bulstrode Whitelocke.* When the British Museum was founded, King George II. presented to it the whole of the royal library; and Ferrar's Concordance, with another similarly illustrated

then to signify his approbation of it in all re- compilation by him, is there preserved in spects; next, to excuse him in two points, the safety. The Reverend Thomas Bowdler first for not returning it so soon as he had pro- of Sydenham, the representative of the last mised, the other, for that he had in many pla- baronet of the Cotton family, the founders ces of the margin written notes in it with his own hand; and "(which I know will please of the Cottonian Library, possesses another you), said the gentleman, you will find an in- of the Ferrar volumes. Of those which stance of my master's humility in one of the were presented by Ferrar to George Hermargins. The place I mean is where he had bert and Dr. Jackson no record remains. written something with his own hand, and The system of which we now speak was then put it out again, acknowledging that he not fully developed until the publication of was mistaken in that particular." Certainly Granger's 'Biographical History of Engthis was an act of great humility in the king, land. Something may be said in favor of and worthy to be noted; book itself much graced by it. The gentleman further those who, with gentle dullness and patient told them that the king took such delight in it, industry, haunted the printsellers' shops to that he passed some part of every day in pe- collect all the engraved portraits which rusing it. And lastly, he said, "to show you Granger had enumerated. There is a how true this is, and that what I have declar- charm in the human face divine, although ed is no court compliment, I am expressly it must needs be powerful to call forth-as commanded by my master earnestly to request it does-twenty, or thirty, or fifty guineas of you, Mr. Nicholas Ferrar, and of the young ladies, that you would make him one of these books for his own use; and if you will please ecuted cut of some Meg Merrilies, some

to undertake it, his Majesty says you will do him a most acceptable service."

'Mr. Ferrar and the young ladies returned their most humble duty, and immediately set about what the king desired. In about a year's time it was finished, and it was sent to London to be presented to his Majesty by Dr. Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury, and Dr. Cosins, one of the king's chaplains. This book was bound entirely by Mary Collet (one of

from a collector's pocket for a coarsely ex

Tom of Bedlam, or some condemned criminal, of which the only value is being 'mentioned by Granger. However, the dross is always the dearest portion of a collector's treasure, be it in books or prints. Strutt's Dictionary of Engravers,' to be completely 'illustrated' in a collector's eyes, should contain every work of every engraver mentioned in it (Hollar alone would cost cured): yet this has been attempted, and so has Rees' 'Cyclopædia!' The copy of Pennant's 'History of London' which was bequeathed to the British Museum by Mr. Crowle cost that gentleman £7000; and the 'Illustrated' Clarendon and Burnet,

Mr. Ferrar's nieces), all wrought in gold, in £10,000, could a set of his works be pro

a new and most elegant fashion. The king, after long and serious looking it over, said, "This is indeed a most valuable work, and in many respects worthy to be presented to the greatest prince upon earth, for the matter it contains is the richest of all treasures. The laborious composure of it into this excellent

form of an harmony, the judicious contrivance formed by the late Mr. Sutherland, of

of the method, the curious workmanship in so neatly cutting out and disposing the text, the nice laying of these costly pictures, and the exquisite art expressed in the binding, are, I really think, not to be equalled. I must acknowledge myself elf to be greatly indebted to the family for this jewel, and whatever is in power, I shall at any time be ready to do for any of them.""

my

Gower-street, and continued by his widow,

*Jan. 18, 1647. The manuscripts and books

in Whitehall, because of soldiers being there,

were ordered to be removed to St. James's house, and placed there, which I furthered in order to the preservation of those rare monuments of learning and antiquity which were in that library.'-Memorials, p. 288, ed. 1732.

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