newly trimmed, mounted on a
chestnut
horse, whereof the legs.
Warner - World's Best Literature - v16 to v20 - Phi to Qui
"Oh, depend upon it, he is
perfectly well and happy," she snapped. She avoided as much
as possible allowing her thoughts to dwell upon contingencies;
but she could not keep down an undercurrent of exasperation at
sight of the idiot's unbroken health. "It is only the people
whose existence has no raison d'être," she said, that go on liv-
ing for ever. ”
«<
<< So-o," muttered Herr Pfuhl to himself emphatically, in a
long-drawn reminiscence of his native land. He hurried down
the short avenue in fretful jumps, and as he went he struck his
greasy wide-awake down flat on his speckled cabinet-pudding of a
head. "So is it in the great houses. They have the butters and
the oils of life, and yet the wheels go creaking. The Mefrou,
ah, she will have her concert when she wants it. Not so was my
Lieschen. Never has she given me Blutwurst again, since I told
her it was Leberwurst I loved better. And yet Blutwurst was
her Leibgericht. "
Whenever he was strongly moved, his German seemed to break
forth again purer from some hidden spring of feeling, and to come
surging up across the muddy ditch of broken Dutch.
## p. 9369 (#389) ###########################################
MAARTEN MAARTENS
9369
A film spread over his eyes, for Lieschen would never eat
Blutwurst again. She had been dead for many years. She had
died in this strange, straight-lined country, of a chill at the heart.
Peace be to the old Director's ashes. He too is dead. But
his orchestra was heard in Mevrouw Lossell's rooms before he
laid down his baton. And on that memorable occasion Hendrik
Lossell went up to him, with nervous, puckered face, and compli-
mented him on the excellence of the performance; adding, with
a palpable sneer, that there were some things so valuable you
could never pay enough for them.
And the sneer was at himself.
GUILT
From God's Fool. Copyright 1892, by D. Appleton & Co.
IN
THE middle of the night Elias awoke. His brain was clear
again, as fools' brains go. He sat up in bed, and said,
"Murder. "
Murder. He did not know much about "death" and "kill-
ing," but he knew what "murder" was. Christ had been mur-
dered. Murder was hating a man so utterly that you wanted.
him to stop seeing, hearing, walking, speaking; that you wanted
him to stop being, in a word. And so you tried to prevent his
being. You struck him until he could no longer be. And he
who did this thing, who made another human being to lie silent
like a stick or stone, was a murderer. It was the very worst
thing a man could be. The wicked Jews had murdered Christ.
And Elias had murdered his brother.
Murder. The whole room was full of it. Room? What did
he know of rooms, of limits of space? He opened his horror-
struck eyes wide, and they saw as much, or as little, as before—
the immensity of darkness.
He put out his hand and felt that he was among unusual sur-
roundings. Where was he? In the place where God confines the
wicked? Prison, the grave, hell- the idea was all one to him.
He was in the darkness-the soul-darkness he had never known
thus till this hour.
Heaven and earth were aflame with the cry of murder. It
rose up in his heart and flooded his whole existence. It pressed
back upon him, and held him by the throat whenever he tried to
shake it off. But he barely tried. His was a mind of few ideas,
## p. 9370 (#390) ###########################################
9370
MAARTEN MAARTENS
at the mercy of so merciless a tyrant as this. The wish to do
away with, to silence, to annihilate. Elias had murdered his
brother, as the Jews had murdered Christ.
He dared not pray. He buried his face in the pillow and
longed to be truly blind, that he might not see "murder"; truly
deaf, that he might not hear "murder. " He dared not think of
forgiveness. There could be no forgiveness for such crime as
this. "Sins" to him had meant his childish petulances. He had
never heard of any one forgiving Christ's murderers. Everybody
was still very angry with them, and yet it was a long time ago
since Christ was killed. There could be no hope, no escape.
There was nothing but this agony, beyond tears, beyond pardon.
Nothing but the consciousness, which must remain forever, of
being one of the very few among the worst of men.
And he remembered that he had thought he was almost as
good as the Lord Christ.
THE DAWN OF THE HIGHER LIFE
From The Greater Glory. Copyright 1893, by D. Appleton & Co.
R
EINOUT, walking his horse in the blazing sunshine, peeped
curiously into the cheaply bound little volume which was
her "dearest thing on earth. "
"Verses! " he said with ready scorn. "All women are
alike. "
He knew enough about verses. Sometimes he read the books
his mother brought him, and sometimes he praised them unread.
"Always say 'Yes' to a woman," the Chevalier was wont to
remark, "if you feel it would hurt to hear you say 'No. '»
That is poetry.
"O mon âme.
O ma flamme.
O que je t'aime. »
"Toujours du même. "
"None of my talent has descended to my child," sighed Mar-
gherita. "And yet I feel sure he will be some sort of a genius
-
- perhaps a Prime Minister. " "A what? " asked the Count, and
walked away to dissemble his laughter. He rejoiced, however,
to think that his wife had come round to his view, whatever her
road.
## p. 9371 (#391) ###########################################
MAARTEN MAARTENS
9371
"Well, she begins young with her love ditties," thought Rein-
out; but, nevertheless, on his return, he settled himself in a
window-seat with the book. It was a Belgian edition of Victor
Hugo's "Les Voix Intérieures. "
He glanced at the first page. The opening words struck him.
"This Age is great and strong.
The quietly impressive words, so unlike much of Victor
Hugo's later redundancy, sank slowly into his soul. Here was a
gospel of the time, which met him half-way on his hap-hazard
path. "Are you looking for me? " it said. "I am here. "
When he had finished, he turned back and began again. He
had never read other poetry before than love songs and bouts-
rimés.
And then he plunged headlong into the piece which follows,
that magnificent poem on the death of the exiled Charles X.
Here the novice soon floundered out of his depth; but he still
held on, borne irresistibly forward by the rush of the rhythm, as
all must understand who appreciate the sublimest of spouters.
It is impossible to stop; the very bewilderment of the reader
twists him helplessly onwards amid those whirlpools of eloquence.
And in all the Titan's endless volumes, Reinout could not have
lighted on a poem more calculated to impress him than this one.
Aristocrat as he must ever remain in all the prejudices of his
bringing-up, lover as he had been destined to become from
childhood of that lowly human greatness which your mere aris-
tocrat ignores, this song of tenderest reconciliation struck chords.
within his being of whose existence his incompleteness had never
been aware. And when he reached, with palpitating heart and
eager breath, the great finale,-
"O Poesy, to heaven on frighted wing thou fliest! "
are
he started to his feet, and stood staring before him into a new
gulf yawning ahead-or was it a visionary ladder, whose top is
hid in heaven? A world of illusion, Idea, the soul-world of
beautiful hopes and fancies, the world in which all men
brothers, great and strong and greatly worthy, a world at which
the cynic laughs, with tears for laughter;-at last he beheld
it; uplifted on the pinions of his ignorance into cloudland, and
beyond that to the sun! He will never forget that moment,
-
___________
## p. 9372 (#392) ###########################################
MAARTEN MAARTENS
9372
although to this day he cannot tell you in intelligible prose what
took place in his soul. Oh, the sweetness of it! The sadness
of it! The beautiful, sorrowful hope! He did not know what
he was saying, as he stumbled on through a wilderness of mag-
nificent words. But gradually a single thought stood out clear
among all this confusion of greatnesses: the majesty - not of
your Highnesses and Excellencies and Eminences- but of the
naked soul of man. He had been yearning for it, searching for
it, unwittingly; at last he could grasp it, and read the riddle of
life.
All that afternoon he hurried upwards, a breathless explorer
on Alpine heights. Like an Indian prince from his father's pal-
ace, he had escaped out of the gilded cage where the neat cana-
ries warbled, away into the regions of the angels' song, "Peace
on earth, good-will among men. Hallelujah! " His soul was
drunken with poesy. He tore off the kid glove from his heart.
He was utterly unreasonable and nonsensical, full of clap-trap
and tall-talk and foolishness. Yes, thank God: he was all that
at last.
## p. 9373 (#393) ###########################################
9373
THE MABINOGION
BY ERNEST RHYS
HE old delightful collection of Welsh romances,-
"open-air
tales," the late Sidney Lanier happily termed them,-known
all the world over as the 'Mabinogion,' is the work of
various mediæval poets and romancers whose very names, like those
of the border balladists, are lost to us. It is easy to speculate, as
Stephens and other critics have done, about the authorship of one or
two of the 'Mabinogion,' in scanning the list of poets in Wales during
the eleventh, twelfth, and thirteenth centuries; but the quest leads to
nothing certain, and save to Welsh students is uninteresting. We
may say, as the poet Shirley wrote in speaking of Beaumont and
Fletcher, the one important thing about these authors is that
have their precious remains. "
་
we
As for the general title 'Mabinogion,' which Lady Charlotte
Guest's English version has made familiar, it is well perhaps at the
outset to listen to the explanation given by the greatest Celtic scholar
of our time, the present principal of Jesus College, Oxford. From
this it may be seen that these tales, too, are but another outgrowth
of that wonderful bardic cult to which some reference is made in a
previous volume. * "An idea prevails," says Principal John Rhys,
"that any Welsh tale of respectable antiquity may be called a
mabinogi; but there is no warrant for extending the use of the term
to any but the four branches of the Mabinogi,' such as Pwyll,
Branwen, Manawydthau, and Math. For, strictly speaking, the word
mabinog is a technical term belonging to the bardic system, and it
means a literary apprentice. In other words, a mabinog was a young
man who had not yet acquired the art of making verse, but who
received instruction from a qualified bard. The inference is that the
'Mabinogion' meant the collection of things which formed the mabi-
nog's literary training-his stock in trade, so to speak; for he was
probably allowed to relate the tales forming the four branches of
the Mabinogion' at a fixed price established by law or custom. If
he aspired to a place in the hierarchy of letters, he must acquire
the poetic art. The supposition that a mabinog was a child on his
nurse's lap would be as erroneous as the idea that the 'Mabinogion'
*Vide article Celtic Literature,' Vol. vi. , page 3403.
―――――
## p. 9374 (#394) ###########################################
THE MABINOGION
9374
are nursery tales,-a view which no one who has read them can rea-
sonably take. »
In Lady Charlotte Guest's later edition in one volume (London,
1877), the most convenient edition for reference,- twelve tales in
all will be found. Of these, the most natively and characteristically
Welsh in character are such tales as the vivid, thrice romantic
'Dream of Rhonabwy,' which owes little to outside sources. The
Lady of the Fountain,' on the other hand, shows in a very striking
way the influence of the French chivalric romances that Sir Thomas
Malory drew upon so freely in his 'Morte d'Arthur. ' In the admi-
rably edited Oxford text of the Welsh originals, The Lady of the
Fountain appears under the title of Owain and Lunet'; and Lunet's
name at once recalls Tennyson's Idylls of the King. Indeed, the
king, King Arthur himself, is not long in making his entry upon the
scene.
We find him in this first romance, set forth with all that
fondness for fine color which marks all Celtic romance:-
"In the centre of the chamber King Arthur sat upon a seat of
green rushes, over which was spread a covering of flame-colored satin,
and a cushion of red satin was under his elbow. "
It is perhaps to be regretted that King Arthur should appear so
indifferent to the delights of fiction as he does in the sequel; for in
the interval before dinner he calmly proposes to go to sleep while
they tell tales. He also suggests that they should get a flagon of
mead and some meat, by way of encouragement to the comfortable
exercise of romance. "So Kai went to the kitchen and to the mead
cellar, and returned bearing a flagon of mead and a golden goblet,
and a handful of skewers upon which were broiled collops of meat.
Then they ate the collops, and began to drink the mead. "
In the way of sheer romance, nothing could be better than the
tale of his adventures that Kynon then recites: how, after journeying
through deserts and distant regions, he came to the fairest valley
in the world, and to a great castle with a torrent below it; how, being
conducted into the castle, he found there four-and-twenty damsels of
surpassing beauty, embroidering satin at a window, who rose at his
coming, and divested him of his armor and attired him in fine linen,
with mantle and surcoat of yellow satin; and how then they spread
a feast before him, with tempting array of gold and silver; and how,
when next day he sets forth refreshed in quest of further adventures,
he is overthrown by the sable Knight of the Fountain. Owain, in
his turn, essays to fight with this Knight of Darkness:- but here let
me pause, in the remote hope of sending new readers to the tale
itself. For those who think mere romance in itself to be wanting in
philosophical interest, let it be added that Principal Rhys has in his
Hibbert Lectures discovered all manner of mythological meaning in
## p. 9375 (#395) ###########################################
THE MABINOGION
9375
the tale. Thus Owain becomes the symbol of the Day, with its
twelve hours of light, while the dark Knight of the Fountain represents
Darkness and Destruction, and corresponds to our old enemy Arawn,
the prince of Night and Hades.
In quite another vein from The Lady of the Fountain' is the
curious story of Lludd and Llevelys,' which begins in the Welsh
original, "Yr beli mawr vab manogair y bu tri meib,”—that is,
"Beli the Great, son of Manogar, had three sons. " These three were
Lludd, Caswallawn, and Nynyaw. But there was also a fourth, called
Llevelys. After the death of Beli, Lludd became King; and we add
a passage to our selections that follow, describing the legendary ori-
gin of London, as founded by King Lludd, after whom Ludgate Hill
is called. What could be more entertaining, as one contemplates
the ramifications of that congeries of cities forming modern London,
than to remember this old Welsh fable of its first beginnings? One
need not trouble to distinguish how far King Lludd and his capital,
Caer Lludd (the old Cymraec name for London), are historical or not.
Here they concern us only as romance, as do the Three Great Plagues
of the Isle of Britain, which King Lludd has to drive away. But
romance or history, let us not forget that these Three Plagues lead,
in the course of the Mabinogi, to the discovery that Oxford is the
very centre of the mystic Isle of Britain; which may very well
account, in turn, for the modern taste of Oxford for Welsh texts!
The tale that follows 'Lludd and Llevelys' in the English edition
of the 'Mabinogion,''Taliesin,' to wit,-is the only item in the list.
which is rather suspicious in its origin. In fact the tale as it stands
is neither primitive nor mediæval, but is a fairly ingenious concoc-
tion of primitive and mediæval ingredients, probably made in the
seventeenth or eighteenth century. It contains, inter alia, some strik-
ing versions of the old mystic poems attributed to Taliesin; for a
further account of which we must refer the reader to the article
in a later volume upon that remarkable and thrice puzzling Cymraec
poet. In the opening of the story of Taliesin,' as it stands, will be
found the mention of a certain Tegid Voel; and this serves to remind
us that it was a Welsh scholar, best known by his bardic use of the
same name, "Tegid," who was Lady Guest's collaborator in trans-
lating the 'Mabinogion. '
It may be said in appraising the value of the contribution thus
made to the open literature of the world, that if, necessarily, some-
thing is lost in the transference from an old to a newer tongue, yet
the version we have is a really surprisingly good English equiva-
lent, written with a great charm of style and a pervading sense of
the spirit of all romance literature. Let us not forget, either, to note
the services rendered to the book, by one so remarkable among the
## p. 9376 (#396) ###########################################
9376
THE MABINOGION
American poets as the late Sidney Lanier, from whom we quoted a
phrase in our opening sentence. In his pleasant preamble to The
Boys' Mabinogion,' the account he gives of his subject forms so con-
vincing a tribute to its delights that one is tempted to steal a sen-
tence or two. After referring to the 'Arabian Nights,' Sidney Lanier
goes on to say that the 'Mabinogion' fortunately "do not move in
that close temperature which often renders the atmosphere of the
Eastern tales so unwholesome. " Again he says (and how well the
sentence touches on the imaginative spell that one finds in the more
primitive, more peculiarly Celtic of those tales, such as the thrice
wonderful 'Dream of Rhonabwy! '): "There is a glamour and sleep-
walking mystery which often incline a man to rub his eyes in the
midst of a Mabinogi, and to think of previous states of existence. "
It remains to be said, finally, that the old manuscript volume of
the 'Mabinogion,' known as the 'Llyfr Coch o Hergest,' the 'Red
Book of Hergest,' lies enshrined in the famous library of Jesus Col-
lege, Oxford: the one college in the older English universities which
has a time-honored connection with Welsh scholarship and Welsh lit-
erature.
Ement Rhys
THE DREAM OF RHONABWY
-
HOW RHONABWY SLEPT, AND BEGAN HIS DREAM
Now
ow, near the house of Heilyn Goch they saw an old hall,
very black and having an upright gable, whence issued a
great smoke; and on entering they found the floor full of
puddles and mounds; and it was difficult to stand thereon, so
slippery was it with mire. And where the puddles were, a man
might go up to the ankles in water and dirt. And there were
boughs of holly spread over the floor, whereof the cattle had
browsed the sprigs. When they came to the hall of the house,
they beheld cells full of dust and very gloomy, and on one side.
an old hag making a fire. And whenever she felt cold, she cast
a lapful of chaff upon the fire, and raised such a smoke that it
was scarcely to be borne as it rose up the nostrils. And on the
## p. 9377 (#397) ###########################################
THE MABINOGION
9377
other side was a yellow calfskin on the floor; a main privilege
was it to any one who should get upon that hide. And when
they had sat down, they asked the hag where were the people.
of the house. And the hag spoke not, but muttered. Thereupon.
behold the people of the house entered: a ruddy, clownish, curly-
headed man, with a burthen of fagots on his back, and a pale,
slender woman, also carrying a bundle under her arm. And
they barely welcomed the men, and kindled a fire with the
boughs. And the woman cooked something and gave them to
eat: barley bread, and cheese, and milk and water.
And there arose a storm of wind and rain, so that it was
hardly possible to go forth with safety. And being weary with
their journey, they laid themselves down and sought to sleep.
And when they looked at the couch it seemed to be made but
of a little coarse straw, full of dust and vermin, with the stems
of boughs sticking up therethrough; for the cattle had eaten all
the straw that was placed at the head and foot.
And upon it
was stretched an old russet-colored rug, threadbare and ragged;
and a coarse sheet full of slits was upon the rug, and an ill-
stuffed pillow, and a worn-out cover upon the sheet. And after
much suffering from the vermin, and from the discomfort of their
couch, a heavy sleep fell on Rhonabwy's companions. But Rhona-
bwy, not being able either to sleep or to rest, thought he should
suffer less if he went to lie upon the yellow calfskin that was
stretched out on the floor. And there he slept.
As soon as sleep had come upon his eyes it seemed to him
that he was journeying with his companions across the plain of
Argyngroeg, and he thought that he went towards Rhyd y Groes
on the Severn. As he journeyed he heard a mighty noise, the
like whereof heard he never before; and looking behind him,
he beheld a youth with yellow curling hair, and with his beard.
newly trimmed, mounted on a chestnut horse, whereof the legs.
were gray from the top of the fore legs, and from the bend of
the hind legs downwards. And the rider wore a coat of yellow
satin sewn with green silk, and on his thigh was a gold-hilted.
sword, with a scabbard of new leather of Cordova, belted with
the skin of the deer, and clasped with gold. And over this
was a scarf of yellow satin, wrought with green silk, the borders
whereof were likewise green. And the green of the caparison of
the horse, and of his rider, was as green as the leaves of the fir-
tree, and the yellow was as yellow as the blossom of the broom.
XVI-587
## p. 9378 (#398) ###########################################
9378
THE MABINOGION
LLUDD AND LLEVELYS
HOW KING LLUDD FOUNDED CAER LLUDD, OR THE CITY OF LONDON
Α
FTER the death of King Beli, the kingdom of the Island of
Britain fell into the hands of Lludd, and Lludd rebuilt the
walls of London, and encompassed it about with number-
less towers. And after that he bade the citizens build houses
therein, such as no houses in the country could equal. And
moreover he was a mighty warrior, and generous and liberal in
giving meat and drink to all that sought them. And though he
had many castles and cities, this one loved he more than any.
And he dwelt therein most part of the year, and therefore it
was called Caer Lludd, and at last Caer London. And after the
stranger race came, it was called London, or Lwyndrys.
How LLUDD FOUND OXFORD TO BE THE CENTRE OF THE ISLAND OF
BRITAIN, AND HOW HE TOOK THE TWO DRAGONS IN A CALDRON
AND King Lludd caused the Isle of Britain to be measured;
and in Oxford he found the central point. And in that place
he caused the earth to be dug, and in the pit a caldron to be
set, full of the best mead that could be made; with a covering
of satin over the face of it. And he himself watched that night;
and while he watched, he beheld the dragons fighting. And
when they were weary, they fell down upon the satin covering,
and drew it with them to the bottom of the caldron.
And they
drank up the mead in the caldron, and then they slept. And
thereupon Lludd folded the satin covering around them, and in
the safest place in all Snowdon he hid them in a kistvaen. And
after this the place was called Dinas Emrys. And thus the
fierce outcry ceased in his dominions.
KILHWCH AND OLWEN
THE RIDE OF KILHWCH
Α
ND Kilhwch pricked forth on a steed with head dappled gray,
of four winters old, firm of limb, with shell-formed hoofs,
having a bridle of linked gold on his head, and upon him
a saddle of costly gold. And in the youth's hand were two
spears of silver, sharp, headed with well-tempered steel, three ells
## p. 9379 (#399) ###########################################
THE MABINOGION
9379
in length, of an edge to wound the wind, and cause blood to
flow, and swifter than the fall of the dew-drop from the blade of
reed grass upon the earth, when the dew of June is at the heav-
iest. A gold-hilted sword was upon his thigh, the blade of which
was of gold, bearing a cross of inlaid gold of the hue of the
lightning of heaven; his war-horn was of ivory. Before him were
two brindled white-breasted greyhounds, having strong collars of
rubies about their necks, reaching from the shoulder to the ear.
And the one that was on the left side bounded across to the
right side, and the one on the right to the left, and like two sea-
swallows sported around him. And his courser cast up four sods
with his four hoofs, like four swallows in the air, about his head,
now above, now below. About him was a four-cornered cloth of
purple, and an apple of gold was at each corner, and every one
of the apples was of the value of an hundred kine. And there
was precious gold of the value of three hundred kine upon his
shoes, and upon his stirrups, from his knee to the tip of his toe.
And the blade of grass bent not beneath him, so light was his
courser's tread as he journeyed towards the gate of Arthur's
palace.
DESCRIPTION OF OLWEN
THE maiden was clothed in a robe of flame-colored silk, and
about her neck was a collar of ruddy gold, on which were pre-
cious emeralds and rubies. More yellow was her head than the
flower of the broom, and her skin was whiter than the foam of
the wave, and fairer were her hands and her fingers than the
blossoms of the wood-anemone amidst the spray of the meadow
fountain. The eye of the trained hawk, the glance of the three-
mewed falcon, was not brighter than hers. Her bosom was more
snowy than the breast of the white swan; her cheek was redder
than the reddest roses. Those who beheld her were filled with
her love. Four white trefoils sprang up wherever she trod.
FROM BRANWEN THE DAUGHTER OF LLYR'
Ρ
PEA
EACE was made, and the house was built both vast and strong.
But the Irish planned a crafty device; and the craft was
that they should put brackets on each side of the hundred
pillars that were in the house, and should place a leathern bag on
each bracket, and an armed man in every one of them. Then
## p. 9380 (#400) ###########################################
9380
THE MABINOGION
Evnissyen [Branwen's brother, the perpetual mischief-maker]
came in before th host of the Island of the Mighty, and scanned
the house with fierce and savage looks, and descried the leathern
bags which were around the pillars. "What is in this bag? "
asked he of one of the Irish. "Meal, good soul," said he. And
Evnissyen felt about it till he came to the man's head, and he
squeezed the head until he felt his fingers meet together in the
brain through the bone. And he left that one and put his hand
upon another, and asked what was therein? "Meal," said the
Irishman. So he did the like unto every one of them, until
he had not left alive of all the two hundred men save one only
and when he came to him, he asked what was there? "Meal,
good soul," said the Irishman. And he felt about until he felt
the head, and he squeezed that head as he had done the others.
And albeit he found that the head of this one was armed, he
left him not until he had killed him. And then he sang an
Englyn:-
―――
"There is in this bag a different sort of meal,
The ready combatant, when the assault is made,
By his fellow warriors prepared for battle. "
FROM THE DREAM OF MAXEN WLEDIG›
A
ND he saw a maiden sitting before him in a chair of ruddy
gold. Not more easy to gaze upon than the sun when
brightest, was it to look upon her by reason of her beauty.
A vest of white silk was upon the maiden, with clasps of red
gold at the breast; and a surcoat of gold tissue was upon her,
and a frontlet of red gold upon her head, and rubies and gems
were in the frontlet, alternating with pearls and imperial stones.
And a girdle of ruddy gold was around her. She was the fairest
sight that man ever beheld.
The maiden arose from her chair before him, and he threw
his arms about the neck of the maiden, and they two sat down
together in the chair of gold; and the chair was not less roomy
for them both than for the maiden alone. And as he had his
arms about the maiden's neck, and his cheek by her cheek,
behold, through the chafing of the dogs at their leashing, and
the clashing of the shields as they struck against each other, and
the beating together of the shafts of the spears, and the neighing
of the horses and their prancing, the Emperor awoke.
## p. 9380 (#401) ###########################################
## p. 9380 (#402) ###########################################
Gresch
T. B. MACAULAY.
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## p. 9381 (#405) ###########################################
9381
THOMAS BABINGTON MACAULAY
(1800-1859)
BY JOHN BACH MCMASTER
HOMAS BABINGTON MACAULAY, the most widely read of English
essayists and historians, was born near London on the 25th
of October, 1800. His early education was received at
private schools; but in 1818 he went into residence at Trinity College,
Cambridge, graduated with honor, and was elected a fellow in 1824.
Out of deference to the wishes of his father he thought for a while
of becoming an attorney, read law, and was called to the bar in 1826.
But the labors of the profession were little to his liking; no business
of consequence came to him, and he was soon deep in literature and
politics, for the pursuit of which his tastes, his habits, and his parts
pre-eminently fitted him.
His nephew and biographer has gathered a mass of anecdotes and
reminiscences, which go far to show that while still a lad Macaulay
displayed in a high degree many of the mental characteristics which
later in life made him famous. The eagerness with which he de-
voured books of every sort; the marvelous memory which enabled
him to recall for years whole pages and poems, read but once; the
quickness of perception by the aid of which he could at a glance.
extract the contents of a printed page; his love of novels and poetry;
his volubility, his positiveness of assertion, and the astonishing amount
of information he could pour out on matters of even trivial import-
ance,-
,—were as characteristic of the boy as of the man.
As might have been expected from one so gifted, Macaulay began
to write while a mere child; but his first printed piece was an anony-
mous letter defending novel-reading and lauding Fielding and Smol-
lett. It was written at the age of sixteen; was addressed to his father,
then editor of the Christian Observer, was inserted in utter ignorance
of the author, and brought down on the periodical the wrath of a
host of subscribers. One declared that he had given the obnoxious
number to the flames, and should never again read the magazine.
At twenty-three Macaulay began to write for Knight's Quarterly Maga-
zine, and contributed to it articles some of which as The Conver-
sation between Mr. Abraham Cowley and Mr. John Milton touching
the Great Civil War'; his criticism of Dante and Petrarch; that on
Athenian Orators; and the 'Fragments of a Roman Tale' are still
―
## p. 9382 (#406) ###########################################
9382
THOMAS BABINGTON MACAULAY
given a place in his collected writings. In themselves these pieces
are of small value; but they served to draw attention to the author
just at the time when Jeffrey, the editor of the great Whig Edin-
burgh Review, was eagerly and anxiously searching for "some clever
young man" to write for it. Macaulay was such a clever young man.
Overtures were therefore made to him; and in 1825, in the August
number of the Review, appeared his essay on 'John Milton. The
effect was immediate. Like Byron, he awoke one morning to find
himself famous; was praised and complimented on every hand, and
day after day saw his table covered with cards of invitation to dinner
from every part of London. And well he might be praised; for no
English magazine had ever before published so readable, so eloquent,
so entertaining an essay. Its very faults are pleasing. Its merits
are of a high order; but the passage which will best bear selection
as a specimen of the writing of Macaulay at twenty-five is the de-
scription of the Puritan.
Macaulay had now found his true vocation, and entered on it
eagerly and with delight. In March 1827 came the essay on Machia-
velli; and during 1828 those on John Dryden, on History, and on Hal-
lam's 'Constitutional History. ' During 1829 he wrote and published
reviews of James Mill's Essay on Government' (which involved him
in an unseemly wrangle with the Westminster Review, and called
forth two more essays on the Utilitarian Theory of Government),
Southey's Colloquies on Society,' Sadler's Law of Population,' and
the reviews of Robert Montgomery's Poems. The reviews of Moore's
'Life of Byron' and of Southey's edition of the Pilgrim's Progress'
appeared during 1830. In that same year Macaulay entered Parlia-
ment, and for a time the essays came forth less frequently. A reply
to a pamphlet by Mr. Sadler written in reply to Macaulay's review,
the famous article in which Croker's edition of Boswell's Johnson
was pilloried, and the essay on John Hampden, were all he wrote in
1831. In 1832 came Burleigh and his Times, and Mirabeau; in 1833
The War of the Succession in Spain, and Horace Walpole; in 1834
William Pitt, Earl of Chatham; in 1835 Sir James Mackintosh; in 1837
Lord Bacon, the finest yet produced; in 1838 Sir William Temple; in
1839 Gladstone on Church and State; and in 1840 the greatest of all
his essays, those on Von Ranke's History of the Popes' and on Lord
Clive. The Comic Dramatists of the Restoration, Warren Hastings,
and a short sketch of Lord Holland, were written in 1841 Frederic
the Great in 1842; Madame D'Arblay and Addison in 1843; Barère
and The Earl of Chatham in 1844: and with these the long list
closes.
Never before in any period of twenty years had the British read-
ing public been instructed and amused by so splendid a series of
## p. 9383 (#407) ###########################################
THOMAS BABINGTON MACAULAY
9383
essays. Taken as a whole the series falls naturally into three classes:
the critical, the biographical, and the historical. Each has merits and
peculiarities of its own; but all have certain characteristics in com-
mon which enable us to treat them in a group.
Whoever will take the pains to read the six-and-thirty essays we
have mentioned, - and he will be richly repaid for his pains, -can-
not fail to perceive that sympathy with the past is Macaulay's ruling
passion. Concerning the present he knew little and cared less. The
range of topics covered by him was enormous; art, science, theology,
history, literature, poetry, the drama, philosophy — all were passed
in review. Yet he has never once failed to treat his subject histori-
cally. We look in vain for the faintest approach to a philosophical
or analytical treatment. He reviewed Mill's essay on Government,
and Hallam's 'Constitutional History'; but he made no observations
on government in the abstract, nor expressed any opinions as to
what sort of government is best suited for civilized communities in
general. He wrote about Bacon; yet he never attempted to expound
the principles or describe the influence of the Baconian philosophy.
He wrote about Addison and Johnson, Hastings and Clive, Machia-
velli and Horace Walpole and Madame D'Arblay; yet in no case did
he analyze the works, or fully examine the characteristics, or set forth
exhaustively the ideas, of one of them. They are to him mere pegs
on which to hang a splendid historical picture of the times in which
these people lived. Thus the essay on Milton is a review of the
Cromwellian period; Machiavelli, of Italian morals in the sixteenth
century; that on Dryden, of the state of poetry and the drama in the
days of Charles the Second; that on Johnson, of the state of English
literature in the days of Walpole. In the essays on Clive and Hast-
ings, we find little of the founders of British India beyond the enu-
meration of their acts. But the Mogul empire, and the rivalries and
struggles which overthrew it, are all depicted in gorgeous detail. No
other writer has ever given so fine an account of the foreign policy
of Charles the Second as Macaulay has done in the essay on Sir Will-
iam Temple; nor of the Parliamentary history of England for the forty
years preceding our Revolution, as is to be found in the essays on
Lord Chatham. In each case the image of the man whose name
stands at the head of the essay is blurred and indistinct.
We are
told of the trial of John Hampden; but we do not see the fearless
champion of popular liberty as he stood before the judges of King
Charles. We are introduced to Frederic the Great, and are given a
summary of his characteristics and a glowing narrative of the wars
in which he won fame; but the real Frederic, the man contending
"against the greatest superiority of power and the utmost spite of
fortune," is lost in the mass of accessories. He describes the out-
ward man admirably: the inner man is never touched.
## p. 9384 (#408) ###########################################
9384
THOMAS BABINGTON MACAULAY
But however faulty the Essays may be in respect to the treatment
accorded to individual men, they display a prodigious knowledge of
the facts and events of the periods they cover. His wonderful mem-
ory, stored with information gathered from a thousand sources, his
astonishing power of arranging facts and bringing them to bear on
any subject, whether it called for description or illustration, joined
with a clear and vigorous style, enabled him to produce historical
scenes with a grouping, a finish, and a splendor to which no other
writer can approach. His picture of the Puritan in the essay on
Milton, and of Loyola and the Jesuits in the essay on the Popes; his
description of the trial of Warren Hastings; of the power and mag-
nificence of Spain under Philip the Second; of the destiny of the
Church of Rome; of the character of Charles the Second in the essay
on Sir James Mackintosh,-are but a few of many of his bits of word-
painting which cannot be surpassed. What is thus true of particular
scenes and incidents in the Essays is equally true of many of them
in the whole. Long periods of time, great political movements, com-
plicated policies, fluctuations of ministries, are sketched with an accu-
racy, animation, and clearness not to be met with in any elaborate
treatise covering the same period.
While Macaulay was writing two and three essays a year, he won
renown in a new field by the publication of 'The Lays of Ancient
Rome. ' They consist of four ballads-'Horatius'; 'The Battle of
the Lake Regillus'; 'Virginius'; and 'The Prophecy of Capys'— which
are supposed to have been sung by Roman minstrels, and to belong
to a very early period in the history of the city. In them are re-
peated all the merits and all the defects of the Essays. The men
and women are mere enumerations of qualities; the battle pieces are
masses of uncombined incidents: but the characteristics of the periods
treated have been caught and reproduced with perfect accuracy. The
setting of Horatius, which belongs to the earliest days of Rome,
is totally different from the setting of the Prophecy of Capys, which
belongs to the time when Rome was fast acquiring the mastery over
Italy; and in each case the setting is studiously and remarkably exact.
In these poems, again, there is the same prodigious learning, the same
richness of illustration, which distinguish the essays; and they are
adorned with a profusion of metaphor and aptness of epithets which
is most admirable.
The 'Lays' appeared in 1842, and at once found their way into
popular favor. Macaulay's biographer assures us that in ten years
18,000 copies were sold in Great Britain; 40,000 copies in twenty
years; and before 1875 nearly 100,000 had passed into the hands of
readers.
Meantime the same popularity attended the 'Essays. ' Again and
again Macaulay had been urged to collect and publish them in book
## p. 9385 (#409) ###########################################
THOMAS BABINGTON MACAULAY
9385
form, and had stoutly refused. But when an enterprising publisher
in Philadelphia not only reprinted them but shipped copies to Eng-
land, Macaulay gave way; and in the early months of 1843 a volume
was issued.
Like the Lays, the Essays rose at once into popular
favor, and in the course of thirty years 120,000 copies were sold in
the United Kingdom by one publisher.
But the work on which he was now intent was the 'History of
England from the accession of King James the Second down to a
time which is within the memory of men still living. ' The idea of
such a narrative had long been in his mind; but it was not till 1841
that he began seriously to write, and not till 1848 that he published
the first and second volumes. Again his success was instant. Nothing
like it had been known since the days of Waverley. Of 'Marmion'
were sold in the first month; of Macaulay's History 3,000
copies were sold in ten days. Of the 'Lay of the Last Minstrel'
2,250 copies were disposed of in course of the first year; but the
publishers sold 13,000 copies of Macaulay in four months. In the
United States the success was greater yet.
2,000
"We beg you to accept herewith a copy of our cheap edition of your
work," wrote Harper & Brothers in 1849. "There have been three other
editions published by different houses, and another is now in preparation; so
there will be six different editions in the market. We have already sold
40,000 copies, and we presume that over 60,000 copies have been disposed of.
Probably within three months of this time the sale will amount to 200,000
copies. No work of any kind has ever so completely taken our whole coun-
try by storm. »
Astonishing as was the success, it never flagged; and year after
year the London publisher disposed of the work at the rate of
seventy sets a week. In November 1855 the third and fourth vol-
umes were issued. Confident of an immense sale, 25,000 copies were
printed as a first edition, and were taken by the trade before a copy
was bound. In the United States the sale, he was assured by Everett,
was greater than that of any book ever printed, save the Bible and
a few school-books in universal use. Prior to 1875, his biographer
states, 140,000 copies of the History were sold in the United King-
dom. In ten weeks from the day of the issue 26,500 copies were
taken, and in March 1856 $100,000 was paid him as a part of the
royalty due in December. .
Honors of every sort were now showered on him. He was raised
to the peerage; he was rich, famous, and great. But the enjoyment
of his honors was short-lived; for in December 1859 he was found in
his library, seated in his easy-chair, dead. Before him on the table
lay a copy of the Cornhill Magazine, open at the first page of
Thackeray's story of Lovel the Widower. '
## p. 9386 (#410) ###########################################
9386
THOMAS BABINGTON MACAULAY
All that has been said regarding the Essays and the Lays applies
with equal force to the History of England. ' No historian who has
yet written has shown such familiarity with the facts of English
history, no matter what the subject in hand may be: the extinction
of villeinage, the Bloody Assizes, the appearance of the newspaper,
the origin of the national debt, or the state of England in 1685.
Macaulay is absolutely unrivaled in the art of arranging and com-
bining his facts, and of presenting in a clear and vigorous narrative
the spirit of the epoch he treats. Nor should we fail to mention that
both Essays and History abound in remarks, general observations, and
comment always clear, vigorous, and shrewd, and in the main very
just.
Johns
he Back MeMaster
THE COFFEE-HOUSE
From the History of England ›
THE
HE coffee-house must not be dismissed with a cursory men-
tion. It might indeed at that time have been not im-
properly called a most important political institution. No.
Parliament had sat for years. The municipal council of the City
had ceased to speak the sense of the citizens. Public meetings,
harangues, resolutions, and the rest of the modern machinery of
agitation had not yet come into fashion. Nothing resembling
the modern newspaper existed. In such circumstances the coffee-
houses were the chief organs through which the public opinion
of the metropolis vented itself.
The first of these establishments had been set up by a Tur-
key merchant, who had acquired among the Mahometans a taste
for their favorite beverage. The convenience of being able to
make appointments in any part of the town, and of being able
to pass evenings socially at a very small charge, was so great
that the fashion spread fast. Every man of the upper or middle
class went daily to his coffee-house to learn the news and to dis-
cuss it.
Every coffee-house had one or more orators to whose
eloquence the crowd listened with admiration, and who soon.
became what the journalists of our time have been called, a
Fourth Estate of the realm. The court had long seen with un-
easiness the growth of this new power in the State. An attempt
## p. 9387 (#411) ###########################################
THOMAS BABINGTON MACAULAY
9387
had been made, during Danby's administration, to close the coffee-
houses. But men of all parties missed their usual places of
resort so much that there was an unusual outcry.
perfectly well and happy," she snapped. She avoided as much
as possible allowing her thoughts to dwell upon contingencies;
but she could not keep down an undercurrent of exasperation at
sight of the idiot's unbroken health. "It is only the people
whose existence has no raison d'être," she said, that go on liv-
ing for ever. ”
«<
<< So-o," muttered Herr Pfuhl to himself emphatically, in a
long-drawn reminiscence of his native land. He hurried down
the short avenue in fretful jumps, and as he went he struck his
greasy wide-awake down flat on his speckled cabinet-pudding of a
head. "So is it in the great houses. They have the butters and
the oils of life, and yet the wheels go creaking. The Mefrou,
ah, she will have her concert when she wants it. Not so was my
Lieschen. Never has she given me Blutwurst again, since I told
her it was Leberwurst I loved better. And yet Blutwurst was
her Leibgericht. "
Whenever he was strongly moved, his German seemed to break
forth again purer from some hidden spring of feeling, and to come
surging up across the muddy ditch of broken Dutch.
## p. 9369 (#389) ###########################################
MAARTEN MAARTENS
9369
A film spread over his eyes, for Lieschen would never eat
Blutwurst again. She had been dead for many years. She had
died in this strange, straight-lined country, of a chill at the heart.
Peace be to the old Director's ashes. He too is dead. But
his orchestra was heard in Mevrouw Lossell's rooms before he
laid down his baton. And on that memorable occasion Hendrik
Lossell went up to him, with nervous, puckered face, and compli-
mented him on the excellence of the performance; adding, with
a palpable sneer, that there were some things so valuable you
could never pay enough for them.
And the sneer was at himself.
GUILT
From God's Fool. Copyright 1892, by D. Appleton & Co.
IN
THE middle of the night Elias awoke. His brain was clear
again, as fools' brains go. He sat up in bed, and said,
"Murder. "
Murder. He did not know much about "death" and "kill-
ing," but he knew what "murder" was. Christ had been mur-
dered. Murder was hating a man so utterly that you wanted.
him to stop seeing, hearing, walking, speaking; that you wanted
him to stop being, in a word. And so you tried to prevent his
being. You struck him until he could no longer be. And he
who did this thing, who made another human being to lie silent
like a stick or stone, was a murderer. It was the very worst
thing a man could be. The wicked Jews had murdered Christ.
And Elias had murdered his brother.
Murder. The whole room was full of it. Room? What did
he know of rooms, of limits of space? He opened his horror-
struck eyes wide, and they saw as much, or as little, as before—
the immensity of darkness.
He put out his hand and felt that he was among unusual sur-
roundings. Where was he? In the place where God confines the
wicked? Prison, the grave, hell- the idea was all one to him.
He was in the darkness-the soul-darkness he had never known
thus till this hour.
Heaven and earth were aflame with the cry of murder. It
rose up in his heart and flooded his whole existence. It pressed
back upon him, and held him by the throat whenever he tried to
shake it off. But he barely tried. His was a mind of few ideas,
## p. 9370 (#390) ###########################################
9370
MAARTEN MAARTENS
at the mercy of so merciless a tyrant as this. The wish to do
away with, to silence, to annihilate. Elias had murdered his
brother, as the Jews had murdered Christ.
He dared not pray. He buried his face in the pillow and
longed to be truly blind, that he might not see "murder"; truly
deaf, that he might not hear "murder. " He dared not think of
forgiveness. There could be no forgiveness for such crime as
this. "Sins" to him had meant his childish petulances. He had
never heard of any one forgiving Christ's murderers. Everybody
was still very angry with them, and yet it was a long time ago
since Christ was killed. There could be no hope, no escape.
There was nothing but this agony, beyond tears, beyond pardon.
Nothing but the consciousness, which must remain forever, of
being one of the very few among the worst of men.
And he remembered that he had thought he was almost as
good as the Lord Christ.
THE DAWN OF THE HIGHER LIFE
From The Greater Glory. Copyright 1893, by D. Appleton & Co.
R
EINOUT, walking his horse in the blazing sunshine, peeped
curiously into the cheaply bound little volume which was
her "dearest thing on earth. "
"Verses! " he said with ready scorn. "All women are
alike. "
He knew enough about verses. Sometimes he read the books
his mother brought him, and sometimes he praised them unread.
"Always say 'Yes' to a woman," the Chevalier was wont to
remark, "if you feel it would hurt to hear you say 'No. '»
That is poetry.
"O mon âme.
O ma flamme.
O que je t'aime. »
"Toujours du même. "
"None of my talent has descended to my child," sighed Mar-
gherita. "And yet I feel sure he will be some sort of a genius
-
- perhaps a Prime Minister. " "A what? " asked the Count, and
walked away to dissemble his laughter. He rejoiced, however,
to think that his wife had come round to his view, whatever her
road.
## p. 9371 (#391) ###########################################
MAARTEN MAARTENS
9371
"Well, she begins young with her love ditties," thought Rein-
out; but, nevertheless, on his return, he settled himself in a
window-seat with the book. It was a Belgian edition of Victor
Hugo's "Les Voix Intérieures. "
He glanced at the first page. The opening words struck him.
"This Age is great and strong.
The quietly impressive words, so unlike much of Victor
Hugo's later redundancy, sank slowly into his soul. Here was a
gospel of the time, which met him half-way on his hap-hazard
path. "Are you looking for me? " it said. "I am here. "
When he had finished, he turned back and began again. He
had never read other poetry before than love songs and bouts-
rimés.
And then he plunged headlong into the piece which follows,
that magnificent poem on the death of the exiled Charles X.
Here the novice soon floundered out of his depth; but he still
held on, borne irresistibly forward by the rush of the rhythm, as
all must understand who appreciate the sublimest of spouters.
It is impossible to stop; the very bewilderment of the reader
twists him helplessly onwards amid those whirlpools of eloquence.
And in all the Titan's endless volumes, Reinout could not have
lighted on a poem more calculated to impress him than this one.
Aristocrat as he must ever remain in all the prejudices of his
bringing-up, lover as he had been destined to become from
childhood of that lowly human greatness which your mere aris-
tocrat ignores, this song of tenderest reconciliation struck chords.
within his being of whose existence his incompleteness had never
been aware. And when he reached, with palpitating heart and
eager breath, the great finale,-
"O Poesy, to heaven on frighted wing thou fliest! "
are
he started to his feet, and stood staring before him into a new
gulf yawning ahead-or was it a visionary ladder, whose top is
hid in heaven? A world of illusion, Idea, the soul-world of
beautiful hopes and fancies, the world in which all men
brothers, great and strong and greatly worthy, a world at which
the cynic laughs, with tears for laughter;-at last he beheld
it; uplifted on the pinions of his ignorance into cloudland, and
beyond that to the sun! He will never forget that moment,
-
___________
## p. 9372 (#392) ###########################################
MAARTEN MAARTENS
9372
although to this day he cannot tell you in intelligible prose what
took place in his soul. Oh, the sweetness of it! The sadness
of it! The beautiful, sorrowful hope! He did not know what
he was saying, as he stumbled on through a wilderness of mag-
nificent words. But gradually a single thought stood out clear
among all this confusion of greatnesses: the majesty - not of
your Highnesses and Excellencies and Eminences- but of the
naked soul of man. He had been yearning for it, searching for
it, unwittingly; at last he could grasp it, and read the riddle of
life.
All that afternoon he hurried upwards, a breathless explorer
on Alpine heights. Like an Indian prince from his father's pal-
ace, he had escaped out of the gilded cage where the neat cana-
ries warbled, away into the regions of the angels' song, "Peace
on earth, good-will among men. Hallelujah! " His soul was
drunken with poesy. He tore off the kid glove from his heart.
He was utterly unreasonable and nonsensical, full of clap-trap
and tall-talk and foolishness. Yes, thank God: he was all that
at last.
## p. 9373 (#393) ###########################################
9373
THE MABINOGION
BY ERNEST RHYS
HE old delightful collection of Welsh romances,-
"open-air
tales," the late Sidney Lanier happily termed them,-known
all the world over as the 'Mabinogion,' is the work of
various mediæval poets and romancers whose very names, like those
of the border balladists, are lost to us. It is easy to speculate, as
Stephens and other critics have done, about the authorship of one or
two of the 'Mabinogion,' in scanning the list of poets in Wales during
the eleventh, twelfth, and thirteenth centuries; but the quest leads to
nothing certain, and save to Welsh students is uninteresting. We
may say, as the poet Shirley wrote in speaking of Beaumont and
Fletcher, the one important thing about these authors is that
have their precious remains. "
་
we
As for the general title 'Mabinogion,' which Lady Charlotte
Guest's English version has made familiar, it is well perhaps at the
outset to listen to the explanation given by the greatest Celtic scholar
of our time, the present principal of Jesus College, Oxford. From
this it may be seen that these tales, too, are but another outgrowth
of that wonderful bardic cult to which some reference is made in a
previous volume. * "An idea prevails," says Principal John Rhys,
"that any Welsh tale of respectable antiquity may be called a
mabinogi; but there is no warrant for extending the use of the term
to any but the four branches of the Mabinogi,' such as Pwyll,
Branwen, Manawydthau, and Math. For, strictly speaking, the word
mabinog is a technical term belonging to the bardic system, and it
means a literary apprentice. In other words, a mabinog was a young
man who had not yet acquired the art of making verse, but who
received instruction from a qualified bard. The inference is that the
'Mabinogion' meant the collection of things which formed the mabi-
nog's literary training-his stock in trade, so to speak; for he was
probably allowed to relate the tales forming the four branches of
the Mabinogion' at a fixed price established by law or custom. If
he aspired to a place in the hierarchy of letters, he must acquire
the poetic art. The supposition that a mabinog was a child on his
nurse's lap would be as erroneous as the idea that the 'Mabinogion'
*Vide article Celtic Literature,' Vol. vi. , page 3403.
―――――
## p. 9374 (#394) ###########################################
THE MABINOGION
9374
are nursery tales,-a view which no one who has read them can rea-
sonably take. »
In Lady Charlotte Guest's later edition in one volume (London,
1877), the most convenient edition for reference,- twelve tales in
all will be found. Of these, the most natively and characteristically
Welsh in character are such tales as the vivid, thrice romantic
'Dream of Rhonabwy,' which owes little to outside sources. The
Lady of the Fountain,' on the other hand, shows in a very striking
way the influence of the French chivalric romances that Sir Thomas
Malory drew upon so freely in his 'Morte d'Arthur. ' In the admi-
rably edited Oxford text of the Welsh originals, The Lady of the
Fountain appears under the title of Owain and Lunet'; and Lunet's
name at once recalls Tennyson's Idylls of the King. Indeed, the
king, King Arthur himself, is not long in making his entry upon the
scene.
We find him in this first romance, set forth with all that
fondness for fine color which marks all Celtic romance:-
"In the centre of the chamber King Arthur sat upon a seat of
green rushes, over which was spread a covering of flame-colored satin,
and a cushion of red satin was under his elbow. "
It is perhaps to be regretted that King Arthur should appear so
indifferent to the delights of fiction as he does in the sequel; for in
the interval before dinner he calmly proposes to go to sleep while
they tell tales. He also suggests that they should get a flagon of
mead and some meat, by way of encouragement to the comfortable
exercise of romance. "So Kai went to the kitchen and to the mead
cellar, and returned bearing a flagon of mead and a golden goblet,
and a handful of skewers upon which were broiled collops of meat.
Then they ate the collops, and began to drink the mead. "
In the way of sheer romance, nothing could be better than the
tale of his adventures that Kynon then recites: how, after journeying
through deserts and distant regions, he came to the fairest valley
in the world, and to a great castle with a torrent below it; how, being
conducted into the castle, he found there four-and-twenty damsels of
surpassing beauty, embroidering satin at a window, who rose at his
coming, and divested him of his armor and attired him in fine linen,
with mantle and surcoat of yellow satin; and how then they spread
a feast before him, with tempting array of gold and silver; and how,
when next day he sets forth refreshed in quest of further adventures,
he is overthrown by the sable Knight of the Fountain. Owain, in
his turn, essays to fight with this Knight of Darkness:- but here let
me pause, in the remote hope of sending new readers to the tale
itself. For those who think mere romance in itself to be wanting in
philosophical interest, let it be added that Principal Rhys has in his
Hibbert Lectures discovered all manner of mythological meaning in
## p. 9375 (#395) ###########################################
THE MABINOGION
9375
the tale. Thus Owain becomes the symbol of the Day, with its
twelve hours of light, while the dark Knight of the Fountain represents
Darkness and Destruction, and corresponds to our old enemy Arawn,
the prince of Night and Hades.
In quite another vein from The Lady of the Fountain' is the
curious story of Lludd and Llevelys,' which begins in the Welsh
original, "Yr beli mawr vab manogair y bu tri meib,”—that is,
"Beli the Great, son of Manogar, had three sons. " These three were
Lludd, Caswallawn, and Nynyaw. But there was also a fourth, called
Llevelys. After the death of Beli, Lludd became King; and we add
a passage to our selections that follow, describing the legendary ori-
gin of London, as founded by King Lludd, after whom Ludgate Hill
is called. What could be more entertaining, as one contemplates
the ramifications of that congeries of cities forming modern London,
than to remember this old Welsh fable of its first beginnings? One
need not trouble to distinguish how far King Lludd and his capital,
Caer Lludd (the old Cymraec name for London), are historical or not.
Here they concern us only as romance, as do the Three Great Plagues
of the Isle of Britain, which King Lludd has to drive away. But
romance or history, let us not forget that these Three Plagues lead,
in the course of the Mabinogi, to the discovery that Oxford is the
very centre of the mystic Isle of Britain; which may very well
account, in turn, for the modern taste of Oxford for Welsh texts!
The tale that follows 'Lludd and Llevelys' in the English edition
of the 'Mabinogion,''Taliesin,' to wit,-is the only item in the list.
which is rather suspicious in its origin. In fact the tale as it stands
is neither primitive nor mediæval, but is a fairly ingenious concoc-
tion of primitive and mediæval ingredients, probably made in the
seventeenth or eighteenth century. It contains, inter alia, some strik-
ing versions of the old mystic poems attributed to Taliesin; for a
further account of which we must refer the reader to the article
in a later volume upon that remarkable and thrice puzzling Cymraec
poet. In the opening of the story of Taliesin,' as it stands, will be
found the mention of a certain Tegid Voel; and this serves to remind
us that it was a Welsh scholar, best known by his bardic use of the
same name, "Tegid," who was Lady Guest's collaborator in trans-
lating the 'Mabinogion. '
It may be said in appraising the value of the contribution thus
made to the open literature of the world, that if, necessarily, some-
thing is lost in the transference from an old to a newer tongue, yet
the version we have is a really surprisingly good English equiva-
lent, written with a great charm of style and a pervading sense of
the spirit of all romance literature. Let us not forget, either, to note
the services rendered to the book, by one so remarkable among the
## p. 9376 (#396) ###########################################
9376
THE MABINOGION
American poets as the late Sidney Lanier, from whom we quoted a
phrase in our opening sentence. In his pleasant preamble to The
Boys' Mabinogion,' the account he gives of his subject forms so con-
vincing a tribute to its delights that one is tempted to steal a sen-
tence or two. After referring to the 'Arabian Nights,' Sidney Lanier
goes on to say that the 'Mabinogion' fortunately "do not move in
that close temperature which often renders the atmosphere of the
Eastern tales so unwholesome. " Again he says (and how well the
sentence touches on the imaginative spell that one finds in the more
primitive, more peculiarly Celtic of those tales, such as the thrice
wonderful 'Dream of Rhonabwy! '): "There is a glamour and sleep-
walking mystery which often incline a man to rub his eyes in the
midst of a Mabinogi, and to think of previous states of existence. "
It remains to be said, finally, that the old manuscript volume of
the 'Mabinogion,' known as the 'Llyfr Coch o Hergest,' the 'Red
Book of Hergest,' lies enshrined in the famous library of Jesus Col-
lege, Oxford: the one college in the older English universities which
has a time-honored connection with Welsh scholarship and Welsh lit-
erature.
Ement Rhys
THE DREAM OF RHONABWY
-
HOW RHONABWY SLEPT, AND BEGAN HIS DREAM
Now
ow, near the house of Heilyn Goch they saw an old hall,
very black and having an upright gable, whence issued a
great smoke; and on entering they found the floor full of
puddles and mounds; and it was difficult to stand thereon, so
slippery was it with mire. And where the puddles were, a man
might go up to the ankles in water and dirt. And there were
boughs of holly spread over the floor, whereof the cattle had
browsed the sprigs. When they came to the hall of the house,
they beheld cells full of dust and very gloomy, and on one side.
an old hag making a fire. And whenever she felt cold, she cast
a lapful of chaff upon the fire, and raised such a smoke that it
was scarcely to be borne as it rose up the nostrils. And on the
## p. 9377 (#397) ###########################################
THE MABINOGION
9377
other side was a yellow calfskin on the floor; a main privilege
was it to any one who should get upon that hide. And when
they had sat down, they asked the hag where were the people.
of the house. And the hag spoke not, but muttered. Thereupon.
behold the people of the house entered: a ruddy, clownish, curly-
headed man, with a burthen of fagots on his back, and a pale,
slender woman, also carrying a bundle under her arm. And
they barely welcomed the men, and kindled a fire with the
boughs. And the woman cooked something and gave them to
eat: barley bread, and cheese, and milk and water.
And there arose a storm of wind and rain, so that it was
hardly possible to go forth with safety. And being weary with
their journey, they laid themselves down and sought to sleep.
And when they looked at the couch it seemed to be made but
of a little coarse straw, full of dust and vermin, with the stems
of boughs sticking up therethrough; for the cattle had eaten all
the straw that was placed at the head and foot.
And upon it
was stretched an old russet-colored rug, threadbare and ragged;
and a coarse sheet full of slits was upon the rug, and an ill-
stuffed pillow, and a worn-out cover upon the sheet. And after
much suffering from the vermin, and from the discomfort of their
couch, a heavy sleep fell on Rhonabwy's companions. But Rhona-
bwy, not being able either to sleep or to rest, thought he should
suffer less if he went to lie upon the yellow calfskin that was
stretched out on the floor. And there he slept.
As soon as sleep had come upon his eyes it seemed to him
that he was journeying with his companions across the plain of
Argyngroeg, and he thought that he went towards Rhyd y Groes
on the Severn. As he journeyed he heard a mighty noise, the
like whereof heard he never before; and looking behind him,
he beheld a youth with yellow curling hair, and with his beard.
newly trimmed, mounted on a chestnut horse, whereof the legs.
were gray from the top of the fore legs, and from the bend of
the hind legs downwards. And the rider wore a coat of yellow
satin sewn with green silk, and on his thigh was a gold-hilted.
sword, with a scabbard of new leather of Cordova, belted with
the skin of the deer, and clasped with gold. And over this
was a scarf of yellow satin, wrought with green silk, the borders
whereof were likewise green. And the green of the caparison of
the horse, and of his rider, was as green as the leaves of the fir-
tree, and the yellow was as yellow as the blossom of the broom.
XVI-587
## p. 9378 (#398) ###########################################
9378
THE MABINOGION
LLUDD AND LLEVELYS
HOW KING LLUDD FOUNDED CAER LLUDD, OR THE CITY OF LONDON
Α
FTER the death of King Beli, the kingdom of the Island of
Britain fell into the hands of Lludd, and Lludd rebuilt the
walls of London, and encompassed it about with number-
less towers. And after that he bade the citizens build houses
therein, such as no houses in the country could equal. And
moreover he was a mighty warrior, and generous and liberal in
giving meat and drink to all that sought them. And though he
had many castles and cities, this one loved he more than any.
And he dwelt therein most part of the year, and therefore it
was called Caer Lludd, and at last Caer London. And after the
stranger race came, it was called London, or Lwyndrys.
How LLUDD FOUND OXFORD TO BE THE CENTRE OF THE ISLAND OF
BRITAIN, AND HOW HE TOOK THE TWO DRAGONS IN A CALDRON
AND King Lludd caused the Isle of Britain to be measured;
and in Oxford he found the central point. And in that place
he caused the earth to be dug, and in the pit a caldron to be
set, full of the best mead that could be made; with a covering
of satin over the face of it. And he himself watched that night;
and while he watched, he beheld the dragons fighting. And
when they were weary, they fell down upon the satin covering,
and drew it with them to the bottom of the caldron.
And they
drank up the mead in the caldron, and then they slept. And
thereupon Lludd folded the satin covering around them, and in
the safest place in all Snowdon he hid them in a kistvaen. And
after this the place was called Dinas Emrys. And thus the
fierce outcry ceased in his dominions.
KILHWCH AND OLWEN
THE RIDE OF KILHWCH
Α
ND Kilhwch pricked forth on a steed with head dappled gray,
of four winters old, firm of limb, with shell-formed hoofs,
having a bridle of linked gold on his head, and upon him
a saddle of costly gold. And in the youth's hand were two
spears of silver, sharp, headed with well-tempered steel, three ells
## p. 9379 (#399) ###########################################
THE MABINOGION
9379
in length, of an edge to wound the wind, and cause blood to
flow, and swifter than the fall of the dew-drop from the blade of
reed grass upon the earth, when the dew of June is at the heav-
iest. A gold-hilted sword was upon his thigh, the blade of which
was of gold, bearing a cross of inlaid gold of the hue of the
lightning of heaven; his war-horn was of ivory. Before him were
two brindled white-breasted greyhounds, having strong collars of
rubies about their necks, reaching from the shoulder to the ear.
And the one that was on the left side bounded across to the
right side, and the one on the right to the left, and like two sea-
swallows sported around him. And his courser cast up four sods
with his four hoofs, like four swallows in the air, about his head,
now above, now below. About him was a four-cornered cloth of
purple, and an apple of gold was at each corner, and every one
of the apples was of the value of an hundred kine. And there
was precious gold of the value of three hundred kine upon his
shoes, and upon his stirrups, from his knee to the tip of his toe.
And the blade of grass bent not beneath him, so light was his
courser's tread as he journeyed towards the gate of Arthur's
palace.
DESCRIPTION OF OLWEN
THE maiden was clothed in a robe of flame-colored silk, and
about her neck was a collar of ruddy gold, on which were pre-
cious emeralds and rubies. More yellow was her head than the
flower of the broom, and her skin was whiter than the foam of
the wave, and fairer were her hands and her fingers than the
blossoms of the wood-anemone amidst the spray of the meadow
fountain. The eye of the trained hawk, the glance of the three-
mewed falcon, was not brighter than hers. Her bosom was more
snowy than the breast of the white swan; her cheek was redder
than the reddest roses. Those who beheld her were filled with
her love. Four white trefoils sprang up wherever she trod.
FROM BRANWEN THE DAUGHTER OF LLYR'
Ρ
PEA
EACE was made, and the house was built both vast and strong.
But the Irish planned a crafty device; and the craft was
that they should put brackets on each side of the hundred
pillars that were in the house, and should place a leathern bag on
each bracket, and an armed man in every one of them. Then
## p. 9380 (#400) ###########################################
9380
THE MABINOGION
Evnissyen [Branwen's brother, the perpetual mischief-maker]
came in before th host of the Island of the Mighty, and scanned
the house with fierce and savage looks, and descried the leathern
bags which were around the pillars. "What is in this bag? "
asked he of one of the Irish. "Meal, good soul," said he. And
Evnissyen felt about it till he came to the man's head, and he
squeezed the head until he felt his fingers meet together in the
brain through the bone. And he left that one and put his hand
upon another, and asked what was therein? "Meal," said the
Irishman. So he did the like unto every one of them, until
he had not left alive of all the two hundred men save one only
and when he came to him, he asked what was there? "Meal,
good soul," said the Irishman. And he felt about until he felt
the head, and he squeezed that head as he had done the others.
And albeit he found that the head of this one was armed, he
left him not until he had killed him. And then he sang an
Englyn:-
―――
"There is in this bag a different sort of meal,
The ready combatant, when the assault is made,
By his fellow warriors prepared for battle. "
FROM THE DREAM OF MAXEN WLEDIG›
A
ND he saw a maiden sitting before him in a chair of ruddy
gold. Not more easy to gaze upon than the sun when
brightest, was it to look upon her by reason of her beauty.
A vest of white silk was upon the maiden, with clasps of red
gold at the breast; and a surcoat of gold tissue was upon her,
and a frontlet of red gold upon her head, and rubies and gems
were in the frontlet, alternating with pearls and imperial stones.
And a girdle of ruddy gold was around her. She was the fairest
sight that man ever beheld.
The maiden arose from her chair before him, and he threw
his arms about the neck of the maiden, and they two sat down
together in the chair of gold; and the chair was not less roomy
for them both than for the maiden alone. And as he had his
arms about the maiden's neck, and his cheek by her cheek,
behold, through the chafing of the dogs at their leashing, and
the clashing of the shields as they struck against each other, and
the beating together of the shafts of the spears, and the neighing
of the horses and their prancing, the Emperor awoke.
## p. 9380 (#401) ###########################################
## p. 9380 (#402) ###########################################
Gresch
T. B. MACAULAY.
## p. 9380 (#403) ###########################################
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## p. 9381 (#405) ###########################################
9381
THOMAS BABINGTON MACAULAY
(1800-1859)
BY JOHN BACH MCMASTER
HOMAS BABINGTON MACAULAY, the most widely read of English
essayists and historians, was born near London on the 25th
of October, 1800. His early education was received at
private schools; but in 1818 he went into residence at Trinity College,
Cambridge, graduated with honor, and was elected a fellow in 1824.
Out of deference to the wishes of his father he thought for a while
of becoming an attorney, read law, and was called to the bar in 1826.
But the labors of the profession were little to his liking; no business
of consequence came to him, and he was soon deep in literature and
politics, for the pursuit of which his tastes, his habits, and his parts
pre-eminently fitted him.
His nephew and biographer has gathered a mass of anecdotes and
reminiscences, which go far to show that while still a lad Macaulay
displayed in a high degree many of the mental characteristics which
later in life made him famous. The eagerness with which he de-
voured books of every sort; the marvelous memory which enabled
him to recall for years whole pages and poems, read but once; the
quickness of perception by the aid of which he could at a glance.
extract the contents of a printed page; his love of novels and poetry;
his volubility, his positiveness of assertion, and the astonishing amount
of information he could pour out on matters of even trivial import-
ance,-
,—were as characteristic of the boy as of the man.
As might have been expected from one so gifted, Macaulay began
to write while a mere child; but his first printed piece was an anony-
mous letter defending novel-reading and lauding Fielding and Smol-
lett. It was written at the age of sixteen; was addressed to his father,
then editor of the Christian Observer, was inserted in utter ignorance
of the author, and brought down on the periodical the wrath of a
host of subscribers. One declared that he had given the obnoxious
number to the flames, and should never again read the magazine.
At twenty-three Macaulay began to write for Knight's Quarterly Maga-
zine, and contributed to it articles some of which as The Conver-
sation between Mr. Abraham Cowley and Mr. John Milton touching
the Great Civil War'; his criticism of Dante and Petrarch; that on
Athenian Orators; and the 'Fragments of a Roman Tale' are still
―
## p. 9382 (#406) ###########################################
9382
THOMAS BABINGTON MACAULAY
given a place in his collected writings. In themselves these pieces
are of small value; but they served to draw attention to the author
just at the time when Jeffrey, the editor of the great Whig Edin-
burgh Review, was eagerly and anxiously searching for "some clever
young man" to write for it. Macaulay was such a clever young man.
Overtures were therefore made to him; and in 1825, in the August
number of the Review, appeared his essay on 'John Milton. The
effect was immediate. Like Byron, he awoke one morning to find
himself famous; was praised and complimented on every hand, and
day after day saw his table covered with cards of invitation to dinner
from every part of London. And well he might be praised; for no
English magazine had ever before published so readable, so eloquent,
so entertaining an essay. Its very faults are pleasing. Its merits
are of a high order; but the passage which will best bear selection
as a specimen of the writing of Macaulay at twenty-five is the de-
scription of the Puritan.
Macaulay had now found his true vocation, and entered on it
eagerly and with delight. In March 1827 came the essay on Machia-
velli; and during 1828 those on John Dryden, on History, and on Hal-
lam's 'Constitutional History. ' During 1829 he wrote and published
reviews of James Mill's Essay on Government' (which involved him
in an unseemly wrangle with the Westminster Review, and called
forth two more essays on the Utilitarian Theory of Government),
Southey's Colloquies on Society,' Sadler's Law of Population,' and
the reviews of Robert Montgomery's Poems. The reviews of Moore's
'Life of Byron' and of Southey's edition of the Pilgrim's Progress'
appeared during 1830. In that same year Macaulay entered Parlia-
ment, and for a time the essays came forth less frequently. A reply
to a pamphlet by Mr. Sadler written in reply to Macaulay's review,
the famous article in which Croker's edition of Boswell's Johnson
was pilloried, and the essay on John Hampden, were all he wrote in
1831. In 1832 came Burleigh and his Times, and Mirabeau; in 1833
The War of the Succession in Spain, and Horace Walpole; in 1834
William Pitt, Earl of Chatham; in 1835 Sir James Mackintosh; in 1837
Lord Bacon, the finest yet produced; in 1838 Sir William Temple; in
1839 Gladstone on Church and State; and in 1840 the greatest of all
his essays, those on Von Ranke's History of the Popes' and on Lord
Clive. The Comic Dramatists of the Restoration, Warren Hastings,
and a short sketch of Lord Holland, were written in 1841 Frederic
the Great in 1842; Madame D'Arblay and Addison in 1843; Barère
and The Earl of Chatham in 1844: and with these the long list
closes.
Never before in any period of twenty years had the British read-
ing public been instructed and amused by so splendid a series of
## p. 9383 (#407) ###########################################
THOMAS BABINGTON MACAULAY
9383
essays. Taken as a whole the series falls naturally into three classes:
the critical, the biographical, and the historical. Each has merits and
peculiarities of its own; but all have certain characteristics in com-
mon which enable us to treat them in a group.
Whoever will take the pains to read the six-and-thirty essays we
have mentioned, - and he will be richly repaid for his pains, -can-
not fail to perceive that sympathy with the past is Macaulay's ruling
passion. Concerning the present he knew little and cared less. The
range of topics covered by him was enormous; art, science, theology,
history, literature, poetry, the drama, philosophy — all were passed
in review. Yet he has never once failed to treat his subject histori-
cally. We look in vain for the faintest approach to a philosophical
or analytical treatment. He reviewed Mill's essay on Government,
and Hallam's 'Constitutional History'; but he made no observations
on government in the abstract, nor expressed any opinions as to
what sort of government is best suited for civilized communities in
general. He wrote about Bacon; yet he never attempted to expound
the principles or describe the influence of the Baconian philosophy.
He wrote about Addison and Johnson, Hastings and Clive, Machia-
velli and Horace Walpole and Madame D'Arblay; yet in no case did
he analyze the works, or fully examine the characteristics, or set forth
exhaustively the ideas, of one of them. They are to him mere pegs
on which to hang a splendid historical picture of the times in which
these people lived. Thus the essay on Milton is a review of the
Cromwellian period; Machiavelli, of Italian morals in the sixteenth
century; that on Dryden, of the state of poetry and the drama in the
days of Charles the Second; that on Johnson, of the state of English
literature in the days of Walpole. In the essays on Clive and Hast-
ings, we find little of the founders of British India beyond the enu-
meration of their acts. But the Mogul empire, and the rivalries and
struggles which overthrew it, are all depicted in gorgeous detail. No
other writer has ever given so fine an account of the foreign policy
of Charles the Second as Macaulay has done in the essay on Sir Will-
iam Temple; nor of the Parliamentary history of England for the forty
years preceding our Revolution, as is to be found in the essays on
Lord Chatham. In each case the image of the man whose name
stands at the head of the essay is blurred and indistinct.
We are
told of the trial of John Hampden; but we do not see the fearless
champion of popular liberty as he stood before the judges of King
Charles. We are introduced to Frederic the Great, and are given a
summary of his characteristics and a glowing narrative of the wars
in which he won fame; but the real Frederic, the man contending
"against the greatest superiority of power and the utmost spite of
fortune," is lost in the mass of accessories. He describes the out-
ward man admirably: the inner man is never touched.
## p. 9384 (#408) ###########################################
9384
THOMAS BABINGTON MACAULAY
But however faulty the Essays may be in respect to the treatment
accorded to individual men, they display a prodigious knowledge of
the facts and events of the periods they cover. His wonderful mem-
ory, stored with information gathered from a thousand sources, his
astonishing power of arranging facts and bringing them to bear on
any subject, whether it called for description or illustration, joined
with a clear and vigorous style, enabled him to produce historical
scenes with a grouping, a finish, and a splendor to which no other
writer can approach. His picture of the Puritan in the essay on
Milton, and of Loyola and the Jesuits in the essay on the Popes; his
description of the trial of Warren Hastings; of the power and mag-
nificence of Spain under Philip the Second; of the destiny of the
Church of Rome; of the character of Charles the Second in the essay
on Sir James Mackintosh,-are but a few of many of his bits of word-
painting which cannot be surpassed. What is thus true of particular
scenes and incidents in the Essays is equally true of many of them
in the whole. Long periods of time, great political movements, com-
plicated policies, fluctuations of ministries, are sketched with an accu-
racy, animation, and clearness not to be met with in any elaborate
treatise covering the same period.
While Macaulay was writing two and three essays a year, he won
renown in a new field by the publication of 'The Lays of Ancient
Rome. ' They consist of four ballads-'Horatius'; 'The Battle of
the Lake Regillus'; 'Virginius'; and 'The Prophecy of Capys'— which
are supposed to have been sung by Roman minstrels, and to belong
to a very early period in the history of the city. In them are re-
peated all the merits and all the defects of the Essays. The men
and women are mere enumerations of qualities; the battle pieces are
masses of uncombined incidents: but the characteristics of the periods
treated have been caught and reproduced with perfect accuracy. The
setting of Horatius, which belongs to the earliest days of Rome,
is totally different from the setting of the Prophecy of Capys, which
belongs to the time when Rome was fast acquiring the mastery over
Italy; and in each case the setting is studiously and remarkably exact.
In these poems, again, there is the same prodigious learning, the same
richness of illustration, which distinguish the essays; and they are
adorned with a profusion of metaphor and aptness of epithets which
is most admirable.
The 'Lays' appeared in 1842, and at once found their way into
popular favor. Macaulay's biographer assures us that in ten years
18,000 copies were sold in Great Britain; 40,000 copies in twenty
years; and before 1875 nearly 100,000 had passed into the hands of
readers.
Meantime the same popularity attended the 'Essays. ' Again and
again Macaulay had been urged to collect and publish them in book
## p. 9385 (#409) ###########################################
THOMAS BABINGTON MACAULAY
9385
form, and had stoutly refused. But when an enterprising publisher
in Philadelphia not only reprinted them but shipped copies to Eng-
land, Macaulay gave way; and in the early months of 1843 a volume
was issued.
Like the Lays, the Essays rose at once into popular
favor, and in the course of thirty years 120,000 copies were sold in
the United Kingdom by one publisher.
But the work on which he was now intent was the 'History of
England from the accession of King James the Second down to a
time which is within the memory of men still living. ' The idea of
such a narrative had long been in his mind; but it was not till 1841
that he began seriously to write, and not till 1848 that he published
the first and second volumes. Again his success was instant. Nothing
like it had been known since the days of Waverley. Of 'Marmion'
were sold in the first month; of Macaulay's History 3,000
copies were sold in ten days. Of the 'Lay of the Last Minstrel'
2,250 copies were disposed of in course of the first year; but the
publishers sold 13,000 copies of Macaulay in four months. In the
United States the success was greater yet.
2,000
"We beg you to accept herewith a copy of our cheap edition of your
work," wrote Harper & Brothers in 1849. "There have been three other
editions published by different houses, and another is now in preparation; so
there will be six different editions in the market. We have already sold
40,000 copies, and we presume that over 60,000 copies have been disposed of.
Probably within three months of this time the sale will amount to 200,000
copies. No work of any kind has ever so completely taken our whole coun-
try by storm. »
Astonishing as was the success, it never flagged; and year after
year the London publisher disposed of the work at the rate of
seventy sets a week. In November 1855 the third and fourth vol-
umes were issued. Confident of an immense sale, 25,000 copies were
printed as a first edition, and were taken by the trade before a copy
was bound. In the United States the sale, he was assured by Everett,
was greater than that of any book ever printed, save the Bible and
a few school-books in universal use. Prior to 1875, his biographer
states, 140,000 copies of the History were sold in the United King-
dom. In ten weeks from the day of the issue 26,500 copies were
taken, and in March 1856 $100,000 was paid him as a part of the
royalty due in December. .
Honors of every sort were now showered on him. He was raised
to the peerage; he was rich, famous, and great. But the enjoyment
of his honors was short-lived; for in December 1859 he was found in
his library, seated in his easy-chair, dead. Before him on the table
lay a copy of the Cornhill Magazine, open at the first page of
Thackeray's story of Lovel the Widower. '
## p. 9386 (#410) ###########################################
9386
THOMAS BABINGTON MACAULAY
All that has been said regarding the Essays and the Lays applies
with equal force to the History of England. ' No historian who has
yet written has shown such familiarity with the facts of English
history, no matter what the subject in hand may be: the extinction
of villeinage, the Bloody Assizes, the appearance of the newspaper,
the origin of the national debt, or the state of England in 1685.
Macaulay is absolutely unrivaled in the art of arranging and com-
bining his facts, and of presenting in a clear and vigorous narrative
the spirit of the epoch he treats. Nor should we fail to mention that
both Essays and History abound in remarks, general observations, and
comment always clear, vigorous, and shrewd, and in the main very
just.
Johns
he Back MeMaster
THE COFFEE-HOUSE
From the History of England ›
THE
HE coffee-house must not be dismissed with a cursory men-
tion. It might indeed at that time have been not im-
properly called a most important political institution. No.
Parliament had sat for years. The municipal council of the City
had ceased to speak the sense of the citizens. Public meetings,
harangues, resolutions, and the rest of the modern machinery of
agitation had not yet come into fashion. Nothing resembling
the modern newspaper existed. In such circumstances the coffee-
houses were the chief organs through which the public opinion
of the metropolis vented itself.
The first of these establishments had been set up by a Tur-
key merchant, who had acquired among the Mahometans a taste
for their favorite beverage. The convenience of being able to
make appointments in any part of the town, and of being able
to pass evenings socially at a very small charge, was so great
that the fashion spread fast. Every man of the upper or middle
class went daily to his coffee-house to learn the news and to dis-
cuss it.
Every coffee-house had one or more orators to whose
eloquence the crowd listened with admiration, and who soon.
became what the journalists of our time have been called, a
Fourth Estate of the realm. The court had long seen with un-
easiness the growth of this new power in the State. An attempt
## p. 9387 (#411) ###########################################
THOMAS BABINGTON MACAULAY
9387
had been made, during Danby's administration, to close the coffee-
houses. But men of all parties missed their usual places of
resort so much that there was an unusual outcry.
