Imágenes de página
PDF
ePub

Mauvais Pas is still a dangerous place for lone travellers. A carbinier at this moment rode up, and asked our party if we had seen any person on the road, for a robbery had been committed a few days ago in that place.

THE SIGNS OF THE TIMES. Nor being gifted with the spirit of prophecy, and possessing no skill in sciences abstruse and occult, we are not going upon the present occasion to attempt any explanation of the mysteries of the past, or to project forward from the dark lantern of imagination an enlightening gleam upon those of the future. We know nothing whatever about the Coming Struggle-have not even the honour of a bowing acquaintance with the Coming Man-have no pretensions to decide upon the completion of the chiliadic periods, nor have looked over the proof-sheets of the next year's almanac by Raphael. The great uproar among the nations that is to be, or is not to be-the long-looked for debacle which is to hoist Turkey in Europe out of Europe-and all the threatened and promised marvels and prodigies and horrors, which certain hungry and thirsty seers find it so profitable just now to send drifting down the current of public opinion-these must take their course for us, and crown their own especial prophets and promulgators with honour or disgrace, as it may happen: they are not wares for our market. The signs of the times with which we at present have to do, though they do some of them hang out aloft very high, and blaze like meteors-while others glimmer feebly and fitfully in fuliginous and cavernous resorts, have nothing either celestial or infernal, supernatural or prophetical about them. They are substantial realities, the work of men's hands; they appeal in silent but unmistakable language to a very numerous class of Her Majesty's liege subjects, and, unlike the symbols of ancient or modern soothsayers, are never misunderstood by the dullest pate in Christendom. For instance: "The Cat and Bagpipes.'

When certain unpropitious planets are in apogee, or when Mars and Venus are in opposition, there may be a shindy brewing somewhere, we don't deny it-very probably there is-we cannot undertake to determine; but when we see the sign of the Cat and Bagpipes in the ascendant, and swaying gracefully in the evening breeze at the corner of a street, we don't want the aid of astrological lore or the spirit of divination to inform us what it symbolises. We know as well as if we were Spigot himself, and had doctored the beer and spirits with our own hands for these twenty years past, what it means. It means stout in draught, and bottled beer, and treble X at threepence-halfpenny 'in your own jugs;' it means 'max,' and 'mountain-dew,' and yards of clay,' and a brown japanned tobacco-box, inscribed with the venerable legend

A good half-penny pay before you fill,
Or forfeit sixpence, which you will;

and a saw-dusted floor crowded with kitchen-chairs and iron-spittoons, and mahogany-tables baptised in beer and loaded with foaming pots, each the temporary property of a volcanic proprietor in a state of eruption, to be followed by a state of harmony, and to end in a state of beastliness. And besides all this, it means skittles in the mouldy patch of garden-ground in the rear, and 'goes' of gin, and 'noggins' and three-outers,' and plenty more of that sort of thing, as everybody knows, and no mistake at all about it.

If any one doubts the universal knowledge which bibulous man has obtained with respect to the language of these signs, he or she must be a person of most happy experience, who has dwelt apart in some delectable Arcadia where milk and honey have not been banished by malt and hops--and not in dusty, miry,

smoky, beery, brewery London, where Sir John Barleycorn surveys the whole capital from unnumbered elevations, and is monarch of all he surveys. Yonder fustian-jacketed labourer is in no such a state of heathen, or, if you like it better, classical ignorance. Ask him the way to Aldgate, and he will direct you along the whole route, though it should extend for a couple of miles, by those to him hospitable and infal lible guides. He knows the charms of each separate paradise, and, never dreaming but that you are equally well informed, directs you to go straight on till you come to the Three Turks, then to turn to the right and cross over at the Dog and Duck, and go on again till you come to the Bear and Bottle, then to turn the corner at the Jolly Old Cocks, and after passing the Veteran, the Guy Fawkes, and the Iron Duke, to take the first turn to the right, which will bring you into it. By this civil communication you are taught, as we have been taught a hundred times, that the publicans' signs are, to no small section of the public, a substitute for the map of London. We propose to take a brief glance at them as they hang over our heads or flourish on side-posts or ground-glass windows. We have no intention of entering their sacred precincts, but shall confine ourselves to some selections from the catalogue which the bare enumeration of them would present, in order to see who and what are supposed to be the presiding deities in these veritable homes of half the working population of the capital of Great Britain. The public-houses in London amount in number to something not much short of 5000, and if we suppose that the average number of customers to each is 100 a day--and some of the gin-spinning fraternity may count their daily customers by thousands-the sumtotal will be more than equivalent to half the adult population-which does not say much for the spread of the total-abstinence principles. The half-million men and women who daily subscribe to the great alcoholic fund for promoting the demoralisation of the human race, and throw their personal example into the bargain, are the supporters of about 30,000 persons employed in the sole occupation of administering the popular libations, and of half as many more engaged in their manufacture, for the consumption of London alone. They congregate together for one uniform purpose, but under banners including every variety which the imagination can suggest. Somebody has said, that upon a question capable of popular solution nearly everybody will arrive at a just verdict, though perhaps no two men will be found who do so upon the same premises: your thirsty subject has always a problem to solve, and, so that he comes to the desired conclusion, is not at all particular as to the premises. If in a loyal mood, he may get drunk on the premises of the Victoria or Prince Albert; if in a patriotic one, at the Nelson or the Duke of Wellington; if in a benevolent one, at the Open Hand; if in an angry one, at the Hand and Dagger; and so on, suiting the action to the sign, with true drunken philosophy, the action being always the same whatever the sign.

The first class of signs demanding notice are those bearing the names, and frequently the portraits, of celebrated individuals. The first on the list, for we like to begin at the beginning, is of course Adam; but Adam, before he had his Eve, had his arms, for which we must refer the reader to the College of Heraldry, putting no faith in the legend of a pewter pot, and a couple of crossed tobacco-pipes, attributed to him by the learned members of the Licensed Victuallers' Company. There is but one Adam's Arms in London. Then come Adam and Eve together, and the blissful pair dominate over exactly twelve reeking tap-rooms within the sound of Bow Bells. Our first parents are the only antediluvians on the list, but of Noah's Arks, which form the connecting-link between the world before and the world after the deluge, there are eight. David with his harp

begins the catalogue of royal personages, of whom there is literally no end. There is a King Alfred, only one King George, two Henry the Eighths, three Kings of Denmark, fourteen Kings of Prussia, five King William the Fourthis, one King on Horseback, ten King and Queens, ninety King's Arms, and seventy King's Heads. Of Queens Adelaide and Charlotte, there are two each; of Queen Victoria, twenty-one; of Queen's Arms, a dozen; and of Queen's Heads, fifty; and for the use and behoof of all these royal personages, there are threescore-and-ten Crowns; and about as many more in connection with Anchors, Anvils, Apple-trees, Barleymows, Tin-cans, Dolphins, Horse-shoes, Leeks, Sceptres, Shears, Shuttles, Sugar-loaves, Thistles, and Woolpacks; to say nothing of fifty Roses, the rose always taking precedence of the crown on the sign-board. There are a dozen Prince Alberts; twice as many Princes of Wales; as many Prince-Regents. Each Prince-Regent might be matched with a Princess of some designation or other; and foreign princes and princes' heads complete the catalogue of sovereignty. Then there is everything Royal, from the Royal Albert, down through the whole alphabet to the Royal Yacht, including five-and-twenty Royal Oaks and fifteen Royal Standards.

Of Dukes, there are ninety-eight, including fourteen Dukes of Clarence, six Dukes of Sussex, twenty-five Dukes of Wellington, and thirty Dukes of York. There are ten Earls, and forty-five Lords, including thirty Lord Nelsons; thirty-six Marquises, of whom one-half are Marquises of Granby. Of Shakspeares, there is but one, and six Shakspeare's Heads. There are two Sir Isaac Newtons, two Sir Sydney Smiths, and one Sir Walter Scott; one Van Tromp, three Whittington and Cats, two Sir John Barleycorns, four Sir John Falstaffs, and ten Robin Hoods.

Among the signs especially appealing to workingmen, there are the arms of every profession, from the Bricklayers' Arms, of which London boasts thirty, through the whole alphabet again, down to the Watermen's Arms, of which there are fifteen.

In the animal kingdom, there are three Antelopes; fourteen Brown Bears, besides a whole bear-garden of various other lively colours; Birds in the Hand, five; Black Bulls, sixteen; Bulls' Heads, twenty-five; Black Dogs, four; Black Horses, twenty-five; Black Lions, ten; Black Swans, six; Blue Boars, seven; one Blue Pig; one Blue Lion; one Camel; four Cart-horses; three Cats; one Civet Cat; twenty Cocks; four Cocks with Bottles; two Cocks with Hoops, and one Cock and Neptune; two Dogs and Ducks; fourteen Dolphins; six Eagles; seven Elephants, with or without Castles; ten Falcons; one Fish; thirty Foxes, with Grapes, Geese, or Hounds; three Hampshire Hogs; five Hares and Hounds; ten Goats, some in Boots, and some furnished with a pair of Compasses; thirty Green Men; nine Greyhounds; two Hen and Chickens; one Hog in the Pound; twenty-seven Horses and Grooms; ten Lions in a state of nature, some tête-à-tête with Lambs, some with French Horns; ninety Lions in red skins, and twenty-eight in white ones; seven Magpies, one with a Maiden, three with a Stump, one with a Pewter Platter, and one with a Punch-bowl; twenty Nags' Heads; one Old Cock; one Old Fox; six Old Red Lions; and four Old Swans. There are twelve Peacocks; one Pheasant; four Pied Bulls; two Rams; two Ravens; nine Red Cows; one Red Horse; ten Roebucks; seven Running Horses; one Running Footman; three Spotted Dogs; eleven Spread Eagles; thirty Swans, some with Horse-shoes, some with Sugarloaves, and one with two Necks; five Tigers; twelve Turks' Heads; five Unicorns; eighteen White Bears; seventy White Harts, and only one White Hind; fiftyfour White Horses; one White Raven; thirty-one White Swans; four Stags; one Leopard; three British Lions, and one Porcupine.

Some publicans betray a partiality for a particular number, and double or treble their signs, or choose some device which shall express their favourite figure. Thus we have the One Tun, the One Swan; the Two Bells, the Two Black Boys, the Two Sawyers, the Two Ships, the Two Mariners, the Two Brewers (of which there are thirty), the Two Eagles, &c. Then we have the Three Colts, the Three Compasses (twenty-seven in number), the Three Cranes, the Three Crowns, the Three Cups, the Three Goats' Heads, the Three Hats, the Three Herrings, the Three Jolly Butchers, the Three Kingdoms, the Three Kings' Heads, the Three Loggerheads, the Three Lords, the Three Mackerel, the Three Neats' Tongues, the Three Pigeons, the Three Stags, the Three Suns, and the Three Tuns, which last number over a score. Four is not a favourite number with publicans, and the Four Swans in Bishopsgate Street is the only quadruple alliance upon the sign-boards of London. Fives there are in plenty; among which we may particularise the Five Bells and Blade-bone, the Five Ink-horns, and the Five Pipes. Of sixes, there are but two-the Six Bells, and the Six Cans and Punch-bowl. Of the sevens, there are just seven-of which six are the Seven Stars, and one the Seven Sisters. Then the Eight Bells, of which there are four; and the Nine Elms, of which there is but one. There is also but one ten-the Ten Bells; and one twelve, which is also a peal of Bells.

There are sixteen saints-St John, St Luke, and St Paul being the favourites; and though there is but one bishop, Bishop Blaize, there are eleven Mitres. Of Georges, there are fifty; and twenty more of that gentleman settling his account with the Dragon. There are twenty-one Angels, and fifteen more Angels in partnership with Crowns, Suns, and Trumpets; seven Flying Horses; about thirty Golden prodigies of various kinds-Anchors, Fleeces, and Lions; of Green Dragons, there are sixteen; and five Griffins, three Men in the Moon, one Monster, three Neptunes, eleven Phoenixes, and one Silver Lion.

Among the Jolly fellows are the Jolly Anglers, the Jolly Farmers, the Jolly Millers, the Jolly Sailors, and the Jolly Waterman, with a Tippling Philosopher at their head.

Of fruits, fruit-trees, and vegetables, we have-Artichokes, seven; Apple-trees, three; Cherry-trees, five; Grapes, sixty-six; Mulberry-trees, four; Orange-trees, two; Pine-apples, five; and Vines, three.

The most absorbent colours are found to be black, blue, green, red, and white. Of these the Blacks amount to nearly a hundred, the greater part of them being Black Bulls and Black Horses; the Blues are sixty, being mainly Anchors, Boars, and Posts; the Greens are fifty, mostly Green Dragons or Green Men; the Reds are a hundred and ten, of which three-fourths are Lions; and the Whites are above two hundred, in which the White Hart and the White Horse principally predominate.

Among the mysterious signs which are apt to puzzle us as we walk the streets, are the Hole-in-theWall, of which there are seven; the Bag of Nailsthought to be a corruption of The Bacchanaliansthe Two Black Boys; the Cat and Salutation; the Fish and Bell; the Globe and Pigeons; the Goose and Gridiron; Grave Maurice (who was he?); the Halfmoon and Punch-bowl; the Ham and Windmill; the Hat and Tun; the Hop and Toy; the Horns and Chequers; the Horse-shoe and Magpie; the King's Head and Lamb; the Naked Boy and Woolpack; the Queen's Head and French Horn; the Rose and Three Tuns; the Salmon and Compasses; the Sash and Cocoatree; the Sun and Sword; the Ship and Blade-bone, &c., the significations of which, if they have any, lie too deep beneath the surface for our comprehension.

Of the implements of agriculture there are-Ploughs,

eighteen; Harrows, five; one Shovel, three Carts and Horses, and two Wagons. We may add that there are fourscore Ships in all conditions, from a Ship on the Launch, to a Sheer Hulk; and of Anchors there are twenty, most of them allied with Hope, and twenty more allied only with blue paint.

The above selections from the list of wooden banners, beneath which assemble nightly the thirsty population of the metropolis, must suffice for the present. They are the multifaced symbols of the most frequented, most popular, and best patronised of all our national institutions; whether they reflect much credit upon us as the inhabitants of the most enlightened city in the world, is a question we have not leisure to enter upon. The hospitality they practise is regarded by humanitarians as a very doubtful virtue-and some of them do not scruple to declare, that though by no means ministers of charity themselves, they are the originating causes of half the munificent and splendid charitable endowments which adorn our land, and, moreover, of not a few of those palatial-looking prison-fortresses which the genius of architecture has latterly condescended to render ornamental too, on the principle, we suppose, that if the body politic cannot get rid of an unsightly wen, the next best thing is to hide it beneath an agreeable covering.

THE MONTH:
SCIENCE

AND ART S.

THE progress of science is in our day so rapid, that a man cut off, for a single year, from sources of information, would find himself in a very uncomfortable state of ignorance on resuming his intercourse with society. A monthly sketch of this department of knowledge though assuming to be nothing more than a kind of popular gossip-will, we think, put our non-scientific readers at their case in well-informed company, while it may be of use to the savant as a chronological record and remembrancer of the progress of discovery. With such objects, we propose taking some pains to group in this department of the Journal whatever is more remarkable in the passing history of science and the useful arts.

A communication from Aden warns mariners navigating the Arabian seas, that a change has taken place in the variation of the compass. This fact, however, is well known to scientific men; it is a process continually going on in that region at the rate of rather more than a degree every ten years. It is now 2:49 west; in 1834, it was above 5°. The causes will probably have to be sought for in the as yet occult phenomena of terrestrial magnetism. The inquiry into these is still perseveringly carried on. Colonel Sabine has just presented an important paper to the Royal Society, in which he demonstrates, from five years' observations, that the moon, as well as the sun, exercises an influence on the magnet. It is another step towards clearing away the obscurities that at present darken the subject.

The

Dr Palagi of Bologna has made some curious experiments, by which he finds that bodies, of whatever kind, in a natural state, exhibit signs of vitreous electricity in proportion as they are raised up from the surface of the earth, and signs of resinous electricity as they again approach it in descending.' It is not, he remarks, the effect of muscular force, nor of the rate of movement; for whether fast or slow, organic or inorganic, the result is still the same. A man may produce it in favourable circumstances by raising his arm. experiments, however, are subject to great modifications, and will not succeed unless carried on in some very open place out of doors. The connection between these phenomena and those of magnetism may become apparent in the further progress of the investigation; meantime, the results obtained by Professor J. Phillips are worthy of notice. He finds, from a course of magnetic observations made in Yorkshire, that different sets of isoclinal lines appear for different portions of that great county. He believes these differences to be and that in time we shall be able, by nice observations due to the nature and inclination of underlying strata, of the magnetic needle on the surface, to judge of the strata that lie below as correctly as by boring. If these views hold good, magnetism will prove a valuable aid to geology; and there is perhaps more relation between the two than is commonly supposed. Magnetic disturbances are known to have occurred during eruptions of Mauna Loa and of Etna; and it is not impossible that some of the unsettled points in geoIs there any limit to the number of planetary bodies?' logy may hereby come to be cleared up. According is the inquiry more and more repeated among astro- to Professor Edward Forbes, the geology of England nomers, as the list of minor planets is increased by is all to do over again, as is indicated by facts which continued discovery. Twenty-seven of these little have recently come under notice in the Isle of Wight. orbs have already been recognised and named, and the Strata and outcrops, he says, have been mistaken, and finding of others is now considered to be scarcely more we have now to regard our English series of Eocene than a mechanical task; one, however, which may lead tertiaries,' hitherto imperfect, to be the most complete to a confirmation of the views that certain starry perhaps in the world. And by these we are enabled to phenomena are about to be better comprehended than assign true places to strata bordering on the Mediterhitherto. Le Verrier argues, that the whole mass of ranean, and even so far off as Australia. No fear, these small bodies within the zone in which they are therefore, of geological inquiries becoming exhausted. found, will prove to be equal to not more than one- A subject of some importance to farmers has been fourth of the mass of the earth; deriving his conclusion brought before the Chemical Society-the deposits of from the fact, that Mars appears to be altogether un-soluble or gelatinous silica' found in the lower chalkdisturbed by their presence. In pursuing the question, it is thought that something like a satisfactory explanation may be arrived at concerning aërolites-one of the puzzles of science. Besides this, a classification for comets is to be drawn up, by which our knowledge, such as it is, of those eccentric wanderers may be reduced to a system; and a connected series of observations on aurora is to be attempted from different parts of the northern hemisphere. With respect to the latter phenomenon, De la Rive puts forth the opinion, that we may attribute it 'to the electricity with which the currents of air are charged that rise from the equatorial regions, and travel in the upper atmosphere towards the poles, where they combine with the negative electricity of the earth, forming, under the influence of the magnetic pole, those luminous arches.'

6

beds at Farnham. They are probably from 80 to 100 feet thick, and they cover an area of several miles. In some samples that have been taken up, the silica amounts to seventy-two per cent. Mr Way proposes

to employ these beds as a source of silicate of lime for agricultural purposes. He finds that the silica can be made to combine with lime with great ease in various ways. A mixture of slaked lime with the powdered rock, when made into a thin mortar, and left for several weeks, is entirely converted into silicate of lime.' The use of this substance on light lands is said to be beneficial, inasmuch as it prevents the over-luxuriance of growing grain, and strengthens the straw. It is something to have a fertiliser at command without sending for it to South America. It appears that the quantity of Peruvian guano available is much less than

was supposed-about 8,000,000 tons, which will probably be exhausted in about eight years. Notwithstanding that specimens of bats' guano have been sent over from Penang, and that great deposits are said to be scattered about the Indian archipelago, it seems desirable that other substances should be looked for as a means of fertilising our fields. In these circumstances, we hear with interest of plans for obtaining artificial manure from the abundant fish of our seas, and from the sewage of our large towns. We are certainly on the eve of realising some of these plans.

The same society have had their attention drawn to certain remarkable phenomena witnessed in the treacle stores of the London Docks. In 1849, 110 casks of molasses, containing altogether 1270 hundredweights, were stowed away in the usual manner. In September 1851, an increase of weight was observed, when the casks were re-coopered. In February 1852, they were again weighed, and again was there an increase of weight, amounting on the whole to 231 hundredweights; or more, for in some instances it had no more than made up for leakage. Another squadron of 347 casks, weighing 4160 hundredweights, were also stowed away in July 1849, and reweighed in September 1852, when some were so swollen, that the heads bulged as though overfull, and on starting the bung, the molasses spurted upwards for several feet like a fountain. These casks weighed 12 hundredweights each: the greater number had gained from 1 pound to 30, and nearly 100 from 30 to 51 pounds, the total gain being 56 hundredweights. In a third instance, the increase ranged from 23 pounds to 68 pounds, an extraordinary result. A remarkable property of absorption is said to be the cause, and most powerful in the casks made of Quebec pine. It is well known that the Davy-lamp used by miners, with all its merits, was not free from imperfections, and that many attempts have been made to improve upon it. Among the latest is the safety-lamp exhibited by Dr Glover at a meeting of the Society of Arts. It has two glass cylinders—the outer one, a quarter-inch thick; the inner, one-eighth, kept in place by a fitting of wiregauze. The air descends between the two, and passes through the gauze to feed the flame from below, which insures almost entire combustion, while by this arrangement the lamp becomes less heated than the Davy, and can be held in the hand. There is safety in the two cylinders, since if the outer one should be broken by a drop of water falling on it while heated, the other suffices to prevent mischief until a new one can be fitted. Another means of safety is, that whenever the lamp is surrounded by an explosive gas, the flame is at once extinguished by a tin cone attached to the gauze; and moreover, the flame goes out should the miner attempt to light his pipe by it. From the trials made, this improved lamp appears well adapted to its purpose, in increased brilliance of light, as well as other respects. It may be well, however, to mention, that a safety-lamp on the lock-spring principle,' was exhibited at the last meeting of the Royal Cornwall Polytechnic Society, by Mr E. Simons, of Birmingham, who placed it in a stream of hydrogen gas, and shewed its construction to be such, that the least attempt on the part of the miner to open the lamp would cause the light to be extinguished.'

There were a few instances of self-educated endeavour brought before the same meeting that are deserving of notice: one, a man of the coast-guard, who had prepared the skeleton of a porpoise in a way superior to anything of the kind yet accomplished, the fins and pelvic bone being retained in their place. Besides the prize awarded to him, a number of his specimens have been purchased for the British Museum, the chiefs of that establishment being well satisfied with the skilful preparations. Another example was a model of a mine and its machinery by a working-mechanic, described as both novel and ingenious, and displaying an amount of

perseverance and talent of no ordinary kind.' There is talk of establishing a School of Mines for Cornwall at Truro: judging from appearances, we may believe that there will be no lack of intelligent students. We may add also, before quitting this subject, that an important machine has been brought into use for drying the china clay,' of which 80,000 tons or more are exported every year from different ports of Cornwall, chiefly to Staffordshire for use in the Potteries. The usual method has been to prepare the clay, and leave it to dry by the natural process-one which, as it frequently demanded six or eight months, involved great loss of time. The machine now used is similar in principle to that employed for drying clothes after washing: the lumps of clay are placed in the compartments made to receive them, the apparatus is then rotated with great velocity, which throws off the water by centrifugal force, and in this way two tons of clay can be dried in five minutes. Seeing that more than L.200,000 is spent annually in Cornwall in 'getting' and preparing this clay for the market, any shortening of the process must lead to important consequences. The same principle has been introduced in the drying of manufactured sugar with considerable advantage. The rearing of fish is about to have a fair trial at Storemountfield on the Tay, where a salmon-nursery has been formed, with 400,000 eggs, all duly fecundated by the artificial process, and now going through the stages towards hatching in the spring. If but one-half of the young fry come forth and survive, there will be good reason for repeating the experiment. Across the Channel, there is a scheme for naturalising the sturgeon, and the saluth, a large fish from the Swiss lakes-in the rivers of France. Should it succeed to any extent, we shall be able to get caviare and isinglass without sending to Astrakan for them. It is thought that, as the Rhône has no mills or factories along the greater part of its course, parks or conservatories of fish may be laid off in suitable places, and attempts made to cross different breeds, as is practised successfully by the Chinese. The Dutch government has just established two of these fish-nurseries in the neighbourhood of the Hague; so that we may hope to see erelong to what extent it is possible to add by this means to our food resources.

Assam, in addition to tea, has sent over fifteen bales of Rheea grass, the same as that from which the muchtalked of 'grass-cloth' is made. It may be used also for other purposes; for it is said to be superior to Russian hemp, and cheaper, and producible in large quantities. Madeira, too, is sending us more of her produce in the shape of pine-apples and oranges, to make up for her losses by the grape disease. Apropos of this malady, it has been stated that it can be cured or prevented by a solution of the higher sulphides of calcium. Vines washed with this solution continued to flourish, while others, purposely left untouched, suffered severely.

M. Bobièrre, a chemist at Nantes, says that bronze is much more lasting and serviceable as sheathing for ships than copper or brass. M. Nicklès is still working at his experiments in magnetising the driving-wheels of locomotives. He has made some trials on the Paris and Lyon Railway; and now, having arrived at a better knowledge of circular electro-magnets, he thinks certain difficulties may be overcome. The object aimed at, is to increase the 'bite' of the wheels upon the rails. 'I shall not rest satisfied,' he says, 'until it has become easy to use gradients of more than ten millimetres to the metre, and until it shall become no longer necessary to construct tunnels at great expense, or to build extensive earthworks, or make curves of large radius.' With respect to the electro-chemical engine that has been a good deal talked about for the past few weeks, some of our ablest mechanicians deny the possibility of an apparatus that shall, as fast as galvanic

effect is obtained, reproduce the liquids still as active as before. If this be possible, the perpetual motion is achieved.

then he acknowledges in his heart-yea, in his heart of hearts-the supremacy of womanhood.

Sara at first shrunk from the great boy, as she The project for an atmospheric conveyance-tube between New York and Boston, has advanced into the called him, although he was probably very little older company stage with a prospect of being carried out. than herself; and Bob, after looking at her by the The tube, when complete, will be 200 miles in length; hour till he had learned her entirely by heart, turned and small parcels are to be sent from one end to the away, with a kind of good-humoured disdain, to his other in fifteen minutes by the force of compressed air. books, or his fencing, or his chess. But he gradually It is a scheme worthy of American enterprise, which discovered in Sara something that was necessary to his has just produced a tunnelling machine, compared with progress. She was much further advanced than himself which all other contrivances for boring holes in the globe in various kinds of knowledge, because what she knew are mere gimlets. It is made of iron, works by steam, she had learned methodically from its earliest rudiments. and weighs seventy-five tons. The cutters are steel disks, which revolve with 'irresistible power,' and carve She was acquainted with at least the first lines of an opening seventeen feet in diameter, through the sciences-for instance, astronomy and botany-of which hardest rock, at the rate of about three feet in two he knew nothing more than the names; and what was hours; and with the attendance of only four men. A of still more consequence, she possessed a large collec'mechanical nautilus,' a new kind of diving-bell, has tion of those multifarious school-books that are used in also been contrived, which can be moved from place modern education. Sara thus acquired more and more to place, or kept stationary at any point between the surface of the water and the bottom with great consequence in his eyes every day; not in her own facility. A report states that treasure, pearl-shells, individuality, but as something which he instinctively coral, sponges, and all products under water, may felt to be necessary to the satisfaction of the blind, be easily gathered, and sent to the surface without unconscious longings of his intellectual nature. requiring the machine to rise. It has an arrangement which permits the digging of trenches, by which telegraph wires and water-pipes may be placed below the reach of anchors.' In short, there is no under-water employment for which it is not available. It has room for ten persons, and will rise from a depth of thirty feet in four seconds. Without necessarily disparaging the machine here described, which appears to be constructed with remarkable ingenuity, we may remind our readers that Mr Babbage suggested something very similar, nearly thirty years ago, in his article Diving-bell, in the Encyclopædia Metropolitana.

Agassiz is making known to the savans of Europe and America, that he is preparing a Natural History of the Fishes of the United States. He has just described a new species of fish sent to him from California, perchlike in appearance, and from ten to twelve inches long, which brings forth its young alive. It is believed that the auriferous state contains many other curiosities of natural history; and now that an Academy of Natural Sciences has been established at San Francisco, they will probably not long remain unknown.

The Photographic Exhibition held at Suffolk Street has proved successful, if only in demonstrating the real advancement made in that interesting art. Apparatus is simplified, landscapes more beautiful than ever have been taken, and life-size portraits can now be produced.

WEARYFOOT COMMON.

CHAPTER III.

A WEARYFOOT EMEUTE AND ITS CONSEQUENCES.

It is a curious fact in the natural history of little girls, that although they are passionately attached to young children, the feeling gradually changes to downright hostility as these creep up into the category of great boys. The great boy, on his part, can hardly be said to reciprocate the enmity; or at least his dislike is so much chastened with contempt as to change its character. He merely pooh-poohs the little girl. He looks upon her as a naturally inferior animal-inferior in wisdom, courage, and strength; and it is not till he has left great boyhood behind, that he finds out his mistake. Then he begins to blush and falter in the presence of the expanded weakling; then he pays obedience to the lightest look of this lower nature; then he dedicates to her service, and makes her own, all those qualities on the exclusive possession of which he had prided himself;

The little girl, on her part, pale, timid, and retiring, began erelong to fancy that after all there was nothing so excessively disagreeable in the great boy, who asked her questions, listened to her replies with calm attention, and received with thankfulness the loan of her books. To confer favours on a great boy changed entirely the relations between them; and by degrees Sara began to reap the advantage of being obliged to revert to the lessons she would otherwise soon have forgotten, in order to teach them to one whose natural gifts quickly books together, looked at the stars together, botanised carried both beyond them. The children studied in in the wood together. Elizabeth had a new listener; the captain another pupil in chess; and, to the extravagant delight of the veteran, Bob taught the little girl to fence, while she taught him to dance to her aunt's mechanical drumming on the piano. It is a trait worth mentioning in the life of this simple family, that Molly, after having been drilled for a week or two in private by Sara, was frequently called into the room to sustain a part in the dance, when it was necessary to make a second couple out of a movable partner and a chair. It must be added, that Molly, although at first frightened, nervous, and astonished, and eliciting far more laughter than applause, took at last to the exercise with such good-will, that it produced a manifest change for the better in her air and carriage. And no wonder; for her performances in the room were repeated step for step before Mrs Margery in the kitchen; and at other times, too, when she had nothing special in hand, or when the idea came spontaneously into her head, she would rush suddenly out to the middle of the floor, to the great annoyance of Mr Poringer, and indulge in a skip on her own account.

All this time the good captain had never once thought of sending his protégé to school, or getting a governess for his niece. His sister, he considered, was all-sufficient in the latter capacity, for there was no end of her homilies; and as for the boy, was he not under his own special care-under the care of a man who had seen the world at home and abroad? The two children would thus have entirely lost some important time, had it not been for the restlessness of mind of the young son of the mist, who was never easy but when groping after knowledge of some kind.

« AnteriorContinuar »