Page images
PDF
EPUB

and requires no law but his word to make him fulfil an engagement, such a man is a gentleman." And, in the Quarterly Review, where the writer is enlarging upon the best education, he thus emphatically says,-" Let a man's pride be to be a gentleman; furnish him with elegant and refined pleasures, imbue him with the love of intellectual pursuits, and you have a better security for his turning out a good citizen, and a good Christian, than if you have confined him by the strictest moral and religious discipline, kept him in innocent and unsuspecting ignorance of all the vices of youth, and in the mechanical and orderly routine of the severest system of education."

66

Seriously speaking, we must hold it a remarkable thing that every Englishman should be a "gentleman;" that in so democratic a country our common title of honour-which all men assert for themselves-should be one which professedly depends on station, on accidents, rather than on qualities! or at best, as Coleridge interprets it, on a certain indifference to money matters;" which certain indifference again must be wise or mad, you would think, exactly as one possesses much money or possesses little! We suppose it must be the commercial genius of the nation, counteracting and suppressing its political genius; for the Americans are said to be still more notable in this respect than we. Now, what a hollow, windy vacuity of internal character this indicates; how, in place of a rightly-ordered heart, we strive only to exhibit a full purse; and all pushing, rushing, elbowing on towards a false aim, the courtier's kibes are more and more galled by the toe of the peasant; and on every side, instead of faith, hope, and charity, we have neediness, greediness, and vain glory; all this is palpable enough. Fools that we are! Why should we wear our knees to horn, and sorrowfully beat our breasts, praying day and night to Mammon, who, if he would even hear us, has almost nothing to give? For, granting that the deaf brute-god were to relent for our sacrificings to change our gilt brass into solid gold, and, instead of hungry actors of rich gentility, make us all in very deed Rothschild-Howards to morrow, what good were it? Are we not already denizens of this wondrous England, with its high Shakspeares and Hampdens; nay, of this wondrous universe, with its galaxies and eternities, and unspeakable splendours, that we should so worry, and scramble, and tear one another in pieces for some acres (nay, still oftener, for the show of some acres), more or less, of clay property? the largest of which properties-the Sutherland itself is invisible even from the moon.-Carlyle.

INDEX.

Accession of Queen Victoria, 77.
Addison, Conversation of, 66.

Adrian, the Model Roman Emperor, 15.
Ancien Régime, Kingsley on, 28.
Ariosto, MSS. of, 16.

Arthur, King, his Remains at Glaston-
bury, 48.

Bacon, Francis, History of, 58.
Barricade in the Strand, 56.

Bonaparte: Was he ever in London? 45.
Bourbon Heroine, 31.

Broughton, Lord, Recollections of, 78.
Byron, Lord, Conversation of, 24.
Cæsar's Landing in Britain, 47.
Chair, Story of, 40.

Characteristics: What are they? 1.
Charles I., Gold Piece of, 63.
Charles I. at Naseby, 61.
Charles I., Omens to, 61.

Churches Dedicated to Charles I., 61.
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, 21.
Continental System, The, 32.
Conversational Powers of Eminent Men,

[blocks in formation]

Gentleman, Characteristics of, 84.
Gentleman, from De Vere, 87.
Gentleman, Goldsmith on, 87.

Gentleman, On, by Johnson and Baily,

86.

Gentleman, Steele on, 87.

George I., Character of, 72.
George II. at Dettingen, 73.
George III., Character of, 73.

George IV., Sketched by Thackeray, 75.
Greatness of Great Men, 68.
Grecian Mythology, 3.
Greek Culture, 2.
Greek Tradition, 2.
Greek Warriors, 6.
Grote, the Historian, 19.
Gunpowder Plot, The, 59.

Hamilton, Sir William, his Learning, 20.
Hampton Court Tapestry and Pictures,

53.

Heinrich Heine, Death of, 18.
Hendlip Hall, Story of, 62.

Hercules, his Labours and Legends, 4.
Hercules' Pillars, 5.

Herodotus, Travels of, 9.

Hogarth's Print of Lord Lovat, 67.
Homer, Battles of, 10.

Hume, Joseph, Memoir of, 81.
Imperial Reply, 35.

James I., Death of, 60.
Jeffrey and Burns, 21.
Jerrold, Douglas, Satire of, 27.
Lemon, Mark, 25.

Leonardo da Vinci, Tomb of, 17.
M., Letter, and the Napoleons, 38.
Macaulay, Lord, on Homer's Battles, 10.
Mackintosh, Sir James, 23.

Maginn, Dr., Epitaph on, 27.
Mallath, the Hungarian, 19.

Mary Queen of Scots, her Prison-
houses, 54.

Moore, Thomas, Conversation of, 24.
Napier, Sir Charles, the
"Hero of

Scinde," 83.

[blocks in formation]
[blocks in formation]

Shaftesbury's Characteristics, 1.
Socrates, Trial and Death of, 12.
Southey, Robert, Conversation of, 25.
Stoics, The, History of, 13.
Story of a Chair, 40.
Tasso, MS. of, 17.

Tradition and History, 64.

Victoria, Queen, Accession of, 77.
Victoria, Queen, First Council of, 78.
Voltaire and Ferney, 34.

Voltaire, Fontenelle, and Diderot, 33.
Voltaire's Pucelle, 34.

Washington, Character of, 42.
Wellington, Duke of, his Characteristics,

80.

What Makes a Gentleman? 84.
Whittington, his True History, 50.
William IV., Last Moments of, 76.
Wolsey, Cardinal, at Esher, 53.
Wordsworth, on Grecian Mythology, 3.
Xenophon, Lesson from, 3.

GRIFFIN'S SHILLING MANUALS,

Edited by JOHN TIMBS.

Uniform with the present work, price One Shilling.

I. ONE THOUSAND DOMESTIC HINTS.

II. POPULAR SCIENCE.

III. ODDITIES OF HISTORY.

IV. THOUGHTS FOR TIMES AND SEASONS.

V. CURIOSITIES OF ANIMAL AND VEGETAble Life,

Bell & Bain, Printers, Glasgow.

141

« PreviousContinue »