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constitution ; which , radically defective as it was and is , was still a beau ideal of Government , compared with the tyranny of Bastilles and lettres de cachet . And when Mirabeau rises to depart he has done what he always does with friends and enemies , with precise gentlemen and fluttering women , fascinated them , conquered their hearts and their reasons , and made them firmly his own . De la
Marck , with all his views and all his prejudices m direct hostility to Mirabeau ' s political and moral life , hating his revolutionary tendency as much as he hated his outrages upon conversational morality , is yet overwhelmed b y his force , by his grasp of mind , by his clear insight , compelled to yield to his arguments , and , stranger still , to take the rough pock-pitted monster to his heart and to love him . For Mirabeau was one of
those extraordinary men from whose person exhales a magnetic influence , an aroma of spiritual warmth and fascination . They part with mutual vows of friendship and vague engagements for infinite dinners . But they do not meet again till they are members of the States General : De la Marck as a representative of the Noblesse , Mirabeau as a deputy of the Tiers Etat . They do not renew their acquaintance till the preliminary
squabbles regarding the constitution of the States , are ended by the subjugation of the clergy and noblesse , during which Mirabeau has asserted his leadership , has got recognized throughout revolutionary France as the master spirit in the great tribune of the people . The Court hate him , yet tremble at his power . Wild rumours are afloat regarding his sanguinary nature , his hatred of the monarchy , his desire for anarchy . De la Marck remembers Mirabeau ' s former professions of faith in
a limited monarchy and constitutional government * He thinks he cannot be the foe to just order that people about Court say he is . He introduces himself , when they recommence their friendship and cement it with daily dinners and suppers . Mirabeau explains his views . He came to the States with an idea—the same idea he had expressed before the States were summoned . He expected Necker would have had a plan to propose to the States , that he would have endeavoured to construct a
Ministerial party , and he came prepared to join that party , provided its views coincided with his own . He had even offered his services to Necker , it appeared , and been repulsed with contempt . Nothing then remained for him but to take up an independent position , and to speak out , in his own bold energ etic manner , whatsoever his insight dictated to him in the various emergencies that arose from the bungling no-policy of Necker and the Court . Stung by pride , determined to make them feel his power , he had even exaggerated his revolutionary views . My influence is my power , said he . With
it I am—Mirabeau : without it , I am nothing . But he is quite ready at the eleventh hour to do what they refused him opportunity to do at the first . De la Marck is delighted ; endeavours to bring him into connection with the Court ; but owing to the prejudice of the Queen against the factious tribune and audacious debauchee , he fails . At length , after the taking of the Bastille , when Mirabeau has grown more disgusted with the spread of anarchy , and the Court more terrified at the overflowing blood , Mirabeau prepares his first m / nnoire for the King ' s brother . It is a vivid , masterly picture
of the position and danger of the Court and Crown . The King must accept the revolution honestly ; he must immediately take up an advanced and liberal policy , and consolidate the nation upon it . If he do not , he writes , " the populace of Paris will batten their carcases in the mud . " The King and Queen are delighted with this , but as yet they cannot overcome their prejudices . Is not Mirabeau an immoral monster ? they ask . Mirabeau is horror-Btrickcn . I was , lie answers ; but I am no longer . " Are then the errors of my bad youth to be tlie < ruin of my country . " De la Marck is called away to Brussels , and the negotiations are suspended . In the
mean time everything grows worse and worse ; Necker bungles and blunders deeper and deeper ; the populace grow more and moro excited and anarchic ; the King ' s throne totters . In l 7 . K ) , De la Marck returns , and reopenH the negotiations between the Court and Mirabeau . At the request of the former , the latter addresses , on the IOth of May , his beautiful and touching letter to the King . The Queen yields . Overtures are made to Mirabeau ; ho is retained as private ! counsellor to the Court at a salary of 6000 livres per month , and one million of livres when the King should be saved . The latter was never paid ; th 6 former hardly at all . And it is only fair to
Mihim ; and there , free from the factious influences of Paris , to throw himself heart and soul into the settlement of the nation on principles of enlarged and liberal constitutional government on the English model . The other forty-eight are minute hints on the minor emergencies of the day . In all these he advises the King to do and say precisely what appears to us alone could possibly have saved him . The King , however , could not make up his mind ; hesitated , longed , yet feared ; consulted nincompoops about the Court ; followed them rather than
fabeauto state that he inherited a fortune of 50 , 000 francs from his father ' s death , which he allowed to go to waste in his labours for the public weal . In reality , he lived on a monthly loan from De la Marck , and died insolvent . On June 1 , 1790 , when these arrangements were complete , Mirabeau addressed his first mSmuire to tbe King . He continued to address him till his death . They are forty-eight in all , exclusive of two lengthy and elaborate papers . These two contained the whole of Mirabeau ' s policy for the Court . They advise the King to withdraw to Rouen ; call the States around
Mirabeau ; and finally did nothing , until Mirabeau was taken from him , when he performed a sort of burlesque of Mirabeau ' s advice in his flight to Varennes ( not perceiving that Mirabeau himself was necessary to the ! success ! of his own plan ); and he lost his head in consequence . All these letters were returned through De la Marck to the writer , and when Mirabeau lay upon his death-bed , he
requested De la Marck to take away all his papers . This was complied with , and De la Marck spent the last years of his life in putting them in order , and bequeathed them to M . de Bacourt , to publish after his decease . M . de Bacourt has performed his trust by the appearance of the three handsome Volumes before us now . The originals have been deposited in the archives of the house of Aremberg , at Brussels .
It maybe as well to add , that De la Marck paints Mirabeau as an upright politician , as a man of the most prodigious genius and activity , as a loveable and steadfast friend . He also denies the reports of Mirabeau ' s excessive immorality ; and , in the vexed question of his death , gives his opinion against the poisoning . But as he produces no evidence , and as every physician who saw the postmortem examination entertained a contrary opinion , we are not inclined to receive De la Marck ' s dictum . In our opinion , the question never can be settled exclusively ; but we decidedly think , that the business of disproving that he was poisoned lies with those who deny it .
The materials for the life of Mirabeau are now complete . We have his whole career before us in totality ' artd in detail , and can pronounce an opinion . If , as we imagine , the greatness of a man consists of the union of a firm faith in a large principle , a vivid insight that sees into the core of things , and an energetic decision that acts at once with power upon the dictates of that insight , then Mirabeau was a great man , than whom
history records few greater . The defect in the argument for his greatness lies in his morality . But let us not measure giants by the inch . An enlightened philosophy will consider temperament and physical organization in its relation to morality . It will not gauge David , Mahomet , Mirabeau by tbe same standard as it gauges Diogenes , Hume , or Pitt . It will disapprove absolutely , as it dare not Condemn relatively . It will leave much to a larger eye and to a wiser judge , and will pronounce with charity : — * ' He docs well , who does his best : Is he weary ? Let him rest !"
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A LOST I'OET . lo Anclw . ! I ' oemn , chiefly lyrical . IJy Thomas Hmihert . ( iroombrid f ^ c jind Boiih Tiieiik is a current superstition that our Poetical Literature is poor , owing to the dearth of PoetKthe requisite genius not appearing , Poems do not appear . Thomas Smibert hints at a deeper and more universal cause . Not because genius w rare , hut because Periodical Literature is exacting--that he seriously believes to bo the explanation ! Wordsworth finely and profoundly says : — " Oh ! many ar <; tho poets that arc nown
Hy nature ; men endow d with highest giftH , The vinion and the faculty ( Irvine , Yet "wanting the accomplishment of verse . " These go to the grave untliought of , because , although ham poets they are not made poets . But , according to ' 1 lamias Smihert , they may have the accomplishment of verso an well as the faculty divine } yet in the face of phenomena , such , as
Chambers * s Journal , Hogg ' s Weekly Instructor , and all the cheap periodicals , they cannot pro duce poems . They have to change their golden guineas into sixpences and coppers j the money is the same but distributed . ' It nlay be so ; but it would require very substantial evidence to make us think so . Genius , if we understand its processes Aright , waits upon no " supply or demand , " is independent of cheap lite . rature , independent of everything save its own in . ward irresistible impulse to create , ft sings as the
bird sings , not because you are listening or are in " want of copy , " but because it is made a singing . bird . The orbit of genius is eccentric . It has a law and a reason of its own . Periodicals neither make nor mar it . To suppose that a poet can write " to order" is to mistake the very nature of hj 8 talent ; and is the mistake of a man of business , not of a critic . When Goethe startled Germany by his Goetz von Serlichingen , an * ' enterprising " bookseller waited on him and desired to give an order for a dozen more chivalry pieces . It was a
purely bibhopohc notion ! But we are wrong to argue this point with Mr . Smibert . The notion of Periodicalism , as destructive of fine poems , was evidently suggested to him by his own experience . It escapes somewhat thus : — I might have been a great poet . Instead of writing great poems , I have squandered my talent on trifles for periodicals . ErgO i periodicalism prevents great poems .
The strength of this syllogism , like the strength of an iron beam , is to be tested by its weakest part , and we have little difficulty in laying our finger on that part . It is the major premiss , " I might have been a great poet * " Mr * Smibert has had the ambition of a poet—the intense yearning to leave a name to aftertime . But the programme of his qualifications ends there . He has learned to write verse , but he is guiltless of poetry . Indeed , so little claim has he to any consideration on the score of poetical faculty , that we almost resented the sympathy his preface awakened . In it he bewails , and somewhat touchingly , the mournful condition of one who , having started on his career winged with heavenly hopes , now looks back in sadness , and sees no lasting trophy of his
labours : — " He has used the pen almost incessantly during a literary life of some considerable duration ; and when he asks himself if this work be indeed all , or the best , which he can now offer to the world , to beat evidenee to the labours of the past , or justify a claim to respect in the future , sentiments of regret are awakened in his mind in real earnest . Undoubtedly , a vast deal more than appears here has been written , and , in one or another place , published ; but the great mass , being produced for temporary purposes , neither deserves not could bear re-issue . On all
those portions which do advance any feasible claims to be so honoured , the author has sat in personal ana uncontrolled judgment , and finds himself constrained to admit , that almost every effort in verse-tiie species of composition here concerned—which is o value even in his own partial eyes , is comprcssjpie , and comprised , within the limits of this small P « WIC 8 ' tion . Such sweeping exclusions as have been deeme necessary , however , could not be made without t - citing Home melancholy reflections—not on account the value , but of the want of value , of the matter - the
jected . There ia a period of life , when prospcei " cry of Cowley , " What shall I do to be tor-ei known ? " assumes the retrospective form of * ^ have I done to be for ever known ? " At that P ^ . ^ even those who have done much , are prone to that they have done but little ; while those who really done but little , are apt to imagine thai Ichh . Nor must it bo conceived , that such « fc ^ can only assail parties impressed with u ' J y \ '] l 0 is of their own powers and endowments . Jle ffe ( . tcd conscious , that at best he could not have e ^ ^ much , has all tho more reason for regret , m () ,, nt fV-elH , perhaps- too Into , that even that limited a
lias not been accomplished . f'lCtl We confess that the diction of the whole pro ¦ ^ Hornewhat congealed our sympathies ; » V ^' poitf prosaic we had not before encountered ; an < < <( i . using the vulgarism " parties" might wen k pause . " But alter all may not that too be ow ^ Feriodicaliftin ? So we read the Poem * ..- ! v , ^ expression is too strong—we " looked ° ' ||( lt lurnc "—and the result of our inspection w > ^ instead of bewailing his lot in having prom ^ more ambitious Work , he ought to be < , j , jH grateful to Fcriodicalism for having thwant ambition by its incessant demands . 0 To give the reader a justification of w ** at we will dip into hia volume , wmply anai ^ random . We have done flo . Our ur « t open" »
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), Aug. 16, 1851, page 778, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1896/page/14/
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