Kitabı oku: «The Mirror Of Literature, Amusement, And Instruction. Volume 17, No. 496, June 27, 1831», sayfa 4
Of the eloquence and general character of Lord Brougham, we have the following excellent portraiture by a master-hand:6—
"Mr. Brougham is from the North of England, but he was educated in Edinburgh, and represents that school of politics and political economy in the house. He differs from Sir James Mackintosh in this, that he deals less in abstract principles, and more in individual details. He makes less use of general topics, and more of immediate facts. Sir James is better acquainted with the balance of an argument in old authors; Mr. Brougham with the balance of power in Europe. If the first is better versed in the progress of history, no man excels the last in a knowledge of the course of exchange. He is apprized of the exact state of our exports and imports, and scarce a ship clears out its cargo at Liverpool or Hull, but he has notice of the bill of lading. Our colonial policy, prison discipline, the state of the hulks, agricultural distress, commerce and manufactures, the bullion question, the Catholic Question, the Bourbons or the Inquisition, 'domestic treason, foreign levy,' nothing can come amiss to him—he is at home in the crooked mazes of rotten boroughs, is not baffled by Scotch law, and can follow the meaning of one of Mr. Canning's speeches. With so many resources, with such variety and solidity of information, Mr. Brougham is rather a powerful and alarming, than an effectual debater. In so many details (which he himself goes through with unwearied and unshrinking resolution) the spirit of the question is lost to others who have not the same voluntary power of attention or the same interest in hearing that he has in speaking; the original impulse that urged him forward is forgotten in so wide a field, in so interminable a career. If he can, others cannot carry all he knows in their heads at the same time; a rope of circumstantial evidence does not hold well together, nor drag the unwilling mind along with it (the willing mind hurries on before it, and grows impatient and absent)—he moves in an unmanageable procession of facts and proofs, instead of coming to the point at once—and his premises (so anxious is he to proceed on sure and ample grounds) overlay and block up his conclusion, so that you cannot arrive at it, or not till the first fury and shock of the onset is over. The ball, from the too great width of the calibre from which it is sent, and from striking against such a number of hard, projecting points, is almost spent before it reaches its destination. He keeps a ledger or a debtor-and-creditor account between the government and the country, posts so much actual crime, corruption, and injustice against so much contingent advantage or sluggish prejudice, and at the bottom of the page brings in the balance of indignation and contempt, where it is due. But people are not to be calculated into contempt or indignation on abstract grounds; for however they may submit to this process where their own interests are concerned, in what regards the public good we believe they must see and feel instinctively, or not at all. There is (it is to be lamented) a good deal of froth as well as strength in the popular spirit, which will not admit of being decanted or served out in formal driblets; nor will spleen (the soul of opposition) bear to be corked up in square patent bottles, and kept for future use!
"Mr. Brougham speaks in a loud and unmitigated tone of voice, sometimes almost approaching to a scream. He is fluent, rapid, vehement, full of his subject, with evidently a great deal to say, and very regardless of the manner of saying it. As a lawyer, he has not hitherto been remarkably successful. He is not profound in cases and reports, nor does he take much interest in the peculiar features of a particular cause, or show much adroitness in the management of it. He carries too much weight of metal for ordinary and petty occasions: he must have a pretty large question to discuss, and must make thorough-stitch work of it. Mr. Brougham writes almost, if not quite, as well as he speaks. In the midst of an election contest he comes out to address the populace, and goes back to his study to finish an article for the Edinburgh Review, sometimes indeed wedging three or four articles (in the shape of refaccimentos of his own pamphlets or speeches in parliament) into a single number. Such indeed is the activity of his mind that it appears to require neither repose, nor any other stimulus than a delight in its own exercise. He can turn his hand to any thing, but he cannot be idle. There are few intellectual accomplishments which he does not possess, and possess in a very high degree. He speaks French (and, we believe, several other modern languages) fluently: is a capital mathematician, and obtained an introduction to the celebrated Carnot in this latter character, when the conversation turned on squaring the circle, and not on the propriety of confining France within the natural boundary of the Rhine. Mr. Brougham is, in fact, a striking instance of the versatility and strength of the human mind, and also in one sense of the length of human life, if we make a good use of our time. There is room enough to crowd almost every art and science into it. If we pass 'no day without a line,' visit no place without the company of a book, we may with ease fill libraries or empty them of their contents. Those who complain of the shortness of life, let it slide by them without wishing to seize and make the most of its golden minutes. The more we do, the more we can do; the more busy we are, the more leisure we have. Mr. Brougham, among other means of strengthening and enlarging his views, has visited, we believe, most of the courts, and turned his attention to most of the constitutions of the continent. He is, no doubt, a very accomplished, active-minded, and admirable person."
Lord Brougham married, in 1816, Mary Anne, relict of John Slade, Esq., of Hill street, Berkeley-square; by whom he has one daughter. Lady Brougham's maiden name was Eden: she is nearly related to the Auckland and Handley families. At her marriage with Mr. Slade, in 1808, she was accounted an extremely beautiful young woman; and she was still possessed of great personal charms at the period of her second union. Lady Brougham had by her former marriage a son, who inherits his father's estate, and is an. officer in the army, and a daughter. Lady Brougham brought no property to her husband but her jointure of £1,500 a-year, and the house No. 5, Hill-street.
Lord Brougham was born in 1779, and is, consequently, in his fifty-second year.
INDEX
ANECDOTE GALLERY, 35-358-378
COSMOPOLITE, THE, 282-299-405
EMBELLISHED ARTICLES IN EACH NUMBER,
FINE ARTS, 158-265-278-300-363
GATHERER IN EACH NUMBER,
ILLUSTRATIONS OF SHAKSPEARE, 136
MANNERS AND CUSTOMS, 104-140-154-206-246-292-367-372-424
NATURALIST, THE, 22-46, 70, 116-250-348-387-406-423
NOTES OF A READER, 13-23-105-118-133-158-171-219-261-314-328-361-389-408
NOVELIST, THE, 71-228-323-420
OLD POETS, 103-284
ORIGINAL ARTICLES IN EACH NUMBER,
RETROSPECTIVE GLEANINGS, 19-60-117-162-227
SELECT BIOGRAPHY, 99-121-344
SELECTOR, AND NOTICES OF NEW WORKS, 26-42-55-73-125-149-164-189-203-213-234-247-279-301-307-325-365-382-393-411-425
SPIRIT OF THE ANNUALS, 6
SPIRIT OF DISCOVERY, 52-182-255-294-312-351-368-375-428
SPIRIT OF THE PUBLIC JOURNALS, 10-20-36-56-77-108-122-137-155-169-184-198-217-236-251-267-285-297-316-332-349-364-379-397-409-430
SKETCH BOOK, 52-101-183-215-293-343
TOPOGRAPHER, THE, 5-18-61-153-201-310-414
Abernethy, the late Mr., 397
Academy, The Silent, 4
Actor, How to roast, 287
Ada, Lines to, 374
Addison, Death of, 419
Æolian Harp, Sonnet to, 404
Æolophon, the, 52
Al Amin at Chess, 36
Album, Character of a good one, 355
Albion, Origin of, 306
Alison, Archibald, his Autograph, 145
Ambiton, Simple, 340
Ampthill House described, 353
America, First English Colony in, 55
Anatomical Subjects, 432
Anatomy of Society, 249
Ancestry, 224-425
André, Major, Account of, 184
Anglo-Saxon History, 301
Anson, Lord, 144
Antiquarian Scraps, 99
Apsley House, Origin of, 192
Arcana of Science for 1831, 312
Arch Poetry, 79
Architecture of Birds, 279
Ariosto, Relics of, 193
Arquà, Petrarch's House at, 1
Arun, Sonnet to the, 227
Arundel House, Strand, 67
Ascot-place Grotto, 225
Atherton, a Tale, 393
Auberge on the Grimsel, 41
Autocrat's Prayer, the, 236
Autographs of Eminent Persons, 145-264
Bacchanalian Song, 122
Bad Company, 13
Bail, Origin of, 61
Baillie, Joanna, her Autograph, 145
Bald Eagle, the, 387-406
Ballot, the Greek, 19
Bampton Lectures, White's, 426
Bankrupts in 1829, 24
Bathos and Pathos, 31
Battle of the Cats, 251
Batty's, Colonel, Views of Edinburgh, 300
Beauty and Slander, by Harrington, 103
Beer Houses, Number of, 263
Beggar Woman of Locarno, 293
Billington, Mrs., 364
Birds, Architecture of, 279
Changing colour, 250
Economy of, 105
Birth-day Prayer, 319
Black Books, Ancient, 227
Blackwood's Christmas Carol, 22
Blue Beard, the Original, 391
Blunders, Ludicrous, 272
Boi, the Syracusan at Chess, 36
Bonaparte and the Koran, 379
Bondsman's Feast, a tale, 126
Boroughs, Three, 369
Borrowing Days, the, 213
Bostock, Dr., his improvements in Ink, 182
Boy, Story of a, 70
Bramber, Borough of, 369
Bray Church described, 209
Brighton, 14
Bristol Channel, Voyage up, 61
Britannia, Origin of, 276
British Institution, the, 158
Brougham, Lord, his Autograph, 145
Bruce at Turnbury, 16
Bull-baiting in Suffolk, 246
at Great Grimsby, 104
Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress, 10
Burial in the Desert, 169
Burning Alive, 133
Burns, the Poet, 134
Byron, Lord, Moore's Life of,
Augusta, Lines to, 81
Character of, 14, 109
Clare, Lord, 93
Detached Thoughts, 92
and Sir H. Davy, 91
Diary of, 93
and the Greeks, 95
and Guiccioli, 86
Journal in Switzerland, 26
Memoirs of, 91
Parsimony of, 90
Portrait of, 96
and Lady Byron, 29
Letters to Mr. Moore, 84, 91
Letter to Mr. Murray, 43
Poetical Gems by, 44
and Porson, 86
Prophecy of, 31
and Pope, 92
at Pisa, 93
and Shelley, 28
Sensibility of, 81
at Venice, 82, 83, 84
with Mr. Moore, 89
Execution at, 86
Palace at, 113
Visit to Arquà, 1
Cabinet Atlas, the, 330
Calculating Notes—Paganini, 364
Calendar, Antiquities of, 23
of the Church of England, 314
Cambrian Superstitions, 206
Canning, Mr., Character of, 118
Canterbury, Lines on viewing, 180
Care, by Constable, 285
Castellan's Sermon on Francis I., 304
Cats, Battle of the, 251
Chair of Ariosto, 193
Chalmers, Thomas, his Autograph, 145
Charles I., Epitaph on, 192
Charlotte, Princess, the late, 358
Charter of William I., 112
Charming Fellow, 432
Chemistry, Popular, 173
, Wonders of, 55
Cheroot, the, 69
Cheshire Enchanter, the, 98
Chess, Anecdotes of, 36
Chestnuts in Florence, 144
Chichester Cross described, 17
Childe Harold at Venice, 114
Chinese Ingenuity, 303
Cholera Morbus, the, 389
Christian's Magazine, the, 378
Christianity, Influence of, 302
Christmas Carol, 22
Christmas Tree in Germany, 154
Cigar-smoking, Effects of, 349
Clarence, Duke of, Origin of, 68
Clonmel, the late Lord, 351
Coach-company, a Sketch, 52
Coals, Mechanical Power of, 45, 55
Cobblers' Arms, Origin of, 372
Cockcrow, Origin of, 24
Cockfighting, Origin of, 23
Coinage, the New, 356
Combustion, Phenomena of, 175
Comets and Women, 192
Companion to the Almanac, 24
Compunctious Visitings, 352
Cooling Wine, Mistake in, 294
Copper Works in Wales, 5
Corfe Castle and Edward II., 291
described, 242
Corfe Castle, Visit to, 260
Costa Ferme, Scene on, 56
County Collections, 18
Covent Garden and Strand Crosses, 66
Cowley's House at Chertsey, 168
Cowslips, a Sonnet, 387
Cream, Why on Milk, 295
Croesus, a Sketch, 373
Cross the Prompter, 239
Cross-dialling, 393
Crotchet Castle, Letters from, 234
Cruelty to Animals, 172
Crystallization, Phenomena of, 174
Cunningham, Allan, 135
, his Autograph, 145
Cuttle Fish, the, 423
Czartoryski, Character of, 425
Damned Author, 328
Dancing Fish, 29
Davy, the late Sir Humphry, 63
Dawlish's Hole, an incident, 101
Day, Ancient Divisions of, 61
Dead Hand, the, 63
Death, Reflections on, 314
Death-beds of Great Men, 419
Devil among the Printers, 112
Dialling, 392
Dignified Reproof, 431
Dirge, 58, 140
Disagreeables, 430
Disappearance, Extraordinary, 304
Ditty by Queen Elizabeth, 117
Doncaster, Christ Church, 49
Dot-and-carry-one-town, letters from, 236
Dramatic Annual, the, 328
Dream Girl, the, a Tale, 189
Dreams by Whispering, 226
Duel, the, a Serious Ballad, 8
Duelling Customs, 135
Duelling in France, 286
Dunmow Flitch, Applicants for, 212
Dunwich, Borough of, 369
Dunstan's, St., Fleet-street, 99
Dyers, the two, 48
Early Rising, 36
Echoes, Remarkable, 221
Ei, the Word, 418
Electioneering Advice, 352
Electricity, Phenomena of, 175
Elfin Triumphant Song, 217
Elizabeth, Queen, her Portrait, 237
Elizabeth, Queen, her Prayer Book, 379
Elizabeth, Princess' Cottage at Windsor, 97
Emperor's Rout, the, 43
Enghien, (Due d'), murder of, 35
English Language, the, 240
Epigrams and Puns, 64
Epitaphs, 31, 48, 64, 208, 220, 223, 224, 240, 256, 320, 361, 400, 416
Equivoque, Royal, 158
Esterhazy, Young Princess, 63
Ettrick Shepherd, the, 134
Executions, Public, 133
Exeter Hall, Strand, 401
Fairy Favours, a Sketch, 183, 215
Fairy Song, 226
Fairies, city of, 215
Fairy Rings, 207
Fame, Lines on, 285
Family Poetry, 297