_Pictures of Old England_. By DR. REINHOLD PAULI, Author of “History of Alfred the Great,” etc. Translated, with the Author’s Sanction, by E.C. OTTE. Cambridge [England]: Macmillan & Co. Small 8vo. pp. xii., 457.
Dr. Pauli is already known on both sides of the Atlantic as the author of two works of acknowledged learning and ability,–a “History of England during the Middle Ages,” and a “History of Alfred the Great.” In his new volume he furnishes some further fruits of his profound researches into the social and political history of England in the Middle Ages; and if the book will add little or nothing to his present reputation, it affords at least new evidence of his large acquaintance with English literature. It comprises twelve descriptive essays on as many different topics, closely connected with his previous studies. Among the best of these are the papers entitled “Monks and Mendicant Friars,” which give a brief and interesting account of monastic institutions in England; “The Hanseatic Steel-Yard in London,” comprising a history of that famous company of merchant-adventurers, with a description of the buildings occupied by them, and a sketch of their domestic life; and “London in the Middle Ages,” which presents an excellent description of the topography and general condition of the city during that period, and is illustrated by a small and carefully drawn plan. There are also several elaborate essays on the early relations of England with the Continent, besides papers on “The Parliament in the Fourteenth Century,” “Two Poets, Gower and Chaucer,” “John Wiclif,” (as Dr. Pauli spells the name,) and some other topics. All the papers show an adequate familiarity with the original sources of information, and are marked by the same candor and impartiality which have hitherto characterized Dr. Pauli’s labors. The translation, without being distinguished by any special graces of style, is free from the admixture of foreign idioms, and, so far as one may judge from the internal evidence, appears to be faithfully executed. As a collection of popular essays, the volume is worthy of much praise.
_The Correspondence of Leigh Hunt_. Edited by his Eldest Son. London: Smith, Elder, & Co. 1862. 2 vols. 12mo.
In Lamb’s famous controversy with Southey in 1823, (the only controversy “Elia” ever indulged in,) he says of the author of “Rimini,” “He is one of the most cordial-minded men I ever knew, and matchless as a fireside companion.”
Few authors have had warmer admirers of their writings, or more sincere personal friends, than Leigh Hunt. He seemed always to inspire earnestly and lovingly every one who came into friendly relations with him. When Shelley inscribed his “Cenci” to him in 1819, he expressed in this sentence of the Dedication what all have felt who have known Leigh Hunt intimately:–
“Had I known a person more highly endowed than yourself with all that it becomes a man to possess, I had solicited for this work the ornament of his name. One more gentle, honorable, innocent, and brave,–one of more exalted toleration for all who do and think evil, and yet himself more free from evil,–one who knows better how to receive and how to confer a benefit, though he must ever confer far more than he can receive,–one of simpler, and, in the highest sense of the word, of purer life and manners, I never knew; and I had already been fortunate in friendship when your name was added to the list.”
With this immortal record of his excellence made by Shelley’s hand, Leigh Hunt cannot be forgotten. Counting among his friends the best men and women of his time, his name and fame are embalmed in their books as they were in their hearts. Charles Lamb, Keats, Shelley, and Mrs. Browning knew his worth, and prized it far above praising him; and there are those still living who held him very dear, and loved the sound of his voice like the tones of a father or a son.
A man’s letters betray his heart,–both those he sends and those he receives. Leigh Hunt’s correspondence, as here collected by his son, is full of the wine of life in the best sense of _spirit_.
_The Works of Charles Dickens_. Household Edition. _Martin Chuzzlewit_. New York: Sheldon & Company.
It is not our intention, at the present writing, to enter into any discussion concerning the characteristics or the value of the novels of Charles Dickens: we have neither time nor space for it. Besides, to few of our readers do these books need introduction or recommendation from us. They have long been accepted by the world as worthy to rank among those works of genius which harmonize alike with the thoughtful mind of the cultivated and the simple feelings of the unlearned,–which discover in every class and condition of men some truth or beauty for all humanity. They are, in the full sense of the word, _household_ books, as indispensable as Shakspeare or Milton, Scott or Irving.
We may fairly say of the various editions of Dickens’s writings, that their “name is Legion.” None of them all, however, is better adapted to common libraries than the new edition now publishing in New York. It will be comprised in fifty volumes, to be published in instalments at intervals of six or eight weeks. The mechanical execution is most commendable in every respect: clear, pleasantly tinted paper; typography in the best style of the Riverside Press; binding novel and tasteful. A vignette, designed either by Darley or Gilbert, and engraved upon steel, is prefixed to each volume. We have to congratulate the publishers that they have so successfully fulfilled the promises of their prospectus, and the public that an edition at once elegant and inexpensive is now provided.
FOREIGN LITERATURE.
_Die Schweizerische Literatur des achzehnten Jahrhunderts_. Von T.C. MOeRIKOFER. Leipzig: Verlag von S. Hirzel. 8vo. pp. 536.
In the early part of the Middle Ages Switzerland contributed comparatively little to the literary glory of Germany. Beyond Conrad of Wuerzburg, who is claimed as a native of Basel, no Swiss name can be found among the poets of the Hohenstaufen period. In a later age it is rather the practical than the romantic character of the Swiss that is manifested in their productions. The Reformation brought them in closer contact with German culture. There was need of this; for in no country was the gap wider between the language of the people and that of the learned. Scholars like Zwinglius and Bullinger were almost helpless, when they sought to express themselves in German. Little appeal could, therefore, be made to the masses in their own tongue by such writers. During the whole of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries the vernacular was even more neglected than before. It was not until the beginning of the eighteenth that Latin and French ceased to be the only languages deemed worthy of use in literary composition. In 1715 Johannes Muralt wrote his “Eidgnoeszischen Lustgarten,” and later several other works, mostly scientific, in German. Political causes came in to help the reaction, and from that time the Protestant portion of the Helvetic Confederation may be said to have had a literature of its own.
It is the history of the literature of German Switzerland during the eighteenth century that Moerikofer has essayed to write. He has chosen a subject hitherto but little studied, and his work deserves to stand by the side of the best German literary histories of our time.
The author begins with the first signs of the reaction against the influence of France, agreeably portraying the awakening of Swiss consciousness, and the gradual development of the enlightened patriotism that impelled Swiss writers to lay aside mere courtly elegance of diction for their own more terse and vigorous idiom.
This awakening was not confined to letters. Formerly the Swiss, instead of appreciating the beauties of their own land, rather considered them as impediments to the progress of civilization. It seems incredible to us now that there ever could have been a time when mountain-scenery, instead of being sought, was shunned,–when princes possessing the most beautiful lands among the Rhine hills should, with great trouble and expense, have transported their seats to some flat, uninviting locality,–when, for instance, the dull, flat, prosy, wearisome gardens of Schwetzingen should have been deemed more beautiful than the immediate environs of Heidelberg. Yet such were the sentiments that prevailed in Switzerland until a comparatively late date. It is only since the days of Scheuchzer that Swiss scenery has been appreciated, and in this appreciation were the germs of a new culture.
As in Germany societies had been established “for the practice of German” at Leipsic and Hamburg, so in various Swiss cities associations were formed with the avowed purpose of discouraging the imitation of French models. Thus, at Zuerich several literary young men, among them Hagenbuch and Lavater, met at the house of the poet Bodmer. The example was followed in other cities. Though these clubs and their periodical organs soon fell into an unwarrantable admiration of all that was English, the result was a gradual development of the national taste. Since then the literary efforts of the Swiss have been characterized by an ardent love of country. A direct popular influence may be felt in their best productions; hence the nature of their many beauties, as well as of their faults. To the same influence also we owe that phalanx of reformers and philanthropists, Hirzel, Iselin, Lavater, and Pestalozzi.
A great portion of the work under consideration is devoted to the lives and labors of these benefactors of their people. The book is, therefore, not a literary history in the strict sense of the term. It gives a comprehensive view of the culture of German Switzerland during the eighteenth century. To Bodmer alone one hundred and seventy-five pages are devoted. In this essay, as well as in that on the historian Mueller, a vast amount of information is presented, and many facts collated by the author are now given, we believe, for the first time.
_Literaturbilder.–Darstellungen deutscher Literatur aus den Werken der vorzueglichsten Literarhistoriker_, etc. Herausgegeben von J.W. SCHAEFER. Leipzig: Friedrich Brandstetter. 8vo. pp. 409.
There is no lack of German literary histories. While English letters have not yet found an historian, there are scores of works upon every branch of German literature. Of these, many possess rare merits, and are characterized by a depth, a comprehensiveness of criticism not to be found in the similar productions of any other nation. Whoever has once been guided by the master-minds of Germany will bear witness that the guidance cannot be replaced by that of any other class of writers. Nowhere can such universality, such freedom from national prejudice, be found,–and this united to a love of truth, earnestness of labor, and perseverance of research that may be looked for in vain elsewhere.
The difficulty for the student of German literary history lies, then, in the selection. A new work, the “Literaturbilder” of J.W. Schaefer, will greatly tend to facilitate the choice. This is a representation of the chief points of the literature of Germany by means of well-chosen selections from the principal historians of letters. The editor introduces these by an essay upon the “Epochs of German Literature.” Then follow, with due regard to chronological order, extracts from the works of Vilmar, Gervinus, Wackernagel, Schlosser, Julian Schmidt, and others. These extracts are of such length as to give a fair idea of the writers, and so arranged as to form a connected history. Thus, under the third division, comprising the eighteenth century until Herder and Goethe, we find the following articles following each other: “State of Literature in the Eighteenth Century”; “Johann Christian Gottsched,” by F.C. Schlosser; “Gottsched’s Attempts at Dramatic Reform,” by R. Prutz; “Hagedorn and Haller,” by J.W. Schaefer; “Bodmer and Breitinger,” by A. Koberstein; “The Leipsic Association of Poets and the Bremen Contributions,” by Chr. F. Weisse; “German Literature in the Middle of the Eighteenth Century,” by Goethe; “Gottlieb Wilhelm Rabener,” by H. Gelzer; “Gellert’s Fables,” by H. Prutz. Those who do not possess the comprehensive works of Gervinus, Cholerius, Wackernagel, etc., may thus in one volume find enough to be able to form a fair opinion of the nature of their labors.
The “Literaturbilder,” though perhaps lacking in unity, is one of the most attractive of literary histories. A few important names are missed, as that of Menzel, from whom nothing is quoted. The omission seems the more unwarrantable, as this writer, whatever we may think of his views, still enjoys the highest consideration among a numerous class of German readers. The contributions of the editor himself form no inconsiderable part of the volume. Those quoted from his “Life of Goethe” deserve special mention. The work does not extend beyond the first years of the present century, and closes with Jean Paul.
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