Part 12 (1/2)
A Neat Reply.--In certain debates in the House of Lords, in 1718, the bills proposed were opposed by Bishop Atterbury, who said, ”he had prophesied last winter, that this bill would be attempted in the present session, and he was sorry to find he had proved a true prophet.” Lord Coningsby, who usually spoke in a pa.s.sion, rose, and remarked, that ”one of the right reverends had set himself forth as a prophet; but for his part, he did not know what prophet to liken him to, unless to that famous prophet Balaam, who was reproved by his own a.s.s.” The bishop, in reply, with great readiness and temper exposed this rude attack, concluding in these words: ”Since the n.o.ble lord hath discovered in our manners such a similitude, I must be content to be compared to the prophet Balaam; but, my lords, I am at a loss how to make out the other part of the parallel. I am sure that I have been reproved by n.o.body but his lords.h.i.+p.” From that day forth, Lord Coningsby was called ”Atterbury's Pad.”
Dr. Hough, of Worcester, was remarkable for evenness of temper, of which the following story affords a proof. A young gentleman, whose family had been well acquainted with the doctor, in making the tour of England before he went abroad, called to pay his respects to him as he pa.s.sed by his seat in the country. It happened to be at dinner-time, and the room full of company. The bishop, however, received him with much familiarity; but the servant in reaching him a chair, threw down a curious weather-gla.s.s that had cost twenty guineas, and broke it. The gentleman was under infinite concern, and began to make an apology for being the occasion of the accident, when the bishop with great good nature interrupted him. ”Be under no concern, sir,” said his lords.h.i.+p, smiling, ”for I am much beholden to you for it. We have had a very dry season; and now I hope we shall have rain. I never saw the gla.s.s so _low_ in my life.” Every one was pleased with the humour and pleasantry of the turn; and the more so, as the Doctor was then more than eighty, a time of life when the infirmities of old age make most men peevish and hasty.
A Test.--A cobbler at Leyden, who used to attend the public disputations held at the academy, was once asked if he understood Latin? ”No,” replied the mechanic, ”but it is easy to know who is wrong in the argument.” ”How?”
enquired his friend. ”Why, by seeing who is first angry.”
Casaubon, in his ”Treatise on the Pa.s.sions,” relates the following pleasing anecdote of Robert, one of the greatest monarchs that ever swayed the sceptre of France. Having once surprised a rogue who had cut away the half of his mantle, he took no other notice of the offence than by saying mildly to him, ”Save thyself, sinner, and leave the rest for another who may have need of it.”
Garrick once complained to Sir Joshua Reynolds of the abuse with which he was loaded by Foote, when Sir Joshua answered, that Foote, in so doing, gave the strongest possible proof of being in the wrong; as it was always the man who had the worst side who became violent and abusive.
TIME, VALUE OF.
Spare Moments.--The great French Chancellor D'Aguesseau carefully employed every moment of his time. Observing that Madame D'Aguesseau always delayed ten or twelve minutes before she came down to dinner, he began to compose a work to which he intended to devote these few minutes, which would otherwise have been lost. The result was, at the end of fifteen years, a work in three large quarto volumes, which went through several editions.
Buffon thus relates the manner in which he acquired a habit of early rising. ”In my youth,” says he, ”I was excessively fond of sleep, and that indolence robbed me of much time. My poor Joseph (a domestic who served him for sixty-five years) was of the greatest benefit to me in overcoming it. I promised him a crown for every time he should make me get up at six o'clock. He failed not the next day to rouse me, but I only abused and threatened him. He tried the day following, and I did the same, which made him desist. 'Friend Joseph,' said I to him at last, 'I have lost my time and you have gained nothing. You do not know how to manage the matter.
Think only of my promise, and do not regard my threatenings.' The day following he accomplished his point. At first I begged, then entreated and abused, and would have discharged him; but he disregarded me, and raised me up by absolute force. He had his reward every day for my ill-humour at the moment of waking, by thanks, and a crown an hour after. I owe to poor Joseph at least ten or twelve volumes of my works.”
Cuvier, the celebrated naturalist, was singularly careful of his time, and did not like those who entered his house to deprive him of it. ”I know,”
said he, ”that Monsieur l'Abbe Hauy comes to see _me_; our conversation is an exchange; but I do not want a man to come and tell me whether it is hot or cold, raining or suns.h.i.+ne. My barometer and thermometer know more than all possible visitors; and in my studies in natural history,” added he, ”I have not found in the whole animal kingdom a species, or cla.s.s, or family, who frighten me so much as the numerous family of _idlers_”
Dr. Pepusch.--”In one of my visits, very early in life, to that venerable master, Dr. Pepusch,” says Dr. Burney, ”he gave me a short lesson, which made so deep an impression that I long endeavoured to practise it. 'When I was a young man,' said he, 'I determined never to go to bed at night, till I knew something that I did not know in the morning.'”
TRAVELLING.
A Tiresome Companion.--The celebrated George Selwyn was once travelling, and was interrupted by the frequent impertinence of a companion, who was constantly teasing him with questions, and asking him how he did. ”How are you now, sir?” said the impertinent. George, in order to get rid of his importunity, replied, ”Very well: and I intend to continue so all the rest of the journey.”
Charles Lamb.--A farmer, by chance a companion in a coach with Charles Lamb, kept boring him to death with questions, in the jargon of agriculturists, about crops. At length he put a poser--”And pray, sir, how are turnips this year?” ”Why that, sir,” stammered out Lamb, ”will depend upon the boiled legs of mutton.”
Clans.--An English gentleman travelling through the Highlands, came to the inn of Letter Finlay, in the braes of Lochaber. He saw no person near the inn, and knocked at the door. No answer. He knocked repeatedly with as little success; he then opened the door, and walked in. On looking about, he saw a man lying on a bed, whom he hailed thus: ”Are there any Christians in this house?” ”No,” was the reply, ”we are all Camerons.”
Welcome Sight.--A writer of a modern book of travels, relating the particulars of his being cast away, thus concludes: ”After having walked eleven hours without having traced the print of human foot, to my great comfort and delight, I saw a man hanging upon a gibbet; my pleasure at the cheering prospect was inexpressible; for it convinced me that I was in a civilized country!”
WAR.