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Original Anecdotes, Literary News, Chit Chat, Incidents, &c

Why the eyes of a portrait, which look directly at a spectator in front, do so also in any other position, has remained without an explanation until lately. Dr. Wollaston after considering the matter, observes, when two objects are seen on the ground at different distances from us, in the same direction, one appears, and must be represented to a picture, as exactly above the other, so that a vertical plane from the eye would pass through them; and since such line will be seen upright, however far we move to one side, it follows that the same object will still seem to be in a line with us, exactly as in the front view-seeming, as we move, to turn from their first direction. In portraits, the permanence of direction, with reference to the spectator, depends on the same principles. So the nose, drawn in front with its central line upright, continues directed to the spectator, though viewed obliquely; or, if the right side of the nose is represented, it must appear directed to the right of the spectator, in all situations.

The temporary derangement of vision, which very commonly follows acidity or flatulency in the stomach, and as commonly precedes sick-headach, or else unusual sleepiness, in great numbers of persons (the writer amongst the number), has lately attracted the attention of Dr. Wollaston, who, with his wonted sagacity, has discovered that, usually, one half only, either to the right or to the left of each eye, is in these cases temporarily affected with blindness. From a careful consideration of the circumstances attending five cases of temporary half-blindness, which are detailed in the Philosophical Transactions just published, the doctor has been led to an important anatomical discovery, as to the semi-decussation of the optic nerves in the human subject; that is, instead of the entire optic nerves from the two opposite thalami of the brain, crossing each other, and proceeding entire to the eyes, on op posite sides, as has generally been supposed, that portion of nerve which proceeds from the right thalamas to the right side of the right eye, passes to its destination without interference; and, in a similar manner, the left thalamus supplies the left side of the left eye with one part of its fibres; whilst the remaining halves of both nerves, in passing over to the eyes of the opposite sides, intersect each other, either with or without intermixture of their fibres. On this principle, Dr. Wollaston most ingeniously explains how single vision is produced by two eyes-how infants are enabled to avoid squinting, &c.

MIGRATION OF BIRDS.

The migration of birds was a subject which, during many years, engaged the attention of the late celebrated Dr. Jenner, having been early in life stimulated to the inquiry by the investigation on this subject which the great John Hunter was carrying

on, whilst Mr. Jenner was resident in his house as a medical pupil. The son of Dr. Jenner has, since his decease, communicated to the Royal Society his father's manu. scripts on the subject, which have been printed in the Philosophical Transactions,—a recapitulation of which is as follows, viz.—First, Dr. Jenner adduces some arguments in support of migration, because of the fact itself not being generally admitted by naturalists of celebrity, and also against the hypothesis of a state of torpor, or what may be termed the hybernating system. He next shows, from repeated observations, that the swallow tribe, and many other birds that absent themselves at stated periods, return annually to the same spot to build their nests; and that any inference drawn from this fact, in support of a state or torpor, would be fallacious, upon physiological principles. In corroboration and continuation of the observations of John Hunter, Dr. Jenner shows, that certain periodical changes of the testes and ovaria are the exciting causes of migration, and states many facts, his therto unnoticed, with respect to the cause which excites the migrating birds, at certain seasons of the year, to quit one country for another, viz. the enlargemeut of the testes of the male, and ovaria in the female, and the need of a country where they can, for a while, be better accommodated with succours for that infant brood than in that from which they depart. It is attempted to be shown by Dr. Jenner, that their departure from this country is not in consequence of any disagreeable change in the temperature of the air, or from a scarcity of their common food, but the result of the accomplishment of their errand, i. e. the incubation and rearing of their young, and the detumessence of the testes and ovaria; that successive artivals of migrating birds are attributable to the progressive development of the generative system in the male and female; that progressive developments are wise provisions of the Creator; that premature arrivals and departures are frequently to be accounted for on the same principle; that the departure of the spring migrators is owing to a change in the testes and ovaria, the very opposite of that which took place in the spring; that the departure of the young birds is not guided by the parents, but the result of an unknown principle. In the second part of the doctor's paper some observations are made on the winter birds of passage:-that they quit their homes in this country, in the spring, in quest of a country better suited to their intended purpose than this; that they are actuated by the same impulse in quitting this country that causes the spring birds to come to it, and that want of food cannot be the inducement; that the emigration of the winter birds is less complete than that of the others, or spring migrators; that

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some species breed here, especially the wild-duck and wood-pigeon; that the redwings and fieldfares are the most regular and uniform in their appearance and disappearance, and most probably never risk the trial of incubation here, or at least not in the part of Gloucestershire where Dr. Jenner resided; that they quit the country temporarily, in severe and longcontinued frost, through want of food, and return to it again at the approach of more temperate weather; that the arrival of water-birds forbodes the approach of intense frost, and the usual return of the water-birds a thaw; that the examinations of the latter prove them to have taken long flights before their return, and sets the fact of temporary migration beyond the reach of doubt. The paper concludes with some additional particulars re

specting the different sizes of the genera tive organs of migratory birds, as they appear at different seasons of the year.

MERMAID.

The Drogheda Journal states that three persons, whose names it gives, saw on the 18th ult. a creature in the sea, which answered the description given of Mermaids, having the human form from the waist upwards; long arms, long hair, and a fish's tail. They do not mention the looking-glass!

HONOUR.

A rich man being asked to pay a debt of a hundred pounds, contracted by his son, who had fled from his creditor, replied, "I have sworn by my honour, and by all that is most sacred, never to pay one of my son's debts; and I should be wanting to my honour if I were to break my word."

NEWSPAPER ACCURACY.

The following appeared in a Sunday newspaper of the 29th ult. :

"Suicide.-On Friday evening a poor woman was put into St. Giles's watch-house for being disorderly in the street, and shortly after hung her. self, and was not discovered till quite dead. She was taken to Marlborough-street police office on Wednesday last on a similar charge!!

WOLVES IN HARNESS.

A singular equipage has been seen for the last six months in the streets of Munich. It is a calash drawn by two enormous wolves, which M. W. K. formerly a merchant of St. Petersburgh, found very young in a wood near Wilna, and has so well tamed

that they have all the docility of horses. These animals are harnessed exactly like our carriage horses, and have entirely lost their ferocious instinct. The police have only requir ed that they shall be muzzled. M. W. K. parades the city in this equipage several times a day, and always attracts an immense crowd.-Mr. ExSheriff Parkins, some years since, drove about in this way two zebras, or wild asses.

ILLUSTRATION OF THE PHOSPHO

RESCENCE OF THE OCEAN.

Pour a little phosphorated ether on a lump of sugar, and drop it into a glass of tepid water. In a dark place the surface of the water will become very soon luminous, and if it be moved by blowing gently with the mouth, beautiful and brilliant undulations of the surface will be visible, exhibiting Those who cannot see the ocean in a the appearance of liquid combustion. flame may adopt this feeble mode of imitating it, and it will give them a faint idea of a phenomenon which has called forth the admiration of all who have ever seen it, and which has been recorded by Lord Byron in noble poetry.

SIR HUMPHREY DAVY has arrived at his house in Grosvenor.

street, from Denmark, after a stormy passage across the North Seas, in the Comet steam-boat. Sir Humphrey has been engaged, during the months of July and August, in pursuing various philosophical researches along the coast of Norway, Sweden, and Denmark, for which the Admiralty granted him the use of the Comet steam-boat. He has ascertained, we understand, that his principle of preserving the copper-sheathing of ships by the contact of 1-200th of iron, succeeds perfectly in the most rapid sailing and in the roughest sea. During this expedition, Dr. Piarks has conthe triangulation of Denmark and Hanover with that of England; and, by the desire of the Admiralty, various points of longitude have been determined by their chro nometers, of great importance to navigation amongst others, that of the Naze of Norway.

nected, by chronometrical observations,

DAVID'S LAST PICTURE.

When David was on the eve of departing from Paris into exile, he is said to have told his pupils that he was about to alter and improve his style, and that he would send them from the Netherlands,—the country which he had chosen for his future

residence,—a specimen of colouring, which should be far superior to any thing which he had heretofore produced. In the present picture, David has fulfilled his promise with a vigour of execution that could scarcely have been expected in youth itself. On this piece he has devoted his whole time during his exile at Brussels. The following description will enable your readers to form some idea of the composition of this piece :-Mars having returned fatigued from the field of battle, has seated himself on a couch, from which Venus has apparently partly risen, in order to make room for him. The latter has one hand resting on the former, and is with the other about to place a garland of flowers on the head of Mars, on condition that he forsakes for the future the pursuit of arms. Mars is with his left hand resigning his sword, as a token of assent to this proposition; and with the other, which is hanging over the head of the couch, holding a spear. Two of the Graces are taking hold of his helmet and shield, and the third presenting him with nectar. Cupid is seated at his feet busily employed in unloosing one of his sandals. The disposition of the whole scene is admirably conceived, though the arrangement is, in my opinion, rather too studied. The drawing is as chaste as it is beautiful; and the colouring, in variety, richness, and truth of tone, is truly admirable, and far superior in brilliance to any of his former productions. The head, body, and in short the whole person of Mars, áre possessed of great beauties; but the Venus, though the back is beautiful and the feet admirable, is possessed of no portion of that melting voluptuousness, which usually belongs to the Venus of Greece and Rome; for, instead of that, we find nothing but anxiety and dejection. Nor are the features of the Graces more agreeable; and the figure of Love is both misplaced and badly embodied. But in spite of these observations, I must acknowledge that, taking into consideration the great age of the artist, and the novelty of the style of the present undertaking to him, that it is a great work, and will always be admired, as a splendid speeimen of colouring. This is said to be the last picture which David intends to undertake.

NEW SYSTEM OF GEOLOGY!! A Frenchman, of the name of Chabrier, has published a Dissertation on the Universal Deluge.

M. Chabrier's occupations obliging him, it appears, to travel frequently, especially in the north of Germany, he was extremely puzzled by the blocks of granite (frequently of vast size,) which are scattered in profusion on both sides of the Elbe, in the territories of Bremen and Hamburg, Mecklenburg, Pomerania, &c.; all which countries are very remote from the granite mountains. The results of his long and arduous meditations are here given to the public in the form of a theory, which, like

many other geological theories, has been produced by a desire to explain a particular phenomenon, apparently irreconcileable with any other geological hypothesis. M. Chabrier, convinced that the aforesaid blocks of granite did not come from the Hartz Mountains or from Sweden, concludes that they must be aerolites!! Having subsequently ascertained, by a scrupulous examination of the mountains, that they were only heaps of rubbish, he began to doubt whether the granite spread over the surface of the globe had been formed and crystallized in a primitive sea, which (says he) nobody had seen. Accordingly, after he had obtained the certainly of the contrary, he formally denies this fact, and does not hesitate to assert, that the granite came, as it is, from the atmosphere, with the other substances to which it is sometimes united, and by which it is also often surrounded. This terrible shower of mountains-arising from the progress of a planetary body violently struck by a comet, or caused by the explosion of the central volcano of that planet-poured at once upon the nucleus of ours, about which M. Chabrier does not trouble himself, the Alps, the Pyrenees, the Andes, &c. and all such beds of primitive rocks. These substances in combustion, falling on the tufted forests of the earth, reduced them to pitcoal!!

This, he farther maintains, was undoubtedly the planet which had for its satellites the four little moons, Ceres, Pallas, Vesta, and Juno, which irrefragably prove the former existence of that unfortunate planet. But even this monstrous shower of mountains is not enough for M. Chabrier : it was accompanied, he says, by all the waters of the planet, which, falling in cataracts, submerged the earth and deluged its inhabitants; but the rain of waters preceded that of the solids, and the latter came very opportunely to confine the waters in part, and to form our present continents and mountains,-but for which, Noah would not have found a resting-place. We must refer our readers to the work itself for the series of proofs and reasonings adduced by the author, which will we dare say convince them that M. Chabrier's system is extremely probable, and that bears all the marks of reality in the simple and easy explanation of all the facts. Thus, for instance, the fossil trees and fish, the petrified human skeleton of Guadaloupe, are remains of the vegetable and animal kingdoms of the destroyed planet, the fragments of which we tread under foot. But an idea which is certainly new, and deserving of the most serious attention, according to M. Chabrier, is, that some of the human creatures of this planet, notwithstanding their rough usage, may have survived this fall: and it is thus he accounts for the difference of races characterized by Blumenbach, Cuvier, &c. Thus the Negroes, the Americans, or the Malays, are probably descendants of the inhabitants of another world,

which was annihilated to punish our first spect,' &c. 12mo. 4s.-Hansard's Parliaparents.

NEW WORKS.

mentary Debates, vol. x. (new Series,) royal 8vo. 11. lls. 6d.

A work is announced, bearing the curious title of "Revelations of the Dead Alive," said to be from the pen of a dramatic writer.

Fielding's Select Proverbs of all Nations, 18mo. 5s.-Curr's Account of Van-Diemen's Land, 12mo. 5s. bds.-Outline of a New Theory of the Earth, 8vo. 2s.-MalteBrun's System of Geography, vol. v. part i. 7s. 6d. Cooper's Surgical Lectures, by Tyrrell, voi. i. 8vo. 10s 6d.--Advice on Diet and Regimen, 8vo. 2s.—Morning Med-lications. itations, by the Author of "The Retro

"The Political and Military Life of Prince Eugene Beauharnois," in one small volume, is among the recent Parisian pub

THE JOURNAL OF LIFE.

I LOVE to gaze at the midnight hour,
On the heavens, where all is shining;
I feel as if some enchanting pow'r

Around my heart were entwining:

To see the moon, like a beacon fair,

When the clouds sail swiftly by
And the stars, like watch-lights in the air,
Illumine the Northern sky.

Ah! then I think on my boyhood's day,,
When hope was brightly glowing,
And all my prospects were fair and gay,
And the tide of success was flowing-

I lov'd to look at the silvery light

Of the sparkling gem at the Pole ;
And view the others so fair and bright,
That round it continually roll.

I lov'd to picture each well known sign,
Where planets their courses urge,

And watch to see them more brightly shine,
Arrived at their topmost verge;

But I trusted the ocean, and wander'd afar,
Where other stars sweetly shine,-
And quitted the isle of the Northern star
For the land of the cedar and pine.
Yes-after the toils of the desperate fight,
I've watch'd (by the cannon's mouth)
The varying forms of the dial of night,

The beautiful Cross of the South;

And I thought of how many lay dead on the plain,

Who saw it the night before

Whose eyes would never behold it again,
Or gaze on their own home shore.

Then I thought on the fate of the coming day
When the burning troops would engage:
How many brave spirits would pass away
'Mid slaughter and maddening rage:
The morning came, and its early blush

Stream'd on the field of gore ;-
The bugles sound, to the charge we rush,
While the cannon destructive roar !

"Hark! bark! to the shout and the deathful shriek,

The clang of the ringing steel,

The bitter groan when the beart-strings break, The muskets' murdering peal;

And see, where the glittering bayonets meet, Our banners waving free

On! on! brave lads, for our foes retreat— Press forward to Victory!"

And thus is the vision of glory's dream
Emblazon'd with blood and flame,

And wounds and death are the warrior's theme,
And this is his boasted fame :

Yet I followed the phantom far and near,

Where the billows are one white foam; And still in pursuit, for many a year,

Through the world I continued to roam

Till I prov'd man's ambition was false and vain,
And his fame like a cloud in the air;
Then I sought the home of my father again,
To rest from my labour and care,

But, ah! how chang'd was each form and mein-
The smile of affection was flown;

And dark and drear was each youthful scene
Which memory prized as her own.

In vain I looked for the cheering face
of friend I had known before-
All formal and chill was their cold embrace,
For fortune denied me her store:
And many had quitted this vale of tears,
O'erwhelm'd by affliction's wave,

And, now alike both their hopes and fears,
Were laid at rest in the grave.

Then cheerless and griev'd, from the world I

withdrew,

To the village and rural cot ;

But here, where the days of my childhood flew,

There were strangers who knew me not.

In the regions of death, and there alone,
I now claim a kiudred part;
And seated at eve on the cold grave-stone,
Commune with my own sad heart.

Yet still I gaze at the midnight hour,
On the heavens, where all is shining;
And feel as if some enchanting pow'r
Around my soul was entwining:
And still those stars, with their sparkling light,
Will shine on the wild-flow'rs bloom-
Whose eyes, surcharg❜d with the tears of night,
Shall weep on my turf-rais'd tomb.

An O. S.

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FRANK CLERMONT inherited may be said to be dying of want,

an estate of twenty thousand a year; having, besides, fifty thousand pounds in the funds which were left to him by a great uncle.

The ready money was disposed of before he was of age, and ten years after his income was reduced to five thousand per annum. He could not make it less, one-fourth of his property being so entailed that it was virtually impossible for him to get rid of it. He nevertheless considered himself to be reduced to absolute beggary, and became more discontented, perhaps, than if he had been without the common means of subsistence.

He is persecuted by duns from morning till night. His equipage is shabby, and he is looked upon in his own circle as a ruined man, and of course treated as one. By his friends, who have not entirely forsaken him, he is usually invited to help off with the fragments of feasts which have the day before been given to his former titled companions; and his own entertainments are attended by those only with whom a short time ago he would have deemed it a degradation to associate.

At first he thought of retrieving his circumstances by marriage, and commenced fortune hunter; but being unsuccessful in an overture which he made to a lady whose reputed fortune was two hundred thousand pounds, he gave up the pursuit in despair, and has since taken so immoderately to drink, that he is fast hurrying himself to the grave; so that, literally, he 37 ATHENEUM VOL. 2. 2d series.

though he is in the receipt of five thousand a year!

P-began the world without a shilling; but by unceasing industry, by watching for and taking advantage of every opportunity by which money was to be made, and, when made, by using it most parsimoniously, he has at last succeeded in realizing a plum:

the ultimatum of his worldly desire, the object which he had in view from boyhood-the hopes of attaining which caused his most arduous exertions to be "Labor absque labore.”

He never even allowed himself the indulgence of a hackney coach, or ride on horseback, till he was worth £50,000; but soon after this sum was realized, his ideas became more expanded, and he absolutely began to think that he could afford to marry a widow with ten thousand pounds, towards whom he had long felt rather tenderly. He made the state of his heart known, and as the lady deemed it a prudent connexion too, there was not much hesitation on her part. Never were a couple united whose ideas were more entirely alike. Wealth was the grand object which they both kept constantly in view, nor did they cease living with their ancient parsimony till the plum was attained: but as soon as it was, they lanched out, and now they sport one of the most splendid equipages in the city. Their entertainments are first-rate in their line. They have an elegant country villa at Richmond, and in fact revel in all the luxuries of

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