PUTNAM'S MONTHLY MAGAZINE OF 3merican Literature, Science, and Art. VOL. VI. JULY TO DECEMBER, 1855. NEW YORK: DIX & EDWARDS, 10 PARK PLACE: MDCCCLV. Harvard College Library Gift of Miss Longfellow, Mrs. Danà, 9 Jan.1895, ENTERED, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1855, by DIX & EDWARDS, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court for the Southern District of New York. HOLMAN & GRAY, PRINTERS AND STEREOTYPERS, N. Y. 4234 4-4 Ancient History-Memoir of S. S. Prentiss- Amos Lawrence-Douglas's Life and Bond- age-The Life of Curran-Calhoun's Works -Peg Woflington- Christie Johnstone- School of Life-Ernest Gray-Mary Lyndon -Peeps from a Belfry-Kate Aylesford- Ellen Mowbray-Initials-Dickens's Works -Twice Married-Clouds and Sunshine- Oakfield-Ethel-Aspirations - Light and Darkness-The Old Homestead-The Old Farm House-The Rag Picker-Isora's Child-The Elder Sister-The Match Girl- The Deserted Wife-Bancroft's Miscellanies - Spencer's Sermons- Agassiz -- Modern Hoary Head-Prescott's Philip II. II. European Literature-England.-Life of Sydney Smith-Doran's Lives of the Queens -Macaulay-Queens before the Conquest- Cestello's Anne of Britanny-Martineau's Guide to the English Lakes-Tennyson- The Brownings-Arnold-Leslie's Hand Book Jervis's Painting and Celebrated Painters-Pictures from the Battle Field- The National-Oxford Essays-Sellar on Lucretius-Froude-The Duke of Bucking- ham's Memoirs of George III.--Past and Present English Expeditions-Lord Chat- ham and Lord Raglan-Memoirs of John J. Gurney-Morality in Exeter Hall and in Lombard Street-Wrightson's Modern Italy -Madame d'Ossoli-Poems by Aubrey de Vere-Brewster's Life of Sir Isaac Newton -Tegoborski's Russia-Cotton's Rhemes and Doway-Stirling's Velazquez ley's Synopsis of Dutch and Flemish Paint- ers-Carlyle's Frederick the Great-Brown- France.-Schnitzler and V. Amanton on the Crimea-Notice sur les diverses Populations Directory of France-Life of Marnix de Sainte Aldegonde, by Quinet-Life of Wash- ington, by M. De Witt-M. Dumas, fils, Le Monde Interlopo-La Grèce Contemporaine, par M. E. About-Tolla Feraldi-Courrier des Etats Unis-Les Paysans, by M. De Balzac-Lamartine's History of Turkey- History of the German Empire and Russian Empire-George Sand-M. Dupin-Lamen- nais' Works Stendhal H. Bayle-M. Merimée-M. de Lamartine's Russie-Le Play-Les Ouvriers Européens-Ampère's Promenade en Amerique-Voyage autour de L'Exposition, par M. About-Pallegoix's Description de Siam-Maynard's impres sions de Voyage de Paris à Sebastopol-- Chasles' Les Souvenirs d'un Médecin-For- Germany-Karl Von Raumer's Geschichte Italy.-Turrisi Colonna-Guerrazzi-Massari Historical Pictures of the Pretender-The III. Fine Arts.-Trinity Chapel-Academy Landscapes-Kensett-Church--Cropsey- IV. The Opera and Music.-Grisi-Mario- V. The Drama.- Rachel-Burton's-Wal- Architecture? PUTNAM'S MONTHLY. A Magazine of Literature, Science, and Art. VOL. VI.-JULY, 1855.-NO. XXXI. IRVING'S LIFE OF WASHINGTON.* BIOGRAPHY may be said to bear to history somewhat the same relation that portraiture does to historical painting. Like other comparisons, there are some points in which this one fails; but it is exact enough for purposes of illustration. The great essential requisite for historical composition, as for historical painting, is the power of grouping. If there is a failure in this respect, skillfulness and elaboration in details, so far from making up for it, may only render confusion worse confounded, and the failure more conspicuous. This power of grouping is, indeed, essential to every species of composition, whether pictorial or written; but a much less degree of it will answer for biography or portraiture than for compositions in history. Nor is this by any means the only advantage which the former possess. Though not ranked so high in the critic's scale, their merits and beauties and power of pleasing are much more level to the common apprehension, and more likely to be generally felt and appreciated. History, as it becomes more comprehensive, more scientific and abstract, giving more and more of its attention to relations and causes not accidental, but natural and necessary, comes to deal less and less with men as individuals, and to confine itself to those motives and impulses shared by groups and, masses in common-motives and impulses to which, rather than to individual peculiarities, the course and order of events is every day more and more traced. It is said that in these modern times we have no heroes; but the reason, probably, is not so much that men or society are yet very different from what they have been, as that we have a different way of viewing things-perceiving that to be accomplished by the united weight of many persons acting under a common impulse, which, according to the old method of explanation, would have been regarded as the heroic work of some single individual. History, considered as a science, and historical compositions, looked upon as demonstrations, have, no doubt, gained much by this change. But, the great mass of the reading public are hardly yet prepared for this journey into the wilderness of historical speculation, even though the promised land of a reorganized and regenerated society may be alleged to lie beyond it; while fed with this philosophical manna, they do still look back with great longings and some murmurings to the flesh- pots of Egypt, breaking out into occasional complaints that they have been led into the desert to starve. Hence, the popularity of that semihistorical species of biography, of which Washington Irving, in the volume before us, has furnished the first installment of a very pleasing specimen. Biography, indeed, in this shape of it, may be said to have picked up not merely the dropped mantle, but, as it were, the cast-off body of the ascending muse of history; and, as yet, the great mass of readers seem much to prefer a Life of George Washington. By WASHINGTON IRVING. New York: G. P. Putnam & Co. Three vols., Vol. I., pp. 504 VOL. VI.-1 |