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of their English brethren even in the pride they The latin "Hungary" was abolished, and with took in placing themselves at the head of every the deliverance from the German yoke, the “ "Magpolitical movement, pretending to be or being re- yar Orszag" (the kingdom of the Magyar), apally ready to sacrifice their own privileges when-parently reduced to decrepitude, rose young and ever the good of the Commonwealth should re-strong, inspired by ardent love of liberty, to take quire it; and the younger sons would serve as once more its place among the kingdoms of Eusecretaries in the Diet, or during vacations, can- rope. At the head of the movement, and now vass the country and thus enter the Lower the soul and the director of the new government, House. was a man who, like his race, had even in serviWhen therefore the opportunity came, they tude cherished lofty aspirations, and in silence were not found unprepared and wanting, as their prepared himself for the great work carved out German brethren, in political education, whilst for him by History. Not more than twelve years the resuscitation of their national feelings raised ago Kossuth was a poor attorney in the employtheir patriotism to the height of almost sacred ment of several deputies, when some magnates enthusiasm. Their scholars had studied the his- of the liberal party discovered his superior talents tory of their race and taught it in lecture-room and untiring activity. At their instigation he unand public square, to the surprise and admira- dertook to publish a journal, containing reports of tion of their fellow-citizens; eloquent patriots the Sessions of their Diet, which, to avoid the had inspired the people with the glorious deeds severe laws against the printing of such docuof their ancestors and the consciousness of their ments, were lithographed and thus sent to every own rights and the name of Magyar had become county in the kingdom. The bold and daring once more an honor among them. enterprise met with unexpected success, but the These were the days when the wave of revo- Austrian government, justly afraid of its influlutions, passing over the continent, reached Vi-ence on a nation like the Magyar, found means enna and roused it from its apparently happy to have the journal confiscated. Nothing daunted, slumbers. But to the surprise of all Europe, it Kossuth continued it by employing a number of was here that the most fearful explosions follow-copyists and sending it out in written copies! ed each other in most rapid succession. One day saw the work of centuries fall to pieces and the father of European politics, Prince Metternich, a fugitive and an exile. Another day and the liberal cabinet of Ficquelmont fell with equal rapidity and disgrace; a third revolution drove the weak Emperor himself out of "his beloved city." A Diet, elected by universal suffrage, as a constituent body, took the affairs of the country in their hands and soon after, following the example of the Parliament of St. Paul, enacted executive measures.

After the adjournment of the National Diet he travelled through the country to see with his own eyes and teach with his own lips; but he was soon arrested for one of his public speeches, kept in prison for nearly three years without ever being brought before a judge and almost accidentally liberated by a general amnesty. Having thus become a martyr of the popular cause he soon found himself in the Lower House and at the head of the opposition. Thus qualified by a slow and gradual, but thorough political education, he rose with his country and when Hungary, The revolution of Vienna was, however, the in March, threw off the yoke of the German, first of those movements which were not so much Kossuth, by the will of the people, seized the undertaken for the sake of political reforms, but supreme power and displayed an energy and manifested the characteristic of the revolutions wisdom, fully equal to the emergency and his of 1848, by demanding political emancipation lofty position. His eloquence, by friend and foe only for the sake of the final independence of spoken of with admiration, and his ardent, unthe different nationalities. Magyar-students, it suspected patriotism won him the hearts of his is said, had been the leaders of this revolution, countrymen, and, by birth, education and characand at the first news of their success, the second ter, the true representative of the Magyar race, Chamber of Hungary, with the concurrence of he soon rose to such power that, to apply the the Upper House, sent an address to the Empe- fatal test of our day, he could issue two hundred ror, demanding a Magyar-Cabinet, responsible millions of florins in paper money and see the to their own Diet, a national guard and universal Diet, unasked, impose capital punishment on all representation, without distinction of rank or who would obey the Emperor's decree and refuse property. One thousand Magyar noblemen in to take these notes! their brilliant national costume ascended the Danube and presented this petition to the Emperor. It was granted, for at that moment there was on the whole continent no government that could have refused.

But, strange fate! hardly had Hungary freed herself from Austria and begun to prepare for the struggle with that power, when an enemy arose within her own limits, small in number, weak in appearance, and strong only in the same

feeling that nerved the Magyar, in ardent patriot- | times of Rome, Europe has known none more ism. The cry of nationality had found an echo powerful aud more gigantic. even in the farthest parts of Europe, and pene- In June the struggle began and war was detrated to the most remote branches of the Scla-clared between Magyar and Slave. The last atvonic family. And when Hungary was Hungary tempt on the part of Austria to conciliate those no longer, but once more the Land of the Mag- whom she was then still disposed to call her subyar, there rose the children of the soil and asked: jects failed; the proud Magyar refused to yield in What have we in common with the Hun? add- anything to the demands of the Sclavonians, and ing in their barbarous Latin, nolumus magyari- the Croats, following the example of the races sari! Should the Magyar be allowed to appro- around them, were determined to recover their priate to himself the harvest he had sown with nationality or to die in the attempt. When the the aid of other nations, and which all had la- crisis really came the courtiers and politicians of bored to ripen? Should he, without drawing his Vienna were not slow in seeing the advantage sword, be allowed to claim alone the fruits of they might derive from it for their own cause. long peace, as if the Croat had not fought by his It was then that they first gave up the West and side with equal bravery against the Mongol, the turned their eyes to the East, to the Sclavonic Tartar and the Turk? They pleaded, not without race; applying the old maxim of divide et imjustice, that they had never been serfs of the Mag-pera they declared the Magyars "rebellious reyar but an "annexed" kingdom with their own publicans" and sanctioned the attempt of the Diet and independent administration and bearing Croats the more readily as they found at their to Hungary the same relation that Hungary bore head a loyal subject and a highly distinguished to Austria, that of regnum in regno. We have officer of the army. Baron Joseph de Jellachich, always, they said, complained of the tyranny of a Slave by birth, had manifested from early youth our stronger brother, the Magyar, even when we a warm sympathy for the interests of his opyet obeyed a common master, but what will be-pressed brethren, and when his signal services in come of us when, deprived of the protection of Italy were to be rewarded he claimed as his only our father, we shall be left to his unrestrained favor a place among his fellow Croats. This was rule? Let the Magyar resuscitate his own race, reassume his language and enjoy once more his national independence, but let him not deprive us of the same rights he is so eagerly claiming for himself!

granted and he lived for years as one of the Colonels commanding on the armed frontier (against Turkey) in their midst, honored and loved as a father. It is here that by his paternal care, his rational endeavors to enlighten his race and improve their condition, and by his personal kindness, he gained that popularity which afterwards made him in all but name the sovereign of a great people. He spoke to them in their own language, the forbidden Illyrian, for, said he, “it is the tongue my mother spoke and I am proud of being able to speak it and to speak it to you!" He lived with them and fought with them; standing alone in the world, they were his only friends and his children.

It is certainly strange that the Magyar, then whom there is none more anxious for liberty and proud of independence, should attempt to impose the same yoke on the Croat which he bore so impatiently, and while he resists to his utmost the attempts of Austria to recover her rebellious province, speak of Croatia as trying under favor of the general revolutionary crisis to rise with impunity against the Hungarian Monarchy! The Magyars-for Hungarians there are no longer have but one excuse: they pretend that Croatia And when they rose to shake off the yoke of dreams of the famous Panslavism and is anxious Magyar laws and Magyar language, they held a to aid in establishing the gigantic Slave Empire great Diet in their city of Agram, and, appealing to which we have referred. Proud of having to all the members of their large and powerful once saved European Christianity from the Mos- family, they declared themselves, after a thousand lems they now are prouder still of what they be- years' oppression, once more a free and indepenlieve their lofty and providential destination: to dent nation. Their poet, Gaj, had prepared their be a bulwark against the encroaching influence minds by his erudite works on their language and of Panslavism. They delight in the thought that history, and this race of shepherds and slaves Russia will march her forty millions of Slaves who but ten years before were without schools against them, for their gallantry is one that is and written laws, now, as by magic, and under flattered by the power of their enemy, and, firmly the inspiration of highly-wrought patriotism, probelieving that the triumph of Magyarism would be duced philologists, scholars, poets and publicists, the triumph of reason, intelligence aud liberty, they and an irresistible enthusiasm filled the minds of hesitate not to oppose themselves, a race of a few all with visions of the future greatness of a noble millions and without any affinity to other nations race. Not disdaining to learn even from their of the earth, to an Empire than which, since the enemies they followed the example of the haugh

ty Magyar in every measure calculated to raise a faithful subject of the House of Habsburg and and strengthen this feeling, and perhaps more an enemy of all the enemies of Austria, but above fortunate even than their foes they elected Jella- all, of the revolutionary Magyars. What he dechich their Ban and Sovereign. It was in the manded was a One United Austria, giving equal large palace of the Congregation, as their Par- rights to all nationalities which form part of the liament is called, that their wise elders and the great monarchy. The different races were to be Greek and Catholic bishops, in their gorgeous represented in a common Parliament at Vienna, robes, were seated on one of three oblong tables, where, of course, the Sclavonic races would, raised on a low platform, whilst the other two owing to their numerical strength, have an overwere occupied by the members at large, surround-whelming majority. In fact, therefore, Austria ed by a graceful balustrade, below which stood would cease to be German, and by a constituthe literati or young men who had passed the tional majority become Sclavonic. necessary examinations, all admitted to witness This the Ban calls the good cause of Austria,

the meeting, but to vote only when of noble and with this war-cry a powerful army left Croabirth. Their picturesque costume was much tia, crossed the Drave, and unfolding the impeenhanced by the richly ornamented arms with rial banner, summoned the Magyar fortress Eswhich every member was amply provided, and segg to surrender to those who came "under the their whole bearing presented a strange but at- venerated authority of the Emperor, their fatractive mixture of the Orient and the West. ther." Thus opened the war between Magyar Long were their debates and stormy, and many and Croat and Magyar and Austrian, a fearful an eye flashed with anger and spoke of future civil war, with all the horrors to be expected bloodshed; many a sword was half-drawn, and from the hatred of races, the fury of serfs but the storm under which the impassionate Assem- recently franchised, from political and religious bly moved to and fro, seemed about to break out fanaticism, and the ferocity of semi-barbarous with perfect fury, when one of the white-haired populations. bishops rose and with a low, trembling voice The Magyars seem to be fully aware of their spoke a few words in Illyrian, of which the for- dangerous position; suspected by Germany, hated eigner would have understood but the last, the by the Slaves, isolated among the nations of the name of Jellachich. Zivio! Zivio! was heard earth, they were left alone, as they say, to resist from old and young, from priest and nobleman, this conspiracy of monarchs and races against and shouts interminable rent the air, and from the them. In Vienna they were ungratefully demidst of the Peers there rose a man of small, nounced as an undisciplined and rebellious naslender stature, and his clear commanding eye, tion; in the North armed bands of Slaves from in calm, firm steadiness, wandered from face to Bohemia and Moravia tried to join their Southface. An instant, all were quiet as if awed by ern brethren in Croatia where Jellachich had alhis glance, but then broke forth such bursts of ready attacked them with a powerful army, and applause and enthusiasm, as only the Orient in the East Russia threatened with her two hunknows to conjure up. He moved not; not a dred thousand men in arms, ready to crush every feature changed. It was not pride-much less movement in favor of republicanism. If Heaven indifference: he felt the ovation and when he itself surveys with pleasure a brave heart strugbegan to speak, his voice was thick as with deep gling with the storms of fate, what a glorious emotion. Few were his words and mild his sight must not a nation be, struggling for the saspeech, but it was the gentle evening-breeze that cred cause of liberty against nearly all Europe ! fans the flames till they rise to the very heavens. When the news of Jellachich's invasion reach

That day Jellachich was elected Ban of Croa-ed Pesth, Kossuth caused himself to be carried, tia, and representatives came from distant re-sick and suffering, to the Diet; supported by two gions from Serbia, Illyria, and even from the men, pale and exhausted, he made, as he then northern Sclavonic provinces, and hailed their thought, his last appeal to the Assembly.great chief. Bishops of the two great churches He spoke words of fire, now appealing to the officiated, with all the pomp of the East, at his sacred memory of their ancient forefathers, now solemn installation, and from Vienna came the showing how their cause was the cause of libnews that the Ban had been appointed the Em- erty for all Europe; he electrified the Assembly, peror's Lieutenant for Hungary! Thus he who and raised the energetic patriotism of the excibut a year before had been a poor Colonel in a table Magyar to a fanaticism that centuries will far-off province, found himself suddenly sover- not be able to allay again. The scene was one eign of an independent kingdom and command- of unsurpassed grandeur, such as the annals of er-in-chief of all the Austrian troops and for- history have but rarely to record. Borne on the tresses in Hungary. He hesitated not to declare shoulders of some of his friends, he then went himself openly in favor of the Emperor's cause, to the fortifications, where the Deputies them

selves, spade in hand, repaired the walls of the terranean, and well consider that there is waiteity, or broke up the pavement to raise barri- ing for their downfall a powerful and uncorrupted cades, while the women on the flat roofs of their race, forming one tenth part of all mankind and houses heated pitch and oil to receive the inva- united by the sacred tie of common blood and the ding enemy. The Parliament in the meantime strong bond of one common language—a race, declared itself permanent; a Committee of Pub- warlike and victorious, represented even now in lie Safety was appointed; Kossuth was chosen the armies of Europe by their only successful Imperator with unlimited power, and every man Generals-Radetzky, Windischgraetz and Jellaable to bear arms, was ordered forthwith to join the army which thus included the regular hussar, the national guard, and the peasant with his national weapon, the scythe.

It is sad that this bright page in the history of so noble a race, should have been stained with a deed that no excitement and no passion can exeuse. Like General Bréa in Paris, Prince Lichnowsky in Frankfurth, and Count Latour in Vienna, was it in Pesth also an old tried soldier who fell ingloriously in an inglorious cause.

chich!

In attempting to present here a few glimpses at Europe in 1848, we have been led to choose the distant and unknown Slave nation as the first of our series, because we believe this movement to be the only one likely to have permanent effects on the state of things in Europe. Not that the revolutions which have disturbed more or less the peace of almost every nation will remain The Emperor, relying on the rapid march of without their momentous consequences. The the Ban of Croatia and the apparent hesitation providence of God does not ordain such fearful of the Magyars entirely to throw off their allegi- commotions without a wise pnrpose, although ance to Austria, sent Count Lamberg as Com- centuries may pass before it becomes manifest missioner to make a last attempt at reconcilia- to our short-sighted minds. Even were there no tion. For this purpose, the venerable old Gen- other benefit to be derived from such a crisis, it eral left Pesth to cross the Danube, when, on the must have enlarged and strengthened those counbridge, an infuriated mob recognized his brilliant tries by elevating all the members of the same uniform in an humble hackney-coach, dragged state to the consciousness of their dignity as citihim out and butchered him in a manner which zens, and by exciting in all men of the same of itself disgraced the whole nation. Soon blood a warmer love of their common race and after, a Count Zichy, a Magyar-magnate and country. But we apprehend that the wishes of cousin to the Princess Metternich, was detected those who, from a pure, but abstract love of freein carrying on a secret correspondence with the dom, hoped for the establishment of republics in Croats and after a summary trial, hung as a trai-Europe, will be doomed to disappointment. We

tor.

There was great and well-founded indignation at Vienna. Jellachich was ordered immediately to dissolve the Magyar Diet, and to reduce the country by fire and sword to obedience; but ere he could march to execute this order, the last revolution broke out in Vienna, and he hastened thither to aid his Emperor's cause, while the Magyars collected an army to assist the Republican party.

have happened of late to meet more than one of those in whose hands had been the government of European countries for long years; and from prudent Guizot, whom no fault of his own, but solely the selfish policy and reluctant half-confidence of Louis Philippe, caused to fall, to the newly risen Kossuth with his ardent enthusiasm for liberty, not one but was convinced that the establishment of republics at present, could not be hoped for and should not be desired, that France would soon Vienna is fallen, and for the moment the cause return to monarchy, that Germany would never of the Slave is triumphant. At the side of West- attempt a republic while Poland remained quiesern Europe we see an Eastern Europe rise, here- cent, and that Italy would but slightly change her tofore hardly known but as the formidable phan-political institutions by forming a federal union. tom of Panslavism, rarely as a friendly power. If however, the movement in favor of repubMillions of Slaves, not Russians, but almost all licanism be comparatively fruitless and produce opposed to them and mostly differing with them but few radical changes in the political aspect of in religion, are rising, coalescing and forming in- Europe, it is far otherwise with the question of stitutions which shall reconcile and combine the nationality. Austria has de facto become a Sclacultus of ancient laws and traditions of the coun- vonic Empire; the Emperor has determined to try with the demands of modern civilization. reside hereafter in Prague among his three milLet the old races of the Continent beware! Let lions of Tchech-subjects, and a union of these them remember Rome and the Barbarians! Let Slaves with their brethren in Hungary, Serbia, them examine the questions now agitated on the Moldavia and Wallachia is already preparing. banks of the Danube and the shores of the Medi-This change will, we fear, seriously affect the

VOL. XV-2

principle of political balance in the Old World :| a door has been opened in the very centre of Europe for the admission of a new race, giving it access to the Adriatic and thence to the Mediterranean, and the interests of the Western half of the Continent will henceforth be more directly exposed to the influence of a power tremendous in itself, and by its close alliance with one of the most numerous races of the world, silent and mysterious in its ambition, but successful in whatever it has attempted.

But my sweet vision, like a bird,
With that brief lustre fled,

And not Love's most endearing word,
Can waken more-the dead-
"Tis hard the beautiful to lay,
Oh! Earth! on thy cold couch of clay-

Still a strange something tells my heart-
Thy presence haunts me yet-
That kindred-natures cannot part,
Nor kindred souls forget-
Death's tyrant-power is more than vain,
Beloved! we shall meet again.

P. H. H.

THE LAST ADIEU.

NATIONAL BALLADS.

"There is a touching part of the Greek-funeral service, There is, perhaps, no similitude more trite and in which relatives and friends are invited to embrace the familiar,-certainly there is none more striking deceased (whose face is uncovered) and so bid their final and true, than that which likens the origin and

adieu."

"She died; yet Death could scarcely chill Her smiling beauties."-MRS. WELBY.

The summer sky is calm and bright,
The Earth looks gay with flowers-
The birds are glancing in the light,

Or warbling in their bowers-
But oh my heart is dark and chill,
I would this fevered pulse were still.

The Heaven, that bends so calm above,
As if God's smile were there,

Is like thy brow, departed love!-
And scarce more pure and fair-
"Dust unto dust"-but not while grace,
So angel-like illumes thy face.

How still thy raven tresses lie!

How paled thy cheek's rich bloom!
How dimmed the lustre of thine eye!-
And yet no trace of gloom,

No trace, no trace is o'er them cast,
For Grief is dead: and Death is past.

Aye! Death is past; but can the power,
So dread a change that wrought
On those pale features in an hour,

Change the soul's love-or thought?
Do beings in the untrodden sphere,
Dream of the days they lingered here?

A sunbeam, through the o'erhanging trees,
Breaks radiant on thy brow,
Where the dark locks a perfumed breeze,
Is stirring gently now-
Was it a smile thy spirit sent,
From the fair, bending firmament?

A moment! and I fondly deemed

So life-like was the ray,

That over eye, lip, ringlet beamed,—
All had not passed away

Of the ethereal, magic flame

That warmed so late thy heart and frame.

progress of nations to the growth and development of children. As a mere figure of speech, to illustrate the periods of increase and decay, it is undoubtedly just and appropriate : but this resemblance, which may be traced as well in the ruined tower, or the tottering oak, is not the most interesting analogy, suggested by such phrases, as the infancy, the maturity, and the old age of nations.

Let a country, fit for the habitation of man, be possessed by a people partly civilized. Let them lay the foundations of a state, and go on, through a succession of ages, to build up, to strengthen, and to extend their dominion: let them reach the culminating point of greatness, and fall into that decline which full surely awaits every work of human hands: and there will be found not only in the power and resources of the nation, at these different epochs, but in the temper and character of the people, in their thoughts and feelings, their passions and pursuits, a remarkable coincidence with those of the corresponding divisions of human life.

These remarks, it is obvious, will not apply to the history of colonies from a highly civilized parent stock. When emigrants leave the soil of their ancestors, to plant in other climes the seeds of future nations, they carry with them the experience and knowledge of the past-the discoveries of science, the treasures of art, the fruits of thought and study-bequeathed to them by their predecessors. They begin their separate existence, at that stage of cultivation, which the mother country had already attained: nor can we expect to discover, in their subsequent progress, the characteristics which belong to an ear'lier civilization. For these we must look back

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