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A thing of beauty is a joy for ever—

has performed such severe and unremitting
duty as a quotation that we are ashamed
once more to recall it. But perhaps it is not
and the whole passage where they stand,
very common to recollect that the words,
indicate a thought which is instinctive in
natures of a certain degree of feeling and
perception, and which has been seized and
embodied by the loftiest minds in their lof-
by the thought of the abiding effect of things
tiest moods. Keats is possessed primarily
beautiful; but he also conveys what Shak-
speare and Spenser and Milton express
again and again the idea of permanency
in beauty itself, its association in the mind,
not with what is transient, but with what is
eternal. We all know what it is to grudge
even the passing of a beautiful day -

The dew shall weep thy fall to-night,
For thou must die;

These with Shakspeare are not transient whimsical phrases. They are his habitual thoughts. They are put into the mouths of we wish to hold fast the "shapes of sky or the most various characters, and they are plain"; and, moved by a stronger instinct intensified by some of his most powerful still, we cannot lose without unwillingness writing. They differ from the Platonic and the present light and glory of personal huSpenserian phantasies so pleasantly dis- man beauty. Permanency is not only the coursed upon by Charles Lamb in the essay thought or emotion of reflecting minds on on Mrs. Conrady. Delicate and true as fronting beauty; it is more than that; it is these are, there is an air of ingeniousness the blind intuition even of natures that about them by reason of which they strike never were and never will be able to comless directly home. In them the virtuous pass in thought such abstractions as beauty soul is the cause of a beautiful exterior, or permanency at all. Reflection, stimprovided always that the material is plastic ulated perhaps rather than dulled by freenough. But the doctrine that the exterior quent loss and familar disappointment, casts beauty is proportioned to the internal intel- about. to find what the elements of permalectual light is too glaringly contrary to nency may be, and the great poets, "in facts to be impressive; and the saving pro- clear dream and solemn vision," have found vision that some material is so obstinate it, and declare it to be the prime germ of that it cannot be worked upon is too general beauty, its life and soul. Call it what you and too elastic. In Shakspeare the beauti-will-grace, virtue, goodness—this "luce ful exterior is not attempted to be accounted for; but the laws of its life and death, its durability and decay, are delineated with a fineness and precision of thought which genius might inspire, but which nothing but virtuous soundness of nature could dictate and render habitual.

If, however, we have mentioned Spenser's "Hymne in Honour of Beautie" with a slightly unfavourable contrast on a particular point, it is impossible to end without stopping again to extol it. There is one thought pervading it in which the two great Elizabethan contemporaries could not but agree in which perhaps all the greatest mediæval and modern poets have agreedand that is, the immortality of beauty. The line in Keats

intellettual, piena d'amore" is the real rem-
edy of lossor of decay in beauty, the guaran-
tee of perpetuity; it casts a
beam upon
the outward shape,"

And turns it by degrees to the soul's essence,
Till all be made immortal.

And Shakspeare, whenever he has occasion
to do more than merely transmit the name
of beauty through his verse, is never far
from thoughts like these. He is always
ready to pass from the outward to the in-
ward; from the form to the idea; from the
corporeal reflection to the inextinguished
ray which

Is heavenly-born and cannot die;
Being a parcell of the purest skie.

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From The Pall Mall Gazette.

this fact will be soonest or most keenly

SOME POLITICAL ASPECTS OF THE WAR. felt. The victories of Prussia must awaken

of a

She

FIRST of all, Europe has been confronted a far more lively interest in Russia than in by a new and startling fact. A colossal any other of the neutral States. For some military Power has unexpectedly risen up years past it has been the policy of the among us. We say has unexpectedly risen Berlin Cabinet to keep on good terms with up, because the most favourable estimates the Czar. Family alliances made it natural of the Prussian military organization had and decent to do so, and there was an not prepared us for anything like the re- obvious prudence in not provoking Russian ality. Many people thought that the result hostility until it was possible to provoke it war between Prussia and France without danger. Consequently, Prussia would be to displace the latter from the and France have been allowed to bid position of military pre-eminence she was against each other at St. Petersburg, and supposed to have regained under the Second as it was not the aim of the Russian GovEmpire. But if the contest ends as it has ernment that either of them should become begun, it will do very much more than this. much stronger than the other, the Czar's It promises to place Prussia in a position Ministers have been careful to encourage such as France has never held except under both a little, and neither very much. Each Louis XIV. and under Napoleon I. There rumour of an alliance to be concluded beis much the same sort of difference between tween France and Russia has been followed this and the position France has lately at no long interval by hints that the relaclaimed to hold as there is between the tions between Russia and Prussia were Ultramontane theory of St. Peter's su- never more friendly, and these again have premacy and the Anglican theory of his been the forerunner of significant suggestprimacy. As a military Power France has ions as to the great things France and been, as theologians would say, primus Russia might do if they could but recognise inter pares, and the utmost that was looked the real identity of their interests. Now for from the war was the transfer of this pre- Russia has been deprived without any warneminence to Prussia. But the utter col-ing of the second string on which she has lapse of the French army, supposing it relied for the success of her archery. really to take place, carries with it some- will have to confront Prussia in future with thing very different. With France dis- no strong Power in the background ready, posed of, Prussia will be the possessor of as well as eager, to take advantage of an unchallenged supremacy over every Prussia's attention being engaged elsewhere other Power taken singly. England cer- in order to undermine her position in Gertainly could not stand up against her. Aus- many. If the policy of the two Governtria failed to do so when Prussia was ments were really one and the same, this weaker than she is now. Russia may some might not be altogether disagreeable to day have the necessary strength, but at Russia. They would agree to go their own present, according to the best accounts, she way and to use their common strength for neither has nor thinks that she bas it. It the attainment of their separate objects. is too soon to determine how this sudden But with the consolidation of Germany unaggrandizement of one Power may affect der Prussian rule the reasons for employing the politics of Europe, but it is quite time their common strength in this way will to point out that the state of things to which cease to have any weight at Berlin. So it introduces us is one for which we were long as Prussia wanted to extend her influquite unprepared. It may be all that it is ence in Germany Russia might have offered described, but certainly there cannot yet her the inducement of being left to do so in have been time enough to allow a cool ob- peace. But now that the process is virtuserver to come to any final conclusion upon ally completed, now that Germany south the subject. There are some reasons, no of the Main as well as north of it is virtudoubt, why Englishmen may fairly rejoice ally one nation and one army, Russia has in a great accession to German strength, no longer this bait at her disposal. Prussia but it remains to be seen how far these has secured all she wanted by her own unspecial grounds for self-congratulation on assisted strength, and any designs that their part will have to be qualified by the Russia may entertain in the East will be commonplace reflection that even Prussians judged at Berlin with no reference to the are but men, and that uncontrolled power bribe that she could once have held out in will still perhaps be capable of abuse, the shape of a full permission to Prussia to though it may be wielded by Teutonic work out her own designs nearer home. hands and guided by Teutonic brains.

It will not, however, be in England that

We may look, therefore, for the assumption of a far more independent attitude

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towards Russia on the part of the Berlin | military information of the past and present Cabinet as one of the most immediate re-events has yet reached us. No diligent sults of the war, and it happens that so military correspondents have hovered about soon as Count Bismarck has any time to the battle-fields to cull from them the inturn his thoughts in that direction he will struction which they were capable of affordnot be without an opportunity for making ing; the facile pen which told of the Bohethis result apparent. For some time back mian triumphs, and which taught us so Russia has been engaged in a species of much, is perforce idle. Even the wellcrusade against her German subjects in the known correspondent who accompanied the Baltic provinces. She has set herself to Crown Prince has as yet been able to reroot out the German language and the Lu- cord little of permanent military value and theran religion to destroy, in fact, all the interest. And yet day by day in the Alsamarks which have hitherto distinguished tian battle fields lessons of the highest imthe German nationality in these provinces portance to the soldier and to the nation from the Slavonic type which she has suc- are being spelt out. We may be told that cessfully established throughout the rest of it is too soon to attempt to generalize from her empire. In this respect her policy has the present struggle, that a day's events been identical with that attributed, whether may upset all our conclusions, that, after truly or falsely, by the Germans to the all, the campaign is scarcely opened, that Danish Government in Sleswick-Holstein, nothing absolutely decisive has yet been and consistency has already demanded that done. In this there is no doubt much truth. the same ultimatum should be presented at It is too soon to attempt to generalize exSt. Petersburg as was presented at Copen-haustively, or to pronounce dogmatically as hagen in 1864 the full recognition, that to the ultimate solution of all the great is, of German claims, or the compulsory problems now being worked out upon the severance of the German territories. Hith-Meuse and Moselle. We have, of course, erto Count Bismarck has been prudently much more to learn, and many questions blind to this logical necessity. He was not are still in suspense. But it is not too prepared to fight Russia, and he justly ar- soon to appeal to the experience of the gued that Russia would listen to no inter-present war as establishing certain facts, ference in her internal affairs which could or as affording indications, more or less not be backed in the last resort by an decided, of important conclusions of grave appeal to force. The mission of Prussia as military import. We have got, at any rate, the protector of German interests in all to the words of one syllable, and these it parts of the world was therefore suffered will be well to make our own before we atto lie in abeyance, and the Russian govern- tempt to master the more difficult lessons. ment went its own way. It is not likely For the present, we shall confine ourselves that this policy will be pursued any longer. to setting forth the points which seem to be The Germans of the Baltic provinces are plainly proved. The instruction to be dekeenly interested in the events of the rived in this way groups itself naturally into and when they say to their Russian several large divisions. There is, for exneighbours, on getting the news of a Prus- ample, that division which connects itself Our troops have beaten with the personnel of the contending armies, yours," there may be something prophetic and the organization under which that perin the instinctive identification of Russia sonnel is directed. There is, again, the with the defeated army. question of material of war, its efficiency and application; there is the large and important division which comprehends the various tactical considerations; there is the strategy of the compaign; there is the home application of these and various other lessons to ourselves and our soldiers. To exhaust these subjects would be to write several treatises, and no attempt of the sort will be made here. All we propose to do is to note down from time to time the points which become more or less decidedly established; thus accumulating as the war proceeds some raw material of instruction which may hereafter be usefully applied to the strengthening of our own system.

war,

sian success,

From The Pall Mall Gazette. MILITARY LESSONS OF THE WAR.

THE absence of military correspondents with the French and Prussian armies of critical, professional observers of the incidents of the great struggle between the two greatest military nations of Europe is to be regretted not merely on account of our present loss, great as that is, but because we thus run a risk of wholly missing some of the more important lessons of the war. It is surprising how little really detailed

It is surely not too soon to bear testimony

to the excellence and efficiency of the Prus- | intrepidity, a coolness, a discipline which sian soldiers. This is the more important place him at once in the very highest milibecause those who, like ourselves, have ad- tary ranks. While full of a deep fury and vocated a reorganization of our military intense national dislike of his foe, he has system on something approaching the Prus- yet carefully subordinated his feelings to sian basis have been frequently met with his discipline. He has not been betrayed the statement that the reputation of this into neglecting the lessons so admirably army rested upon no solid foundation. The taught him during peace. He has not fired supporters of the old standing army system, away all his ammunition like a feu de joie, as contra-distinguished from what we may or at impossible ranges; he has not trusted call the national military system, have urged to unreasoning or unnecessary onsets for that the successes of the Prussians in Den- victory; he has not omitted to fight under mark, or against an internally divided and cover as far as possible; he has not fought badly administered military Power like indiscriminately or blindly, although when Austria, afforded no guarantee of the suc- required, as at Spikeren, he has been ready cess of the Prussian_arms against a really to execute assaults of the most desperate first-rate military Power, against a well- and bloody kind, and he has throughout trained, vigorous, compact standing army, exhibited a certain gentleness which is adsuch as that of France. All advances to- mirable. It seems to us, if the accounts wards the Prussian system have been met which we have received may be relied upon, by a depreciation of the performances of that the Prussian soldier has approached as the Prussian army in Bohemia and else- near perfection in his conduct on the march where. Prussia was ready while her oppo- and in action as it is possible to attain to. nents were not; or she happened to be bet- In gallantry he may not have surpassed the ter armed; or she was inherently stronger; French, but he has equalled them, and he or the generals opposed to her were weak has coupled that gallantry with a discretion and incapable; or there were dissensions in and a moral sobriety and quiet earnestness the enemy's camp; or the campaign was of purpose which the French soldier does too short to admit of sound conclusions be- not always seem to have exhibited. His ing drawn. In fact, the Prussian military very enthusiasm also is of a totally different strength was hollow. Prick it with a character from that of his foe. Much of all French bayonet, and who should say that it this, no doubt, is natural to the Prussians; would not go to pieces? The past few but much of it is the direct offspring of an weeks will have supplied a complete an- excellent discipline. And that discipline swer to this criticism. The Prussian arms begins, not in the army, but in the national have achieved a series of extraordinary suc- schools. cesses against a French army. And the French army, be it observed, has fought in some respects under what may be regarded as great advantages. It has been animated by all the first fire which lights up and almost sanctifies a popular campaign-by all the confidence of men who anticipated a decided victory. There were new and wonderful weapons, too, to exhibit their prowess; there were French generals of Italian and Algerian reputation, who for years had been studying the question which this war was destined to solve; there was an army numerically stronger, we believe, than any which France has before placed in the field. If there was numerical inferiority, there was the compensating advantage of position. There was, in brief, a military machine believed to be the highest quality, which for years had been undergoing all sorts of polishing and improvement specially in view of the occasion which had at last arrived. This was the force against which the Prussian soldier was called upon to fight. How has be acquitted himself? No one will deny that he has shown a determination, an

The Prussian soldier is an important factor in the results which we have described. The military system completes and compacts what the national education has commenced. That system is essentially an intelligent one in its two main features. In the first place, it draws into the ranks a large proportion of superior recruits; in the second place, it subjects the whole army to a training of the highest character. The expression" superior recruits" is sometimes sneered at in this country by military men. They tell us that we want a soldier to do what he is told-neither more nor less. But we have never been able to comprehend why an intelligent recruit should be less likely to be amenable to discipline than one who recognizes in it nothing more than a mechanical coercive force. Is it not from our superior recruits that our non-commissioned officers are made? And we may also fairly urge that the Prussian army, which is without doubt the most intelligent in the world, is also probably at this moment the most efficient. As to the system of training, we have spoken of this on many

ous body of trained men for the defence of the country- a force which, while not always on foot, can spring into active, efficient existence at a moment's notice — then surely it is important to note the suggested and apparently satisfactory solution of this problem which is presented by the Prussians. This is the first great lesson of the present

war.

From The Pall Mall Gazette. ENGLAND AND PRUSSIA.

WE fear that the sense of the necessity of pressing on our naval and military preparations has grown less keen since Parliament broke up. The event which gave such a sudden impulse to these preparations was undoubtedly the publication of the Draught Treaty and the light it was supposed to throw on the designs of France. Now all danger from this quarter may be considered to have passed away. France is in no position to conquer Belgium; she has enough to do to escape being conquered herself. Fortune has favoured and promises still to favour the arms of Prussia, and most of the organs of English opinion are in such a hurry to make their obeisance to the rising sun that they do not stop to consider whether his rays may not later in the day be found to scorch those exposed to them. We cannot see that the French reverses have made any change in the duty of the English Government. From whatever point of view the war is regarded it seems laden with danger to the tranquillity of the rest of Europe, Let us assume in the first instance that the close of the present campaign will be as triumphant for Prussia as its beginning. We put this simply as a supposition. We have no wish to prejudge the result of the gallant efforts which the French nation are making to

occasions. No one who is interested in these subjects can be ignorant of the method of field instruction in vogue in Prussia, and which we have lately happily adopted to some extent for our troops the method of bringing large bodies of men together, not for sham fights," but for a series of military manœuvres which are made as real as the absence of ball cartridge and of an actual enemy will permit manœuvres by which not merely the rank and the file but the officers and generals are practised and informed. Nor can any one who is acquainted even slightly with the Prussian army believe that the discipline is otherwise than stringent. No soldiers - least of all such soldiers as the Prussians can be made without discipline. And the product of this system of this intelligent discipline and training-acting upon a comparatively high personnel, is the army which is now rolling back an attempted invasion by what has hitherto been regarded as the greatest regular military Power in Europe. There is another point to be observed with regard to the Prussian columns now advancing into France. They are not, as a rule, old soldiers. The older soldiers of Prussia are at present in her second line. The first lines- the columns which conquered at Saarbrücken, Woerth, and Mars-la-Tour are composed mainly of men in their first term of short service; and yet these men seem to lack nothing of the finer qualities of veteran soldiers. Further, these columns derive much of their momentum from the fact that they stand in relation to the nation from which they issue forth, not as a class apart, but strictly as national representatives. The Prussian army is essentially a national army-a national microcosm. It is not a mere isolated body of trained men; it is a vital part of the nation, which beats with the same pulse and is animated with the same emotions. Such a force is, we will not say irresistible, but, well directed, it undoubtedly forms as pow-retrieve their defeat; but, as impartial erful a military engine, whether for attack observers, it is impossible to doubt that the or defence, as can be conceived. We call odds are still greatly in favour of the Prusattention to these things, not as being new, sians, and consequently, in calculating how but because they have derived from recent the future will affect our own policy, it is events a new emphasis and increased natural in the first instance to start from strength, and because, while we are striv- this hypothesis. We pointed out the other ing to remodel our military system, it be- day what a tremendous military Power hoves us attentively to observe the results Prussia would become in the event of her of that system which appears to combine at completely overthrowing the French aronce the maximum of efficiency with the mies; and we cannot profess to derive much minimum of cost. If standing armies are comfort from the reflection that the Prusunendurable, if daily they are becoming sians belong to the Teutonic race. more of an anachronism, and if, at the same doubt distinctions of race are very importtime, it is daily becoming more and more ant, as summing up the action of many necessary to have always at hand a numer-lages on particular sections of mankind.

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