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CHAPTER III.

RURAL LIFE AND EMPLOYMENTS.

"The stately homes of England,
How beautiful they stand,

Amid their tall ancestral trees,

O'er all the pleasant land."-HEMANS.

Rural Scenery of England.

THE sweet singer from whom these lines proceeded never uttered anything more beautiful or more true. No one, I suppose, would like to see the tall ancestral trees displaced, or even disfigured by the smoke of manufacturing chimneys. The great men of the mills and the mines have strong in them the healthy old English relish for a country life. How they fly when they can from the factory and the counting-house to the fields, like children with delight rushing home when the business of the school is over. There is Mr. Mark Philips, with his fine figure and ruddy cheeks, as perfect a squire as if his ancestors had been out under Rupert, or his title-deeds the gift of William the Norman. There are the Gregs, whose farming accounts, furnished to the Committee on Burdens on Land, contain such valuable materials for exact insight into the nature and relations of agricultural capital and income. There are the Marshalls, a colony of them in Cumberland. How they must revel in the intoxicating beauties of Ullswater and the lake of Keswick! But there is no need to go to Cumberland, or even to Devonshire, for rural beauty. It is, as Wordsworth says, the simple produce of the common day. Go where you will, you cannot escape it. The ordinary English landscape is far

more beautiful than any that one usually meets with on this side of the Alps, or than the general surface of Ireland or Scotland. Ireland, in spite of her rich green pastures, has generally a bare and desolate aspect, and the luxuriance of Wicklow and Killarney are at times almost agonizing from their contrast with the visible wretchedness of the people. But in England, to the outward eye at least, all is harmonious. One great charm arises from the multitude of hedgerows, full of wild flowers, which, as Mary Howitt's sweet lyric teaches us, exist for their beauty alone. Then there are the masses of varied foliage scattered over the more distant landscape in every variety of grouping-here stretching off in lines, like a rich framework for the precious corn-fields, and there spreading out over the slopes of the hills, but everywhere delighting the eye, which at last, perhaps, draws off and half closes under the shade of a near group of lofty elms, or, grander still, of ancient gnarled oaks, flinging their branches abroad, and suggesting the thought that they may have seen the great Civil Wars, or may connect us with the days of Elizabeth.

How one sees in the productions of the great Elizabethan writers the influence of the English landscape. In reading Shakspeare, above all, it is as if the sun, glancing through the leaves, constantly cast their shadows on the page. Milton had such scenery in his eye in the creation of Comus, and the Garden of Eden. You see it in the unrivalled imagery of Jeremy Taylor, in the rural yet holy tranquillity which breathes in the poems and the Country Parson of George Herbert. You see it breaking in through all those terrible internal conflicts upon the soul of John Bunyan, that great poet of the people. Nay, you see the natural love of it even in Alexander Pope, forcing its way through the restraints of the false French taste, rising again with great force in Thomson, running like a silver thread through the dark and mysterious web of Cowper's life, and then spreading out in boundless expanse for the inspiration and refreshment of mankind in the pages of Wordsworth. How full of it is English art! I am no judge of

art, admiring only with the children and the Easter-Monday mechanics, but Italy can scarcely have any treasures of more worth to the common mind, than some of those landscapes of COOPER, and LEE, and CRESWICK',

Its Moral and Social Effects.

This love of natural beauty, and the scenery which corresponds to the feeling, constitute the chief sustaining influence in the lives of many men. I know one noble-hearted worker, a man of true Cromwellian energy, and indeed with an infusion of actual Cromwellian blood in him too-who will even, I believe, do one day what Cromwell could not, namely, get the better of those sons of Zeruiah, his brethren the lawyers, and force a reform in chancery procedure, with proofs gathered from facts by the strictest method of induction-who, with a prodigious mass of work, far too much, on his shoulders, can go year after year, in his holiday, to the same place on the banks of the Thames, and with his wife and his children, and the artist friends who love him scarcely less, drink in from the riverbanks, and the trees, and the waving autumn corn-fields, and the hills receding towards evening in the lovely ever-deepening blue distance, not only immediate enjoyment, but strength, and that bracing of all the higher powers of the soul which fits men for the sternest tasks of duty. But it is not only in natures like this one, in which the elements of love and poetry are overflowing, that the passion for the country appears. It is found strong in men who care comparatively little for poets and pictures, who live almost wholly in strife, and who have it fresh, as it were, from the original fountain of nature, welling up in their own souls. There was William Cobbett, whose life was a storm and a battle, yet whose enjoyment of rural

As to Mr. MILLAIS, I dare not say half what I feel. The painter of “The Hugonot" is surely a great artist, if ever there was one. May he sacredly obey the monitions of his genius, and may we, in these days when temptation can so readily entwine itself with the tenderest affections, profit as we ought by that noble and soul-strengthening lesson.

scenery bursts out, soft and beautiful, in the midst of his harshest polemics, and makes the reader feel that, under that rough and cross-grained exterior, there beat a heart of the richest and most genial endowment.

Now this universal hankering after the country, which is so deep-rooted in the national mind, and is connected with such a multitude of healthy moral influences, corresponds to—and is in a great measure dependent upon-the realities of rural employment and rural scenery which exist in England. At the present time, beyond all others, whatever tends to give additional force to such influences must be of inestimable value.

But what has all this to do with political economy ? A good deal, even with the lower branch of the science, and much more with that to which what is commonly called political economy should be the handmaid. Our survey of rural attractions is, in fact, an estimate of the most important part of the fixed capital of England. By far the greater part of the beauty which the poets and the artists love, has been gradually produced by the efforts of innumerable labourers. Generation after generation they have silently passed on, leaving this monument behind. The oaks and elms rear their lofty foliage, the hedgerows bloom, the pastures in which the cattle are halfhidden spread out their rich expanse, and the fields of golden grain are waving, where swamps and barren wastes alone were seen before the hand of man began to call forth the hidden riches of the soil. This is no dream of the fancy, no mere imagination of the poets. It is the plain statement of the statistician, of one who, in spite of his reverence for Ricardo (natural enough in an affectionate disciple), has quietly got rid of many Ricardo abstractions which obstructed his view of realities. Hear Mr. M'Culloch in the "Geographical Dictionary," and compare him with Mrs. Hemans'.

"The distinguishing peculiarity in the aspect of the country

This comparison is literally offered to the eye of the reader, in an admirable selection of English poetry, by Edward Hughes, the author also of other educational works of much merit.

is, however, the exuberance of its vegetation, and the rich luxuriant appearance of its lower and far most extensive portion. It owes this distinction partly to nature and partly to art. The humidity and mildness of the climate maintain the fields in a constant state of verdure; in winter they are seldom covered with snow or blighted by long-continued frosts, and in summer they are rarely withered and parched by droughts. In this respect England is as superior to the finest countries of continental Europe-to Italy and Sicily, for example as she is superior to them and to every other country in the amount of labour that has been expended in beautifying, improving, and fertilizing her surface. It is no exaggeration to affirm, that thousands upon thousands of millions have been laid out in making England what she now is. In no other nation has the combination of beauty with utility been so much regarded. Another peculiar feature in the physiogony of England is the number and magnificence of the seats of the nobility and gentry. These superb mansions, many of which are venerable from their antiquity, and all of which are surrounded with fine woods and grounds, give to the country an appearance of age, security, and wealth, that we should in vain look for anywhere else. The farm-houses and cottages have mostly also a substantial, comfortable look; and evince that taste for rural beauty, neatness, and cleanliness, that eminently distinguish their occupiers."

Present State of Agriculture.

No practical statesman or moralist can doubt the national importance of preserving and, if it may be, of still further beautifying this unrivalled inheritance, upon which so much toil has been spent. More desirable, certainly, than the further extension of mines, or workshops, or factories, would be the means-if means can be found-of infusing new life into every branch of agricultural industry, of stimulating the cheerful voice of labour behind the plough, of restoring the joy of the harvest

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