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and truculent despot; they saw "the handsomest and most charming young fellow that had ever excited the fancy of an odalisque." He had soft eyes and delicately-cut features, with "a noble face, full of sadness and gentleness." Young, handsome, and light-hearted, it seemed an effort to him to preserve the gravity indispensable to an occasion so solemn; but they gathered an idea of his dignity and immeasurable power from the profound veneration of his subjects who encircled him. "He seemed not a monarch, but a god." And who can wonder that such a country is misgoverned when all depends on the character of an absolute despot, who is surrounded by slavish and venal counsellors, who is brought up to believe himself the sun of his system, and who can seldom hear the truth by any chance? Muley-el-Hassan must have been one of the most favorable specimens of his dynasty, yet Morocco was as miserably governed as ever. Nevertheless the omnipotent monarch was affable, and he entirely won the hearts of his guests.

As they passed the troops of his bodyguard under inspection, the Italians had some opportunity of judging of his military power. It is certain that the Moors showed great bravery in their campaigns with the French and Spaniards, defending their positions with dogged determination in spite of the wretched inferiority of their weapons, and occasionally making desperate charges, in which they fell, with the ferocious courage of fanaticism. But it is probable that it was the more sturdy levies from the country districts who were the bone and sinew of the Moorish army. Nothing could be more ludicrously discreditable than the show of the regiments at Fez, though they may be supposed to have been the crack corps of the service; and Gerhard Rohlfs reports no better of them in his day. They were of all ages and sizes; some wore uniforms, and many were in rags; "they came from the desert, from the coast, and the mountains," while a large proportion of the rank and file were boys who looked like vicious street gamins.

Notwithstanding their eagerness to reach Fez, a little of that city went a long way with the Mission, and their lively curiosity was speedily sated. It was the

NEW SERIES.-VOL. XXXII., No. 1

cooking, even more than their dread of the heat, on the return journey to Tangiers, that made them desire to hasten their departure. Rohlfs, who half denationalized himself, was far less particular; but more fastidious travellers, like Messrs. Hooker and Ball, pleaded guilty to precisely similar feelings. Everything was supplied to the Englishmen in superabundance, but they found no nourishment in the mutton and fowls, while the native" made-dishes" turned their stomachs. The succession of formal banquets, where they were forced to stuff and denied the wine that might have helped digestion, were terrible ordeals to the Italians. Here is the menu of Sid-Moussa's state breakfast, as given by Signor de Amicis, and with that we shall close our notice of his experiences and adventures in Morocco:

"We seated ourselves, and were served at once. Twenty-eight dishes, without counting the sweets! Twenty-eight immense dishes, every one of which would have been enough for twenty people, of all forms, odors, and flavors; monstrous pieces of mutton on the spit, chickens (with pomatum), game (with cold cream), fish (with cosmetics), livers, puddings, vegetables, eggs, salads, all with the same dreadful combinations, suggestive of the barber's shop; sweetmeats, every mouthful of which was enough to purge a man of any crime he had ever committed: and with all this, large glasses of water, into which we squeezed lemons that we had brought in our pockets; then a cup of tea, sweetened to syrup; and finally, an irruption of servants, who deluged the table, the walls, and our

selves with rose-water."

We should say, in fact, that travel in Morocco, notwithstanding the many objects of interest, is one of the things that are more enjoyable in the retrospect than in reality. But if it still pleases the Moors to keep strangers at arm's-length, it is satisfactory to reflect that the changes of time have put an end to the intercourse they used to force upon Europeans. One shudders to think of the fate of the Christians condemned to perpetual slavery with such a people, in the days when the famous Sallee rovers were the terror of all the neighboring coasts; and should the country ever accept the blessings of civilization, it is certain that the philanthropists will have their work cut out for them.-Blackwood's Magazine.

3

THE PINCH OF POVERTY.

BY JAMES PAYN.

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In these days of reduction of rents, or of total abstinence from rent-paying, it is, 1 am told, the correct thing to be little pressed for money." It is a sign of connection with the landed interest (like the banker's ejaculation in "Middlemarch") and suggests family acres, and entails, and a position in the county. (In which case I know a good many people who are landlords on a very extensive scale, and have made allowances for their tenants the generosity of which may be described as Quixotic.) But as a general rule, and in times less exceptionally hard, though Shakespeare tells us "How apt the poor are to be proud," they are not proud of being poor.

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Poverty," says the greatest of English divines, "is indeed despised and makes men contemptible; it exposes a man to the influences of evil persons, and leaves a man defenceless; it is always suspected; its stories are accounted lies, and all its counsels follies; it puts a man from all employment; it makes a man's discourses tedious and his society troublesome. This is the worst of it." Even so poverty seems pretty bad, but, begging Dr. Jeremy Taylor's pardon, what he has stated is by no means the worst of it. To be in want of food at any time, and of firing in winter time, is ever so much worse than the inconveniences he enumerates; and to see those we love delicate women and children perhapsin want of them, is worse still. The fact is, the excellent bishop probably never knew what it was to go without his meals, but took them " reg'lar" (as Mrs. Gamp took her Brighton ale) as bishops generally do. Moreover, since his day, Luxury has so universally increased, and the value of Intelligence has become so well recognized (by the publishers), that even philosophers, who profess to despise such things, have plenty to eat, and good of its kind too. Hence it happens that, from all we hear to the contrary from the greatest think ers, the deprivation of food is a small thing indeed, as compared with the great spiritual struggles of noble minds,

and the doubts that beset them as to the supreme government of the universe, it seems hardly worth mentioning.

In old times, when folks were not so "cultured," starvation was thought more of. It is quite curious, indeed, to contrast the high-flying morality of the present day (when no one is permitted, either by Evolutionist or Ritualist, however dire may be his necessity, so much as to jar his conscience) with the shocking laxity of the Holy Scriptures. "Men do not despise a thief if he steal to satisfy his soul when he is hungry," says Solomon; after which stretch of charity, strange to say, he goes on to speak of marital infidelity in terms that, considering the number of wives he had himself, strike one as severe.

It is certain, indeed, that the sacred writers were apt to make great allowances for people with empty stomachs, and though I am well aware that the present profane ones think this very reprehensible, I venture to agree with the sacred writers. The sharpest tooth of poverty is felt, after all, in the bite of hunger. A very amusing and graphic writer once described his experience of a whole night passed in the streets; the exhaustion, the pain, the intolerable weariness. of it, were set forth in a very striking manner; the sketch was called The Key of the Street,' and was thought by many, as Browning puts it, to be the true Dickens. But what are even the pangs of sleeplessness and fatigue compared with those of want? Of course there have been fanatics who have fasted many days; but they have been supported by the prospect of spiritual reward. I confess I reserve my pity for those who have no such golden dreams, and who fast perforce. It is exceedingly difficult for mere worldlings-such as most of us are

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not to eat, if it is possible, when we are hungry. I have known a great social philosopher who flattered himself that he was giving his sons an experience of High Thinking and Low Living by restricting their pocket-money to two shillings a day, out of which it was under

stood they were to find their own meals. I don't know whether the spirit in their case was willing, but the flesh was decidedly weak, for one of them, on this very moderate allowance, used to contrive to always have a pint of dry champagne with his luncheon. The fact is, that of the iron grip of poverty, people in general, by no means excepting those who have written about it, have had very little experience; whereas of the pinch of it a good many people know something. It is the object of this paper-and the question should be an interesting one, considering how much it is talked about -to inquire briefly where it lies.

It is quite extraordinary how very various are the opinions entertained on this point, and, before sifting them, one must be careful in the first place to eliminate from our inquiry the cases of that considerable class of persons who pinch themselves. For, however severely they do it, they may stop when they like and the pain is cured. There is all the difference in the world between pulling one's own tooth out, and even the best and kindest of dentists doing it for one. How gingerly one goes to work, and how often it strikes one that the tooth is a good tooth, that it has been a fast friend to us for ever so many years and never "fallen out" before, and that after all it had better stop where it is!

To the truly benevolent mind, indeed, nothing is more satisfactory than to hear of a miser denying himself the necessaries of life a little too far and ridding us of his presence altogether. Our confidence in the average virtue of humanity assures us that his place will be supplied by a better man. The details of his penurious habits, the comfortless room, the scanty bedding, the cheese-rinds on his table, and the fat banking-book under his thin bolster, only inspire disgust; if he were pinched to death he did it himself, and so much the better for the world in general and his heir in particular.

Again, the people who have a thousand a year, and who try to persuade the world that they have two thousand, suffer a good deal of inconvenience, but it can't be called the pinch of poverty. They may put limits to their washingbills, which persons of cleanlier habits would consider unpleasantly narrow;

they may eat cold mutton in private for five days a week in order to eat turtle and venison in public (and with the air of eating them every day) on the sixth ; and they may immure themselves in their back rooms in London throughout the autumn in order to persuade folks that they are still at Trouville, where for ten days they did really reside and in splendor; but all their stint and selfincarceration, so far from awakening pity, only fill us with contempt. afraid that even the complaining tones of our City friend who tells us that in consequence of " the present unsettled state of the markets" he has been obliged to make "great retrenchments”which it seems on inquiry consist in putting down one of his carriages and keeping three horses instead of six-fail to draw the sympathizing tear. Indeed, to a poor man this pretence of suffering on the part of the rich is perhaps even more offensive than their boasts of their prosperity.

On the other hand, when the rich become really poor their case is hard indeed; though, strange to say, we hear little of it. It is like drowning; there is a feeble cry, a little ineffectual assistance from the bystanders, and then they go under. It is not a question of pinch with them; they have fallen into the gaping mouth of ruin, and it has devoured them. If we ever see them again, it is in the second generation as waiters (upon Providence), or governesses, and we say "Why, dear me, that was Bullion's son (or daughter), wasn't it?" using the past tense as if they were dead. "I remember him when he lived in Eaton Square." This class of cases rarely comes under the head of "genteel poverty." They were at the top, and hey presto! by some malignant stroke of fate, they are at the bottom; and there they stick.

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I don't believe in bachelors ever experiencing the pinch of poverty; I have heard them complaining of it at the club, while ordering Medina oysters instead of Natives, but, after all, what does it signify even if they were reduced to cockles? They have no appearances to keep up, and if they cannot earn enough to support themselves they must be poor creatures indeed.

It is the large families of moderate in

come, who are delicate, and have delicate tastes, that feel the twinge and especially the poor girls. I remember a man, with little care for his personal appearance, of small means but with a very rich sense of humor, describing to me his experiences when staying at a certain ducal house in the country, where his feelings must have been very similar to those of Christopher Sly. In particular he drew a charming picture of the magnificent attendant who in the morning would put out his clothes for him, which had not been made by Mr. Poole, nor very recently by anybody. The contempt which he well understood his grace's gentleman must have felt for him afforded him genuine enjoyment. But with young ladies, in a similar position, matters are very different; they have rarely a sense of humor, and certainly none strong enough to counteract the force of a personal humiliation. I have known some very charming ones, compelled to dress on a very small allow ance, who, in certain mansions where they have been occasionally guests, have been afraid to put their boots outside their door, because they were not of the newest, and have trembled when the officious lady's maid has meddled with their scanty wardrobe. A philosopher may think nothing of this, but, considering the tender skin of the sufferer, it may be fairly called a pinch.

In the investigation of this interesting subject, I have had a good deal of conversation with young ladies, who have given me the fullest information, and in a manner so charming, that, if it were common in witnesses generally, it would make Blue-Books the most delightful description of reading.

"I consider it to be a pinch," says one, "when I am obliged to put on black mittens on occasions when I know other girls will have long white kid gloves.' I must confess I have a prejudice myself against mittens; they are, so to speak,gritty" to touch; so that the pinch, if it be one, experienced by the wearer, is shared by her ungloved friends. The same thing may be said of that drawing-room fire, which is lit so late in the season for economical reasons, and so late in the day at all times; the pinch is felt as much by the visitors as by the members of the household.

These things, however, are mere nips, and may be placed in the same category with the hardships complained of by my friend Quiverfull's second boy. "I don't mind having papa's clothes cut up for me," he says, but what I do think hard is getting Bob's clothes [Bob being his elder brother], which have been papa's first; however, I am in great hopes that I am outgrowing Bob."

A much more severe example of the pinch of poverty than these is to be found in railway travelling; no lady of any sense or spirit objects to travel by the second, or even the third class, if her means do not justify her going by the first. But when she meets with richer friends upon the platform, and parts with them to journey in the same compartment with their man-servant, she suffers as acutely as though, when the guard slams the door of the carriage with the vehemence proportioned to its humble rank, her tender hand had been crushed in it. Of course it is very foolish of her; but it demands democratic opinions, such as almost no woman of birth and breeding possesses, not to feel that pinch. Her knowledge that it is also hard upon the man-servant, who has never sat in her presence before, but only stooped over her shoulder with 'Ock, Miss," serves but to increase her pain.

66

A great philosopher has stated that the worst evil of poverty is, that it makes folks ridiculous; by which I hope he only means that, as in the above case, it places them in incongruous positions. The man, or woman, who derives amusement from the lack of means of a fellowcreature, would jeer at a natural deformity, be cruel to children, and insult old age. Such people should be whipped and then hanged. Nevertheless there are certain little pinches of poverty so slight, that they tickle almost as much as they hurt the victim. A lady once told me (interrupting herself, however, with pleasant bursts of merriment) that as a young girl her allowance was so small that when she went out to spend the morning at a friend's, her promised pleasure was almost darkened by the presentiment (always fulfilled) that the cabman was sure to charge her more than the proper fare. The extra expense was really of consequence to her, but she

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It is people of this class, much more than those beneath them, who are shut out from all amusements. The mechanic goes to the play and to the music-hall, and occasionally takes his "old girl,' as he calls his wife, and even a kid" or two, to the Crystal Palace. But those I have in my mind have no such relaxation from compulsory duty and importunate care. "I know it's very foolish, but I feel it sometimes to be a pinch,' says one of these ill-fated ones, to see them all [the daughters of her employer] going to the play, or the opera, while I

*There is, however, some danger in this. I remember reading of some highly respectable old gentleman in the City who thus accommodated on a wet day a very nice young woman in humble circumstances. She was as full of

apologies as of rain-water, and he of good natured rejoinders intended to put her at her ease; so that he became, in a Platonic and paternal way, quite friendly with her by the time she arrived at her destination—which happened

to be his own door. She turned out to be his new cook, which was afterward very embar. rassing.

am expected to be satisfied with a private. view of their pretty dresses." No doubt it is the sense of comparison (and especially with the feniale) that sharpens the sting of poverty. It is not, however, through envy that the "prosperity of fools destroys us" so much as the knowledge of its unnecessariness and waste. When a mother has a sick child who needs sea air, which she cannot afford to give it, the consciousness that her neighbor's family (the head of which perhaps is a most successful financier and market-rigger) are going to the Isle of Wight for three months, though there is nothing at all the matter with them, is an added bitterness. How often it is said (no doubt with some well-intentioned idea of consolation) that after all money cannot buy life! I remember a curious instance to the contrary of this. In the old days of sailing-packets a country gentleman embarked for Ireland, and when a few iniles from land broke a blood-vessel through sea-sickness. A doctor on board pronounced that he would certainly die before the completion of the voyage if it was continued ; whereupon the sick man's friends consulted with the captain, who convoked the passengers, and persuaded them to accept compensation in proportion to their needs for allowing the vessel to be put back; which was accordingly done.

One of the most popular fictions of our time was even written with this very moral, that life is unpurchasable. Yet nothing is more certain than that life is often lost through want of money-that is, of the obvious means to save it. In such a case how truly has it been written that "the destruction of the poor is their poverty"! This, however, is scarcely a pinch, but, to those who have hearts to feel it, a wrench that "divides asunder the joints and the marrow.'

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A nobler example, because a less personal one, of the pinch of poverty, is when it prevents the accomplishment of some cherished scheme for the benefit of the human race. I have felt such a one myself when in extreme youth I was unable, from a miserable absence of means, to publish a certain poem in several cantos. That the world may not have been much better for it if I had had the means does not affect the question. It is easy

to be incredulous. Henry the Seventh

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