The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 01, No. 2, December, 1857 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 311 pages of information about The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 01, No. 2, December, 1857.

The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 01, No. 2, December, 1857 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 311 pages of information about The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 01, No. 2, December, 1857.

In private life Carlyle is amiable, and often high and beautiful in his demeanor.  He talks much, and, as we have said, well; impatient, at times, of interruption, and at other times readily listening to those who have anything to say.  But he hates babblers, and cant, and sham, and has no mercy for them, but sweeps them away in the whirlwind and terror of his wrath.  He receives distinguished men, in the evening, at his house in Chelsea; but he rarely visits.  He used occasionally to grace the saloons of Lady Blessington, in the palmy days of her life, when she attracted around her all noble and beautiful persons, who were distinguished by their attainments in literature, science, or art; but he rarely leaves his home now for such a purpose.  He is at present engaged in his “Life of Frederick the Great,” whom he will hardly make a hero of, and with whom, we learn, he is already very heartily disgusted.  The first volume will shortly appear.

And now we must close this imperfect paper,—­reserving for a future occasion some personal reminiscences of him, which may prove both interesting and illustrative.

THE BUTTON-ROSE.

CHAPTER I.

I fear I have not what is called “a taste for flowers.”  To be sure, my cottage home is half buried in tall shrubs, some of which are flowering, and some are not.  A giant woodbine has wrapped the whole front in its rich green mantle; and the porch is roofed and the windows curtained with luxuriant honeysuckles and climbing wild-roses.  But, though I have tried for it many times, I never yet had a successful bed of flowers.  My next neighbor, Mrs. Smith, is “a lady of great taste”; and when she leads me proudly through her trim alleys edged with box, and displays her hyacinths and tulips, her heliotropes, cactuses, and gladioluses, her choice roses, “so extremely double,” and all the rare plants which adorn her parterre, I conclude it must be that I have no taste at all.  I beg her to save me seeds and bulbs, get fresh directions for laying down, and inoculating, grafting, and potting, and go home with my head full of improvements.  But the next summer comes round with no change, except that the old denizens of the soil (like my maids and my children) have grown more wild and audacious than ever, and I find no place for beds of flowers.  I must e’en give it up; I have no taste for flowers, in the common sense of the words.  In fact, they awaken in me no sentiment, no associations, as they stand, marshalled for show, “in beds and curious knots”; and I do not like the care of them.

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The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 01, No. 2, December, 1857 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.