The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction. Volume 14, No. 384, August 8, 1829
Voltaire is the bronze and plaster poet of France. Cheek by jowl with Rosseau, (their squabbles are forgotten in the roll of fame), you see him perched on mantel, bracket, ecritoire , and bookcase: in short, their effigies are as common as the plaster figures of Shakspeare and Milton are in England. How far the rising generation of France may profit by their household memorials—or the sardonic and satanic smile of their great poet—we will not pretend to determine; neither do we invite any comparison; although Voltaire, with all his trickseyings and panting after fame, never inculcated so sublime a lesson as is conveyed in
The cloud-capp'd towers, &c.
which are inscribed beneath the bust of our immortal bard.
Of the purchase of Ferney, Voltaire thus speaks in his memoirs:—
I bought, by a very singular kind of contract, of which there was no example in that country, a small estate of about sixty acres, which they sold me for about twice as much as it would have cost me at Paris; but pleasure is never too dear. The house was pretty and commodious, and the prospect charming; it astonishes without tiring: on one side is the lake of Geneva, and the city on the other. The Rhone rushes from the former with vast impetuosity, forming a canal at the bottom of my garden, whence is seen the Arve descending from the Savoy mountains, and precipitating itself into the Rhone, and farther still another river. A hundred country seats, a hundred delightful gardens, ornament the borders of the lakes and rivers. The Alps at a great distance rise and terminate the horizon, and among their prodigious precipices, twenty leagues extent of mountain are beheld covered with eternal snows.
Upon Voltaire's settlement at Ferney, the country was almost a savage desert. The village contained but fifty inhabitants, but became by the poet's means the residence of 1,200 persons, among which were a great number of artists, principally watch makers, who established their manufacture under his auspices, and exported their labours throughout the continent. Voltaire also invited to Ferney, and afforded protection to, the young niece of the celebrated Corneille; here she was educated, and Voltaire even carried his delicacy so far as not to suffer the establishment of Madlle. Corneille to appear as his benefaction. The family of Calas, likewise, came to reside in the neighbourhood, and to this circumstance may be attributed the zeal which Voltaire evinced in their ill fate.
Various
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Voltaire's Chateau, at Ferney.
DURHAM HOUSE, STRAND:
THE DEATH OF MURAT.
COAST BLOCKADE MEN.
ONCE ANCIENT.—A FACT.
PORTRAIT OF FAIR ROSAMOND.
THE NATURALIST.
NEW ZOOLOGICAL WORK.
CURIOUS ACCOUNT OF AN OYSTER CATCHING THREE MICE; AND A LOBSTER CATCHING AN OYSTER.
INSTINCT OF SPIDERS.
COBBETT'S CORN.
THE WATCHMAN'S LAMENT.
GOOD AND BAD STYLES OF LIVING.
The Novelist.
GUY MANNERING.
NOTES OF A READER
JOHN KEMBLE AND MISS OWENSON.
WOMAN.
BURMESE TEMPLES.
ENGLISH AND FRENCH MURDERS.
PETROLEUM.
SIGNS OF THE TIMES.
SOFT MUSIC.
THE GATHERER.
SHAKSPEARE.
BEETLES
SNAILS.
THE BITER BIT.
PRIDE.
LONGEVITY.
SIR WILLIAM WALWORTH.