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ROBERT CRAIGHEAD, PRINTER,

No. 112 FULTON STREET.

THE

LONDON QUARTERLY REVIEW.

No. CXXXIX.

FOR JUNE, 1842.

ART. I.-Des Classes dangereuses de la Population dans les Grandes Villes, et des Moyens de les rendre meilleures. Ouvrage récompensé en 1838, par l'Institut de France (Académie des Sciences Morales et Politiques). Par H. A. Frégier, Chef de Bureau à la Préfecture de la Seine. Paris, 1840. 2 vols. 8vo., pp. 985.

lon, we may very probably be mistaking elegancies for barbarisms. A more impor tant fault is, that our author, carried away by his great anxiety to conquer all objections to his favourite system of solitary confinement, has been led to falsify all the proportions of his book, by devoting a very undue number of pages to this one branch of his subject.

We cannot but suspect also that M. Frégier's essay in 400 pages, which obtained the prize, may have been a more perfect treatise with reference to its proper and specific theme than the present expanded work. Seventy-fours, cut asunder and lengthened into nineties, seldom retain their firmness and solidity of structure; and books, when from one trim, compact volume, drawn out into two, have always their weak points; the joinings never hold well together-the materials have no unison and easy play among themselves; and the whole structure is very apt to give way when exposed to the rough sea of criticism. In the present instance the original treatise, in accordance with the terms of the submitted question,* was confined entirely to the dangerous classes among the lower orders of society. In the published work the author has extended his subject. and

THE modern French press has sent forth few works more interesting than this, or better calculated to do good service, not to France alone, but to the countries around her. To none does it offer more useful instruction than to England, similarly situated as she is in the progress of civilisation and in many of the leading features of national character. Despite the difficulties and annoyances, nay the dangers, which surrounded the subject he had to investigate, M. Frégier appears to have made himself accurately master of it in many of its ramifications. To mere literary merit his volumes have little claim: occasionally we meet with passages extremely well expressed; but in general the style is somewhat complicated and redundant; and it is deformed by the perpetual introduction of ' termes de Palais,' in places where the subject in no degree requires their use. We should say, too, that the pages are tinged The thesis proposed was as follows:with some vulgarisms, were it not that, in 'Rechercher d'après des observations positives, the rapid strides which modern French is dans toute autre grande ville, cette partie de la popquels sont les élémens dont se compose à Paris, ou taking to emancipate itself from the shack-ulation qui forme une classe dangereuse par ses les of the Dictionary of the Academy, and vices, son ignorance, et sa misère; indiquer les the way in which year by year, nay almost moyens, que l'administration, les hommes riches ou day by day, it is separating itself from the aisés, les ouvriers intelligens et laborieux pourraient employer pour language of Pascal, Molière, and Massil- dépravée."

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