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Πάντα δέ τ ̓ εἴδεται ἄστρα· γέγηθε δέ τε φρένα πιομήν
Τέσσα, μετηγὺ νεῶν ἠδὲ Ξάνθοιο ροάων,
Τρώων καιόντων πυρὰ φαίνετο Ιλιόθι πρό.
Χίλι ̓ ἄρ' ἐν πεδίω πυρὰ καίετο· πὰρ δὲ ἑκάστῳ
Εἴατο πεντήκοντα, σέλας πυρὸς αιθομένοιο.
Ιπποι δὲ καὶ λευκὸν ἐρεπτόμενοι καὶ ὀλύρας,
Εσταότες παρ ̓ ὄχεσφιν, εὔθρονον τῶ μίμνον.
Which Sotheby thus renders:

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"But Troy elate, in orderly array, All night around her numerous watch-fires lay,As when the stars, at night's illumin'd noon, Beam in their brightness round the full-orb'd moon, When sleeps the wind, and every mountain height, Rock, and hoar cliff, shine tow'ring up in light, Then gleam the vales, and ether, widely riv3n, Expands to other stars another heav'n, While the lone shepherd, watchful of his fold, itch Looks wond'ring up, and gladdens to behold-ding Not less the fires, that thro' the nightly hours

!

Spread war's whole scene before Troy's guarded to wrs,
Flung o'er the distant fleet a shadowy gleam,"
And quivering play'd on Xanthus' silver stream.i
A thousand fires: and each with separate blaze,
O'er fifty warriors cast the undying rays,
Where their proud coursers, saturate with corn,
Stood at their cars, and snuff'd the coming morn.
And Pope:

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"The troops exulting sat in order round, And beaming fires illumin'd all the ground. As when the moon, refulgent lamp of night! O'er heav'n's clear azure spreads her sacred light, When not a breath disturbs the deep serene, And not a cloud o'ercasts the solemn scene; Around her throne the vivid planets roll, And stars unnumber'd gild the glowing pole, O'er the dark trees a yellower verdure shed, And tipt with silver ev'ry mountain's head; Then shine the vales, the rocks in prospect rise, A flood of glory bursts from all the skies: The conscious swains, rejoicing in the sight, Eye the blue vault, and bless the useful light. So many flames before proud Ilion blaze,

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And lighten glimm'ring Xanthus with their rays:
The long reflection of the distant fires
Gleam on the walls, and tremble on the spires.
A thousand piles the dusky horrors gild,
And shoot a shady lustre o'er the field.
Full fifty guards each flaming pile attend,
Whose number'd arms, by fits, thick flashes send.:
Loud neigh the coursers o'er their heaps of corn,
And ardent warriors wait the rising morn."

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It would be unfair to Mr Sotheby to point out only bis defects. His picture of the descent of Apollo is happy:

"The arrows rattling round his viewless flight,
Clang'd as the god descended dark as night."

Many passages might be cited which he has rendered with equal success, But, on idea of Homer. We suspect can only be done for the English reader in the manner that Rose has given us the Orlando Inamorato-by a mixture of prose narrative and poetical versions of the most beautiful and the most characteristic passages. Who will make the attempt?

In an ad ect thinole, he gives us no

Destiny; ; or, the Chief's Daughter. By the Author of "Marriage" and "The Inheritance." In three volumes. Edinburgh: Robert Cadell. London: Whittaker and Co. 1831.

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WE regard, the author of these volumes as standing, among living female writers, second only to Joanna Baillie. She has a grasp of life and its concerns, a power of appreciating and describing character, a variety and reach in her genius, and above all, a knowledge of that wherein human dignity truly consists, shared with her only by the illustrious woman we have named. They differ in kind-Joanna is more masculine and powerful, Miss Ferrier more gentle and feminine; perhaps also in degree the former throws herself more boldly upon the first elements of nature, the latter clings more fondly and timidly to approved rules and customs. But in this they are alike; that their works are elaborated from the recesses of their own reflection, feeling, and experience. You feel, while you read them, that the materials have existed before they were clothed in words; that the authors have written because they had something to say. In reading the most powerful of the rest of our lady-birds, you cannot help feeling as if they had begun to write before they began to think, and that after they had by long practice attained the power of turning melodious couplets and periods, thought was by God's grace added unto them.

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Destiny" (although we confess we cannot exactly see why it should be so called) is worthy of the author of Marriage." It fills up a gap in Sir Walter's works. He has given us pictures of Lowland life, from the time of the Black Douglas down to that of Meg Dods and Lady Penelope Penfeather; but he has broken off his Highland series with the " Forty-five." The death-blow was then given to the characters and feelings which he loved, and he has not had heart to resume the strain. Miss Ferrier has undertaken to supply the deficiency; to paint the Highlands and Highlanders of our own day. And she has performed her task nobly. Her picture is that of an old race clinging to the forms of an earlier state of society, after its life and power have departed. have the chief deprived of political power, but unable to subside into a country gentleman, fortifying himself in concentrated egotism and self-will. We have the retainers disarmed, but still devoted to their chief. We have a society in which the right of the strong-hand has been manacled, but habits of regular industry and intellectual culture have not yet come to relieve the languor of this constrained inaction. But amid the mental and moral torpor thus engendered, we see everywhere small lambent flames gathering to a blaze of intellectual life; we see young and green branches of promise springing from the sapless stems, and waxing to maturity.

We

The first volume is chiefly devoted to a portraiture of the Chief of Glenroy, and the circle of which he is the sun and centre. The Chief; his English lady; his retainers, Benbowie of the ugly waistcoat, and Mrs Macauley the painter and embroiderer; the moderate parish

Nor does Homer ever use such an involved and unplc- minister; the old merchant Inch Orran, so harmoniously turesque metaphor as to advise his chiefs to

"Pamper the steed to turn to flight the field."

dissimilar to the rest of his Highland kith and kin; the amiable Malcolms; the children so diversified in charac

ter, aping the feuds of their parents; all are brought out by innumerable delicate touches. It is a Flemish style of painting. We must, however, admit, that in this part of the work, the story flags, considerably. The author is so busy introducing her dramatis persona, that the business does not go on. She introduces us moreover to such a set of unredeemed bores, that we almost forget in their

ho!-it was very good! very good!' Here Mr M'Dow indulged in another fit of laughter, while his guests turned their eyes to another picture, but it was no less obnoxious to the sight. That again is my fawther, and a most capital picture! there's a great deal of dignity there! for though extremely affable, he could assume a great deal of dignity when it was necessary.'

tediousness the admirable skill and tact with which they with lowering brows and a bob-wig, morocco and gold,

are represented. She is too pertinaciously true to nature. Our Scottish readers, however, we think, will all of them acknowledge the accuracy of this picture: "Lucy was enchanted, but the enchantment fled on approaching the Manse. It was a thin tenement, built of rough grey stone of the usual pattern, a window on each side of the door, and three above. At one side was the garden, with cabbages and marigolds growing pell-mell, and in the rear was the set of condemned offices, partly thatched and partly slated. There were no attempts at neatness in the approach to the house, which was merely a rough jogtrot road, flanked on each side by a dyke. Presently Mr M'Dow was seen hurrying to the door to meet his guests, and there, as they alighted, he was ready to receive them with open hands.

"Great was the joy expressed at this honour, as Mr M'Dow led the way to the interior of his mansion, which was just such as might have been expected its outward aspect. There was a narrow xoue passage, with a door on each side, and there was a perpendicular wooden stair, and that was all that was to be seen at the first coup dail. But if little was revealed to the eye, the secrets of the house were yielded with less coy reserve to the other senses; for there was to be heard the sound of a jack, now beginning with that low slow mournful whine, which jacks of sensibility are sure to have; then gradually rising to a louder and more grating pitch, till at length one mighty crash, succeeded, as all mighty crashes are, by a momentary silence. Then comes the winding up, which, contrary to all the rules of the drama, is, in fact, only a new beginning, and so on, ad infinitum, till the deed is done. With all these progressive sounds was mingled the sharp, shrill, loud voice and Gaelic accents of the chef de cuisine, with an occasional clash or clang, at least equal to the fall of the armour in the

Castle of Otranto.

"This dignitary was a mean, consequential-looking body, in an arm-chair, with a flaming Virgil, pourtrayed in red in his hand.

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"I am no connyshure myself, but they strike me as being very good pictures; and I can vouch for their being most capital likenesses. Neither Captain Malcolm nor Lucy could violate sincerity so far as to bestow a single commendation on the pictures; so Mr M'Dow went on-That book which you see in my father's hand, was a present made to him by his scholars when he was master of the Myreside School. I confess I look at it with great pride, as a most flattering testimony of the honourable and Here a prodigious crash from the kitchen, followed by very loud and angry vociferations, arrested Mr M'Dow's harangue; and, opening the door, he called, in a very high authoritative tone, What's the meaning of this noise? Upon which the tumult ceased. Make less noise there, and keep the kitchen door shut! A violent slam of the door was the only answer returned. I understand it's all the fashion now in great houses, to have the kitchen as near the diningroom as possible,' said Mr M'Dow, wishing to throw an air of gentility over his menage. But, for my own part, I must confess I would prefer it at a little distance, for it's impossible, do what you will, to get servants to be quiet; and it's really not pleasant, when I have a friend or two with me, and we are just wishing to enjoy ourselves, to be disturbed as we were just now. What I want in my addition is this-I would turn my present kitchen into my drawing-room, or study, just as it shuted, for there's an exceeding good light scullery off it, which I could make my own closet, and keep my books and papers in. The kitchen I would throw to the back, with a washing-house, and small place for the lasses. Then, up stairs, I would have a pretty good family bedchamber, and a good light closet for keeping my groceries within it, besides a press fitted up for my napery, (of which I have a pretty good stock,)

and

We wish much to follow up this by the description of the minister's banquet, which would make the hair of Meg Dods stand on end—either in her grave or in James'

"Then there issued forth with resistless might asmell which defied all human control, and to which doors and windows were but feeble barriers or outlets; till, like the smoke in the Arabian Nights, which resolved itself into a genie, it seemed as if about to quit its aerial form, and assume a li-Square-but "such eternal blazon" must not be in the ving and tangible substance.

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"Lucy would fain have drawn back as she crossed the threshold, and, quitting the pure precincts of sunshine and fresh air, found herself in the power of this unseen monster -this compound of fish, fat, peats, burnt grease, kail, leeks, and onions, revelling too amid such scenes, and beneath such a sky!

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"You see I have brought my sketch-book, Mr M'Dow,' said she, so I must make the most of my time, and be busy out of doors.'

"You'll have plenty of time for that, Miss Lucy; it's early in the day yet, you've had a long ride, and you'll be the better of a little refreshment; pray sit down, and do me the favour to take a mouthful of something; and he handed a plateful of short-bread, which, with a bottle of wine, stood ready stationed on a side-table. You'll find it uncommonly good, Miss Lucy, it comes all the way from Glasgow; it's made by my mother, now in the 78th year of her age; she sends me always a bun, and half a peek of short-bread for my hogmanay, and it's surprising how it keeps. This is the last farl of it, but it's just as good as the first was!' helping himself to a piece, which would have qualified any body else for six weeks of Cheltenham. And, by the by, that's a picture of my mother, taken when she was a younger woman than she is now, pointing to an abominable daub of a large, vulgar, flushed-looking, elderly woman, sitting on a garden chair, with a willow at her back, her hands crossed before her, and a large hair ring on her fore-finger. That's reckoned a strong likeness of my mother; she was an uncommon fine woman when in her prime; she measured five feet ten and three quarters on her stocking soles, which is a remarkable heighth for a woman, and she carried the breadth along with it; yet she was the smallest of six daughters. It's told of her fawther, Mr McTavish, (who was a man of great humour,) that he used to say he had six-and-thirty foot of daughters-hoch, hoch,

LITERARY JOURNAL-the Devil points to the foot-rule with which he has measured this article. In lieu, therefore, of the Rev. Mr M'Dow's symposium, we give a powerful scene between Ronald Malcolm and an old retainer of his family. Ronald had been left an estate, but without the power to touch a penny of it until he was six-and-twenty. He became a sailor, and the report was that he had been lost at sea. His father was his The shipwreckheir according to the terms of the will.

ed sailor-boy returning, finds his paternal home deserted --but we may now leave Ronald to speak for himself: "At length, in a sharp Highland tone, he received the satisfactory reply of,"Captain Malcolm?-aye! whar should he be but in his ain hooss?

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But this was his house,' said Ronald, reviving at this information, scanty as it was.

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Aye, and wha says it's no his hooss, noo? but it's no his dwelling-hooss, if you mean that he's ower great a man to dwell here nooaye, that he is!'

"The truth flashed upon Ronald, and with a pang he said, "What he now lives at Inch Orran, I suppose?'

To be sure what else should he live? But, sit down, sit down. You maun be a stranger here, it seems, frae the Low Country? Maybe, a friend o' the faamily?' "Thank you; but first tell me, is Captain Malcolm well, and my and all of them, are they all well?" And Ronald's lips quivered as he put the question. "Oo, surely, surely-they're all well. What should ail them ?' Nothing, nothing. And my Ronald's heart fluttered as he thought of his mother; and he could not find voice to name the name dearest to his heart.

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"The old woman went on. No, no, there's nothing ails them noo-they've gotten aw thing they can want. Och aye, God be praised! they are very prosperous noo, an' very happy.'

"They have met with some good fortune, then, it seems?' said Ronald, trying to speak with composure. "Och aye! 'deed an' they have done that, and well they deserve it. Not but what they paid for it, too, poor craaters! aye, that they did. God knows, their fine fortune cost them sore hearts at the time; but that's past-an' noo, what should they be but pleased an' happy?'

"Ronald's heart heaved, and he was silent a few moments, then said, ' But they have been afflicted-they have suffered ?'

"Och! 'deed they were that-they were sore distrest, poor people! at the drooning o' their boy-a fine boy-a pretty boy he was-Och aye!' Here old Nanny groaned, and wiped her eyes with the corner of her apron.

"But you say they are happy now-they have forgotten him?' said Ronald, with emotion.

"Oh! surely, surely-God be thank't, he's forgotten noo, an' it's time-'deed is it-och aye! And we little know what's for our good in this world; for it was God's merciful providence, after all, that the boy was ta'en, or they tell me they would hae been but a puir needfu' faamily, the day-'deed would they !'

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he, och aye! he's dead and gone, an' it wouldna do to bring him back again-no, no; wae I was when I heard o' the poor thing's droonin', but I was ignorant then. I did not know that it was Gol's providence to set up the faamily like by that same meas, and make them all so comfortable, and genteel, and happy, och aye!'

"And my mother?' said Ronald, faintly, as he covered his eyes with his hand, while his whole frame thrilled with emotion.

"The mother?' said Nanny, catching the sound imperfectly. Aye, his mother-that's the leddy hersell, you'll mean? och, God only knows the mother's sorrow, och aye! But she's a quiet craater, and she knew whose hand it was that was upon her, aye, that she did, and so she demeaned hersell like a good Christian as she is ; but they tell me she has never had her ain colour since.'

"Tears forced their way through Ronald's fingers."

Rather than reduce his parents again to poverty, he condemns himself to voluntary and perpetual exilesnatches a glance at his loved ones, and flies without discovering himself.

The second volume describes the gradual decline of the faculties of the chieftain, and, finally, his death. Much of it is occupied by the love-adventures of his daughA strange pang shot through Ronald's heart. What cated along with Edith-betrothed to her-but had lost his ter and a young and faithless cousin, who had been edua vile unfeeling creature,' thought he, to talk in such a manner!' and he was about to leave the house, when old heart, when on his travels, to Lady Waldegrave, the daughNanny resumed,ter of her father's second wife by a former marriage. The "Och aye! Providence was really kind in that parti-characters of Edith and the fascinating but heartless wocular, for the droonin' o' the boy, poor thing, (that ever I man of the world are beautifully contrasted. The scene should say't!) has been the savin' o' that whole faamily, where Edith at last awakes to a sense of her lover's false'deed has it! And weel they deserve it, for they're a wor- hood is beautiful. It was during a storm at sea that his thy well-doin' faamily; and Inch Orran himself is a good man, and does a deal o' good, that he does; and he is a reall exclusive care of Lady Waldegrave brought conviction blessin' to the country-that he is!' to her mind. Here is the consequence :

"But he might have been a blessing to the country although his son had not been drowned,' said Ronald.

"No, no-they tell me not. That if the boy had lived, he would have keepit his father a poor man a' his days; and wouldna that have been a sin and a shame? No that it wad hae been the poor boy's fault, poor thing, but the fault o' them that would have made him keep his father's head below the water; Och! it was God's providence to tak the boy out of his worthy father's way; and noo a' thing's as it should be, and he has gotten his ain, honest man; and long, long may he enjoy it!'

"And you say they are all quite well, -- and happy?' said Ronald, his heart swelling, in spite of the contempt he tried to feel for the unfeeling narrator.

"Aye, aye! they are that. Happy they are, and happy may they be; and shouldna they be happy when there's gawn to be a grand marriage amang them? Miss Lucy, that's her that's the eldest o' the faamily, isna she gawn to get a husband, and a braw one, too-no less than the young Laird of Dunross? No but what Miss Lucy is well worthy of him and the best in the land-aye, by my troth she is; but she wadna hae gotten him wantin' the tocher; for the auld Laird's ower fond o' the siller to let his son tak a tocherless lass. Och aye, shame till him!-Wasna poor Miss Lucy maist broken-hearted because he wouldna let his son get her when she was the poor man's daughter? And the Captain wouldna let him tak' her wantin' his father's will; and the poor young creatures were just beside themselves, like; and so the young man went into the army, and has been in the Indies, but noo he's come back; and they're so happy, and the Captain-that's Inch Orran —is to give her five thousand gold guineas on her weddin'day, they tell me, forbye this hooss that they're comin' to dwell in; and him paintin' it all from top to bottom, and makin' every thing so genteel for them; and all comes o' the droonin' o' the bonny laddie! Och aye!'

"Many little circumstances that had taken place before he left home, here darted into Ronald's mind, in confirmation of old Nanny's words. Young Dunross and Lucy had been lovers even then, and want of fortune on her part had been the only obstacle to their union; and now that was removed, and he had returned only to blast their happiness!

"But what if he has not been drowned-what if he should yet return?' said he, with agitation.

“Och, sorrow bit he'll ever return noo, poor bairn; and it wouldna do for him to come back in the body noodeed, an' he wad be but a black sight-no, no, that it would not-he's been owre lang dead to come back noo-'deed has

"There was no contesting the point any longer. He remained, and the night was passed in a state of gloomy restlessness by him-of sleepless anguish by Edith-griefs differing in kind as in degree; for even amid the reproaches of conscience, and the struggles of remorse, as gratitude, tenderness, and pity filled his heart, still the idol passion had erected, maintained its sway, and in his imagination shone forth fair and beauteous, even amid the wreck it had No

made.

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"But with Edith all was dimness and desolation. star shed its light in her path-in her existence there was no object which even hope could for an instant illume. Amid the darkness that brooded in her heart, heaven and earth, the present and the future, were alike an undistinguishable chaos, and only one dreary hope was hers-the hope of despair. She felt it was impossible she could long exist under such a weight of woe as had overwhelmed her; soon, very soon she should pass away, and be at rest. she knew not the capacity of the human heart for suffering -she knew not those depths profound, where sorrow, unseen, unsuspected, dwells through many a long life. Nous ne connoissons l'infini que par la douleur! All the faith of her early days-all the cherished feelings of a lifetimeall the fond gatherings up of woman's love and tenderness, which she had deemed were treasured in her lover's heart, had been rudely cast from him as slighted, priceless things; and for an instant her pale cheek glowed at the indignity. But bitter as these feelings were, they were rendered still more so by the thoughts of the disappointment and sorrow that awaited her father. All his proud imaginations to be thus cast down-his hopes laid in the dust, where his own grey head would soon be brought low by the hands which ought to have smoothed the pillow of his old age! And yet it must be! Nought remained for her but to sever the last feeble link of those ties which, entwined as they were with every feeling of her heart, hung only as a galling yoke on the breast of her false lover. With the courage of despair, she drew from her finger the ring of betrothment-that ring which his faithless hand had placed there, with the vow of eternal constancy, and which, like a talisman, had ever guarded her heart against all fears and suspicions of his fidelity. Even this inanimate object, associated as it was with all the hopes and the joys of her life, it was anguish unspeakable to part with; her heart recoiled from the deed, and again and again she relinquished the attempt. But then the thought, that Reginald might for an instant suppose she still retained her claim upon his hand, even when convinced that his affections were given to another, that was not to be endured! She hastily folded and sealed

In the two last

the ring in a small packet; and when Mrs Malcolm at an Ronald Malcolm, and the renewal of their young attachearly hour entered her apartment, she put it into her haud, ment-his reception at his father's house when the period and, with forced composure, requested that she would con- had elapsed, during which he, as merely nominal proprievey it to its destination. "Mrs Malcolm was not deceived by this assumed forti- tor of the estate, must have beggared his family by his tude-she saw it was the result of excitement, not of resig-return--and his union with Edith. nation; it was easy to guess at the contents of the packet, and she said, I will do any thing-any thing for you, my love, that can be for your good, but-must this be?* "It must,' replied Edith, still retaining her composure. "May there not be some mistake, which a mutual friend might assist you in clearing up? Dearest Edith, do not entirely cast away your own happiness, and that of

ethers.'

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"Edith could not speak, and she buried her face in her hands, while her heart heaved with strong emotion.

"Mrs Malcolm tenderly embraced her. Edith,' she said, I have known and loved you from a child, both for your own sake, and that of our dear Ronald, to whom you were dearer, if possible, than his own sisters. I cannot then be silent, and see you thus; if you will not confide to me the cause of your distress, will you allow me to hint to you what, I fear, has happened?'

"Edith gasped for a few moments, as if for utterance, then, by a strong effort, said, 'We are parted, and for ever! Oh, do not ask me more-take that,' pointing to the ring, in mercy take it from my sight!'

"Mrs Malcolm, too wise to persist where she saw such extreme agitation ensue, refrained from urging the topic any farther; but shocked and distressed as she was, she strove to soothe Edith into greater composure, and then left her, to seek Sir Reginald, for the purpose of executing her commission. On viewing the packet, he hastily tore it open, and at sight of the ring turned pale; tears sprung from his eyes; he struck his forehead with his hand, and at length, unable to control the emotion he was unwilling to avow, he rushed from the room. The sight of the ring had awakened a train of remembrances that had long slumbered in his heart. The fair image of Edith, tender, innocent, and true, rose to his mind's eye. That gentle, loving being the playfellow of his childhood-the companion of his youth his once beloved-his betrothed-oh, had he wronged her, and had she renounced him, without one word of reproach! "There are moments when even the master passion of the soul is overcome by stormy and sudden emotion. And so it was when this mute remembrancer of sweet and happy days reminded him, more eloquently than words could have done, of the vows he had broken, of the joys he had blighted. In the anguish of self-condemnation, it was a relief to him to give utterance to his feelings, by writing to Edith, and with his usual impetuosity, he poured them forth in a strain too agitated and contradictory to meet the eye of any but her to whom it was addressed. While he reviled and denounced himself in the bitterest terms, he, at the same time, sought to extenuate and vindicate his conduct; and while he declared that her happiness was a thousand times more precious to him than his own, he pleaded the overwhelming force of his passion for another, as the excuse for his apostasy from her. He returned her the ring-he besought her to keep it, at least for the present; he could not,

he would not receive it from her now. A time might come when it might cost them both less to part; but now it must be with breaking hearts.

"Edith's emotion, at reading the letter, was not less than that with which it had been written; but her part was taken with the courage of a wounded heart.' She answered it.

"The time has come when we must part-when we have parted, and for ever. No human power can ever again unite us no separation can be more complete than that which has already taken place. You cannot recall the past -do not then, I beseech you, by vain remonstrance, seek still more to embitter the present. Yet, in one thing, you can gratify me, and it will be my last request. Go to my poor father, bear with him, soothe him for my sake. From me he shall never learn what has passed-he need never hear it from any one else. And when I die-Oh, Reginald-by the love you once bore me, do not desert my father in the hour of affliction! be to him all, and more, than I could ever have been! so shall my last prayer be for your happiness. E. M.'"

The third volume narrates Edith's adventures, after her father's death, as a dependent upon her relations in Scotland and in England-her meeting with her cousin,

volumes the story moves on with sufficient rapidity; and even the tedium of which we complained in the first is only felt during the perusal-the characters with which we are there made acquainted, are stamped indelibly on the memory.

and Miss Ferrier, we add, is its best historian. Woman's world, we are told, is the domestic circle;

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THIS awkward, lumbering, and pedantic title-page is no unapt representative of the blockhead to whose works it is prefixed. It is full of pompous pretension and irrelevant matter-clumsy, and inaccurate. Verily, if he be indeed what he gives himself out for, a Corresponding Member of the Philosophical Society at Rotterdam, he must be of opinion that that worthy body still judge of the value of works as did their ancestors of old; for he has striven hard to make his book "as big as dat cheese." In the most remorseless manner has he squeezed into the "Life of Fuseli" not only two long, and not very readable reviews, one of Cowper's Homer, the other of Roscoe's Lorenzo de Medici-he has reprinted verbatim the catalogue of the Milton Gallery, with all the quotations, and without adding one word in explanation of his motives for so doing. His language is good enough, but his remarks are puerile, and his anecdotes selected without taste or discrimination, if indeed any selection has been made. We knew that the Royal Society, like misery, brought men acquainted with "strange fellows,”—but we were not quite prepared for Mr John Knowles.

Fuseli was not merely an artist, he was a man of letters, and took almost as active a share in the literary as in the pictorial exertions of his time. We shall defer the consideration of the artist and the author till next week, and confine our attention at present to the man.

Henry Füessli (this is the family name, which, in after his arrival in this country, into Fuseli) was born at mercy to English organs of pronunciation, he changed, Zurich, in Switzerland, in the year 1741. His father was a portrait-painter, a man who had seen much of the world, and had even in his time played the courtier's part, but of blunt and abrupt manners. He was an author, too, and his house was the resort of most of the literary characters of Zurich. The mother of Fuseli was a wo man of retired habits, who divided her time between the care of her family and the perusal of religious books. Her son was indebted to her for much of his education, and till the end of his life he rarely spoke of her without tears in his eyes.

Fuseli's father destined him to the clerical profession, notwithstanding the love and aptitude for art, which he displayed at a very early period. The youth was accordingly placed, as soon as he attained the proper age, in the Caroline College at Zurich, where he studied under Breitinger and Bodmer, and along with Lavater, and others, who have since attained a name in Germany. It is curious enough, that from under the tuition of these patriarchs of the Swiss school of criticism, (as it has been termed in Germany, in opposition to that of which Leipzig was the headquarters,) men eminently distinguished for strong practical sense and want of poetical feel

ing, went forth the most rash and fantastic speculators and
artists of the next age.
crity is the very worst instructor of genius. A kindred
spirit may lead far, but it will not lead wrong, and will
awe, by its boldness, the mind which soon learns to des-
pise a weaker tutor, and to show its defiance of his pre-
cepts, by rushing into exaggeration.

"Fuseli seldom or never concealed his sentiments with Thus, we may see that medio-regard to men, even to their faces. Calling upon him one evening, I found Mr Marchant and Mr Nollekins in his room; although I was well acquainted with these gentlemen, he formally took me up to them, and said, 'This, Mr Knowles, is Mr Marchant, that Mr Nollekins, two of the cleverest artists in their way, I believe, in Europe, but in every thing else two old daddies."

In 1761, Fuseli and his friend Lavater entered into holy orders. His biographer speaks (from report) highly of his powers of eloquence; but the account which he gives us of it shows it to have been much upon a par with the run of German pulpit eloquence of the time-something between Ossian and Tristram Shandy. The writings of Voltaire and Rousseau had at that time produced the same effect in Switzerland as elsewhere. They had stirred up a desire of good, produced a conviction that something was rotten in society, and inspired all young men with a desire to reform, without teaching them very clearly what it was that needed reformation. Fuseli caught the epidemic, and this soon put an end to his preaching. He and Lavater made themselves so conspicuous in the prosecution of an obnoxious magistrate, that, to avoid the vengeance of his powerful family, it was deemed expedient for them to retire from Zurich, The same vague praise is bestowed upon Fuseli's conduct on this occasion as upon his oratory, but as no details are given, it is impossible to say with what justice.

His first place of refuge was Berlin, where he remained for some time cultivating his talents for art, which he had never entirely neglected. An opportunity occurred of visiting England after he had been about six months in Berlin, and he embraced it with the approbation of his father. Something very mysterious is said, about one of the chief causes of his visiting our country, being a scheme then in agitation for establishing a correspondence between the literati of Germany and England. That some such scheme might have been in contemplation, is very probable-it is quite in keeping with the character of the literary Germans of that day-men whose minds had been excited by study even to a morbid excess of activity, and who, feeling that the autocratical forms of their governments precluded them from any share in active life, made the most desperate and fantastic efforts to obtain a standing place, where they could have a purchase upon the machine of society. The plan of establishing a correspondence among the literati of all nations, that they might the more speedily illuminate the world, is not unlike some of their day dreams. It was, how ever, a scheme not at all likely to take in this prosaic country, especially under the auspices of such an apostle as Fuseli.

After arriving in this country, which, except while he studied at Rome, and again when he paid a brief visit to Zurich, was his home for the rest of his life, Fuseli's history is commonplace enough. He supported himself at first by literary labours, afterwards by his works in art. He raised himself, by the usual slow degrees, to eminence in his profession, and attained at last the professorship of painting, which his rare union of the scholar and the artist singularly qualified him to fill. His life was spent in the society of the most accomplished and ingenious of both sexes; and he died full of years and full of honour, on the 16th of April, 1825.

Fuseli was, in his private character, a man of integrity and generosity, but unamiable in the extreme. Irascible to a high degree, and rude, not from want of feeling or reflection, but from predetermination. He has obtained the name of a wit, but we think unjustly; for he astonished, not by saying what other men could not, but by saying what they dared not utter. Whoever puts himself above the restraints of good feeling and common civility, may easily startle. His good things, when not unamiable, are distorted by a straining for effect; they are, like his pictures, extravaganzas. One or two instances, selected at random, will bear us out.

*

"Every one knows, who is acquainted with art, the powers Mr Northcote displays when he paints animals of the brute creation. When his picture of Balaam and the Ass' was exhibited at the Macklin gallery, Northcote asked Fuseli's opinion of its merits, who instantly said, My friend, you are an angel at an ass, but an ass at an angel.'

*

"Discoursing one day with a gentleman at Mr Johnson's table upon the powers and merits of Phocion, a stranger, who had apparently listened with attention to the conversation, interrupted him by putting the question, Pray, sir, who was Mr Phocion? Fuseli immediately answered, 'From your dialect, sir, I presume you are from Yorkshire; and if so, I wonder you do not recollect Mr Phocion's name, as he was a member for your county in the Long Parliament;' and then,” says Mr Knowles, "he resumed the discourse."

"Discoursing with a lady upon sculpture, who, however, was too well read in the classics to be a subject of his mischievous pleasantry, he pretended to inform her of a fine bas-relief which had been received by the Royal Academy, from Rome. 'What is the subject?' she asked. Hector and Andromache,' said he, dashing out against a wall the little Astyanax's brains.'-Poh! why do you tell me such stuff?' said she. Ay, you may laugh,' replied Fuseli, but it would go down with many a one. I have often said such things in company without detection; only try it yourself at the next lord's house you may visit, and see how many fine ladies and dandies will detect you."" This is impertinence, not wit.

Oxford. A Poem. By Robert Montgomery. Author of the "Omnipresence of the Deity," &c. 8vo. Pp. 258. London Whittaker and Co. Edinburgh : Blackwood. 1831.

:

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MR MONTGOMERY is the very Malvolio of poets. is "sick of self-love, and tastes with a distempered appetite." He takes "birdbolts for cannon-balls." A lone and companionless youth, if we may believe his own account of himself, he has grown up cherishing without disturbance his own peculiar feelings. He has been regularly indoctrinated into moral and religious principles. The vague and delicious aspirations of youth have taken their form, as they have lent their hues, to the notions thus inculcated. He has read poetry, and feeling himself able to construct metre and rhymes, he has expressed his thoughts in that form. He believed, because he felt pleasure in the task, that its contemplation must afford pleasure to others. He was strengthened and confirmed in this idea by the plaudits of injudicious friends, and mercenary critics. But his works, on being submitted to a wider public, were found wanting in many particulars, and the voice of censure was heard sharpened and aggravated by the undeserved eulogiums of which he had been made the object. Young men are naturally sensitive, and this tendency had been in Mr Montgomery cherished even to a morbid degree, by the gross and fulsome flattery to which he had been accustomed. He immediately grew waspish and suspicious, as he had previously been arrogant. In every playful attack, his diseased fancy saw indications of a conspiracy against him. It was difficult to say whether his idea of his own importance, or of his secret enemies, were more extravagant and ludicrous. If we have justly pourtrayed the workings of his mind, we have justified our calling him the Malvolio of poets-and we prove the truth of our description out of his own mouth. He thus dismisses the charges brought against him by critics:

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