THE AMERICAN MONTHLY MAGAZINE AND CRITICAL REVIEW. VOL. I. NEW-YORK: PUBLISHED FOR H. BIGLOW, Esq. EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR, BY KIRK & MERCEIN, AT THE OFFICE OF THE EDINBURGH AND QUAR- AMERICAN MONTHLY MAGAZINE AND CRITICAL REVIEW, FOR MAY, 1817. NO. I.....VOL. I. ART. I. Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, Canto III,-Prisoners of Chillon, and other Poems, by Lord Byron. IT oscillation of public opinion in his fa- we possibly have than his lordship's their opposites. Contempt naturally judgment in the case? or who could be so conusant to his lordship's merits as himself? But be this as it may, it was, at any rate, very generally agreed to believe what his lordship so seriously persisted in asserting; and if he obtained credit in any proportion to the extent of his claims, his celebrity is not wonderful. His title to panegyric being thus established, the only strife seemed to be, who should be most vociferous in his praise. If a snarling critic were surly enough to question a decree pronounced by acclamation, he could taste, and might have continued to scarcely hope to be heard in the tumult of applause. follows disabused esteem; and mistaken sympathy may easily be converted into detestation. His lordship's boastful blazon of the depravity of his beart, casts no little imputation on the strength of his understanding; whilst his wanton exhibition of his deformity, has not left good-nature even a fig-leaf with which to cover his shame. Yet, but for his folly, he might still have basked in the sunshine of favour. He had long enjoyed a plenary indulgence for sins against the canons of But fanaticism, which is generally founded in delusion, is ever transient; and the fickleness of fashion is prover transgress them with impunity, had he contravened no other laws. But, as he has chosen so intimately to blend his poetic with his moral character, and to obtrude himself, in both, so often, and His lordship's experience of the with so little modesty, on the public, it |