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lads, the Song of the Shirt, and the chief of the humanitarian poems by which Hood in his last days became so endeared to the world.

The London Press has but one voice in speaking of Mr. Hood and his writings-admiration mingled with pathetic regret. Says the Daily News (no doubt Mr. DICKENS himself holding the pen) in language echoed by many others :

"This collection of Mr. Hood's serious poems is made in fulfilment of his own desire. It was among his last instructions to those who were dearest to him.'

"Much is expressed in this opening.paragraph of the brief and unaffected preface to this book. Around the death-bed of the great genius whose name it bears, consoling recollections of the thoughtful exercise of high powers diffused peace and resignation. No wish to blot one line in these, his best and worthiest efforts, troubled his repose. But, arrived at the last sad test and trial of all that is good and durable in life, he could contemplate his legacy to mankind, and thank God for its Christian spirit, and look with hope and trust to its results, when he should be no more.

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Pity for the erring, mercy to the weak, scorn of hypocrisy and bigotry; the preservation, through a rough life, of every humanising and tender thought to which its youth. gave birth, were the sustaining impulses to this desire, as they are the spirit of these poems. If any man can read THE BRIDGE OF SIGHS, without the deepest sympathy and compassion, or THE SONG OF A SHIRT, without being touched to the soul, in his awakened sorrow for the miseries in which so many of his fellow-creatures pine and wear away their lives, let him

Pray Heaven for a human heart,

that he may come, in time, to have some portion in the last bequest of THOMAS HOOD.

"Passing from these productions as being widely known of late, and (for the same reason) from THE DREAM OF EUGENE ARAM, THE HAUNTED HOUSE, and THE GOLDEN LEGEND OF MISS KILLMANSEGG (all of extraordinary merit), we will confine our extracts to two minor pieces, with which our readers may be less acquainted. There is, in the first, a sentiment so touching and so universal, that there will probably be no collection of poems in the English tongue for centuries to come, in which it will not find a place:

April, 1845.

STANZAS.

Farewell Life! my senses swim,
And the world is growing dim:
Thronging shadows cloud the light,
Like the advent of the night-
Colder, colder, colder still,
Upward steals a vapor chill;
Strong the earthy odor grows-
I smell the mould above the rose !

Welcome Life! the Spirit strives!
Strength returns and hope revives;
Cloudy fears and shapes forlorn
Fly like shadows at the morn,-
O'er the earth there comes a bloom;
Sunny light for sullen gloom,

Warm perfume for vapor cold

I smell the rose above the mould !

"The next (the Ode on a distant prospect of ClapHAM ACADEMY) is of a different class, but who has not this poem in his mind and his experience?

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"The preface, from which we have already quoted, expresses a hope that in any future recital of the names of writers who have contributed to the stock of genuine English poetry, Thomas Hood will find honorable mention.' Before it can be otherwise, not only must the character of genuine English poetry be altogether changed, but with it the recollections, fancies, affections, and very nature of men.

"We may be allowed to add one parting word; not of the Author, but the deceased friend. That he was a man of a most free and noble spirit, who harbored none of the grudging jealousies too often attendant on the pursuit of literature; who found no detraction from his own merits in the success and praise of another; who, beset by great infirmity of body, and many sharp anxieties of mind, could travel far out of his way to swell, with his generous pen, the triumph of a young writer, with whom he had, at that time, little or no acquaintance, saving through his works ;no one living should know better, than the writer of this faltering tribute to his memory."

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