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"He thought what fear it were to fall Into the pit that swallows all,

to a chamois, deals with a chamoishunter. He describes one scaling "Catton's battlement" before the peep of day, and now at its summit.

"Over the top, as he knew well,
Beyond the glacier in the dell
A herd of chamois slept;

So down the other dreary side,

With cautious step, or careless slide
He bounded, or he crept."

"And now he scans the chasmed ice; He stoops to leap, and in a trice

His foot hath slipp'd,-O heaven! He hath leapt in, and down he falls Between those blue tremendous walls, Standing asunder riven.

"But quick his clutching nervous grasp Contrives a jutting crag to clasp,

And thus he hangs in air ;O moment of exulting bliss! Yet hope so nearly hopeless is Twin-brother to despair.

"He look'd beneath,-a horrible doom!
Some thousand yards of deepening gloom,
Where he must drop to die!
He look'd above, and many a rood
Upright the frozen ramparts stood
Around a speck of sky.

"Fifteen long dreadful hours he hung, And often by strong breezes swung

His fainting body twists, Scarce can he cling one moment more, His half-dead hands are ice, and sore His burning bursting wrists.

"His head grows dizzy,-he must drop,
He half resolves,-but stop, O stop,
Hold on to the last spasm,
Never in life give up your hope,-
Behold, behold a friendly rope
Is dropping down the chasm!

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Unwing'd with hope and love; And when the succour came at last, O then he learnt how firm and fast Was his best Friend above."

That is much better than any thing yet quoted, and cannot be read without a certain painful interest. But the composition is very poor. "O heaven!

He hath leapt in !"

Well-what then?" and down he falls!" Indeed! We do not object to "between those blue tremendous walls," but why tell us they were "standing asunder riven?" We knew he had been on the edge of the "chasmed ice." "O moment of exulting bliss!" No-no-no. "Many a rood"-perpendicular altitude is never measured by roods nor yet by perches. Satan "lay floating many a rood"-but no mention of roods when "his stature reached the sky." "His head grows dizzy"-aye that it did long before the fifteen hours had expired. "But stop, O stop" is, we fear, laughable-yet we do not laugh -for 'tis no laughing matter-and

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never in life give up your hope" is at so very particular a juncture too general an injunction. "Be cool, man, hold on fast" is a leetle too much, addressed to poor Pierre, whose "half dead hands were ice," and who had been hanging on by them for fifteen hours.

"And so from out that terrible place, With death's pale paint upon his face, They drew him up at last"—

is either very good or very bad-and we refer it to Wordsworth. The con

"They call thee, Pierre,-see, see them cluding stanzas are tame in the ex

here,

Thy gathered neighbours far and near,
Be cool, man, hold on fast :
And so from out that terrible place,
With death's pale paint upon his face
They drew him up at last.

"And he came home an altered man, For many harrowing terrors ran

Through his poor heart that day; He thought how all through life, though

young,

Upon a thread, a hair, he hung,

Over a gulf midway:

treme;

"For many harrowing terrors ran Through his poor heart that day!"

We can easily believe it; but never after such a rescue was there so feeble an expression from poet's heart of religious gratitude in the soul of a sinner saved.

The "African Desert" and "The Suttees" look like Oxford Unprized Poems. The Caravan, after suffering the deceit of the mirage, a-dust are aware of a well.

"Hope smiles again, as with instinctive haste
The panting camels rush along the waste,

And snuff the grateful breeze, that sweeping by
Wafts its cool fragrance through the cloudless sky.
Swift as the steed that feels the slacken'd rein
And flies impetuous o'er the sounding plain,
Eager as, bursting from an Alpine source,
The winter torrent in its headlong course,
Still hasting on, the wearied band behold
-The green oase, an emerald couch'd in gold!
And now the curving rivulet they descry,
That bow of hope upon a stormy sky,
Now ranging its luxuriant banks of green
In silent rapture gaze upon the scene:
His graceful arms the palm was waving there
Caught in the tall acacia's tangled hair,
While in festoons across his branches slung
The gay kossom its scarlet tassels hung;
The flowering colocynth had studded round
Jewels of promise o'er the joyful ground,
And where the smile of day burst on the stream,
The trembling waters glitter'd in the beam."

What

There is no thirst here—our palate grows not dry as we read. passion is there in saying that the camels rushed along the waste,

"Swift as the steed that feels the slackened rein,"

could much mend it; but some of the most agreeable men we know labour under it, and we suspect owe to it no inconsiderable part of their power in conversation. People listen to their impeded prosing more courteously,

And flies impetuous o'er the sounding and more attentively, than to the prate

plain ?"

"Not a bit." And still worse is "Eager as bursting from an Alpine source The winter torrent in its headlong course;" for there should have been no allusion to water any where else but there; the groan and the cry was for water to drink; and had Mr Tupper felt for the caravan, men and beasts, no other water would he have seen in his imagination-it would have been impossible for him to have thought of likening the cavalcade to Alpine sources and winter torrents-he would have huddled it all headlong, prone, or on its hands, hoofs, and knees, into the water of salvation. "The green oase, an emerald couched in gold!!" Water! Water! Water! and there it is!

"That bow of hope upon a stormy sky!!!" They are on its banks-and

“In silent rapture gaze upon the scene!!!"

And then he absolutely paints it! not in water colours-but in chalks. Graceful arms of palms-tangled hair of acacia-scarlet tassels of kossoms in festoons-and the jewels of promise of the flowering colocynth!!!

Stammering or stuttering, certainly is an unpleasant defect-or weakness in the power of articulation or speech, and we don't believe that Dr Browster

VOL. XLIV. NO. CCLXXVIII.

of those "whose sweet course is not hindered;" and thus encouraged, they grow more and more loquacious in their in argument or anecdote, and are the vivacity, till they fairly take the lead delight and instruction of the evening, as it may hap, in literature, philosophy, or politics. Then, a scandalous story, stuttered or stammered, is irresistible-every point tells and blunt indeed, as the head of a pin, must be that repartee that extricates not itself with a jerk from the tongue-tied, sharp as the point of a needle.

We beg to assure Mr Tupper, that his sympathy with the "Stammerer," would extort from the lips of the most swave of that fortunate class, who, it must be allowed, are occasionally rather irritable, characteristic expressions of contempt; and that so far from thinking their peculiarity any impediment, except merely in speech, they pride themselves, as well as they may, from experience, on the advantage it gives them in a colloquy, over the glib. If to carry its point at last be the end of eloquence, they are not only the most eloquent, but the only eloquent of men. No stammerer was ever beaten in argument-his opponents always are glad to give in-and often, after they have given in, and suppose their submission has been accepted, they find the contrary of all that from a

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Therefore, we cannot but smile at "the Stammerer's Complaint"-as put into his lips by Mr Tupper. He

is made to ask us

"Hast ever seen an eagle chained to earth?
A restless panther to his cage immur'd?
A swift trout by the wily fisher check'd?
A wild bird hopeless strain its broken
wing ?"

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Heaven preserve us! is the world so ill off for woes-are they so scant

that a Poet who indites blank verse to Imagination, can dream of none worthier his lamentations than the occa sional and not unfrequent inconveniences that a gifted spirit experiences from a lack of fluency of words?

"I scarce would wonder, if a godless man, (I name not him whose hope is heavenward,)

We have; but what is all such sights
to the purpose? An eagle chained
cannot fly an inch-a panther in a cage
can prowl none-a trout "checked"
basketted, we presume-is as good as
gutted-a bird winged is already dish-
ed-but a stammerer, "still begin-
ning, never ending," is in all his glory
when he meets a consonant whom he
will not relinquish till he has conquer-
ed him, and dragged him in captivity
at the wheels of his chariot,
"While the swift axles kindle as they What if he were dumb?
roll."

A man whom lying vanities hath scath'd
And harden'd from all fear,-if such an one
By this tyrannical Argus goaded on,
Were to be wearied of his very life,
And daily, hourly foiled in social converse,
By the slow simmering of disappointment,
Become a sour'd and apathetic being,
Were to feel rapture at the approach of
death,

Mr Tupper's Stammerer then is made

to say,

"Hast ever felt, at the dark dead of night,

Some undefined and horrid incubus
Press down the very soul,-and paralyse
The limbs in their imaginary flight
From shadowy terrors in unhallowed
sleep?"

We have; but what is all that to the
purpose, unless it be to dissuade us
from supping on pork-chop? Such op-
pression on the stomach, and through
it on all the vital powers, is the
effect of indigestion, and is horrible;
but the Stammerer undergoes no such
rending of soul from body, in striving
to give vent to his peculiar utterance
-not he indeed-'tis all confined to
his organs of speech-his agonies are
apparent not real-and he is conscious
but of an enlivening emphasis that,
while all around him are drowsy, keeps
him wide awake, and banishes Sleep

to his native land of Nod. We ourselves have what is called an impediment in our speech-and do "make wry faces," but we never thought of exclaiming to ourselves,

And long for his dark hope,-annihilation."

Mr Tupper is a father-and some of his domestic verses are very pleasing-such as his sonnet to little Ellen, and his sonnet to little Mary; but we prefer the stanzas entitled "Children," and quote them as an agreeable sample, premising that they would not have been the worse of some little tincture of imaginative feeling-for, expressive as they are of mere natural emotion, they cannot well be said to be poetry. We object, too, to the sentiment of the close, for thousands of childless men are rich in the enjoyment of life's best affections; and some of the happiest couples and the best we have ever known, are among those from whom God has withheld the gift of offspring. Let all good Christian people be thankful for the mercies graciously vouchsafed to them; but beware of judging the lot of others by their own, and of seeking to confine either worth, happiness, or virtue, within one sphere of domestic life, however blessed they may feel it to be;

"For the blue sky bends over all,' and our fate here below is not determined by the stars.

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We like the following lines still better-and considered "as one of the moods of his own mind," they may be read with unmingled pleasure.

WISDOM'S WISH.

"Ан, might I but escape to some sweet spot,
Oasis of my hopes, to fancy dear,

Where rural virtues are not yet forgot,

And good old customs crown the circling year;
Where still contented peasants love their lot,
And trade's vile din offends. not nature's ear,
But hospitable hearths, and welcomes warm
To country quiet add their social charm;

"Some smiling bay of Cambria's happy shore,
A wooded dingle on a mountain side,
Within the distant sound of ocean's roar,

And looking down on valley fair and wide,
Nigh to the village church, to please me more
Than vast cathedrals in their Gothic pride,
And blest with pious pastor, who has trode
Himself the way, and leads his flock to God;

"There would I dwell, for I delight therein !
Far from the evil ways of evil men,
Untainted by the soil of others' sin,
My own repented of, and clean again :

With health and plenty crown'd, and peace within,
Choice books, and guiltless pleasures of the pen,
And mountain-rambles with a welcome friend,
And dear domestic joys, that never end.

"There, from the flowery mead, or shingled shore,
To cull the gems that bounteous nature gave,
From the rent mountain pick the brilliant ore,
Or seek the curious crystal in its cave;

And learning nature's Master to adore,

Know more of Him who came the lost to save;
Drink deep the pleasures contemplation gives,
And learn to love the meanest thing that lives.

"No envious wish my fellows to excel,
No sordid money-getting cares be mine;
No low ambition in high state to dwell,

Nor meanly grand among the poor to shine:
But, sweet benevolence, regale me well

With those cheap pleasures and light cares of thine,
And meek-eyed piety, be always near,
With calm content, and gratitude sincere.

"Rescued from cities, and forensic strife,

And walking well with God in nature's eye,
Blest with fair children, and a faithful wife,
Love at my board, and friendship dwelling nigh,
Oh thus to wear away my useful life,

And, when I'm called in rapturous hope to die,
Thus to rob heav'n of all the good I can,
And challenge earth to show a happier man!"

But the best set of stanzas in the volume are those entitled Ellen Gray. The subject is distressing, and has been treated so often-perhaps too often-as to be now exhausted or if not so, nothing new can be expected on it, except either from original genius, or from a spirit made creative by profoundest sympathy and sorrow for the last extremities of human misery.

ELLEN GRAY.

"A starless night, and bitter cold;
The low dun clouds all wildly roll'd
Scudding before the blast,

And cheerlessly the frozen sleet
Adown the melancholy street

Swept onward thick and fast;

"When crouched at an unfriendly door, Faint, sick, and miserably poor,

A silent woman sate;

She might be young, and had been fair,
But from her eye look'd out despair,
All dim and desolate.

"Was I to pass her coldly by, Leaving her there to pine and die,

The live-long freezing night? The secret answer of my heart Told me I had not done my part In flinging her a mite.

"And for a home,-would I had none ! The home I have, a wicked one,

They will not let me in,

Till I can fee my jailor's hands
With the vile tribute she demands,
The wages of my sin :

"I see your goodness on me frown;
Yet hear the veriest wretch on town,
While yet in life she may

Tell the sad story of her grief,-
Though heav'n alone can bring relief
To guilty Ellen Gray.

"My mother died when I was born:
And I was flung, a babe forlorn,

Upon the workhouse floor;
My father, would I knew him not!
A squalid thief, a reckless sot,
-I dare not tell you more.

"And I was bound an infant-slave,
With no one near to love, or save
From cruel sordid men,

A friendless, famish'd, factory child,
Morn, noon, and night I toil'd and toil'd,-
Yet was I happy then;

"My heart was pure, my cheek was fair,
Ah, would to God a cancer there

Had eaten out its way!

For soon my tasker, dreaded man,
With treacherous wiles and arts began

To mark me for his prey.

"And month by month he vainly strove

"She look'd her thanks,--then droop'd To light the flame of lawless love

her head;

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In my most loathing breast;
Oh, how I fear'd and hated him,

So basely kind, so smoothly grim,
My terror and my pest!

"Thenceforward droop'd my stricken head;

I liv'd, I died, a life of dread,

Lest they should guess my shame;
But weeks and months would pass away,
And all too soon the bitter day

Of wrath and ruin came;

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