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Jan. 31, 1852J tg;ft* %t&fr*t* HI
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BOOKS ON OUR TABLE. Personal Narrative o...
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Nicaragua; its People, Scenery, and Monu...
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•The Comfort or Religion.—The coolness w...
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We should do ourutmost to encourage the ...
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OLD MAN AND YOUNG. BY GOODWYN BABMBY. Un...
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VIVIAN ON THE FAIR SEX. It was felicitou...
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Reade's P Oetical Works. The Poetical Wo...
« The vision came upon my Sleep From the pbahtom-land of Dreams : And , with its prophetic gleams , Son g was sent me wild and deep , T 6 tell all I did behold . The ethereal fire is warm That stamped on my mind each form . Such nondescript lines as u Oerahadowing earth like thunder clouds , lightnings : "
or as « Enthroned there ; brows the recdrds of high And august thought that made of human names , " make one play strange tricks with accents . ^ This of '' august" for " august" we notice again in the previously quoted description of Homer;—** Shone o ' er his august countenance , as sheds /' which makes the Homeric face autumnal ; yet to prove that when the sad necessity of rhythm does not force him , Air . Reade pronounces the word like all other educated Englishmen , we have only to quote this line : — " All thought august that make us what we are , " where it is rightly accented .
We have done . As far as the brief notice of a journal can convey an opinion of an author ' s claims , we have attempted to convey ours in this notice of John Edmund Reade , whom we find reviewed in the last Revue des Deux Mondes aide by side with Tennyson and Elizabeth Barret Browning .
Jan. 31, 1852j Tg;Ft* %T&Fr*T* Hi
Jan . 31 , 1852 J tg ; ft * % t & fr * t * HI
Books On Our Table. Personal Narrative O...
BOOKS ON OUR TABLE . Personal Narrative of Travels to the Equinoctial Region * of America , during the years 1799—1804 . By Alexander von Humboldt and AnhS Bonpland . Translated and Edited by Thomasina Boss . ( Bohn ' s Scientific Library . ) H . G . Bohn . This is , perhaps , the most valuable of _ all the works issued by Mr . Bohn . "When the three volumes are complete we shall devote space to it commensurate -with its importance ; but in the meanwhile announce to our readers , for their especial behoof and guidance as purchasers , that the book itself is " worth its weight in gold , " and that this compact edition has had the advantage of careful revision in its style , and has all the Spanish and Portuguese terms , phrases , and quotations which occur in the original translated into English—a very necessary precaution in a country where those languages are so little studied . The Odes of Ptndar . Literally translated into English Prose by Dawaon W . Turner , M . A . To which is adjoined a Metrical Version by Abraham Moore . ( Bohn ' s Classical Library . ) II . G . Bohn . Pindar we have tried to read in Greek , but could ' nt ; we have gallantly mounted the breach in Engl ish , but were always repulsed . In Greek the difficulty of the language made us secretly fancy there must , be something fine , could one but get at it ; in English the naked nonsense " stood confessed . " We are perfectly aware that there are lines and images to be quoted which have a certain Grecian splendour ; but in this Pindar is like the Old English Dramatists" beauties " lie scattered over heaps of rubbish .
Here , however , for those who still think Pindar is pindaric , Mr . Bohn issues two translations , one literal and prose , the other paraphrastic and prosy one useful as a " crib , " especially with its notes ; the other for those who wish to read Pindar ,
" In sounding song by Genius framed , " to apply its own elegant diction . The Literary Almanack . P . Edwards . This almanac is not quite what it profeBsea—but another year ' s , which is promised as an improvement , may be more Worthy of the title . Oh what principle the list of books published is compiled does not appear ; we missed several for which we looked . Among publishers , the name of James "Watson is omitted . At least the sole publisher of a special class should be represented . The idea of the almanao is a good one , and deserves to be well and impartially executed . ¦
A Woman's Journey Bound the fForld , from Vienna to Brazil , Chili , Tahiti , China , Hlndostan , Persia , and Ania Minor . An Unabridged Translation from the German of Ida Pfeiffer . With , tinted engravings . National Illustrated Library . Madame Ida Pfeiffer ' a remarkable journey round the world is here presented to the English reader in an idiomatic and unabridged translation , carefully executed . It is illustrated with tinted engravings of various remarkable sites—some of them , as the Rook Temples of Elora , conveying a very vivid conception of the scene , others of no peculiar merit .
The United Industrial School of Edinburgh . A Sketch of ita Origin , Progress , and Practical Influence . A . and 0 . Black . Two engravings of the Children at Work ( rendered with a Kombrandtish effeot of light and shade , perhaps we ought to say of shade and light ) , and a series of papers explanatory of the objects of this useful school , constitute the substance of this pamphlet . The industrial feature is a part of education which practical Scotland takes the lead in ; and on this account , apart even from the benevolence of the object sought to be promoted by it , this pamphlet deserves attention .
The Bible our Stumbling Block and our Strength , John Chapman . We have here a thoughtful , well written " tract for the times " against Bibliolatry . Why it is anonymous we cannot tell . Shall we ever outlive the timidity which tolerates and cherishes an erroneous reverence , so long as writers who protest against ' the evil avoid or evade the responsibility of their own advice ?
Nicaragua; Its People, Scenery, And Monu...
Nicaragua ; its People , Scenery , and Monuments . With numerous original Maps and Plates . By E . G . Squier , late Charge d'Affairas . Two Volumes . Longman , Brown , Green , and Co . Rambles beyond Railways . By W . Wilkie Collins . Second Edition . . Bentley . A Practical Treatise on the Disease of the Lungs and Heart . By W . H . Walshe . M . D . Taylor , Walton , and Maberly . Lebdhn ' s German , in One Volume ; with a Key . Simpkin , Marshall , and Co . BduardCharlton ; or . Life Behind the Counter . A Tale Illustrative of the Drapery Trade , and the Evils of the Late Hour System . By Frederick Boss . Henry Lea . The Companion-Shaktpere . No . 2 , Richard II . Charles Knight-A Woman ' sJourney Round the World . By Ida Pfeiffer . National Illustrated Library .
Donaldson ' s Latin Grammar . J . W . Parker and Son The History of the British Empire , from the Accession of James I . By John Macgregor , JV 1 . P . Chapman and Hall . Memoirs of the Marquis of Rockingham and his Contemporaries . With Original Letters and Documents . In two volumes . By George Thomas , Earl of Albemarle . Bentley . Martin Fontrond ; or . Adventures of a Frenchman in London . By James Morier . Bentley . Biographical Notice of Nicolo Paganini , with an Analysis of hi * Compositions , and a Sketch of the History of the Vtolin . By E . J . Fetis . Translated by Wellington Guernsey . Schott and Co . The Child ' s German Book . ByA . H . N . FraniThimen . Royal Military Magazine : The British Soldier . A Journal devoted to the Interest * of the United Services . By Lieutenant Colonel Hort . W . Hart and Co .
Notes , Thoughts , and Enquiries . By Charles Chalmers . First Series . John Churchill . May I not Do what I Will with My Own . Considerations on the Contest between the Operative Engineers and their Employers . By Edward-Vansittart Neale , of Lincoln ' s Inn . - Bezer . Epitome of the Evidence on Church Rates . By J . S . Trelawny , Esq ., M . P , Theobald , T he Poems and Ballads of Schiller . Translated by Sir Edward Bolwer Lyttoii , Baronet . Blackwood and Sons . Edinburgh , Introductory : Lectures on the Opening of Owen ' s College , at Man » chetter . T . Sowler , Manchester .
•The Comfort Or Religion.—The Coolness W...
• The Comfort or Religion . —The coolness with which people who live above the world sometimes avail themseivei of its lowest verge of usage is truly amazing . An affluent gentleman of high religious profession , subscriber to gospel schools , believer in prevenient grace , and otherwise the pride of the evangelical heart , found himself not insensible to the approaches of the Hudson mania , speculated far beyond the resources of his fortune , declined to take up his bad bargains , and thus , at the expense of utter ruin to his agent , escaped with comparatively easy loss to himself . The agent , being but an honourable sinner of the worldly class , was struck down by the blow into great depression . His employer was enabled to his
take a more cheerful view , and , on meeting poor viotim , rallied him on his dejected looks and hopeless thoughts , so different from his own resigned and comfortable state of mind ; " but , ah ! I forgot , " he added with a sigh , " you are not blest with my religious consolations ! "— Westminster Rev ., No . 111 . A Dog ' s Imag ^ nation .-t-A dog , which refused dry bread , and wai in the habit of receiving from his master little morsels dipped in the gravy of the meat remaining in the plate , snapped eagerly after dry bread if he saw it rubbed round the plate , and as , by way of experiment , this was repeatedly done till its hunger was satisfied , it was evident that the imagination of the animal conquered for the time its faculties of smell and taste . — T hompson ' s Passions of Animals .
Caukbh of a Shellfish . — -But the life of a shellfish is not one of unvarying rest . Observe the phases of an individual oyster from the moment of its earliest embryo-life , independent of maternal ties , to the consummation of ita destiny when the knife of fate shall sever its muscular cords and doom it to entombment in a living sepulchre . How starts it forth into the world of waters ? Not , as unenlightened people believe , in the shape of a minute , bivalved , protected , grave , fixed ,. and steady oysterling . No ; it enters upon its career all lifo and motion , flitting about in the sea as gaily and lightly as a butterfly or
a swallow skims through the air . Its first appearance is as a microscopic oyster-cherub , with wing-like lobes flanking a mouth and shoulders , unencumbered with inferior crural prolongations . It passes through a joyous and vivacious juvenility , skipping up and down as if in mockery of its heavy and immovable parents . It roynges from oystor-bed to oyster-bed , and if in luck , so as to eHcape the watchful voracity of the thousand enemies that lie in wait or prowl about to prey upon youth und inexperienoe , at length , having sown its wild oats , settles down into a « teady , solid , domestio oyster . It becomes the parent of fresh broods of oyster-cherubB , —W «* tmin * tw Rev ,, No , Ul
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We Should Do Ourutmost To Encourage The ...
We should do ourutmost to encourage the Beautiful , for the Useful encourages itself . —Goethe .
Old Man And Young. By Goodwyn Babmby. Un...
OLD MAN AND YOUNG . BY GOODWYN BABMBY . Unknit thy furrowed brows . Old Man , And loose thy puckered lips ; The golden sun gilds evening dun , Old earth the new dew sips ; And why should thou die dark , Old Man , In pride of pomp or pelf , And scorn the beam which young eyes dream , Nor see the snake in self ? Say not , in treacherous tones , Old Man , That wisdom is in years , When on the ground the seed is found Shed from the burnished ears ; And of those ears , thus shed , Old Man , The empty husks remain , While even the seed to spring in need Is old life young again . It is not childish talk , Old Man , Those dizzy dreams of youth , Whose rainbows ray , whose pinions play , Upon the breath of Truth : There ' s fount of colour deep , Old Man , From which those rainbows rise . And curving springs whence plumy wings Soar singing to the skies . Prate not so much of age , Old Man , 'Tis modest not , nor true ; There's even dust despised which must Be older far than you ; And think a moment , pray , Old Man , That power was old as Him Whose endless truth has ever youth , Whose love grows never dim . And hast thou ever read , Old Man , How Youth came from the skies , And filled the morn on which ' twas born With oldest harn » onies ; And taught that such as you , Old Man , Must yetrbe born again ; And , scorning wise all ancient lies . Held children uj > to men . Shake not thy palsied head , Old , Man , It readeth thus to me : Immortal Truth , eternal Youth , Are one in harmony ; Truth never dies , mark well , Old Man , We die to Truth and Love : The suns but set to burnish yet The blushing skies above . Say not , What is , will be , Old Man ; That change is not ordained ; That slaves and kings are useful things , And men are happiest chained . The breeze it freely flows , Old Man , By no vain edict bound ; The starry choir out-hymn thee , liar ! And roll more radiant round . Then totter to thy tomb . Old Man , Nor strive no more to freeze The warming flood of rich red blood Which fills our ministries ; Thy place is under ground , Old Man , Thy tomb shall have a tongue ; The young grass grow o ' er thee below . The skies beam o ' er the young . Old things must go with thee , Old Man , Old dynasties must die ; Old creeds , old laws , " the good old cause , " Must sunset in the sky . New thoughts are rising high , Old Man , And still the prophets sing The birth of Truth , the faith of Youth , And the sunshine of the Spring .
Vivian On The Fair Sex. It Was Felicitou...
VIVIAN ON THE FAIR SEX . It was felicitously said of a woman , by the gay and gallant Steele , that " to love her was a liberal education . " AncV to son pit tore : I am proud to say that I have had such a liberal education ; in fact , J have had many liberal educations 1 In virtue of this inestimable good fortune , I claim the privilege of being heard on a question sometimes debated by the correspondents of this journal ; the more so as I myself , in spite of my notorious love and devotion to the sexe enchanteur , have been accused by correspondents of treating that sex with levity in not sufficiently recognizing " that woman has a soul . " As I set up , moreover , in the modest recesses of my heart , the claim to bo a poet—unread , indeed , and incdited—but are we not often assured that «« The world knows nothing of its greatest men" ?—
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), Jan. 31, 1852, page 19, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse2.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/cld_31011852/page/19/
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