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tations of natural liberty, in accordance with justice and morality. In other words I concur in the correctness of Mr. Justice

Blackstone's definition of it. He defines it to be natural liberty so far restrained as may be required by the public good.

MORTAL AND IMMORTAL.

BY AMIE.

Stand beside me, darling Clare,
Clasp in mine your dainty hand;
Tis an hour for pensive thought,
Skies with fading splendors fraught;
Shadows flitting through the air,
Stealing o'er the land.

You have counted six sweet years-
Garlanded are they with roses;
May they meet no purple closes,
And no sudden gushing tears,
As once came to one of old!

His dear years wove flowers of gold

In full many a web of life;

But the shining thread was stayed,
And the web with gloom was rife,
Wildest gloom and shade.

Turn your cherub face to me,
Petted Clare-

Not so sunny seems your hair,
As adorned his temples fair;
Or was it that the angel light?
Falling made it golden bright?
Then I pray that yours may be

Just as now, a silken brown,
By no glow from angel crown
Shadowed goldenly.

Ah, your voice is like a lark

Syllabling your dainty sweetness,

Now in kisses, now in words,
Roses seem to lend completeness
To the melody of birds.

And your eyes are dreamy dark,
But they have a sudden light,
Like a fire-fly's lustrous spark,
Flashing in and out the gloom
Of the purple night.
But his eyes were tender blue,
Sunbeams ever smiling through;

And I feel the impress yet,

Of his lips like blossoms wet-
And his voice was like a dove,
Echoing from room to room,
Notes of joy and love.

You are six, and just as tall,
Runs your shade along the wall,
Where the sunbeams follow after;
When I hear you at your play,
Almost stops my heart to say,—
Is it Eddie-is it Clare,
Bounding up and down the stair,
With glad song and laughter?
All undimmed by stains and tears,
Ah, his little sunny years,

How they faded like June roses!
Strange how much of grief and ill
Follows where light feet grow still,
And a young mouth closes!

When you glide with stealthy feet,
Climbing softly up my chair,
From your lips so red and rare,
Raining kisses warm and sweet-
Ere I turn to see your face,
With its witchery and grace,
Swift by memory's magic led,

I retrace life's pathway wild—
Once again I seem a child,

In the olden summer glory

Reading life like some sweet story— Clasped by his young arms instead!

Half I sigh, and half I smile,

Such delusive thoughts beguile;

For some joys are so like pain,

Smiles and tears will fall together,

Like the mingled shine and rain,
Of the April weather!

Clarence, bright and joyous-hearted,
You are not to me as near
As the cherub long departed,-
For I cannot call you brother,

And you do not bear our name

But you are so wondrous dear,

With your sweet, caressing arms, And your tender, winning charms, That I love you just the same,

Bless you by another.

Half he seems to be of earth,

Once again the chain unriven;

Half you seem of spirit-birth,
Fading into Heaven.

Day by day I seem to win

Light from the celestial portal, Fluttering back, and entering in,

Mortal and immortal!

THE RAVEN-BY EDGAR A. POE.

Of all the works of this brilliant but eccentric genius, none is more remarkable and characteristic than his short poem of "The Raven." The first perusal leaves no distinct understanding of its meaning, but fascinates the reader with a strange and thrilling interest. It produces on him a vague impression of It fate, of mystery, of hopeless sorrow. sounds like the utterance of a full heart,

poured out-not for the sake of telling its sad story to a sympathizing ear-but because he is mastered by his emotions, and cannot help giving vent to them. It is not like the chorus of the old plays, introduced for the purpose of narrating to the audience all the events which resulted in the drama about to be performed. It more resembles the soliloquies of Hamlet, in which he betrays his struggling thoughts and feelings, and in which (with occasional glimpses of the tragic horror in the back ground) he reveals the workings of his soul, stirred to its inmost depth by his terrible forebodings.

But no man, with a spark of imagination, or poetic sympathy, ever stopped at one reading of the Raven. Over and over again he reads, until, like one who looks long and attentively at a finished picture, he discerns feature after feature (seen at first dimly and confusedly) coming out in its proper relation to the rest; and, combining them together, he takes in, at last, the full meaning and expression of the artist. Even so does the poem, by little and little, develope the past suffering of the speaker-his deep dejection, almost despair-his solitary vigil in the dismal wintry midnight-the vain endeavor to obtain—

"From his books surcease of sorrow, sor

row for the lost Lenore, For the rare and radiant maiden, whom the angels name Lenore, Nameless here for evermore,"

and the gloomy reverie into which he lapses, full of bitter memories of the past, of anxious longings to penetrate the future. He is startled by a sudden rapping at his chamber door, which, coming

"in the dead waste and middle of the night," sounds an alarm to his nerves, already strung to a high pitch of excitement: he subdues the superstitious feeling, opens wide his door, and invites his supposed visitor to enter, but instead of a visitor, he finds before him

"Darkness there, and nothing more.."

The thought of the supernatural instantly recurs with redoubled forcecan it be that his grief has called back from another world the soul of her whom he laments, and that this is the signal of her presence? Half in hope, and half in fear, he peers long and anxiously into the "void obscure," and, at last, himself breaks the silence by whispering her name. It is echoed back to him, and again all is darkness and silence. Agitated and bewildered, he returns into his chamber-the rapping is repeated, and this time he discovers that it proceeds from his window. Once more summoning his courage to explore the mystery, he flings open the shutter, and "The Raven" enters his room. The demeanor of the bird is strange-he is stately and solemn, but composed-he perches upon a bust of Pallas above the door, and gazes at his host, whose attention is soon riveted upon him. The mind of the man, feverish and disordered, is prepared to receive him as a messenger from the Spirit Land. The bird, sometimes of his own accord, sometimes when spoken to, repeats the single word, "Nevermore;" which is always interpreted by the questioner as responsive to the cravings of his soul for that knowledge which lies beyond the grave. He even frames his inquiries in such a way (although unconsciously) that the everrecurring and melancholy word shall be a fit reply to them: as one in a dream sometimes lays a train for the development of an event, which, nevertheless, strikes him with surprise, or seems to do so, upon its occurrence. Thus proceeds the wild and exciting dialogue, the feelings of the man growing more intense, and his fancy more distempered, every

moment: while the bird preserves his air of grave and solemn mystery, and utters his oracular word. At length these replies, which seem to deny all sympathy, to destroy all hope, to extinguish forever the light beyond the waves of Time"the star on Life's tremulous ocean"drive the poor sufferer to despair and frenzy. The bird becomes in his eyes a demon, a tormentor. In vain he assails the messenger of darkness and evil with epithets of hate and rage-in vain commands his departure. Unmoved and passionless, the black minister of Fate remains, gazing, with fiery eyes, upon his victim, and repeating to his ear the fatal sentence of his perdition

"And the raven, never flitting, still is sitting, still is sitting,

On the pallid bust of Pallas, just above my chamber door;

And his eyes have all the seeming of a

demon that is dreaming,

And the lamp light o'er him streaming throws his shadow on the floor, And my soul from out that shadow that

lies floating on the floor,

Shall be lifted-nevermore!"

Such is the picture painted in the Raven: a man, distracted by grief, disordered by long watching, and wild imaginings, wrought upon by strange and weird appearances, believes himself in communion with a supernatural being, seeks to discover his fate (and that of another dearer than himself) in the world to come, receives an answer which consigns him to despair, and sinks under the cold, relentless torture, which the fiend inflicts upon him.

Fancies as wild and as tormenting are not unfrequent, when fever fires the brain. But the poet has not merely depicted a wild and tormenting delusion. By a strong and sustained effort he has conceived this delusion as occurring to another, and has described it, in the person of the victim, with all the force and fidelity of actual consciousness and belief. We see and hear him, from step to step of his progress-nay, we see and hear as he does, we feel as he feels, we are caught up from our firm footing on the earth and carried along with him

into regions of shadow and mystery, and made to share his emotions, as the dread secrets of futurity are revealed to him. To have imagined such a poem is, of itself, a proof of no ordinary genius: but to have executed it so perfectly, affords the more valuable evidence of a vigor and perseverance, commensurate with the power of invention. We say of rigor and perseverance. The former quality makes itself felt in the vivid ideas, and nervous diction, of the poem. The latter is to be traced in the management of the subject, in the gradual action of the drama, the struggle of the solitary against his phantasies, the ebb and flow of his feelings, till the stormy tide suddenly rises to its height, and prostrates the barrier of Reason-while the reality of the tale is illustrated in all its course by the natural (and seemingly casual) introduction of the familiar objects in and about the chamber. For instance, he throws himself into a chair, after the Raven's entrance, and plunges into troubled speculation.

"This and more I sat divining, with my head at ease reclining

On the cushion's velvet lining, that the lamplight gloated o'er,— But whose velvet violet lining, with the lamplight gloating o'er

She shall press-ah! nevermore!”

It is to be traced also in the skilful composition of the verse: in the admirable choice of words, at once melodious and expressive-sometimes quaint and unlooked for, but always most appropri ate in the rhythm and cadence of the lines, swelling and sinking like great waves, gently, but with majesty and power: in the artful repetition of the idea presented in the fourth line of each stanza, bringing it out again in the fifth line, varied and relieved by new epithets: in the frequent recurrence of harmonious rhymes, flowing in and out among the words, like streams of music: and in the consummate art, which causes each stanza to fill up the measure of its mean ing, as well as its verse, with the same melancholy burden of "Nevermore," making "the sound an echo to the sense," and bearing us along with growing pre

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sentiments of ill-fate, to the sorrowful catastrophe.

The day is gone by, when the affectation of easy writing was in fashion. The truth is now universally admitted, that in Poetry, as in all other human pursuits, what is rare and valuable is seldom to be obtained without patient labor. We impute it, therefore, as praise to our author, that he bestowed time and pains upon his work; and that, after he had planned a poem, which few minds beside his own could have conceived, he clothed it in a style and language, whose force and affluence have seldom, if ever, been surpassed.

After what we have said, we shall not be suspected of any design to depreciate the merit of the poem, in alluding to certain productions, which appear to us to have suggested to Mr. Poe the ideas, both of the action and the versification of the Raven. We say suggested: and it is nothing more than suggestion. To compare the figure, which the Raven makeson his first appearance, with the part he plays in the poem, would be to liken the feats of a bottle conjuror to the magic of Prospero. And while we think there can be no doubt that the stanza was derived from the source to be presently mentioned, it has become, in his hands, an instrument of far greater power and expression. There are indeed some rhymes, and almost whole lines, borrowed from the original. These, it is probable, had dwelt upon his ear in reading, and recurred to him when engaged in his own work, without his being aware that they were supplied by memory, instead of invention. Such self-deceptions are common enough; and Sir Walter Scott says somewhere, that he is often at a loss to determine whether the thoughts and words which occur to him, are really his own, or are the fruits of his reading, unconsciously remembered.

The germ of the character and adventure of the Raven, will be found in one of the Noctes Ambrosianæ of Blackwood's Magazine, published in No. XLI., March 1829, (Vol. III. of Mackenzie's Edition, pp. 244, 225.)

Christopher North and Tickler have

commenced the evening symposium by themselves, when they are suddenly joined by the Ettrick Shepherd, who comes in with one of those extravagant stories, graphic in description, racy and humorous in style, but utterly impossible in fact, which are so often put into his mouth in their famous dialogues. Upon this occasion, he describes how, for a "bate" (bet) of twenty guineas, he has beaten a cockney bagman from the Forest to Edinburgh, the bagman driving a blooded mare, and the Shepherd on footskating along the highway, which is covered with ice! His tale ended, the Shepherd makes acquaintance with the Editor's Raven, as follows

North. Well, if I did not know you, my dear James, to be a matter-of-fact man, I should absolutely begin to entertain some doubt of your veracity.

Shepherd. What the deevil's that hingin' frae the roof?

North. Why, the chandelier.

Shepherd. The shandleer? It's a cage, wi' an outlandish bird in 't. A pawrot, I declare! Pretty Poll! Pretty Poll! Pretty Poll!

Parrot. Go to the devil and shake yourself.

Shepherd. Heaven preserve us! Heard you ever the likes o' that? A bird cursin'! What sort o' an education must the cretur hae had? Poor beast, do you ken what you're sayin'?

Parrot. Much cry and little wool, as the devil said when he was shearing the Hog.

Shepherd. You're gettin' personal, Sir, or Madam, for I dinna pretend to ken your

sex.

North. That everybody does, James, who has any thing to do with Blackwood's Magazine.

Shepherd. True enough, sir. If it wad but keep a gude tongue in its head--it's really a bonny cretur. What plumage! What'll you hae, Polly, for sooper?

Parrot. Molly, put the kettle on,

Molly, put the kettle on,

Molly, put the kettle on,

And I shall have some punch. Shepherd. That's fearsome. Yet, whisht!

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