That sun of glory beams once more, But clouds have dimmed its radiant hue. The splendor of its race is o'er, It sets in blood on Waterloo! A proud memorial of the free; JAMES LAWSON, A CITIZEN of New York, and for many years connected with its literary interests, was born November 9, 1799, in Glasgow, Scotland. He was educated at the University of that city, and came early in life, at the close of the year 1815, to America, where he was received at New York in the countting-house of a maternal uncle. Mr. Lawson seems early to have taken an interest in American letters; for in 1821 we find him in correspondence with Mr. John Mennons, editor of the Greenock Advertiser, who was then engaged in publishing a miscellaneous collection of prose and verse, entitled the Literary Coronal. Mr. Mennons desired to introduce specimens of American authors, then a novelty to the British public, into his book, and Mr. Lawson supplied him with the materials. It was through this avenue and one or two kindred publications, that the merits of several of the best American authors first became known abroad. Halleck's "Fanny" was repul ›d by Mr. Mennons in September, 1821, a fac-simile of the New York edition. In a second volume of the Literary Coronal of 1823, it was again re-published with poems by Bryant, Percival, James G. Brooks, and Miss Manley. An English edition of Salmagundi was published in the same year in the style of the Coronal, by Mr. Mennons, who was, perhaps, the first in the old world to seek after American poetry, and introduce abroad those felicitous short pieces of verse which have since become household words in England, through collections like his own. In this, he had a willing co-operator in Mr. Lawson, whose literary and personal friendship with the authors of the country has been a marked trait of his life. GamesLawend A third Edinburgh publication followed, "The American Lyre," composed entirely of American poetry. It opened with Ontwa, the Son of the Forest, a poem first published in New York in 1822, the curious and interesting notes to which on Indian character and antiquities, were written by the Hon. Lewis Cass, then Governor of Michigan. Ontwa is a spirited poem, an eloquent commemoration of the manners and extinction of the nation of the Eries. Another volume of the Coronal, liberally supplied with American verse, appeared in 1826. About this time the failure of the mercantile house in which Mr. Lawson was a partner, led him to turn his attention to literature. He had been already connected with the poet and editor, Mr. J. G. Brooks, in writing for the literary periodical of the latter, the New York Literary Gazette, and American Athenæum.* In this, Mr. Lawson wrote the first criticism on Mr. Edwin Forrest, who had then just made his appearance in New York at the Bowery Theatre, under the management of Gilfert. This opening performance, in November, 1826, was Othello; and Mr. Lawson's criticism of several columns appearIt ed in the next number of his friend's paper. was shrewd, acute, freely pointing out defects, and confidently anticipating his subsequent triumphs. The Literary Gazette, on its discontinuance, was immediately succeeded by an important newspaper enterprise, founded by Mr. J. G. Brooks, Mr. John B. Skilman, and Mr. James Lawson, as associates. This was the Morning Courier grown into the New York Courier and Enquirer. The first number of this journal was issued in 1827; and its first article was written by Mr. Lawson. The joint editorship of the paper continued till 1829, when new financial arrangements were made, and Noah's Enquirer was added to the Courier. Mr. Brooks and Mr. Lawson retired, when the latter immediately joined Mr. Amos Butler in the Mercantile Advertiser, with which he remained associated till 1833. In 1830, a volume, Tales and Sketches by a Cosmopolite, from the pen of Mr. Lawson, was published by Elam Bliss, in New York. In these the writer finds his themes in the domestic life and romance of his native land, and in one instance ventures a dramatic sketch, a love scene, the precursor of the author's next publication, Giordano, a tragedy; an Italian state story of love and conspiracy, which was first performed at the Park Theatre, New York, in Nov. 1828. The prologue was written by the late William Leggett, and the epilogue, spoken by Mrs. Hilson, by Mr. Prosper M. Wetmore. This is Mr. Lawson's only dramatic production, which has issued from the press. He has, however, in several instances, appeared before the public in connexion with the stage. He was associated with Mr. Bryant, Mr. Halleck, Mr. Wetmore, Mr. Brooks, and Mr. Leggett, on the committee which secured for Mr. Forrest the prize play of Metamora by the late J. A. Stone, for which This weekly periodical was commenced by Mr. Brooks in the octavo form, Sept. 10, 1-25. as the New York Literary Gazette and Phi Beta Kappa Repository; the latter portion of the title being taken from some dependence upon the support of members of that Society, which turned out to be nugatory. At the end of the volume, with the twenty-sixth number, the Phi Beta title was dropped, and an association effected with a similar publication. The American Athenæum, also weekly in quarto, conducted by George Bond, which had been commenced April 21, 1825, of which forty-four numbers had been issued. The joint publication bore the title "The New York Literary Gazette and American Athenæum," and as such was published in two quarto volumes, ending March 3, 1827. † John Augustus Stone, the author of Metamora, was born in 1801, at Concord, Mass. He was an actor as well as dramatic writer, and made his first appearance in Boston as "Old Norval" in the play of Douglas. He acted in New York in 1926, and in Philadelphia afterwards at intervals. He received five hundred dollars from Mr. Forrest for Metanora. He wrote two other plays in which Mr. Forrest performed, The Ancient Briton, in which he took the part of Brigantius, and for which he paid the author a thousand dollars; and Fauntleroy, The Bunker of Rouen aversion of the story of the English personage of that name. In the latter, the hero was executed on the stage by a machine bearing a close resemblance to an actual guillotine. The loaded knife descended; the private signal was imperfectly given, and the young American tragedian saved his head by a quick motion at the expense of his locks, which were closely on its representation Mr. Wetmore wrote the prologue and Mr. Lawson the epilogue. Mr. L. was also one of the similar committee which selected Mr. J. K. Paulding's prize play of Nimrod Wildfire, or the Kentuckian in New York, for Mr. Hackett. Mr. Lawson has also been a frequent contributor of criticism, essays, tales, and verse, to the periodicals of the day; among others, Herbert's American Monthly Magazine, the Knickerbocker, the Southern Literary Messenger, and Sargent's New Monthly. These have, however, been but occasional employments, Mr. L., since his retirement from the active conduct of the press in 1833, having pursued the business of Marine Insurance, through which important interest he is well known in Wall street as an adjuster of averages, and in other relations. THE APPROACH OF AGE. Well, let the honest truth be told! And I have guessed for many a day, I meet the friends of former years, shaved. Stone also wrote La Roque the Regicide, The Demonute. Tancred, and other pieces. The circumstances of his death were melancholy. In a fit of derangement he threw himself into the Schuylkill and was drowned. The date of this event is recorded on a monument over his remains, which bears this inscription: "To the memory of John Augustus Stone, who departed this life June 1, 1884. aged thirty-three years," and on the reverse, Erected to the Memory of the Author of Metamora, by his friend EdWin Forrest." Will not the approach of age confess. When o'er our vanished days we glance, But thank thee, Heaven, our lengthened life The youthful heart unwisely fears SONNET-ANDREW JACKSON. Come, stand the nearest to thy country's sire, And battled 'gainst the wrong. Thy holiest aim Was freedom, in the largest sense, despite Misconstrued motives, and unmeasured blame. Above deceit, in purpose firm, and pure; Just to opposers, and to friends sincere, Thy worth shall with thy country's name endure, And greener grow thy fame, through every coming year. 1887. SONG. When spring arrayed in flowers, Mary, When larks sang to the sun, Mary, Then first we met and loved, Mary, By Grieto's loupin' linn; Now autumn winds blaw cauld, Mary, Are faded frae the knowes; Nae chilly autumn there, And sweet thy smile as spring's, Mary, Thy sunny face as fair. Nae mair the early lark, Mary, Trills on his soaring way; Nae autumn in my heart, Mary, WILLIAM BOURNE OLIVER PEABODY-OLIVER WILLIAM BOURNE PEABODY. THE twin brothers name together at the head of this article, the sons of Judge Oliver Peabody of Exeter, New Hampshire, were born at that place July 9, 1799. They were educated together at the celebrated academy under the charge of Dr. Abbot, entered Harvard College together at the early age of thirteen, and were graduated together in 1816. This close union of birth and education was accompanied by a similarity of outward form and inward temperament. Both were men of eminent natural endowment, of ripe scholarship, of gentle and affectionate tempers, and both eventually dedicated their lives to the same path of professional duty, thus laboring in spirit though not in actual bodily presence, side by side, and separated in death by but a brief interval from one another. At the outset of life, however, their courses were for a time separate, Oliver studying law, and William theology. Oliver, after passing some time in his father's office, completed his legal education at Cambridge, and returned to practise in his native town, where he resided for eleven years, serving for a portion of the time in the state legislature, and being also occupied at different periods as editor of the Rockingham Gazette and Exeter NewsLetter. In 1823, he delivered a poem before the Phi Beta Kappa Society at Harvard, and shortly after read a similar production at the celebration of the second centennial anniversary of the settlement of Portsmouth, New Hampshire. In 1830, Mr. Peabody removed to Boston, where he became the assistant of his brother-inlaw, the Hon. Alexander H. Everett, in the editorship of the North American Review. He was also for some years an assistant editor of the Boston Daily Advertiser. His connexion with the four periodicals we have named, was that of a contributor as well as a supervisor. The three journals contain many finished essays and choice poems from his pen, marked by a closeness of thought and elaborate execution, as well as a lively and humorous inspiration; while scarcely a number of the North American, during several years, was issued without one or more articles from his pen. In 1836, Mr. Peabody was appointed Register of Probate in Suffolk county, a laborious office, which he resigned in 1842 in consequence of impaired health, and his acceptance of the professorship of English Literature in Jefferson College, an institution supported by the state of Louisiana. Finding a southern climate unsuited to his constitution, he returned in the following year to the North. His views and tastes had been for some time turned in the direction of theology, and he now determined to enter the ministry. In 1845, he was licensed by the Boston Unitarian Association as a preacher, and in August of the same year became the minister of the Unitarian church of Burlington, Vermont, where the remainder of his life was passed in the di-charge (so far as his delicate health would permit) of his parochial duties. He died on the sixth of July, 1848. WILLIAM B. O. PEABODY, immediately after receiving his degree, entered upon a preparation for the ministry in the Divinity school of Cambridge; and was, soon after his ordination, called to the charge of the Unitarian church at Springfield. He entered upon his duties in this place in 1820, when not quite twenty-one years of age; and it was here that the whole of his ministerial life was passed. William B. Liabo 47 In addition to a conscientious discharge of the literary duties of his profession, Dr. Peabody of Springfield is said to have contributed a greater number of articles to the North American Review and Christian Examiner than any other person. He was also the author of several choice occasional poems published in the last named and other periodicals; and of the Report of the Ornithology of Massachusetts, prepared in fulfilment of his duties as one of the commission appointed for the scientific survey of the state. points of assimilation between himself and his Dr. Peabody's health, another of the many brother, was feeble. He suffered a severe deprivation in 1843 by the loss of his wife, and in the following year by that of a daughter, who in some measure supplied the place of the head of his household. Neither bodily nor mental sufferings were, however, permitted to interpose more than a temporary pause in his constant course of useful labor. He died, after a confinement to his bed of but a few days, May 28, 1847. A selection from Dr. Peabody's sermons was prepared for the press by his brother Oliver, who had nearly completed a memoir to accompany the volume, when his own life reached its termination. The work was completed by Everett Peabody, who, soon after its publication, prepared a selection from the contributions to the North American Review and poems of its author, MONADNOCK. Upon the far-off mountain's brow The angry storm has ceased to beat, I saw their dark and crowded bands But there, once more redeemed, he stands, And heaven's clear arch is o'er him bending. I've seen him when the rising sun Shone like a watch-fire on the height; I've seen him when the day was done, Bathed in the evening's crimson light; I've seen him in the midnight hour, When all the world beneath were sleeping, Like some lone sentry in his tower His patient watch in silence keeping. No sovereign but the King of kings: He rears in melancholy glory. With all its grandeur melt away, He welcomes not nor fears to-morrow. Perhaps, not far in future years, All time and chance and change defying, And on the inward strength relying. If life before my weary eye Grows fearful as the angry sea, With firm resolve and strong endeavor Till life's short warfare ends for ever. MAN GIVETH UP THE GHOST, AND WHERE IS HE? Where is he? Hark! his lonely home May fire the windows of his hall: Like weeping love remembering him. Where is he? Hark! the friend replies: "I watched beside his dying bed, And heard the low and struggling sighs That gave the living to the dead; I saw his weary eyelids close, And then-the ruin coldly cast, Where all the loving and beloved, Though sadly parted, meet at last." Where is he? Hark! the marble says, That "here the mourners laid his head; And here sometimes, in after-days, They came, and sorrowed for the dead: But one by one they passed away, And soon they left ine here alone To sink in unobserved decay. A nameless and neglected stone." Where is he? Hark! 'tis Heaven replies: "The star-beam of the purple sky, That looks beneath the evening's brow, Mild as some beaming angel's eye, As calm and clear it gazes down, Is shining from the place of rest, The pearl of his immortal crown, The heavenly radiance of the blest!" LUCIUS M. SARGENT. LUCIUS MANLIUS SARGENT was born at Boston June 25, 1786. He was the son of a leading merchant of that city, and in 1804 entered Harvard College. He was not graduated in course, but received an honorary degree of A.M. from the University in 1842. After leaving college he studied law in the office of Mr. Dexter. In 1813 he published Hubert and Ellen, with other Poems,* all of a pathetic and reflective character. Mr. Sargent married a sister of Horace Binney of Philadelphia, one of the most accomplished scholars in the country, by whom he had three children, the eldest of whom, Horace Binney, was graduated with distinction at Harvard in 1843. Some time after the death of this lady he again married. Mr. Sargent was an early advocate of the Temperance cause, and rendered important service to the movement by his public addresses and the composition of his Temperance Tales, a series of short popular stories, which have been extensively circulated in this country and reprinted in England, Scotland, Germany, and, it is to be hoped with good moral effect, in Botany Bay. During the editorship of the Boston Transcript by his relative Mr. Epes Sargent, he contributed a series of satirical and antiquarian sketches to its columns under the title of Dealings with the Dead by a Sexton of the Old School. His other writings for the press have been numerous, but almost entirely anonymous. Mr. Sargent makes a liberal use of a liberal fortune, possesses a fine library, and is a thorough scholar. WINTHROP SARGENT, a kinsman of Lucius M. Sargent and son of George W. Sargent, was born in Philadelphia, September 23, 1825. He is the author of an "Introductory Memoir" prefixed to the Journals of officers engaged in Braddock's Expedition, printed by the Pennsylvania Historical Society in 1855 from the original manuscripts in the British Museum. Under the modest title we have cited Mr. Sargent has not only given the most thorough history of Braddock and his expedition that has ever appeared, but furnished one of the best written and most valuable historical volumes of the country. In the prosecution of his task he has used extensive research, and has grouped his large mass of varied and in many cases original material with admirable literary skill. WILLIAM B. WALTER. WILLIAM B. WALTER was born at Boston, April 19, 1796, and was graduated at Bowdoin College in 1818. He studied divinity at Cambridge, but did not follow the profession. He published, in 1821, a small volume of Poems at Boston, with a dedication to the Rev. John Pierpont, in which he says "I cannot make the common, unprofit Hubert and Ellen, with other poems, The Trial of the Harp, Billowy Water, The Plunderer's Grave, The Tear Drop, The Billow. By Lucius M. Sargent. able, and to me exceedingly frivolous, apology— that these poems are the pleasant labors of idle or leisure hours. On the contrary, this volume, and I am proud to confess it, contains specimens of the precious and melancholy toil of years." The longest of these poems is entitled Romance. It opens with a picture of Palestine at the time of Our Saviour, from thence passes to the Crusades, and closes with reflections on nature, and on the vanity of human affairs. The remaining pieces, The Death Chamber, Mourner of the Last Hope, and others, are written in a strain of deep despondency. Walter published in the same year a rambling narrative and descriptive poem, with the title of Sukey, the idea of which was evidently derived from the then recently published "Fanny." The story is little more than a thread connecting various passages of description and reflection. Sukey is introduced to us at the dame's school; grows up under the peaceful influences of country life; and has a lover who goes to sea while Sukey departs in a stage sleigh for a winter's visit to the city. In due course of time Sukey becomes a belle, and figures at an evening party, which is minutely described, with its supper-table, jostling, and chit-chat about novels and poems, when suddenly "an Afric's form is seen," not one of the waiters, but a highly intelligent specimen of his race, who gives an animated and poetical description of a fight at sea with an Algerine pirate, whose vessel has just been brought into port by the victor, Sukey's lover. The poem extends to one hundred and seventyone six-line stanzas, and contains several melodious passages, many of which, however, are close imitations of Byron and Montgomery. The poem appeared in the same year with Fanny, and seems to have had a large circulation; the copy before us being printed at Baltimore, "from the second Boston edition," in a form similar to, and with the copyright notice of the original. Walter died at Charleston, South Carolina, April 23, 1822. Wrap our being here Which time and thought cannot number. In the dance along, Like a seraph of heaven in brightness. None could gaze on her eye of lustrous blue, And not feel his spirit heaving, When it flashed in love, Like a light from above, The azure cloud brightly leaving. And her cheek of snow was a cheek of health, To those who knew not her weakness, Till the hectic flush, Like the day's faint blush, Came o'er to disturb its meekness. When she shrunk away from her pride of form, Like a cloud in its loveliest shading, Like the death-toned lute, When winds are mute, Or the rose in the summer's fading. And the crowd did pass from the couch of woe; All had finished each mournful duty; And the garlands wove, By the hands of love, Hung around in a withering beauty. As they buried her deep- In the lone place-so dark and dreary. Oh, CHRIST! 'tis a strange and a fearful thought That beauty like her's should have perished; That the red lean worm Should prey on a form, Which a bosom of love might have cherished. Who shall madly believe That man may grieve O'er the page of eternity written! The Old Man rose, and he went his way,Oh, deep was his utterless mourning. But the woes of the night- Will dispel with the ray of its dawning. F. W. P. GREENWOOD. FRANCIS WILLIAM PITT GREENWOOD was born in Boston, in 1797. After completing his college course at Harvard in 1814, he studied theology at the same university, and commenced his career as a preacher with great popularity, as the pastor of the New South Church, Boston, but was obliged at the expiration of a year to visit Europe for the benefit of his health. After passing a winter in Devonshire, England, he returned to this country, and settled in Baltimore, where he became the editor of the Unitarian Miscellany. In 1824 he returned to Boston, and became associate minister of King's Chapel. In 1827, he |