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in an ode lately submitted to our perusal by an ingenious and modest young man, in which, about half way

To stay thy car upon the Latmos hill,
Touch with a clouded hand thy look of light;
Nor elemental blight

Mar the rich beauties of thy hyacinthine hair.

down, he exclaims, as if prophetically, Queen of the tumbling floods! oh lend thine ear

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READER AWAKE!" There is much smartness in the idea of "two dead eternities." An eternity especially, past with whales, is enough to make the stoutest reader blubber. Do not let John Keates think we dislike him. He is a young man of some poetry; but at present he has not more than about a dozen admirers,-Mr Leigh Hunt whom he feeds on the oil-cakes of flattery till he becomes flatulent of praise,-Mr Benjamin Haydon, who used to laugh at him till that famous sonnet-three engrossing clerks -and six or seven medical students, who chaunt portions of Endymion as they walk the hospitals, because the author was once an apothecary. We alone like him and laugh at him. He is at present a very amiable, silly, lisping, and pragmatical young gentleman-but we hope to cure him of all that-and should have much pleasure in introducing him to our readers in a year or two speaking the language of this country, counting his fingers correctly, and condescending to a neckcloth.

Why should Leigh Hunt and John Keates have a higher opinion of themselves, than Barry Cornwall? One "dramatic scene"-even the very tamest and most imitative of them all is worth both "The two dead Eternities" of the Cockneys. We now charge Barry Cornwall, coram populo, with the following hymn to Diana. It is classical, without being pedantic.

HYMN TO DIANA.

Dian!-We seek thee in this tranquil hour;
We call thee by thy names of power;
Lucina first-(that tender name divine,

Which young and travail'd dames adore and fear;)
Child of the dark-brow'd Proserpine!
Star-crowned Dian! Daughter of Jove
Olympian! Mother of blind Love!
Fair Cynthia! Towered Cybele !
Lady of stainless chastity!

Bend low thy listening ear,

And smile upon us, now the long day's toil,
Beautiful queen! is done,

And from the withering sun

Save thou and bless the perch'd and fainting soil;
So may thy silver shafts ne'er miss their aim,
But strike the heart of every bounding fawn;
And not a nymph of thine e'er lose her fame
By loitering in the beechen glades;

Or standing, with her mantle haif undrawn,
Like hearkening Silence, near the skirting shades
Of forests, where the cloven satyrs lie
Sleeping with upward face, or piping musically.
Oh! smile upon us Dian! smile as thou

Art wont, 'tis said, at times to look upon

Thy own pale boy, Endymion,

When calm he slumbers on the mountain's brow: And may no doubt, not care,

When thou shalt wish, on nights serene and still

To us who seek and praise thee here-
-Fright not the Halcyon from her watery nest,
When on the scarcely-moving waves she sits
Listening-sore distrest

Lest that the winds, in sullen fits,

Should come, and lift the curling seas on high:-
-Yet, if the storm must come-then Dian! then
Scatter the billows from the Delphic shore,
And bid the monsters of the deep go roar
In those far foreign caves
Sicilian, where the ocean raves

For ever, (dug, 'tis said, by giant men
Beneath Pelorus' rugged promontory.)

on thy white altar we

Lavish in fond idolatry.

Herbs and sweet flowers such as the summer uses:
Some that in wheaten fields

Lift their red bells amidst the golden grain :-
Some that the moist earth yields,
Beneath the shadows of those pine trees high,
Which, branching, shield the far Thessalian

plains

From the fierce anger of Apollo's eye-
And some that Delphic swains

Pluck by the silver springs of Castaly-
[Yet, there thus it is said the wanton Muses,
Their dark and tangled locks adorning,
Lie stretch'd on green slopes 'neath the laurel
boughs,

Or weave sad garlands for their brows;
And tho' they shun thee thro' the livelong night,
Bend their blue eyes before the God of morning,
And hail with shouts his first return of light.-]
Now and for ever hail, great Dian !-Thou,

Before whose moony brow,

The rolling planets die, or lose their fires,
And all the bravery of Heaven retires-
-There, Saturn dimly turns within his ring,
And Jove looks pale upon his burning throne;
There, the great hunter-king

Orion, mourns with watery glare,
The tarnish'd lustre of his blazing zone-
Thou only through the blue and starry air,
In unabated beauty rid'st along,
Companion'd by our song-

Turn hither, then, thy clear and stedfast smile,
To grace our humble welcoming,
And free the poet's brain

From all but that so famous pain,
Which sometimes, at the still midnight,
Stirs his creative fancyings, while,
(Charm'd by thy silver light)

He strives, not vainly then, his sweetest song to sing.

It would greatly amuse us, to meet in company together Johnny Keates and Percy Bysshe Shelly,-and as they are both friends of Mr Leigh Hunt, we do not despair of witnessing the conjunction of these planets on Hampstead Hill, when we visit London in spring. A bird of paradise and a Friezeland fowl would not look more absurdly, on the same perch. Hear with what a deep voice of inspiration Shelly speaks.

MARIANNE'S DREAM.

A pale dream came to a Lady fair,
And said, a boon, a boon, I pray !

I know the secrets of the air,

And things are lost in the glare of day, Which I can make the sleeping see,

If they will put their trust in me.

And thou shalt know of things unknown,
If thou will let me rest between
The veiny lids, whose fringe is thrown
Over thine eyes so dark and sheen:
And half in hope, and half in fright,
The lady closed her eyes so bright.

At first, all deadly shapes were driven Tumultuously across her sleep,

And o'er the vast cope of bending heaven
All ghastly-visaged clouds did sweep;
And the Lady ever looked to spy
If the golden sun shone forth on high.
And as towards the east she turned,

She saw aloft in the morning air,
Which now with hues of sunrise burned,
A great black anchor rising there;
And wherever the lady turned her eyes.
It hung before her in the skies.

The sky was as blue as the summer sea,
The depths were cloudless over head,
The air was calm as it could be,

There was no sight or sound of dread,
But that black anchor floating still
Over the piny eastern hill.

The lady grew sick with a weight of fear,
To see that Anchor ever hanging,
And veiled her eyes; she then did hear
The sound as of a din low clanging,
And looked abroad if she might know
Was it aught else, or but the flow

Of the blood in her own veins to and fro.

There was a mist in the sunless air,

Which shook as it were with an earthquake's shock,

But the very weeds that blossomed there
Were moveless, and each mighty rock
Stood on its basis stedfastly;

The Anchor was seen no more on high.

But piled around, with summits hid
In lines of cloud at intervals,
Stood many a mountain pyramid,
Among whose everlasting walls
Two mighty cities shone, and ever
Thro' the red mist their domes did quiver.
On two dread mountains, from whose crest,
Might seem, the eagle, for her brood,
Would ne'er have hung her dizzy nest,
Those tower-encircled cities stood.
A vision strange such towers to see,
Sculptur'd and wrought so gorgeously,
Where human art could never be.

And columns framed of marble white,
And giant fanes dome over dome
Piled, and triumphant gates, all bright

With workmanship, which could not come
From touch of mortal instrument,
Shot o'er the vales, or lustre lent

From its own shapes magnificent.

But still the Lady heard that clang
Filling the wide air far away;
And still the mist whose light did hang
Among the mountains shook alway,
So that the Lady's heart beat fast
As half in joy, and half aghast,
On those high domes her look she cast.

Sudden from out that city sprung

A light that made the earth grow red; Two flames, that each with quivering tongue Lick'd its high domes, and over head Among those mighty towers and fanes Dropped fire, as a volcano rains Its sulphurous ruin on the plains.

And hark! a rush, as if the deep

Had burst its bonds; she looked behind
And saw over the western steep

A raging flood descend, and wind
Thro' that wide vale; she felt no fear,
But said within herself, 'tis clear
These towers are Nature's own, and she
To save them has sent forth the sea.

And now those raging billows came
Where that fair Lady sate, and she
Was borne towards the show'ring flame
By the wild waves heaped tumultuously,
And on a little plank, the flow
Of the whirlpool bore her to and fro.

The waves were fiercely vomited
From every tower and ev'ry dome,
And dreary light did widely shed

O'er that vast flood's suspended foam,
Beneath the smoke which hung its night
On the stained cope of heaven's light.

The plank whereon that Lady sate

Was driven thro' the chasms about and about,
Between the peaks so desolate

Of the drowning mountains in and out
As the thistle beard on a whirlwind sails
While the flood was filling those hollow vales.

At last her plank an eddy crost,

And bore her to the city's wall,

Which now the flood had reached almost;
It might the stoutest heart appal
To hear the fire roar and hiss
Thro' the domes of those mighty palaces.

The eddy whirl'd her round and round
Before a gorgeous gate, which stood
Piercing the cloud of smoke, which bound
Its aery arch with light like blood;
She look'd on that gate of marble clear
With wonder that extinguish'd fear.

For it was filled with sculptures rarest
Of forms most beautiful and strange,
Like nothing human, but the fairest

Of winged shapes, whose legions range
Throughout the sleep of those that are,
Like this same Lady, good and fair.

And as she looked, still lovelier grew
Those marble forms;-the sculptor sure
Was a strong spirit, and the hue

Of his own mind did there endure
After the touch, whose power had braided
Such grace, was in some sad change faded.

She looked, the flames were dim, the flood
Grew tranquil as a woodland river
Winding thro' hills in solitude;

Those marble shapes then seemed to quiver,
And their fair limbs to float in motion,
Like weeds unfolding in the ocean.

And their lips moved ;-one seemed to speak,
When suddenly the mountains crackt,
And thro' the chasm the flood did break
With an earth-uplifting cataract :
The statues gave a joyous scream,
And on its wings, the pale thin dream
Lifted the Lady from the stream.

The dizzy flight of that phantom pale,
Waked the fair Lady from her sleep.
And she arose, while from the veil

Of her dark eyes the dream did creep,
And she walked about as one who knew
That sleep has sights as clear and true
As any waking eyes can view.

So much for the " Literary PocketBook" 1819. The earth has performed its revolution round the sun, and that number is no more. What would we not give for a reading of Mr Leigh Hunt's Literary Pocket-Book for 1819! Could Messrs Olliers get together a few dozen from villatic and rural manuscribes, they would be very diverting. Put down our names, at random, for a dozen copies.

The 66

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Literary Pocket-Book" for 1820 is just published. The lists are pretty much the same as formerly— but we believe, both fuller and more correct. In place of the "Callendar of Nature, we have from the pen of Mr Hunt, a Callendar of Observers," or specimens of the greater or less enjoyment which people derive from the world they live in, according to the number and healthiness of their perceptions!" The Observers are six in number. The Mere LoungerThe Mere Man of Business-The Bi

got-The Mere Sportsman-TheMere Sedentary Liver, and the Observer of Nature. Mr Hunt tells us, with his usual cleverness, what each of these characters sees in each of the seasons.

SPRING.

Sees a

"The mere Lounger.-Sees his face in the glass, and yawns. Sees his tailor, who informs him that it is spring. Sees several persons, horses, and suits of clothes in Bond Street. Sees some pretty faces. great deal of green and white in the milliner's shops, and thinks the country must be getting pretty. Takes a ride round the Regent's Park, and sees Jones.

The Mere Man of Business.-Sees his clerks or apprentices up. Sees his customers come in all day. Sees their money. Sees faces occasionally go by. Sees shelves and bundles all about him. Sees his law. yer and broker. Sees dinner with brief transport, just time enough to get an indigestion. Sees to his accounts in the evening, and endeavours to think himself a happy man. Sees his goods adulterated. Goes to bed, and sees in his dreams a great pale multitude looking at him, whom he sets down for people he has cheated. Sees himself exposed, and wakes in a trepidation. N. B. It is the fumes of indigestion, which in these and other cases inspire a man's dreams with a certain Delphic hor

ror.

"The Bigot.-Sees the sunshine, and thinks how happy he and his friends will be in heaven exclusively. Sees a party going towards the country laughing, and gaily dressed. Sees in them only so many devoted victims to eternal fire; calls the world a vile world; and sees his debtor sent to prison. Sees the building of his chapel going on, and counts up his profits, monied and eternal. Sees his servant bringing in a green goose for dinner; and says, with an air of delighted regret, that he fears his friend the gun-maker is too late.

"The Mere Sportsman-Sees a fox. Sees him several times over. Sees a girl's complexion and ancles. Sees his friends all drunk after dinner.

"The Mere Sedentary Liver.-Sees his tongue in the glass. Sees the fine weather, and calls to mind all that the poets have said about it. Takes his first walk this year, and sees numberless things, but all discoloured and half pleasant. Goes home and sees with delight a new packet of books. Reads an account of a man who saw a spectre, and almost sees it himself. Goes to bed, and sees in his sleep a vision shockingly mixed up of oddity and horror. "The observer of Nature.-Sees the first fine spring day and leaps up with transport. Sees a world full of beauty and pleasure even in towns. Sees the young and fair abroad, and sees their lovely countenances and minds. Sees the white pigeons careering round the steeple, the horses issuing

forth with new strength and sprightliness, the dog scampering about his master in hopes he is going towards the fields, and hyacinths, narcissuses, and violets in the green markets: and seeing these, he cannot but hasten the faster to see the country. Instead of reading his book at home, he takes it with him, and sees what the poets describe.

He sees the returning blue of the sky, the birds all in motion, the glancing showers, the after-laughing sun, the maiden blossoms in the gardens, the thickening leafiness of the hedges, the perfect young green of the meadows, the bustling farm-yards, the far prospects, the near and odorous bowers, the bee bounding forth with his deep song through the lightsome atmosphere, the kids leaping, the cattle placidly grazing, the rainbow spanning the hills in its beauty and power, the showers again, the blue sky again, the sun triumphing over the moisture like bright eyes above dewy lips, the perfumed evening, the gentle and the virgin moon. Going home, he sees every thing again with the united transport of health and imagination, and in his dreams sees his friend and his mistress as happy as himself.

SUMMER.

"The Mere Lounger.-Goes into the coun try to see Jones. Sees Jones. Sees some horses. Sees little else in the country but the absence of town. Is shown a prospect, and sees in it a considerable resemblance to a scene at the Opera. Sees a storm, and hopes it won't rain next Wednesday.

The Mere Man of Business.-Is sorry to see the town so empty. Sees some flowers at the door, but declines buying any, because he will not give the price asked by a half-penny. Sees some new dishes on his table at dinner, and has a remote notion that he enjoys himself. Feels himself half stifled with the weather, the dust, the close shop, and repletion; and sees the pavement before his door watered with a tin canister, in liquid lines of refreshment a quill thick.

"The Bigot.-Sees the beauty of the country, but thinks it wrong to be moved by earth. ly delights, and hastens home to his roast pig. Sees nothing in the world after dinner but a fleeting shew. Finds it very hot; sees a fiery kind of horrid look in the sunshine; and is not quite easy in thinking that ninety-nine hundredths of his fellow creatures are to be burnt for ever; thinks it impious however to suppose his Maker too kind to suffer it, and comforts himself with callousness.

"The Mere Sportsman.-Sees a hare, Sees a friend in a ditch. Does not see him

out.

Sees, in a transport of rage, the hounds at fault. Goes to angle, to settle his spirits; and with considerable relief, sees several fish drawn gasping out of the water with a hook in their jaws, and a salmon crimped alive.

"The Mere Sedentary Liver.-Sees with delight the flowers in his window, and vows

every day that he will go out the next.
Sees with an exclamation of regret, while
he is yet reading, the servant come in
Sees
every day to say dinner is ready.
motes before his eyes. Sees himself, with
great disgust, getting corpulent, which is
very unlike the Greek forms, or the ad-

mirable Crichton. Sees his friend sick in
bed with staying at home, and wonders how
any body can do so. Rouses up the bad

humours in his blood with one walk instead

of twenty, and sees it is hopeless to struggle with his disorder. Sees more beauties than ever in his authors, but a great falling off in

the world he so admired when a lad.

"The Observer of Nature.-Sees the early sun striking magnificently into the warm mists in the streets, as if it measured them with its mighty rule. Sees other effects of this kind, worthy of the pencil of Canaletto. Sees a thousand shapes and colours of beauty as the day advances. Sees the full multitude of summer flowers, with all their gorgeous hues of scarlet, purple, and gold; roses, carnations, and amaranths, wall

flowers, lupins, larkspurs, campanulas, golden-rods, orchis, nasturtiums, &c. &c. and the Martagon lily, or Greek hyacinth. And then he sees the world with a Greek sight, as well as his own, and enjoys his books over again. And then he sees the world in a philosophic light, and then again in a purely imaginative one, and then in one purely simple and childlike; and every way in which he turns the face of nature, he finds some new charm of feature or expression, something wonderful to admire, something affectionate to love. Sees or fancies in some green and watery spot, the white sheep-shearing. Sees the odorous haymaking. Sees the landscape with a more intent perfectness from the silence of the birds. Sees the insects at their tangled and dizzy play; and fancies, what he well knows, how beautiful they must

look, some with their painted or transparent wings, others with their little trumpets and airy-nodding plumes. Sees the shady richness of the trees; the swallows darting about like winged thoughts; the cattle standing with cool feet in the water; the young bathers trailing themselves along the streams, or flitting about the sward amidst the breathing air. Sees the silver clouds which seem to look out their way, far through the sky. Sees the bees at work in their hurrying communities, or wandering ones rushing into the honied arms of the flowers. Sees the storm coming up in its awful beauty, to refresh the world; the angel-like leaps of the fiery lightning; and the gentle and full rain following the thunder, like love ushered by mightiness.

Divine Nature! And thou, when the touch of sympathy has made thee wise, diviner human nature! how is he stricken dumb who would attempt to record the smallest part of the innumerable joys of VOL. VI.

your intercourse! He becomes as mute as your own delight, when mind" hangs enamoured" over beauty.

There can be no doubt that this is

very lively, but is the classification a
good one? Surely not. Nobody wishes
to be told what a mere Lounger does
with himself, according to the sea-
sons. Neither do mere Loungers form
a class. Their number must be incre-
dibly small. But whether small or great,
they are totally and universally unin-
teresting; and it is somewhat too
with one from one year's end to the
much to carry their character about
other. The mere Man of Business is
still worse. Why obtrude upon our
attention, every day in the year, a
dull, gross, greedy knave, who adul-
terates his goods, and would rejoice to
become a fraudulent bankrupt? These
are not fitting contemplations for a
gentleman's Literary Pocket-Book ei-
ther during hot or cold weather. The
We all
Bigot is worse and worse.
know what Mr Hunt means by bigot❤
ry, and what a very sweeping epithet
it is in his hands. The picture he
draws is shocking and unnatural. The
mere Sedentary Liver is something
better-but he is far too much of a
ninny-and we are hurt by finding
him alive all the year through. He
should have died in autumn at the
very latest, of jaundice, indigestion,
the liver complaint, and the physician.
The Observer of Nature alone, with
all his conceit, deserves to live through
the year 1820-but let him look to
his flannel waistcoats, and beware of
sitting in wet shoes. Mr Hunt (for
he draws from himself here) is an
adventurous man, and thinks nothing
of walking from Catharine Street to
Hampstead in mist or sleet, in magna-
nimous contempt of hackney-coaches.
It will be a pretty story indeed if
Johnny Keates have to write the Cal-
endar of Observers for 1821, and if
Leigh Hunt's name be transferred
from the list of living authors to that
of "Eminent Persons in Letters,
Philosophy, and the Arts, whose great
original genius, individual character, or
reputation with posterity, has had an
influence in modifying the taste and
opinions of the world." By the way
why did not Mr Hunt include our
name in the list of living authors.
We find there "Hunt, Leigh, Poetr
Criticism, Politics, and Miscellanic
Now, why not also " North, Chris

H

pher, Poetry, Politics, Metaphysics, Mathematics, Criticism, Travels, Bon Mots, and Cookery." We expect to see this in the Literary Pocket-Book for 1821, and thenceforth evermore. But we had almost forgotten Mr Hunt's account of the mere Sportsman. It is plain that he knows nothing of Nimrod. A tallyho would break the tympanum of his ear. Were we to imagine one thing more ridiculous than all the other ridiculous things in this world, it would be the Examiner a steeple-hunting. John Gilpin must have looked a Castor in comparison with the author of Rimini. Pray, who ever heard of following a pack of hounds in Summer? Mr Leigh Hunt might as well go a butterfly-hunting in the dead of winter. For shame, ye Cockneys! to pursue, unto the death, poor puss and her infant family during the dog-days. And is it, indeed, customary, as Mr Leigh Hunt asserts in this his Literary Pocket-Book, for Cockney sportsmen "to fly into a transport of rage" when the hounds are at fault? a mere sportsman is the last man in the world to do that-he-but now he is "a pike in a doublet.” is quite cool on such occasions, and uses the whip with alacrity but discrimination. Then, ye gentlemen of England, what think you of angling for salmon in the middle of summer, on a sultry afternoon, by way of refreshing yourselves after harriers? and what think ye of crimping on the spot the salmon you thus miraculously ensnare? Oh! Leigh, Leigh, thy lips utter a vain thing, and thy heart conceiveth foolishness! You and other literary men-poets, critics, and politicians it is who are, in verity, the crimpers of salmon. The mere sportsman does none of these things. He despiseth the fish, and eateth him not. Thou art the crimper. You say that angling is not a manly amusement. Why, there is no virility in sitting in a punt, with your head bobbing over the side, and your nose in the water, laying plots against perches, and revelling in the massacre of minnows. Angling is but a sorry pastime in the New River. But come down to Scotland next autumn, when we pitch our tent on Loch Awe side, and you will then know whether or not angling be a manly amusement. We will put a twenty-foot-rod into your hand, with fifty fathom of line, and a reel as large as a five gallon cask.

We will hook a fish for you-and back him for his life against the Examiner. It is four miles from Loch Awe to the Salt Sea of Loch Ericht.The banks of the river Awe are pretty precipitous-and ere you, Mr Leigh Hunt, have been dancing five minutes over the crags, you will have bitter occasion for all your virility, and devoutly wish that the salmon were crimped, so that he were but off the end of your line. What do you think of swimming arms of lakes-and fording foamy torrents neck high-and crossing wide moors up to the middle in heather-and scaling mountains girdled with granite-and driving your solitary way through blind mists, or roaring blasts, or rain deluges—of returning at midnight to a sheeling on the hill laden with spoil, and bowed down with the weary weight of many savage and dreary leagues? This is the nature of Scottish angling-indeed, of all angling that deserves the name. As to old Isaac Walton, honest man, he used to be a most particular favourite with Mr Leigh Hunt

.

The secret cause of all this raving against angling and anglers is, that we are anglers. Several admirable angling articles have appeared in this Magazine, and, therefore, Mr Leigh Hunt cannot endure angling. This is quite pitiful. But it is true.

Enough of Mr Hunt for the present, so let us turn to "Walks round London, No I." a very easy, graceful, and amiable little composition, which could almost suspect to be from the pen of Mr Cornwall.

we

WALKS ROUND LONDON.
NO. I.

"If we were to judge by the number of handsome country residences, which, within a few years, have risen like exhalations" on the different roads, the south side of London would be pronounced the favourite quarter for the citizens to retire to. But here, as in many other matters of taste, they do not seem to have chosen the better part." On the north of the great city, and at no greater distance, there are more situations which partake of the true country aspect. A few at random may be mentioned and let a "Suthron" match them if he can. The

road from Hampstead to Hendon ; the rural district all round the feet of Hampstead and Highgate; the neighbourhood of Hornsey, Muswell-hill, Crouch-end, Colney-hatch, Southgate ;-the region about Walthamstow, Wanstead, Highbeach, and Seward

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