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NEW-YEAR'S EVE. *
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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.
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THE MONTHLY REPOSITORY ANP REVIEW . NEW SERIES , No . XXV .
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JANUARY , 1829 .
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Although we cannot , in our critical conscience , assign Bernard Barton any very distinguished place among the bards of Britain , yet we can say of him , what we should not ventureto affirm of many bards , that his productions may be perused with pleasant , congenial , and improved feelings , by the rational and devout Christian , at those seasons which most dispose him to serious reflection . There are times when the good sense , good principle , and good feeling , which we are sure of findings in his Verses , make ample
amends for their lack of poetry , or rather for the inferiority of the kind of poetry to which they belong . And such a * time is New-Year's Eve , when , if we look at all into any book , save one , it should be just such a book as this , whose spirit is in perfect harmony with the sentiments we desire and ought to cherish . He has chosen his subject well ; and ministers like a faithful , gentle , and pious friend , at the bedside of the departing year . He breathes on its last moments a Christian benediction ; and , turning from the past to
futurity , he " engarlands the sepulchre of time" with the wreath of immortality . Next to that task which admits of no companionship ; that examination , reflection , and devotion , which every man should engage himself -4 ny during some portion of such days , and which must be done by himself in both senses of the phrase ; which must pass in the innermost sanctuary of his soul , its holy of holies ; next to this , in the catalogue of becoming occupations at such a time , is the adoption of meditations so appropriate and useful as those of our author . We shall select some of his stanzas as the
medium for a seasonable communion of thought with our readers ; merely premising that the Poem from which they are taken , and which furnishes a title to the volume , only fills its first 26 pages , the remainder being occupied with a variety of smaller pieces , many of which have appeared before in the Annuals and other periodical publications . They have the usual characteristics of the writer , and will be welcome to all who have derived pleasure from his previous performances . We have said enough to shew our accordance with the opening stanza :
" A New Years ' s eve ! Methinks 'tis good to sit ) At such an hour , in silence and alone , Tracing that record , by the pen unwrit , Which every human heart has of its own , Ofjpys and g riefs , of hopes and fears , unknown To all beside ; to let the spirit feel , In all its force , the deep and solemn tone Of Time ' s unflattering " , eloquent appeal , Which Truth to every breast would inwardly reveal . "
* A New-Year ' s Eve , and other Poems . By Bernard Barton . 8 vo . pp . 244 . * " 9 s .
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VOL . III . B
New-Year's Eve. *
NEW-YEAR ' S EVE . *
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Jan. 2, 1829, page unpag, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2568/page/1/
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