On this page
-
Text (2)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
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.
-
-
Transcript
-
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.
Untitled Article
lines are continually occurring which , humour them as much as we may , will not and cannort be metrical . There is still the same iTidistinctiieas of metaphor , and the same redundancy of words . And , moreover ? L . J&X . ^ ay con ti iiue to be interpreted by Love , Everlasting Love . But it is , only justice to say that all her faults appear to be diminishing , and she displays a considerable increase of
poetic power . We have good hopes of her ; and the more so as the evident improvement in this volume shews that she has not been spoiled by the preposterous puffery of her patron of the Literary Gazette , Her path is open to the very highest rank among the poetesses of the day ; she has capabilities for its attainment ; and the truth and beauty of the following Hoes may almost be taken as a pledge that she will arrive at it .
** Out on our being ' s falsehood !—stu-* died , cold , Are we not like that actor o £ old time . Who wore his jnask so long , his features took its likeness ?—Thus we feign we do not feel , Until our feelings are forgotten things , iTheirnature warp'd in one base
selfishness ; And generous impulses , and lofty thoughts , Are counted folly , or are not believed : And he who doubts or mocks at excellence ( Good that refines our nature , and subdues ) , Is riveted to earth by sevenfold chains .
Of never had the poet's lute a hope , An aim so glorious as its present one , In this our social state , where petty cares And mercenary interests only look Upon the littleness of to-day , and shrink From the bold future , and the stately past * —«• Where the smooth surface of society Is polish'd by deceit , and the warm heart
With all its kiiid affections' early flow , Flung b $ ck upon itself , forgets to beat , At Jeaitf for others;—' tis the poet ' s " gift To melt these frozen waters into tears , By sympathy with sorrows not our own , By wakening memory with those mournful notes , Whose music is the thoughts of early
years , When truth was on tlie lip , and feelings wo ^ e The sweetness aud the freshness of their morn .
Untitled Article
Young poet , if thy dreams have not such hope ' '' ... " ' ¦ '* "" ¦ To purify , refine , exalt , snbdit f ^' To totfeh the selfish , arixt to shame the 11 > vatii ¦ ¦ , . ¦ ¦ '; :- - Out of themselves , by gentle mournfulness , Or chords that rouse some aim of
enterprise ,. Lofty aud pure , and meant for general go <« l > If thou hast not some power that may direct The niiod from the mean round of daily life , Waking affectious that might else have
slept , Or high resolves , that petrified before , Or rousing in that mind a finer sense Of inward and external loveliness , Making imagination serve as guide To all of heaven that yet remains on earth , — Thine is a useless late z break it , and die "
The London University Magazine * its origin , character , and resources , so far as they can be judged pf by . the . first number * may be described by the title of the first article in that nuuiber f ' * A Young Head , and , what is b $ tte * . sjitl , a Young Heart . " Indications of 1 p 0 i these Juvenilities areVyery abundant ^ But the
establishment of ^ a-perioaical is " xxo boy ' s play ; " and if not old , yet mature , heads and hearts must be admitted into alliance , and predominate in the manage wen I , to afford a fair prospect of success . Had that been the case , some mistakes in this number , especially that of the very absurd dedication to the King , would hardly have been
committed . Still , as a bona fide production of the students , it is creditable and promising . There is a judicious intermixture of scientific papers with those of a lighter description ; and , what ,. we were rather surprised to , see , after a disclaimer of religion as well as politics , there is an Essay " ou ~ a General Judgment , and on ihe Effects which a Belief therein produces on the Human Character . " The
object of this paper 19 to shew that the expectation of a future judgment is founded , exclusiveJy , upon divine revelation . One topic in it , that of the preponderance of pleasure over suffering in the present state of existence , is ingeniously and conclusively handled . B « t iu the pursuit of bis main object $ he writer seems to want a distinct notion of the difference between human and diviue
Untitled Article
Monthly Report 0 / Genera / Literftture . 793
Untitled Article
VOL . III . 3 I
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Nov. 2, 1829, page 793, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2578/page/49/
-