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BOOKS PUBLISHED THIS DAY.

Sir Henry Torrens. THE NEW MONTHLY MAGAZINE for

Sept. 1, is embellished with a fine Portrait, (ac. companied by a Memoir) of SIR HENRY TORRENS, and contains, among other interesting articles---1. Letters to Mr. Malthus on several subjects of Political Economy, and on the present causes of the stagnation of Commerce, by Mr. Say. 2. On the present state of Poriodical Literature. 8. Lamia and other Poems, by John Keates. 4. Reveries in a Garret, containing short and original Remarks on Men and Books, by Paul Ponder, Gent. 5. Anecdotes of George H. and the late Queen, by Mrs. Delaney. 6. On Angling, by an Amateur, Letters 5 and 6. 7. On the supposed habitations of Columbus, Petrarch, and Judas Iscariot, by Baron Zach. 8. Historical Anecdotes of the Japanese 9. Comparative Psycology. 10. On the Origin and Language of Ancient Rome, by M. Galiffe. 11. Memoir of Jammiamea, King of the Sandwich Islands, 12. On the Manners, Customs, and Character of the Corsicans. 13. Journal of a Voyage from Paris to St. Cloud, 14. The Book of Four Colours, by M. Bon Ton. 15. Intelligible Odes, Cheerful Elegies, Gay Sonnets, and Tales of no Wonder. 16. Fine Arts. 17. Dramatic Notices. Mr. Kean's re-appearance. 18. Varieties, Literary and Scientific. 19. Rural Economy. 20. New Publications, with Critical Remarks.. 21. New Inventions and Discoveries. 22. Reports, Literary, Agricultural, and Commercial. 23. Historical digest of Political Events. 24. Interesting Occurrences, Promotions, Births, Marriages, and Deaths; with Biographical particulars of the most celebrated Persone. Printed for Henry Colburn and Co. Conduit Street.

National Medals.

In 4to. with plates, 11. 11s. 6d.

AN HISTORICAL & CRITICAL ACCOUNT of a GRAND SERIES of NATIONAL MEDALS, published under the direction of JAMES MUDIE, Esq. Embellished with Outlines of the entire Series; and dedicated by permission to the King. London: Printed for Henry Colburn and Co. Conduit Street.

NOS. XVII. and XVIII. of the DELPHIN

CLASSICS; with Variorum Notes. Intitled the Regent's Edition. Edited and Printed by A. J. VALPY, late Fellow of Pem. Coll. Oxford.

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This is a very compact and useful edition of the Iliad, for the use of Schools. The force of the Particles, a distinguising beauty of the Grecian language, is well pointed out. It will be found, beyond all comparison, the best edition for the use of Schools, at present extant.-Antijacobin Review, Sept. 1819.

BOOK of GEOFFREY CRAYON, Gent. Printed for John Murray, Albemarle Street. Of whom may be had, a new Edition of the First Volume, 12s.

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MEMOIRS of the LIFE of ANDREW HO

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The 3d edition, enlarged, in 1 vol. 12mo. ptice 75. 6 plain, or 10s. 6d. coloured,

This is, perhaps, the most useful edition of the Monian bard, that has yet made its appearance. CONVERSATIONS ON BOTANY, with

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PARISHIONERS. With Morning and Evening Prayers. By R. VALPY, D.D. F.A. S. The Subjects treated in this Address are---Of God. The Son of God. The Holy Ghost. The Trinity. Read the Scriptures. Incarnation of Jesus Christ. Doctrines of Jesus Christ. Resurrection. Redemption. Justification. Faith. Works, Works without Faith. Faith without Works. Union

CONVERSATIONS on POLITICAL ECONOMY. Third edition, improved, in 1 large vol. 12mo. price 3s. boards.

THE LONDON MAGAZINE, No. 9, for September, published by Baldwin, Cradock and Joy, contains the following articles 1. Lions Castle Goblin. 3. Note from Mr. Bowles on Pope. 4. Head. 2. Old Stories, No. 1. The Lying Servant, The Table Talk, No. 11, on the Conversation of Authers. 5. Sbogar, the Dalmatian Brigand. 6. The Jewels of the Book, No. II. 7. Italy, Sonnet from Filicaia. 8. Stanza, by B. B. 9. German Descriptions of Hogarth's works, No. 1. Harlot's Progress, Plate I. gedy, introductory to remarks on Manzoni's Count cí Carmaglona. 11. Drab Bonnets. 12. Sketch of the Progress of Vocal Science in England, with Notices of the principal Performers and Composers. 13. Mr. Westhercock's Private Correspondence, intended for the Public Eye. 14. Sonnet to the author of Poems under the name of Barry Cornwall. 15. To R. S. Knowles, Esq. on his Virginius. 16. Visit to the Republic of San Marino in May 1820. 17. Critical Notices of New Books

10. On Italian Tra

1. Mrs. Graham's Residence near Rome; 2. Eltor's

Brothers, a Monody; 3. Keats's Volume of Poems. .

The Drama. 19. Report of Music. 20. Literary and Critical Scientific Intelligence. 21. Historical and Summary of Public Events. 22. Agricultural Report. 23. Commercial Report---also the usual Lists, Markets, &c. &c.

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August 30, 1820.

of Faith and Works. Merit and Reward. Humility. Influence of the Holy Spirit. Repentance. Regene. ration. Conversion. Delay of Conversion. Our Endeavours. Predestination. Free will. Prayer. Public Worship. Family Prayer. Sacrament. Forgiveness bugh. Veneration to the Name of God. Relative Duties. Exhortation to Picty. Prospect in Life. Use of Time. Death. Printed by A. J. Valpy; and sold by Longman and Co.; Whittakers; Rivingtons; London and all Booksellers. Of whom may also be had, by the same author,

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No. 190.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1820.

REVIEW OF NEW BOOKS. Recollections and Reflections, Personal and Political, as connected with Public Affairs during the Reign of George III. By John Nichols, Esq. London, 1820. 8vo. pp. 408.

This is one of those publications which may be expected when

-Old age looks out

deal, under the names of Back-stairs, and
Behind-the-throne authority.

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PRICE 8d.

his new purchase, he could not help exclaiming with the shepherd in Virgil's Eclogue,

"The Princess Dowager of Wales wished her son to be a king, such as she had been educated to believe a king ought to be; viz. 'Non equidem invideo, miror magis.' a king after the model of a Duke of Saxe "Soon after Mr. Edmund Burke became a Gotha; and this was the object of that les-political character, he, and his cousin Wilson which she was continually inculcating to liam Burke, embarked in a speculation in him, George, be King. But I do not see India Stock. They prevailed on many of any reason for believing that there was any their friends to join them, among others, on original intention of forming an interior Ca- Earl Verney, who fell a victim to this conbinet. I believe that the plan of the interior nexion. They used much solicitation with Cabinet grew out of circumstances which af- Sir Joshua Reynolds to join them, but he terwards arose. The first wish was, that was dissuaded from it by Anthony Chamier, the Earl of Bute should be advanced to be for which Anthony Chamier, as he told me Prime Minister; and while he was Minister, himself, was never forgiven by the Burkes. there was certainly no desire to form an in- This speculation was at first extremely sucterior Cabinet. Most probably the interior cessful, but at last it failed. William Burke, Cabinet arose on his retirement from office. and Lord Verney, were announced as the When the Earl of Bute was made Secretary defaulters; and Edward Burke's name was of State for the Northern Department, he concealed. William Burke was sent to Infound in that office Mr. Charles Jenkinson dia, and a situation at the Court of the Raa man of family, though in the inferior situ-jah of Tanjore obtained for him. Other adation of a volunteer clerk. The Earl of vantages in India were also obtained for this Bute discovered this gentleman's abilities; gentleman. and when he was made first Lord of the Treasury, removed Mr. Jenkinson with him to his new office, and made him Secretary of the Treasury. When the Earl of Bute resigned, Mr. Jenkinson was the channel through which confidential communications were conveyed from the King to the Princess Dowager and the Earl of Bute; and this was most probably the origin of the interior Cabinet."

We quote a passage relating to the celebrated Edmund Burke, whom Mr. N. seems to love but little.

And garrulous, recounts the feats of youth. The author is an ancient gentleman of seventy-six, resident at Thoulouse; his father was a physician at the court of George II. and, having himself sat in three Parliaments, he imagined that he had materials enow for a volume, to enlighten the present generation, respecting the doings of the last. His claim is, however, rather moderately supported; for though there will be found some intelligence, and some sound views, in his lucubrations, he broaches so many wild theories, repeats the same things so very often, contradicts himself so frequently, and is so lavish of imputations on every unfortunate individual honoured by his notice, that he presents us, upon the whole, but a crude inass of inconsistencies, and a sweeping libel | upon humanity. Not only every monarch and minister, but every man and woman, whom he recognizes, for three quarters of a century, appear in the vizards of rogues, or the caps of fools. There is nevertheless some curious information in these pages, and several facts (if they can be depended upon) of considerable importance. For example, it is asserted, by this zealous Foxite, that "At the time when Burke was selected to Mr. Pitt was unwillingly forced into the war be the private Secretary to the Marquis of against the French Revolution, by the great Rockingham, he was an author in the service Whig families, instigated by Burke ; and, in- of Mr. Dodsley, the bookseller; he had deed, very cogent reasons are given in cor- conducted for that gentleman the Annual roboration of this statement. But we will leave Register, a work of considerable reputation Mr. Nichols' political reflections on French, and merit, first established in the year 1758; Spanish, and American revolutions, on agri- and I believe that it was conducted under culture and commerce, on the Pope and par- the direction of Mr. Burke to a very late peties, on German Governments and Indian af- riod of his life. The political knowledge of fairs, to those who love that species of specula- Mr. Burke might be considered almost as an tion, contenting ourselves with extracting Encyclopædia: every man who approached half a dozen of his anecdotes, which possess him received instruction from his stores; the more agreeable property of being likely and his failings (for failings he had) were not to amuse our readers. We shall just pre-visible at that time; perhaps they did not mise, in order to mark our reprehension then exist; perhaps they grew up in the proof it, that the terms in which he speaks of gress of his political life. When Mr. Burke our late king, are very unbecoming, as well entered into the service of the Marquis of as foolishly at war with his own expressed Rockingham he was not rich, but the muniopinions. He seems also to attach more ficent generosity of that Nobleman immeconsequence to Burke than ever Burke in diately placed him in an affluent situation. reality possessed;-in short, his free language Mr. Burke purchased a beautiful villa, at is hardly one remove from the slander of the Beaconsfield, which was paid for by the dead, from the throne to the footstool. The Marquis of Rockingham. When Dr. Johnfollowing is his story of the origin of an in-son, who, like Mr. Burke, had subsisted by fluence of which we have all heard a great his labours as an author, visited his friend at VOL. IV.

"When the Coalition came into power, Mr. Burke saw that much strength might be acquired for his party, by the seizure of India patronage. With this view Charles Fox was employed to bring in the India Bill, generally known by the name of Fox's India Bill. But I am firmly persuaded that Mr. Fox had nothing to do with the formation of this Bill. It was prepared by Mr. Edinund Burke, whose only assistant in it was Mr. Pigot, afterwards Sir Arthur Pigot. Mr. Lee, at that time Attorney General, and Sir James Mansfield, at that time Solicitor General, both assured me, that they never saw the Bill, until it was printed for the use of the House of Commons. They doubted whether Charles Fox himself had seen the Bill, before the essential parts of it had been completely arranged by Mr. Burke. Lord North certainly did not see it until the Bill was completed; and when it was shown him, he said with his usual pleasantry and sagacity, that he thought it a good receipt to knock up an administration.""

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The subjoined is a pleasanter story, to account for Mr. Francis's hostility to Warren Hastings and his friends.

"Mr. Francis was a man of considerable abilities. He was a very superior classical scholar; and he was capable of laborious application. Strong resentment was a leading feature in his character. I have heard him avow this sentiment more openly and more explicitly than I ever heard any other man avow it in the whole course of my life. I have heard him say publicly in the House of Commons, Sir Elijah Impey is not fit to sit in judgment on any matter where I am interested, nor am I fit to sit in judgment on

"This is my opinion (no matter what it is about) while resident in France, on the 7th of March, 1820. In the town which I now inhabit, the house formerly occupied by the The following are also curiousInquisition has been purchased for the use "George II. had always publicly kept a of the Missionaries; and it is well known, mistress, most certainly with the know- that a body of men, under the name of sèerèts, ledge of the Queen; and it was generally are still kept in the same town and its neighbelieved that his mistresses were chosen by the bourhood. Probably they are not so numeQueen. I believe Mr. Walpole is right when rous as they were in 1815. They were then he says, that the Queen was the woman who uncontrollable. They openly murdered Gehad the strongest hold of his affections. Ineral Ramel, the Commander of the King's recollect a circumstance mentioned to me by forces in this town. I believe other Genemy father, which is a proof of this asser- rals in the service of Louis XVIII. experienc tion. The morning after the King's death, ed the same fate in other parts of France." my father and Sir Edward Wilmot, who were the only two King's physicans then in town, received an order to be present at the opening of the body, and to report their opinion as to the causes of his Majesty's death.

A paper of directions left by the King, as to the manner in which his body should be treated, &c., was produced; and in that paper he had directed, that the coffin should be so constructed, that one side of it might be drawn out. The coffin in which the body of Queen Caroline was placed had been constructed in a similar manner; and his Majesty directed, that one side of each coffin should be drawn out, so that the two bodies might be in one coffin. I believe these directions were very exactly observed.

We must recommend a good chapter on the decline of talent in our law-courts; it is the cleverest part of the work, and, we are sorry to say, much to the disadvantage both of the present bench and bar.

Portraits of Illustrious Personages of
Great Britain, with Biographical and
Historical Memoirs of their Lives and
Actions. By Edmund Lodge, Esq.,
Lancaster Herald, F. S. A. Medium
and Super-royal Folio. Parts 1 to 19.
London 1814 to 1820.

him.' A relation of the ground of this ill him to Paris, where he married her; and information which we may have omitted will may be amusing. Mrs. Le Grand, the thus the insult, which this lady received to lay before them. wife of a gentleman in the Civil Service in frou Mr. Francis, aud the loss of reputaBengal, was admired for her beauty, for the tion, which was, perhaps unjustly, the consweetness of her temper, and for her fasci-sequence of that insult, eventually elevated nating accomplishments. She attracted the her to the rank of Princess of Benevento. attention of Mr. Francis. This gentleman, by means of a rope-ladder, got into her apartment in the night. After he had remained there about three-quarters of an hour, there was an alarm; and Mr. Francis came down from the lady's apartment by the rope-ladder, at the foot of which he was seized by Mr. Le Grand's servants. An action was brought by Mr. Le Graud against Mr. Francis, in the Supreme Court of Justice in Calcutta. The judges in that court assess the damages in civil actions, without the intervention of a jury. The gentlemen who at that time filled this situation, were Sir Elijah Impey, Chief Justice, Sir Robert Chambers, and Mr. Justice Hyde. I was intimate with the first and the third from early life; having lived with them on the Western Circuit. On the trial of this cause, Sir Robert Chambers thought, that as no criminality had been proved, no damages should be given. But he afterwards proposed to give thirty thousand Rupees, which are worth about three thousand pounds sterling, Mr. Justice Hyde was for giving a hundred thousand rupees. I believe, that Mr. Justice Hyde was as upright a judge as ever sat on Since the illustrious portraits of Houany bench; but he had an implacable hatred braken, we are not aware of any similar to those, who indulged in the crime imputed "George II., while Electoral Prince of work of equal magnitude and importo Mr. Francis. Sir Elijah Impey was of Hanover, had served in the Duke of Marl-tance with the present; and excellent opinion, that although no criminal inter- borough's army, and had given distinguished course had been proved, yet that the wrong proofs of personal courage: but I believe as many of the heads in the former done by Mr. Francis to Mr. Le Grand in that this was the only military qualification magnificent publication were, there was entering his wife's apartment in the night, which he possessed. He had neither litera- an inequality in the general execution, and thereby destroying her reputation, ought ture nor taste, but a strong sense of decoto be compensated with liberal damages. rum. I will mention a little anecdote as a He thought the sum of thirty thousand ru- proof of this. The Duke of Richmond of pees, proposed by Sir Robert Chambers, that day was one of the King's chief compatoo small; and that proposed by Mr. Hyde, nions. A Doctor of Divinity of the Duke's of a hundred thousand, too large. He there- acquaintance, eminently learned, had acfore suggested a middle course, of fifty quired a knack of imitating the caterwawlthousand rupees. This proposal was acqui-ings of a cat. The Duke had no taste for esced in by his two colleagues. When Sir his friend's learning; but he took great pleaElijah Impey was delivering the judgment of sure in hearing him imitate the cat. He had the Court, my late friend, Mr. Justice Hyde, often talked to the King of this uncommon could not conceal his eager zeal on the sub-talent which his friend possessed, and had ject; and when Sir Elijah named the sum of fifty thousand rupees, Mr. Justice Hyde, to the amusement of the bystanders, called out, Siccas, brother Impey which are worth eleven per cent. more than the current rupees. Perhaps this story may not be thought worthy of relation but it gave occasion to that animosity, which Mr. Francis publicly avowed against Sir Elijah Impey; and the criminal charge afterwards brought against him in the House of Commons, was the off-dressed in canonicals. The King was so shock-specting the graphic merits of this

spring of that animosity. I will follow up this anecdote by mentioning the consequences of the action brought by Mr. Le Grand. The lady was divorced: she was obliged to throw herself under the protection of Mr. Francis for subsistence. After a short time she left him, and went to England. In London she fell into the company of M. Talleyrand Perigord. Captivated by her charms, he prevailed on her to accompany

pressed his Majesty to allow him to place
this gentleman behind his chair, one day at
dinnner, that he might himself judge of his
extraordinary power of imitation. The King
at last consented; and this learned man was
one day placed behind the King's chair, while
he was at dinner. The King was for some
time amused with his various imitations; he
at last turned round to see the gentleman,
when he received a bow from a gentleman full

which certainly does not exist to the detriment of this undertaking. The uniformity of style in the engravings before us, and the care and correctness observable in their finish, render them peculiarly worthy of public regard and of the attention of men of taste. The mode, a mixture of the chalk and line, excellent in itself for the purposes of characteristic expression in the countenances and perfect representation of costume and draperies, has been as judiciously employed as admirably performed; and the result is, the production of the most brilliant and striking effect, in clearness, tone, and depth of colour.

As however we shall have many occasions to introduce our opinions re

ed at the sight, that he could not refrain from superb collection, as we proceed with
saying to the Duke of Richmond, Do take those local details which it is our inten-
hiin away: I cannot bear buffoonery from a tion to submit to our readers, we shall
man in such a dress.' If this may not be now rather look to the grand outline
mentioned as a proof of the King's good taste, than to particular parts. After laying
it may at least serve to show that he had aa foundation of this kind, we shall find
strong sense of decorum."
much, both in the letter press and in the
plates, worthy of more particular notice.
The exhibition just closed at the British

We annex but one paragraph more; and, as it contains a reference to the author, our readers may apply to him (post-paid) for any

Gallery, has familiarized us with a considerable number of the paintings, whence Mr. Lodge has taken his copies; and it would bave been desirable to bring his volumes under review, at the period when the comparison between their ornaments and the originals might so readily have been institated. But besides that our weekly sheet was too limited to admit of two Essays of any length upon the Arts in the same numbers, (consistently with our plan of giving as much variety as we can to each,) we postponed our determination, in the hope that the last part (XX.) would have appeared, and put it in our power to take the complete scries into view at once.

These reasons for and against having respectively lost and gained force, we deem it advisable to delay our remarks on Mr. Lodge no longer; and the fresh recollection of the splended Exhibition to which we have alluded, and to which, we believe, this publication led the way, will materially assist and improve the spirit of our criticism.

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and is deserving of, public patronage for tus C, consisting of private letters, speeches
support; for the most valuable collec-in parliament, small treatises, prayers, de-
tions of pictures throughout the empire, tached maxims and observations, poems, &c.,
appear to have been visited; and thence, written at all times of his life, and here
the portraits of illustrious characters have transcribed, álmost wholly with his own
been selected, for the enrichment of this hand. “In the authorities which I have con-
gallery of British worthies.
sulted for the present purpose, (Mr. Lodge
tells us,) I find no notice taken of this very
curious collection, which, even from the
very cursory inspection which I have been
able to bestow on it, appears to contain
matters of inestimable importance to the
history of his time."

The bounds allotted for this design are 20 parts, each containing 6 portraite of distinguished individuals, of British birth, who died previous to the year 1700; and it is but justice to state, that all the impression which could be anticipated from an admirable union of literary biography and engraved portrait, has been achieved to the full extent of the author's promise. He has indeed acquitted himself most ably and satisfactorily in both branches; and we are sure it will be felt, that his exertions have raised a splendid monument to departed greatness—a tribute to the dead, a stimulus to the living, and an honour to the arts of England.

We have perused the biographies with as much interest as we have looked at the plates with admiration ; and we know not when we have experienced a stronger influence than their combination has exercised over our minds.

Part II, contains Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk, Walter Devereux, Earl of Essex, Thomas Howard, Earl of Suffolk, Sir Kenelm Digby, Queen Jane Seymour, and Cardinal Allen; the first two and the last painted by unknown artists, and the three others by Zucchero, Vandyke, and Holbein.

From this part we shall select only one passage, a letter of the Earl of Essex to the Lord Treasurer Burghley, previous to his setting out on his expedition to Ireland. It possesses considerable interest, and is a fair specimen of the manners at the Court of Elizabeth, as well as of the style of the times.

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"May it please your L.

Part I. which was published in April 1814, contains Sir Philip Sidney, (by Sir Yesterday I was at the Courte, and dyd Antonio More,) William first Lord Paget, take my leave of Her Matte. She hath signed (by Holbein,) Queen Catherine Par, (by the all my books, and I am departed from her same,) Henry Howard Earl of Northampton, Matie wt. verie good words, and promyse of (by Zucchero,) Thomas Radclyffe, 3d Earl her favour and furtherance of this enterof Sussex, (by Sir A. More,) and Sir prize. Uppon the taking of my leave, she Thomas Bodley, (by Cornelius Jansen). Of told me that she had two speciall things to these personages, the lives are generally too advise me of; the one, that I should have well known to sanction our devoting much consideracion of the Irishe there, whiche she space to extract; we shall therefore say thought had become her disobedient subnothing of the renowned Sidney, of the sixthjects, rather because they have not byn wife of the uxorious blue-beard Henry, of defended from the force of the Scotts then the able statesinan Radelyffe, or of the cele- for any other cause. Her Matie's opinion brated founder of the Bodleian Library. Nor was, that uppon my comyng, they wold yeld indeed shall we repeat more of the founder themselves good subjects, and therefore of the Uxbridge and Anglesey peerage, wyshed them to be well used. To this, my than that he was born in London in 1506, | L, I answered, that I determyned to deale where his father was Serjeant of Mace to the so with them, as I should fynd beste for her Corporation. The young William was no-service when I came there; and, for the ticed by Gardiner, Bishsop of Winchester, present, I could not saye what is beste to and by him educated and recommended to be done; but this her Matie shold be sure public employment, at a court where merit of; that I wold not imbrue my hands wh was more sure of advancement, than perhaps more blud then the necessitie of the cause it ever was at a court before, or has been requireth. The other speciall matter was, since. that I should not seeke tco hastily to bring people that hathe byn trayned in another religion from that wch they have been brought uppe in. To this, I answered, that, for the present, I thought it was best to lerne them to know their aliegence to her Matie, and to yeld her their due obedience; and after they had lerned that, they wold he easily brought to be of good religion. Muche more speches besids passed betweene her Matic and me, whiche were of no greate importance, and therefore I wryte them not to yo L.

The title of the work sufficiently indicates its plan; which is, to give an exact copy of the portraits of the most illustrious personages of British History, engraved with the strictest attention to excellence of execution and faithfulness of similitude, from the finest and most authentic pictures which are extant of them. To obtain this distinction, one course alone seems to have been adopted throughout; for, as portraits of the illustrious personages of our country, have in general descended with titles and estates to their posterity, and are consequently to be found principally in the galleries of the ancient nobility, or in the national collections; we find every portrait to have been executed from authorities of this nature, which are at once sources of the highest authenticity, and productions of the most exquisite art. Thus, we perceive portraits of the Howards, to have been contributed from the Norfolk Gallery; those of the Russels, by the Duke of Bedford; of the Hamiltons, whose loyalty so long upheld the royal cause in Scotland at the period of the Rebellion, from the palace of their noble descendants, at Hamilton; and of the historian of this turbulent period and companion in exile of our second Charles, from the collection of his descendant, the present The Earl of Northampton is vindicated by Earl of Clarendon. The episcopal palace at Mr. Lodge, from the charge of being privy Lambeth and the British Museumn, have con- to Sir Thomas Overbury's murder. He was tributed portraits of three of the most dis- the builder of Northampton House, Charing tinguished primates that ever upheld the Cross, afterwards Suffolk, and now NorthProtestant faith-Archbishops Warham,umberland House, where he died in 1563. Cranmer, and Laud. From Oxford we Among the writings of this acute man, find portraits of Thomas Bodley and of Cardinal Wolsey, engraved from the original pictures, which are preserved in the magnificent establishments of which they were the respective founders: in short, this work is a costly proof of the extent to which private enterprize may be carried in this country, when it depends upon,

We observe 23 of Lodge's portraits, are from pictures in this exhibition; and several of the same individuals, but from portraits by other hands.

besides those which he published, are "two
Treatises to justify Female Government;" the
one in the Harleian, the other in the Bod-
leian collection: "An abstract of the Frauds
of the Officers of the Navy," among the
King's MSS." "A defence of the French
Monsieur's desiring Queen Elizabeth in
Marriage," also in the Harleian; and some
devotional pieces in other departments of
the library of the Museum. But the great
treasure of his remains is a volume of
1,200 pages, in the Cotton MSS, marked Ti-

"I am, my L. dep'ted from the court, wh many good and fayre promises of diverse, but of the pformance of them I know what assurance I may make. I repose my onlie truste uppon your L. Your honourable dealing wt me, both in this, and at all times before, hathe byn suche as hath bound me

1573.

ever to be at your L'. commandement. And
so I rest, and humbly take my leave of yo'
L. From Duresme House, this xxth of Julie,
At your L'. commandement.
"W. Essex."
The Earl of Suffolk here is the discoverer
of the memorable gun-powder treason. His
portrait is remarkable for its small hat and
feathers, resembling the highland bonnet.
Cardinal Allen, was the zealous defender
of the Roman faith during the reign of
Elizabeth. About 1563, when driven out of
England in consequence of his writings and
success in converting proselytes, he went to
Douay, where, on an academy recently esta-
blished, he raised the college since so ce-
lebrated for the education of British Ro-
manists, and which subsisted till the French
Revolution dispersed its inmates, and con-
verted their academie retreat into a military
hospital. It is now, we believe, a manu-
factory.

[Sequent Parts in our following Nos.]

Prometheus Unbound; a Lyrical Drama, in four acts, with other Poems. By Percy Bysshe Shelley, London, 1820, 8vo, pp. 222.

These may seem harsh terms; but it | been simply to familiarise the highly refined is our bounden duty rather to stem such imagination of the more select classes of poa tide of literary folly and corruption, etical readers with beautiful idealisms of than to promote its flooding over the moral excellence"-such, to wit, as the preference of damnation with certain beings, to country. It is for the advantage of beatitude with others! sterling productions, to discountenance counterfeits; and moral feeling, as well as taste, inexorably condemns the stupid trash of this delirious dreamer. But, in justice to him, and to ourselves, we shall cite his performance.

But of this preface, more than enough:we turn to Prometheus Unbound; humbly conceiving that this punning title-page is the soothest in the book-as no one can ever think him worth binding.

rest

Ye icy Springs, stagnant with wrinkling frost,
Which vibrated to hear me: and then crept
Shuddering through India.
And ye, swift Whirlwinds, who, on poised wings
Hung mute and moveless o'er yon hushed abyss,
As thunder, louder than your own, made rock
The orbed world.

The dramatis impersona are Prometheus, Jupiter, Demogorgon, the Earth, the Ocean, There is a preface, nearly as mystical and Apollo, Mercury, Hercules, Asia, Panthea, mysterious as the drama, which states Mr. lone, the phantasm of Jupiter, the Spirit of Shelley's ideas in bad prose, and prepares us, the Earth, Spirits of the Hours, other Spirits by its unintelligibility, for the aggravated ab- of all sorts and sizes, Echoes, substantial and surdity which follows. Speaking of his obliga- spiritual, Fawns, Furies, Voices, and other tion to contemporary writings, he says, "It monstrous personifications. The plot is. is impossible that any one who inhabits the that Prometheus, after being three thousand same age, with such writers as those who years tormented by Jupiter, obtains the asstand in the foremost ranks of our own, can cendancy, and restores happiness to the conscientiously assure himself, that his lan-earth-redeunt Suturnia regna. We shall guage and tone of thought may not have not follow the long accounts of the hero's been modified by the study of the produc- tortures, nor the longer rhapsodies about tions of those extraordinary intellects." [Mr. the blissful effects of his restoration; but S. may rest assured, that neither his lan- produce a few of the brilliant emanations ef guage, nor tone of thought, is modified by the mind modified on the study of extraordithe study of productions of extraordinary in-nary intellects. The play opens with a tellects, in the age which he inhabits, or in speech of several pages, very argutely deliIt has been said, that none ought to any other.] He adds, "It is true, that, not vered by Signior Prometheus, from an icy attempt to criticise that which they do the spirit of their genius, but the forms in rock in the Indian Caucacus, to which he is not understand; and we beg to be con- which it has manifested itself, are due less" nailed" by chains of "burning cold." He sidered as the acknowledged transgres- to the peculiarities of their own minds, than invokes all the elements, seriatim, to inform sors of this rule, in the observations to the peculiarity of the moral and intellec-him what it was he originally said against which we venture to offer on Prome-tual condition of the minds among which Jupiter to provoke his ire; and, among the theus Unbound. After a very diligent of writers possess the form, whilst they want they have been produced. Thus, a number and careful perusal, reading many pas- the spirit of those whom, it is alledged, they sages over and over again, in the hopes imitate; because the former is the endowthat the reward of our perseverance ment of the age in which they live, and the would be to comprehend what the wri- latter must be the uncommunicated lightenter meant, we are compelled to confess, ing of their own mind." We have, upon hothat they remained to us inflexibly un-nour, quoted verbatim: and though we have tried to construe these two periods at intelligible, and are so to the present least seven times, we avow that we cannot the chief secret of Mr. Shelley's poetry; This first extract will let our readers into hour, when it is our duty to explain discern their drift. Neither can we col-which is merely opposition of words, phrases, them pro bono publico. This is a per-lect the import of the following general axi- and sentiments, so violent as to be utter nonplexing state for reviewers to be placed om, or paradox.-"As to imitation, poetry sense: ex. gr. the vibration of stagnant in; and all we can do is to extract is a mimetic art. It creates, but it creates springs, and their creeping shuddering;some of these refractory combinations of by combination and representation." What the swift moveless (i. e. motionless) whirlwords, the most of which are known to kind of creation the creation by representa- winds, on poised wings, which hung mute the English language, and submit them Shelley, no doubt, knows his own meaning; their own!! In the same strain, Prometheus, tion is, puzzles us grievously. But Mr. over a hushed abyss as thunder louder than to the ingenuity of our readers, especi- and, according to honest Sancho Panza, who ought to have been called Sphynx, when ally of such as are conversant with that is enough." In his next edition, answered in a whisper, says, those interesting compositions which therefore, we shall be glad of a more distinct Tis scarce like sound: it tingles thro' the frame grace certain periodicals, under the ti- definition than this- A poet is the combin-As lightning tingles, hovering ere it strike. tles of enigmas, rebuses, charades, and ed product of such internal powers as modify riddles. To them Mr. Shelley's poem influences as excite and sustain these the nature of others; and of such external may be what it is not to us (Davus sum powers; he is not one but both." We fear our non Edipus)-explicable; and their so- readers will imagine we are vulgarly quizlutions shall, as is usual, be thankfully zing; but we assure them, that these identireceived. To our apprehensions, Pro-cal words are to be found at page xiii. In metheus is little else but absolute rav- the next page, Mr. S. speaks more plainly of ing; and were we not assured to the himself; and plumply, though profanely, contrary, we should take it for granted damned with Plato and Lord Bacon, declares, "For my part, I had rather be When plague had fallen on man, and beast, and that the author was lunatic-as his prin- to heaven with Paley and Malthus."-Poor than go ciples are ludicrously wicked, and his man! how he moves concern and pity, to supoetry a inélange of nonsense, cockney-persede the feelings of contempt and disgust. ism, poverty, and pedantry. But such as he is, his "object has hitherto

Common bards would have thought the tingling was felt when it struck, and not before,-when it was hovering too, of all things for lightening to be guilty of! A melancholy voice" now enters into the dialogue, and turns out to be "the Earth." Melancholy Voice" tells a melancholy story, about the time

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worm

And Famine;

She also advises her son Prometheus t use a spell,—

So the revenge

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