Class Book I m COPYRIGHT DEPOSIT? No. 130. MAYNARD'S English • Classic • Series * — =tfy — ' l— l-l-l_l_l_i^i_,_i^rr^r ^— % AH JSSAY LORD BYRON Lord Macaulay. ■ — ■ — ■ — ■ — j — ■ — ■ — ■- -i — ■ — i — ■ NEW YORK Maynard, Merrill <5c Co. 43,45 e /oHomwh; PZ ai/S , cac /i in one volume, are noiv ready ; Merchant of Ven.ce. King Henry V. *- %#- - Julius Caesar. Macbeth. Tempest. Hamlet. King Lear. Othello. As You Like It. King Richard Hi. A Midsummer-Night's Dream. A Winter s Tale. King Henry IV., Part King Henry VIII. | Twelfth Night Conolanus. Mailing price, 30 cents per copy. Special frfe. to Teacher,. Historical Classic Readings. TI ith Introductions aiid Explanatory Notes. For Classes in History, Beading, and Literature. The following numbers, uniform in style and size, are now ready • ..Discovery of America. Washinoton , sissippi Va *y. Jo,v G™ ■- 6. Chamrtpin and his Associates. V ' a CMAN. "' 7. BradSocks Defeat. Francis Park 2. Settlement of Virginia. Capt. John t>MITH. 3. History of Plymouth Plantation. Gov. \\ h.liam Bradford. 4. K.ng Philip's War, and Witchcraft in New England. Gov. Thomas HCTCHINSON. 5. Discovery and Exploration of the Mis- AN. Defeat. Francis R 8. First Battles of the Revolution. Ed pp. 9. Co !oni» Pioneers James Parton. 1^ s Revolution. James Special Prices to Teachers. Other Xumbers in Preparation. Full Descriptive Catalogue sent on application. i ENGLISH CLASSIC SERIES.— No. 120. LORD BYRON. AN ESSAY. Thomas Bablngton Macaulay. Witi) aStoarapfjtcal Sfcctdjes of Bwrou auto iHacaulaw, References, antr 2£rjjlanatori? Notes. gOf> SELECTED. P ■ XT' YORK: Iard, Mi ri:ill, & Co., Publishers, 43, 45 and I? East Tenth Street. r_ . Ni-w Series, No. 95. November 28, 1892. Published Semi weekly. Subscription Price $10. Eniere.l at Post Office, New York, as Second class Matter. H A Complete Course in the Study of English. Spelling, Language, Grammar, Composition, Literature. Reed's Word Lessons A Complete Speller. Reed's Introductory Language Work. Reed & Kellogcs Graded Lessons in English. Reed & Kellogcs Higher Lessons in English. Reed & Kellogcs One-Book Course in English. Kellogg'S Text-Book on Rhetoric. Kellogcs Text-Book on English Literature. In the preparation of this series the authors have had one object clearly in view — to so develop the study of the English language as to present a complete, progressive course, from the Spelling-Book to the study of English Literature. The troublesome contradictions which arise in using books arranged by different authors on these subjects, and which require much time for explanation in the school- room, will be avoided by the use of the above "Complete Course." Teachers are earnestly invited to examine these books. MAYNARD, MERRILL & Co., Publishers, 43, 45 and 47 East Tenth St., New York Copyright, 1893. By MAYNARD, MERRILL & CO. Lite of Macattlat. Thomas Babtngton Macaulay, whose father was Zacliary Macaulay — famous for his advocacy of the abolition of slavery, was born at Rothley Temple, in Leicestershire, towards the end of 1800. From his infancy he showed a precocity that was simply extraordinary. He not only acquired knowledge rapidly, but he possessed a marvelous power of working it up into literary form, and his facile pen produced compositions in prose and in verse, histories, odes, and hymns. From the time that he was three years old b.3 read incessantly, for the most part lying on the rug before the fire with his book on the ground, and a piece of bread and butter in his hand. It is told of him that when a boy of four, and on a visit with his father, he was unfortunate enough to have a cup of hot coffee overturned on his legs, and when his hostess, in her sympathetic kindness, asked shortly after how he was feel- ing, he looked up in her face and said, " Thank you, madam, the agony is abated." At seven he. wrote a compendium of Universal History. At eight he was so fired with the Lay and with Mar- mion that he wrote three cantos of a poem in imitation of Scott's manner, and called it the "Battle of Cheviot." And he had many other literary projects, in all of which he showed perfect correct- ness both in grammar and in spelling, made his meaning uniformly clear, and was scrupulously accurate in his punctuation. With all this cleverness he was not conceited. His parents, and particularly his mother, were most judicious in their treatment. They never encouraged him to display his powers of conversa- tion, and they abstained from every kind of remark that might help him to think himself different from other boys. One result was that throughout his life he was free from literary vanity ; another was that he habitually overestimated the knowledge of others. When he said in his essays that every schoolboy knew a 4 J, IKK OF MACAULAY. this and that fact in history, he was judging their information by his own vast intellectual stores. § At the age of twelve, Macaulay was sent to a private school in the neighborhood of Cambridge. There he laid the foundation of his future scholarship, and though fully occupied with his school work-chiefly Latin, Greek, and mathematics-he found time to gratify his insatiable thirst for general literature. He read at ran- dom and without restraint, but with an apparent partiality for the lighter and more attractive books. Poetry and prose fiction re- nTained throughout his life his favorite reading. On subjects of this nature he displayed a most unerring memory, as well as the capacity for taking in at a glance the contents of a printed page. Whatever caught his fancy he remembered, as well as though he had consciously got it by heart. He once said, that if all the cop- ies of Paradise Lost and the Pilgrim's Progress were to be de- stroyed, he would from memory alone undertake to reproduce both. . In 1818 Macaulay went from school to the university— to trin- ity College, Cambridge. But here the studies were not to his mind He had no liking for mathematics, and was nowhere as a mathematical student. His inclination was wholly for literature, and he gained various high distinctions in that department. It was unfortunate for him that he had no severe discipline in scien- tific method; to his disproportionate partiality for the lighter sides of literature must be attributed his want of philosophic grasp, his dislike to arduous speculations, and his want of cour- age in facing intellectual problems. "The private life of Cambridge had a much greater influence on him than the recognized studies of the place. He made many friends. His social qualities and his conversational powers were widely exercised and largely developed. He became too, a brill- iant member of the Union Debating Society, and here politics claimed his attention. Altogether he gave himself more to the enjoyment of all that was stirring around him than to the taking of university honors. In 1824, however, he was elected a Fel ow, and began to take pupils. Further, he sought a wider field for his literarY labors, and contributed papers to some of the maga- LIFE OF MACAULAY. O zines — mostly to Knight's Quarterly Magazine. Chief among these contributions are " Iviy," and " Naseby" in spirited verse, and the conversation between Cowley and Milton, in as splendid prose. When Macaulay went to Cambridge, his father seemed in afflu- ent circumstances, but the slave-trade agitation engrossed his time a«nd his energy, and by and by there came on the family commer- cial ruin. This was a blow to the eldest son, but he bore up bravely, brought sunshine and happiness into the depressed household, and proceeded to retrieve their position with stern fortitude. He ultimately paid off his father's debts. Though called to the bar in 1826, he did not take kindly to the law, and soon renounced it for an employment more congenial — literature. Already in 1824 he had been invited to write for the Edinburgh Review, and in August, 1825, appeared in that maga- zine his article on Milton, which created a sensation, and made the critics aware of the advent of a new literary power. This first success he followed up rapidly, and besides giving new life to the periodical, he soon gained for himself a name of note. In 1828 he was made a Commissioner of Bankruptcy, and in 1830 was elected M.P. for Calne. In the Reformed Parliament he sat for Leeds. He entered Parliament at an opportune period, and was in the thick of the great Reform conflict. His speeches on the Reform Bill raised him to the first rank as an orator, and gained for him official posts. It was while burdened with these severe public labors that he wrote thirteen (from Montgomery to Pitt) of the Edinburgh Review Essays. Thus he went on for four years, but the narrow circumstances of his family induced him to accept the lucrative post of legal adviser to the Supreme Council of India. This necessitated his going to India, which was clearly adverse to his prospects at home ; yet the certainty of returning with £20,- 000 saved from his large salary was sufficient inducement to make the sacrifice, and he sailed February 15, 1834. In India he maintained his reputation as a hard worker. Be- sides his official duties as a Member of Council, he undertook the additional burden of acting as chairman in two important com- mittees, and it is in connection with one of these — the committee (J UFE OF MACAULAY. appointed to draw up the new codes— that he has his chief title to fame as an Indian statesmen. The New Penal Code was in great part his work, and proves his wide acquaintance with English Criminal Law. He also took great part in the work of the Com- mittee of Public Instruction, and was chiefly instrumental in in- troducing English studies among the native population. But he was not popular in Calcutta. Certain changes he helped to intro- duce roused the feeling of the English residents against him, and he was attacked in the most scurrilous way. In 1838 he was back in England. Meanwhile he had written two more essays for the Edinburgh, one on Mackintosh and one on Bacon, and he was hardly home when there appeared another, that on Sir W. Temple. After spending the winter in Italy, he reviewed in 1839 Mr. Gladstone's book on Church and State, and might have settled down to purely literary life, but once more he was drawn into politics. Elected as Member for Edinburgh, he was soon admitted into the Cabinet as Secretary-at-War to the Whig Ministry of Lord Melbourne. The position, however, was no gain to Macaulay. He purposed to write "A History of Eng- land, from the accession of King James II., down to a time which is within the memory of men still living," and his official duties forced him to lay this project aside for the present. Fortunately Lord Melbourne's ministry did not last long ; it fell in 1841, and Macaulay was released from office. Still retaining his seat for Edinburgh, and speaking occasionally in the House- lie was free to follow his natural bent. His leisure hours were given as usual to essay-work for the Edinburgh, and he wrote in succession Clive, Hastings, Frederick the Great, Addison, Chatham, etc. But in 1844 his connection with the Bemew came to an end, and he wrote no more for the Blue and Yellow, as it was called. In 1841 he had put forth a volume of poems-the Lays of Ancient Rome-not without mis- givings as to the result. But the fresh and vigorous language at once carried the volume into popularity, and it had an enormous sale. On a change of government in 1846, Macaulay, at the request of Lord John Russell, again became a Cabinet Minister, this time LIFE OF MACAULAT. 7 as Paymaster-General of the Army, and ha\ ing to seek re-election from his constituents, went down to Scotland for the purpose. After a severe contest, and notwithstanding a growing unpopu- larity, he was successful. But at the general election of the fol- lowing year the forces in opposition to him redoubled their en= ergy, and he was defeated. This was the real end of his political life. Although pressed to contest other seats, he resolutely declined, and for the next few years worked ' doggedly ' at his History. In 1848 appeared the first two volumes, which had an immense success, 13,000 copies being sold in less than four months. The same year he was elected Lord Rector of Glasgow University. By 1852 the people of Edinburgh had repented the rejection of their famous Member, and took steps to re-elect him free of expense ; and so thoroughly was the scheme carried out that Macaulay, without having made a single speech, and without having visited the city, was returned triumphantly at the top of the poll. Through the length and breadth of the land the news was hailed with satisfac- tion, as an act of justice for an undeserved slight in the past. The result was very flattering to Macaulay, but he never really re- turned to political life as in his younger days. Moreover, forty years of incessant intellectual labors had begun to undermine his health, and he was now unequal to the fatigues that formerly were a pleasure to him. Accordingly in 1856, after having brought out the third and fourth volumes of his history, of which in a few months 25,000 copies were sold, he resigned his seat, and yield- ing too late obedience to all interested in his welfare, gave him- self up to the enjoyment of that ease which he had faithfully earned. Then in 1857 he was created a Peer — Baron Macaulay of Rothley, his birthplace. Still struggling on with his History in the intermissions of his malady, he died suddenly on December 28, 1859. He was only fifty-nine — the victim of an appetite for work, insatiable and unfortunately too long ungoverned. EXTRACTS FROM MOORE'S "LIFE AND LETTERS OF LORD BYRON." It has been said of Lord Byron, that " he was prouder of being a descendant of. those Byrons of Normandy, who accompanied William the Conqueror into England, than of having been the author of Childe Harold and Manfred." Its antiquity was not the only distinction by which the name of Byron came recommended to its inheritor. Of the better-known exploits of the family, it is sufficient, per- haps, to say, that at the siege of Calais, under Edward III., and on the fields of Cressy, Bosworth, and Marston Moor, the name of the Byrons reaped honors both of rank and fame. Lord Byron combined in his own nature some of the best and, perhaps, worst qualities that lie scattered through the various characters of his predecessors,— the generosity, the love of enter- prise, the highmindedness of some of the better spirits of his race, with the irregular passions, the eccentricity, and daring recklessness of the world's opinion, that so much characterized others. That, as a child, the boy's temper was violent, or rather sul lenly passionate, is certain. Even when in petticoats he showed the same uncontrollable spirit with his nurse which he afterwards ex- hibited, when an author, to his critics. Being reprimanded one day for having soiled or torn a new frock, he got into one of his "silent rages "(as he himself has described them), seized the frock with both his hands, rent it from top to bottom, and stood in sullen stillness, setting his censurer and her wrath at defiance. Notwithstanding such unruly outbreaks,— in which he was but too much encouraged by the example of his mother, who fre- 9 10 EXTRACTS FROM MOORE'S " LIFE OF BYRON." quently proceeded to the same extremities with her caps, gowns, etc., — there was in his disposition, as appears from the testimony of all employed about him, a mixture of affectionate sweetness and playfulness, by which it was impossible not to be attracted ; and which rendered him then, as in his riper years, easily man- ageable by those who loved and understood him sufficiently to be at once gentle and firm enough for the task. By an accident, which occurred at his birth, one of his feet was twisted out of its natural position, and this defect (chiefly from the contrivances employed to remedy it) was a source of much pain and inconvenience to him during his early years. Though the chance of his -succession to the title of his ances- tors was for some time altogether uncertain, his mother had, from his very birth, cherished a strong persuasion that he was destined not only to be a lord, but " a great man." The title devolved to him but too soon. Had he been left to struggle on for ten years longer as plain George Byron, there can be little doubt that his character would have been, in many re- spects, the better for it. On May 19, 1798, his granduncle, the fifth Lord Byron, died at Newstead Abbey, having passed the latter years of his strange life in a state of austere and almost savage seclusion. It is said that, the day after little Byron's accession to the title, he ran up to his mother and asked her " whether she perceived any difference in him since he had been made a lord, as he perceived none himself." The small volume of poems which he had now for some time been preparing, was, in the month of November [1800], ready for delivery to the select few among whom it was intended to circu- late. [August 2, 1807, he writes to a friend :] "Crosby, my London publisher, has disposed of his second im- portation, and has sent to Ridge for a third — at least so he says. In every bookseller's window I see my own name, and say noth- ing, but enjoy my fame in secret. My last reviewer kindly re- EXTRACTS FROM MOORE'S " LIFE OF BYRON." 11 quests me to alter my determination of writing no more ; and ' A Friend to the Cause of Literature' begs that I will gratify the public with some new work ' at no very distant period.' Who would not be a bard? — that is to say, if all critics would be so polite. . . . So much for egotism/ My laurels have turned my brain, but the cooling acids of forthcoming criticisms will proba- bly restore me to modesty." ["Hours of Idleness " — Byron's first literary attempt.] Byron, in addition to the real misfortune of being an unbeliever at any age, exhibited the rare and melancholy spectacle of an un- believing school-boy. The same prematurity of development which brought his passions and genius so early into action, en- abled also to anticipate this worst, dreariest result of reason; and at the very time of life when a spirit and temperament like his most required control, those checks which religious prepos- sessions best supply were almost wholly wanting. Such was the state of mind and heart in which Lord Byron now [1809] set out on h'.s indefinite pilgrimage. . . . Baffled, as he had been, in his own ardent pursuit of affection and friend- ship, his sole revenge and consolation lay in doubting that any such feelings really existed His natural vivacity and humor but lent a fresher Mow to his bitterness, till he at last reveled in it as an indulgence ; and that hatred of hypocrisy, which had hitherto only showed itself in a too shadowy coloring of his own youthful frailties, now hurried him, from his horror of all false pretensions to virtue, into the still more dangerous boast and ostentation of vice. [After traveling for two years in Greece, Turkey, and the East, Byron returned to England. The first two cantos of Ghilde Harold took the public by storm, and Byron "awoke one morn- ing and found himself famous;" then came in rapid succession The Giaour, The Bride of Abydos, The Corsair, and Lara, — de- scriptive of the "manners, scenery, and wild passions of the East and of Greece — a region as picturesque as that of his rival [Scott], and as new and fresh to his readers." In 1S15 he married Miss Milbanke, a lady of fortune ; but in 12 EXTRACTS FROM MOORE'S " LTFE OF BYRON." about a year Lady Byron left her husband. "Her reasons foi taking this step remain a mystery." Soon [1816] Byron left his native land, and the remainder of his life was spent on the Continent, whore he indulged in the grossest dissipation. In 1824 he went to the aid of the Greeks, then struggling for their independence ; and, a few months after his arrival at Missolonghi, died of inflammatory fever— after an illness of ten days ] To attempt to describe how the intelligence of this sad event struck upon all hearts would be as difficult as it is superfluous, lie, whom the who!.' world was to mourn, had on the tears of (Greece peculiar claim -as it was at her feet he now laid down the harvest of such a life of fame. On a tablet of white marble in the chancel of the church of Hucknell is the following inscription : In the vault beneath, where many of his ancestors and bis mother are buried, lie the remains of George Gordon Noel Byron Lord Byron, of Rochdale, in the county of Lancaster, the author of " Childe Harold's Pilgrimage." He was born in London on the 22nd <>f January, 1788. He died at Missolonghi, in Western Greece, on the 19th of April, 1824, engaged in the glorious attempt to restore that country to her ancient freedom and renown His sister, the honourable, Augusta Maria Leigh, placed this tablet to his memory. " Many pictures have been painted of him (says a fair critic of his features), with various success ; but the excessive beauty of his lips escaped every painter ami sculptor. In their ceaseless play they represented every emotion, whether pale with anger, curled in disdain, smiling in triumph, or dimpled with archness and love. This extreme facility of expression was sometimes painful, tor 1 have seen him look absolutely ugly— 1 have seen him look EXTRACTS FROM MOORE'S "LIFE OF BYRON." lo so hard and cold, thai you must bate; him, and then, in a moment, brighter than the sun, with such playful .softness in his look, such affectionate eagerness kindling' in his eves, and dimpling his lips into something more sweet than a smile, that you forgot the man, the Lord Byron, in the picture of beauty presented to you, and. gazed with intense curiosity — 1 had almost said — as if to satisfy yourself that thus looked the god of poetry, the god of the Vatican, when he conversed with the sons and daughters of man." [First visit abroad; letU r to his mother. .] "The next day I was introduced to Ali Pacha. 1 was dressed in a full suit of staff uniform, with a very magnificent saber, etc. The vizier received me in a large room paved with marble ; a fountain was playing in the center ; the apartment was sur- rounded by scarlet ottomans. lie received me standing, a won- derful compliment from a Mussulman, and made me sit down on his right hand. I have a Greek interpreter for general use, but a physician of Ali's named Femlario, who understands Latin, acted for me on this occasion. His first, question w!ls, why, at so early an age, I left my country? (the Turks have no idea of traveling for amusement). He then said the English minister, Captain Leake, had told him I was of a great family, and desired his respects to my mother ; which I now, in the name of Ali Pacha, present to you. He said he was certain I was a man of birth, because I had small ears, curling hair, and little white hands, and expressed himself pleased with my appearance and garb. He told me to consider him as a father whilst I was in Turkey, and said he looked on me as his son. Indeed, he treated me like a child, sending me almonds and sugared sherbet, fruit and sweetmeats, twenty times a day. "To day I saw the remains of the town of Actiura, near which Antony lost the world, in a small bay, where two frigates could' hardly maneuver; a broken wall is the sole remnant. On an- other part of the gull' stands the ruins of Nicropolis, built by Augustus, in honor of his victory. Last night 1 was at a Greek marriage ; but this and a thousand things more I have neither time nor space to describe." 14 EXTRACTS FROM MOORE'S ''LIFE OF BYRON." [ Extracts from Jo u rn at. ] "Sept. 19, 1810. — Rose at five. Crossed the mountains to Montbovon on horseback, and on mules, and, by dint of scram- bling, on foot also ; the whole route beautiful as a dream, and now to me almost as indistinct. . . . "The view, from the highest points of to-day's journey, com- prised on one side the greatest part of Lake Leman ; on the other, the valleys and mountain of the Canton of Fribourg, and an immense plain, with the lakes of Neuchatel and Morat, and all which the borders of the Lake of Geneva inherit ; we had both sides of the Jura before us in one point of view, with Alps in plenty. . . . " The music of the cows' bells (for their wealth, like the pa- triarch's, is cattle) in thejpastures, which reach to a height far above any mountains in Britain, and the shepherds shouting to us from crag to crag, and playing on their reeds where the steeps appeared almost inaccessible, with the surrounding scenery, realized all that I had ever heard or imagined of a pastoral ex- istence : — much more so than Greece or Asia Minor, for there we are a little too much of the saber and musket order, and if there is. a crook in one hand, you are sure to see a gun in the other : — but this was pure and unmixed — solitary, savage, patriarchal. As we went, they played the " Ranz des Vaches " and other airs, by way of farewell. I have lately repeopled my mind with nature." " SErT. 22. — Arrived at the foot of the mountain (the Jung- 1'rau, that is, the Maiden) ; glaciers ; torrents ; one of these tor- rents nine hundred feet in height of visible descent. Lodged at the curate's. Set out to see the valley ; heard an avalanche fall, like thunder ; glaciers enormous ; storm came on, thunder, light- ning, hail, all in perfection, and beautiful." The Journal concludes : " I am a lover of nature and an ad- mirer of beauty. 1 can bear fatigue, and welcome privation, and have seen some of the noblest views in the world. But in all this — the recollection of bitterness, and more especially of recent and more home desolation, which must accompany me through life, have preyed upon me here ; and neither the music of the PRINCIPAL WORKS OF LORD BYRON. 15 shepherd, the crashing of the avalanche, nor the torrent, the mountain, the glacier, the forest, nor the cloud, have for one moment lightened the weight upon my heart, nor enabled me to lose my own wretched identity, in the majesty, and the power, and the glory, around, above, and beneath me." PRINCIPAL WORKS OF LORD BYRON. Hours of Idleness. — " Fugitive Poems." !► English Bards and Scotch Reviewers. — Due to an unfavorable crit- icism in the Edinburgh Review. Childe Harold, — " A series of gloomy but intensely poetical mono- logues put into the mouth of a jaded and misanthropic voluptuary, who seeks refuge from his misery in the con- templation of lovely and historic scenes of travel." The Giaour ( [joor] chief). "] The Siege of Corinth. Mazeppa. Parisina. The Prisoner of Chillon. The Bride of Abydos. The Corsair. Lara. The Island. nu tt- • fi t 7 * [ Gav, airy, satirical.' The Vision of Judgment. \ J J The Age of Bronze.— " A vehement, satirical declamation." The Curse of Minerva.— "Directed against the spoliation of the frieze of the Parthenon." The Lament of Tasso. The Prophecy of Dante.— ■" Written in the terza rima, the first at- tempt of any English poet to employ that measure." The Bream.— "In some respects the most touching of Byron's minor works." "These are, in general, fragmen tary. They are made up of intensely interesting moments of passion and action." 16 REFERENCES — BYRON. Manfred. The best of his dramas. "] Marino Faliero. The Two Foscari. Sardanapalus. \ Dramatic Works. Werner. Cain. The Deformed Transformed. J Don Juan.—" The longest, and in some respects the most char- acteristic, of Byron's poems." Hebrew Melodies.— One of the most familiar of these is "The De- struction of Sennacherib." " Byron's prose, which is full of vigor and animal spirits, is to be found chiefly in his Letters." "There are but two personages in all Byron's poems— a man in whom unbridled passions have desolated the heart and left it hard and impenetrable; a man contemptuous of his kind, skepti- cal and despairing, yet occasionally feeling kindly emotions with a singular intensity. The woman is the woman of the East— de- voted and loving, but loving with the unreasoning attachment of the lower animals." REFERENCES— BYRON. Biographies by Gait ; Elze ; Nichol (English Men of Letters Series); Moore. Lord Bywn and Some of his Contemporaries. Leigh Hunt. Recollections of the Last Days of Shelley and Byron . Trelawney. Lord Byron's Poems. (First review of Byron.) Edinburgh Review, January, 1808. Byron. Thomas Carlyle. Remiiii.se, nces. De Quincey. Essays in Literary Criticism. Hutton. Afternoons with the Poets. Deshler. Modem Greece. (Byron in Greece.) Jebb. Letters to Dead Authors. Lang. Byron and Wordsworth. Swinburne, Nineteenth Century Magazine, April and May, 1884. [For fuller list, see " Nineteenth Century Authors," by Louise Manning Hodgkins.] REFERENCES— MACAULAY. Chief biographer" of Macaulay — G. 0. Trevelyan. Biographies by Milinan ; Jones ; Morison (English Men of Let- ters Series). Home Life of Great A uthors. Griswold. Lord Macaulay's Place in English Literature. North British Review, August-November, 1860. Gleanings of Past Years. Gladstone. History of English Thought. Stephen. Representative British Orations. Adams. The Tom Side of Macaulay. Lloyd, Harper's Magazine, March, 1879. Essays in Biography and Criticism. Bayne. A New Spirit of the Age. Home. [For fuller list, see " Nineteenth Century Authors," by Louise Manning Hodgkins.] 17 BAIN ON THE PARAGRAPH. The division of discourse next higher than the sentence is the Paragraph: which is a collection of sentences with unity of pur- pose. Like every division of discourse, a paragraph handles and exhausts a distinct topic; there is a greater break between the paragraphs than between the sentences. There are certain principles that govern the structure of the paragraph, for all kinds of composition. I. The first requisite of the paragraph is that the bearing of each sentence upon what precedes shall be explicit and unmistak- able. II. When several consecutive sentences iterate or illustrate the same idea, they should, as far as possible, be formed alike. This may be called the rule of Parallel Construction III. The opening sentence, unless so constructed as to be obvi ously preparatory, is expected to indicate with prominence the subject of the paragraph. IV. A paragraph should be consecutive, or free from dislocation. V. The paragraph should possess unity ; which implies a defi- nite purpose, and forbids digressions and irrelevant matter. VI. As in the sentence, so in the paragraph, a due proportion should obtain between principal and subordinate statements. [Very few writers in our language seem to have paid much attention to the construction of paragraphs. Macaulay is perhaps the most exemplary.] 18 LORD BYRON. Letters and Journals of Lord Byron ; with Notices of his Life. By Thomas Moore, Esq. 2 vols, 4to. London, 1830. We have read this book with the greatest pleasure. Con- sidered merely as a composition, it deserves to be classed among the host specimens of English prose which our age has produced. It contains, indeed, no single passage equal to two or three which we could select from the Life of Sheridan. But, 5 as a whole, it is immeasurably superior to that work. The style is agreeable, clear, and manly, and when it rises into eloquence, rises without effort or ostentation. Nor is the matter inferior to the manner. It would be difficult to name 2. As a composition. Opposed I o what? 5. Life of Sheridan. Biography by M -e. Richard Brinsley Sheridan (1751-1816), author of The Rivf his most splendid ami popular poetry. Childe Harold, Canto 11. The Oiawtr. 26. The Grecian camp, lie sailed for Greece July 14, 1828, and reached Missolonghi Jan. 5, 1824. LORD BY RON'. 31 the work of seventy years upon his delicate frame. The hand of death was upon him : he knew it ; and the only wish which he uttered was, that he might die sword in hand. This was denied to him. Anxiety, exertion, exposure, and those fatal stimulants which had become indispensable to him, 5 soon stretched him on a sick-bed, in a strange land, amidst strange faces, without one human being that he loved near him. There, at thirty-six, the most celebrated Englishman of the nineteenth century closed his brilliant and miserable career. We cannot even now retrace those events without feeling 10 something of what was felt by the nation, when it was first known that the grave had closed over so much sorrow and so much glory ; something of what was felt by those who saw the hearse, with its long train of coaches, turn slowly northward, leaving behind it that cemetery which had been consecrated 15 by the dust of so many great poets, but of which the doors were closed against all that remained of Byron. We well re- member that on that day rigid moralists could not refrain from weeping for one so young, so illustrious, so unhappy, gifted with such rare gifts, and tried by such strong tempta- 20 tions. It is unnecessary to make any reflections. The history carries its moral with it. Our age lias indeed been fruitful of warnings to the eminent, and of consolations to the obscure. Two men have died within our recollection, who,, at a time of life at which many people have hardly completed their educa- 25 tion, had raised themselves, each in his own department, to the height of glory. One of them died at Longwood ; the other at Missolonghi. It is always difficult to separate the literary character of a man who lives in our own time from his personal character. 30 It is peculiarly difficult to make this separation in the case of Lord Byron. For it is scarcely too much to say, that Lord Byron never wrote without some reference, direct or indirect, to himself. The interest excited by the events of his life mingles itself in our minds, and probably in the minds of 35 27. Napoleon. 28. Byron. 32 LORD BYRON. almost all our readers, with the interest which properly lie- longs to his works. A generation must pass away before it will be possible to form a fair judgment of his books, consid- ered merely as books. At present they are not only books, 5 but relies. We will however venture, though with unfeigned diffidence, to offer some desultory remarks on his poetry, His lot was cast in the time o( a great literary revolution. That poetical dynasty which had dethroned fche successors of Shakespeare and Spenser was, in its turn, dethroned by a race iowho represented themselves as heirs of the ancient line, so long dispossessed by usurpers. The real nature of this revo- lution has not, we think, been comprehended by the great majority of those who concurred in it. Wherein especially does the poetry of our times differ from 15 that of the last century? Ninety-nine persons out of a hun- dred would answer that the poetry of the last century was cor- rect, but cold and mechanical, and that the poetry of our time, though wild and irregular, presented far more vivid images, and excited the passions far more strongly than that 20 of Parnell. of Addison, or of Pope. In the same manner we constantly hear it said, that the poets of the age of Elizabeth had far more genius, but far less correctness, than those of the age of Anne. It seems to be taken for granted, that there is some incompatibility, some antithesis, between correct- 25 ness and creative power. We rather suspect that this notion arises merely from an abuse of words, and that it has been the parent of many of the fallacies which perplex the science of criticism. What is meant by correctness in poetry? If by correctness 8. That poetical dynasty, etc As a rough outline of the history of English poetry from the times of Elizabeth, we may set down rive dynasties or schools, adding the most distinguished name in each (1)The so-called Metaphysical school— Cowley ; (2) The poets of the Civil War and Common- wealth—Milton ; (3) The poets of the Restoration— Dryden ; (4) The Au- gustan Age— Pope ; (5) The poets of our own century. 00. Parnell. The Rev. Thos. P.; 1679-1717. Best known by his Hermit. •20. Addison. The most elegant prose-writer of the eighteenth century. Dr. Johnson has said of him: " Whoever wishes to attain an English style, familiar but not coarse, and elegant but not ostentatious, must give his days and nights to the volumes of Addison." LORD BtRON. 33 be meant the conforming to rules which have their foundation in truth and in the principles of human nature, then correct- ness is only another name for excellence. If by correctness be meant the conforming to rules purely arbitrary, correctness may be another name for dullness and absurdity. 5 A writer who describes visible objects falsely and violates the propriety of character, a writer who makes the mountains '• nod their drowsy heads" at night, or a dying man take leave of the world with a rant like that of Maximin, may be said, in the high and just sense of the phrase, to write incorrectly. 10 He violates the first great law of his art. His imitation is altogether unlike the thing imitated. The four poets who are most eminently free from incorrectness of this description are Homer, Dante. Shakespeare, and Milton. They are therefore, in one sense, and that the best sense, the most correct of poets. 15 When it is said that Virgil, though he had less genius than Homer, was a more correct writer, what sense is attached to the word correctness ? Is it meant that the story of the iEneid 8. Mountains nod, etc. From Dryden's Indian Emperor. 9. A rant like that of Maximin. Maximin, the principal character iu Dryden's Tyrant Love ; or, The Royal Martyr. He is made to exclaim:. " Bring me Porphyrion and my Empress dead; I will brave heaven, in my each hand a head ! " And again when dying: " And shoving back the earth on which I sit, I'll mount and scatter all the gods I hit." 14. Homer. Author of Iliad and Odyssey. The greatest name in the history of epic poetry. Supposed to be an Asiatic (ireek. 14. Dante. One of the greatest poets of all time. His greatest work is The Divine Comedy. (Italian.) 14. Milton. Author of Paradise Lost and Paradise Regained. Dryden says of these poets: " Three poets in three distant ages born, Greece. Italy, and England did adorn. The first in loftiness of thought surpassed; The next, in majesty; in both, the last. The force of nature could no further go- To make a third, site joined the former two." 15. Note the many illustrations and allusions in this and the succeeding paragraphs. Is this a merit or a defect ? Hi. Virgil. Author of JEneid, etc. After Homer, the greatest epic poet of antiquity. Born in Mantua, Italy. TO b.c-19 b.c. 18. iHneid. An epic poem by Virgil. In this poem Virgil celebrates the adventures of ^Eneas, a Trojan prince. When Troy fell, ^Eneas left the city, accompanied by his father, his son, and many followers. He visited various countries and settled in Latium. To him tradition ascribes the commencement of the Roman Empire. 34 LOUD BYRON. is developed more skillfully than that of the Odyssey ? thai the Roman describes the face of the external world, or the emo- tions of the mind, more accurately than the Greek? that the characters of Achates and Mnestheus are more nicely discrimi- 5 nated, and more consistently supported, than those of Achilles, of Nestor, atid of Tlysses ? Tin 1 fad incontestably is that, for every violation of the fundamental laws of poetry which can be found in Homer, it would be easy to find twenty in Virgil. Troilus and Cressida is, perhaps, of all the plays of Shake- iospeare, that which is commonly considered as the most incor- rect. Yet it seems to us infinitely more correct, in the sound sense of the term, than what are called the most correct plays of the most correct dramatists. Compare it, for example, with the Iphigenie of Racine. We are sure that the Greeks of 15 Shakespeare bear a far greater resemblance than the Greeks of Racine to the real Greeks who besieged Troy ; and for this reason, that the Greeks of Shakespeare are human beings, and the Greeks of Racine are mere names, mere words printed in capitals at the head of paragraphs of declamation. Racine, it 20 is true, would have shuddered at the thought of making a warrior at the siege of Troy to quote Aristotle. But of what use is it to avoid a single anachronism, when the whole play is one anachronism, the sentiments and phrases of Versailles in the camp of Aulis? 1. Odyssey. Great epic poem, attributed t«> Homer. It celebrates the adventures of Ulysses after the Trojan War, and of his son Telemachus, who went in search of Ulysses. (Ulysses: Gk., Odysseus). 4. Aehates and Mnestheus. Two of Eneas' companions. 5. Achilles. The lino of the Iliad, and especially famous as the most valiant of all the Greek ehiefs at the siege of Troy. Was killed by Paris, who shot him in the heel - his only vulnerable pari C. Nestor. A Greek hero. He distinguished himself among the leaders at the siege of Troy by Ins commanding eloquence and wisdom. 6 Ulysses. Thl' greal Greek hero. His achievements at Troy most materially assisted the sueeess of the expedil ion 14. Iphigeuie of Racine. Racine, the most admired of all the French dramatists. Iphigenia was daughter of Agamemnon and Clytemnestra, and was offered as a sacrifice to Diana: hut (he goddess spared her life and made her a priestess. Hallam has said of this and other of Racine's female characters, that they bear the same analogy to Shakespeare's that sculpture does to painting. 21. Making :i warrior, etc. In Troilus and Cressida, ii. 2, Agamem- non quotes Aristotle. 24. Ill the camp of Aulis. Where the scene ol the Iphigenie is laid. " Aulis, a seaport of Bceotia, where Agamemnon assembled Ihe Greek fleet intended to sail against Troj ."' LORD BYRON. 35 In the sense in which we arc now using the word correct- ness, we think that Sir Walter Scott, Mr. Wordsworth, Mr. Coleridge, are far more correct poets than those who are com- monly extolled as the models of correctness, Tope, for example, and Addison. The single description of a moonlight night in 5 Pope's Iliad contains more inaccuracies than can be found in all the Excursion. There is not a single scene in Cato in which all that conduces to poetical illusion, all the propriety of character, of language, of situation, is not more grossly violated than in any part of the Lay of the Last Minstrel. No 10 man can possibly think that the Romans of Addison resemble the real Romans so closely as the moss-troopers of Scott re- semble the real moss-troopers. Wat Tinlinn and William of Deloraine are not, it is true, persons of so much dignity as Cato. But the dignity of the persons represented has as little 15 to do with the correctness of poetry as with the correctness of painting. We prefer a gypsy by Reynolds to his Majesty's S.Scott. Port ami Novelist; 1771-1832. Regarding Scott both as a poet and as a writer of fiction lie must be reckoned beyond question the greatest which this century lias yet produced. 2. Wordsworth. One of the so-called Lake Poets; 1770-1850, Hsi poems are all marked by purity of language, originality of thought— the product of his own meditation,— wonderful strength and beauty in occa- sional lines, almost perfect knowledge of nature, and high moral aim. " To console the afflicted; to add sunshine to daylight, by making the happy happier; to lead the, young and the gracious of every age to see, to think, to feel, and to become more actively and securely virtuous this is their office." 3. Coleridge. One of the Lake Poets; 1772 1834. Coleridge says, " Poetry has been to me its own exceeding great reward; it has soothed my afflictions: it has multiplied and refined my enjoyments; it has endeared solitude; and it has given me the habit of wishing to discover the good and the beautiful in all that meets and surrounds me. 6. Iliad. One of the so-called Homeric poems. It commemorates the deeds of Achilles and other (b-eek heroes at siege of Troy. (Troy: Ilium or llion.) Pope translated the Hind 7 Excursion. Wordsworth's great poem. 7. Cato. Tragedy by Addison. 10. Lay of Last Minstrel. Poem by Scott. 12. Moss-trooper. A marauder of the border country between England and Scotland. 14. Wat Tinlinn and William of Deloraine. Two moss-troopers in Lay of Last Minstrel. 17. Reynolds. " Sir Joshua Reynolds, generally placed at the head of the English School of painting, was born in England in 1723. His portraits were of unsurpassed merit.'eclipsing everything that had been executed since the time of the celebrated Flemish artist Van Dyke (died in 1G41). He was the companion and friend of .Tohuson, Burke, Goldsmith, (4arrick. the famous actor, and other literary men of the time. lie died in 1792 ,? (Andersons' History of England). 36 LORD BYRON. head on a sign-post, and a Borderer by Scott to a Senator by Addison. In what sense, then, is the word correctness used by those who say, with the author of the Pursuits of Literature, that 5 Pope was the most correct of English poets, and that next to Pope came the late Mr. Gifford ? What is the nature and value of that correctness, the praise of which is denied to Mac- beth, to Lear, and to Othello, and given to Hoole's translations, and to all the Seatonian prize-poems ? We can discover no 10 eternal rule, no rule founded in reason and in the nature of things, which Shakespeare does not observe much more strictly than Pope. But if by correctness be meant the conforming to a narrow legislation which, while lenient to the mala in se, multiplies, without the shadow of a reason, the mala pjohibita, 1 5 if by correctness be meant a strict attention to certain cere- monious observances, which are no more essential to poetry than etiquette to good government, or than the washings of a Pharisee to devotion, then, assuredly, Pope may be a more correct poet than Shakespeare ; and, if the code were a little 20 altered, Colley Cibber might be a more correct poet than Pope. But it may well be doubted whether this kind of correctness be a merit, nay, whether it be not an absolute fault. It would be amusing to make a digest of the irrational laws which bad critics have framed for the government of poets. 25 First in celebrity and absurdity stand the dramatic unities of place and time. No human being has ever been able to find 6. Mr. Gifford. First editor of the Quarterly Review. Author of " two of the most bitter, powerful, and resistless literary satires which modern times have produced. His translation of Juvenal is one of the most perfect versions of an ancient author in the English language.'' 8. Macbeth; Lear; Othello. Plays of Shakespeare. 8. Hoole's translations. Ariosto's Orlando Furioso and a work of Tasso. 9. Seatonian prize poems. " An annual prize given for the best poem on a religious subject written by a graduate of Cambridge." 20. Colley Cibber (1671175?). Poet Laureate from 1730-1757. He is best known^for his comedies, The Nonjuror and The Careless Husband. 23. Digest. See diction/try. 25. Dramatic unities, 'the three unities of fiction, of time, and of place are generally attributed to Aristotle. These are the rules- (1) There should be a distinct plot with one main action, to which all the minor parts of the play should contribute; (2) The incidents of the play should naturally come within one day; (3) The entire action should naturally occur in one place. LORD JiYRON. 37 anything that could, even by courtesy, be called an argument for these unities, except that they have been deduced from the general practice of the Greeks. It requires no very profound examination to discover that the Greek dramas, often admir- able as compositions, are, as exhibitions of human characters and human life, far inferior to the English plays of the age of Elizabeth. Every scholar knows that the dramatic part of the Athenian tragedies was at first subordinate to the lyrical part. It would, therefore, have been little less than a miracle if the laws of the Athenian stage had been found to suit 10 plays in which there was no chorus. All the greatest master- pieces of the dramatic art have been composed in direct viola- tion of the unities, and could never have been composed if the unities had not been violated. It is clear, for example, that such a character as that of Hamlet could never have been 15 developed within the limits to which Alfieri confined himself. Yet such was the reverence of literary men during the last century for these unities, that Johnson, who, much to his honor, took the opposite side, was, as he says, ''frightened at his own temerity," and "afraid to stand against the authori- 20 ities which might be produced against him." There are other rules of the same kind without end. "Shakespeare," says Rymer, " ought not to have made Othello black ; for the hero of a tragedy ought always to be white." "Wilton," says another critic, "ought not to have taken 25 Adam for his hero ; for the hero of an epic poem ought always to be victorious." "Milton," says another, "ought not to have put so many similes into his first book ; for the first book of an epic poem ought always to be the most unadorned. There are no similes in the first book of the Iliad." "Mil- 30 ton," says another, " ought not to have placed in an epic poem such lines as these: 'While thus I called, and strayed I knew not whither. 1 " 8. Lyrical. See rhetoric or dictionary for definition of Epic, Dramatic, and Lyric poetry. 16. Alfieri. Italian dramatist ; 1749-1803. 18. Johnson (1709-1781,). Essayist, lexicographer, poet. Wrote Lives of the Poets. 23. Rymer, An indifferent critic, but a careful compiler of records; 1050-1713. 38 LORD BYRON. And why not? The critic is ready with a reason, a lady's reason. ''Such lines,' 1 says lie, "are not, it must be allowed, unpleasing to the ear ; but the redundant syllable ought to be confined to the drama, and not admitted into epic poetry." 5 As to the redundant syllable in heroic rhyme on serious sub- jects, it has been, from the time of Pope downward, proscribed by the general consent of all the correct school. No magazine would once have admitted so incorrect a couplet as that of Drayton: 10 "As when we lived untouched with these disgraces, When a?, our kingdom was our dear emhraces. 1 ' Another law of heroic rhyme, which fifty years ago was con- sidered as fundamental, was, that there should be a pause, a comma at least, at the end of every couplet. It was also pro- 15 vided that there should never be a full stop except at the end of a line. Well do we remember to have heard a most correct judge of poetry revile Mr. Rogers for the incorrectness of that most sweet and graceful passage, " Such grief was ours,— it seems but yesterday,— *° When in thy prime, wishing so much to stay, 'Twas thine, Maria, thine without a sigh At midnight in a sister's arms to die. Oh thou wert lovely; lovely was thy frame, And pure thy spirit as from heaven it came : And when recalled to join the blest above 2 c Thou diedst a victim to exceeding love, Nursing the young to health In happier hours, W 7 hen idle Fancy wove luxuriant flowers, Once in thy mirth thou badst me write on thee ; And now I write what thou shalt never see." Sir Roger Newdigate is fairly entitled, we think, to be ranked 30 among the great critics of this school. He made a law that none of the poems written for the prize which he established at Oxford should exceed fifty lines. This law seems to us to have at least as much foundation in reason as any of those which we have mentioned; nay, much more; for the world, 9. Drayton. Poet; 1563-1631. 17. Rogers. London banker, poet, and wit; 17G3-1855 The quotation is from Hitman Life. LORD BYRON. 39 we believe, is pretty well agreed in thinking that the shorter a prize-poem is the better. We do not see why we should not make a few more rules of the same kind ; why we should not enact that the number of scenes in every act shall be three or some multiple of three, 5 that the number of lines in every scene shall be an exact square, that the dramatis persomr shall never be more or fewer than sixteen, and that, in heroic rhymes, every thirty- sixth line shall have twelve syllables. If we were to lay down these canons, and to call Pope. Goldsmith, and Addison incor- 10 rect writers for not having complied with our whims, we should act precisely as those critics act who find incorrectness in the magnificent imagery and the varied music of Coleridge and Shelley. The correctness which the last century prized so much 15 resembles the correctness of those pictures of the Garden of Eden which we see in old Bibles. We have an exact square, enclosed by the rivers Pison, Gihon, Hiddekel, and Euphrates, each with a convenient bridge in the center, rectangular beds of flowers, a long canal, neatly bricked and railed in, the tree 20 of knowledge, clipped like one of the limes behind the Tuile- ries, standing in the center of the grand alley, the snake twined round it, the man on the right hand, the woman on the left, and the beasts drawn up in an exact circle round them. In one sense the picture is correct enough. That is to 25 say, the squares are correct ; the circles are correct ; the man 3 We do not see why, etc. Macaulay lias borrowed a hint from Schlegel's Dramatic Literature: " Three unities, five acts why not seven persons? These rules seem to proceed according to odd numbers.'' 8. Heroic rhymes. Iambic pentameter constitutes what is called the Heroic line. 10. Goldsmith (1728-1774). He is best known to us as a novelist and a poet. As a writer, perfect ease is his characteristic, and nothing could be more natural, simple, and graceful than his stvle 14. Shelley. Poet; 1792-18-22. " A cloud, a plant, a sun rise— these are his characters: they were those of the primitive poets, when they took the lightning for a bird of fire, and the clouds for the Hocks of heaven. But what a secret ardor beyond these splendid images, and how we feel the heat of the furnace beyond' the colored phantoms which it sets afloat over the horizon 1 Has any one since Shakespeare and Spenser lighted on such tender and such grand ecstasies? " (Taiue). 22. Tuileries. Royal palace in Paris. Burned by the mob in 1871. 40 LORD BYRON. and the woman are in a most correct line with the tree ; and the snake forms a most correct spiral. But if there were a painter so gifted that he could place on the canvas that glorious paradise, seen by the interior eye of 5 him whose outward sight had failed with long watching and laboring for liberty and truth, if there were a painter who could set before us the mazes of the sapphire brook, the lake with its fringe of myrtles, the flowery meadows, the grottoes overhung by vines, the forests shining with .Hesperian fruit ioand with the plumage cf gorgeous birds, the massy shade of that nuptial bower which showered down roses on the sleeping lovers, what should we think of a connoisseur who should tell us that this painting, though finer than the absurd picture in the old Bible, was not so correct? Surely we should answer, 35 It is both finer and more correct ; and it is finer because it is more correct. It is not made up of correctly drawn diagrams; but it is a correct painting, a worthy representation of that which it is intended to represent. It is not in the fine arts alone that this false correctness is 20 prized by narrow-minded men, by men who cannot distinguish means from ends, or what is accidental from what is essential. M. Jourdain admired correctness in fencing. "You had no business to hit me then. You must never thrust in quart till you have thrust in tierce. 1 ' M. Tomes liked correctness in 25 medical practice. " I stand up for Artemius. That he killed his patient is plain enough. But still he acted quite according to rule. A man dead is a man dead ; and there is an end of the matter. But if rules are to be broken, there is no saying what consequences may follow." We have heard of an old 30 German officer who was a great admirer of correctness in mil- itary operations. lie used to revile Bonaparte for spoiling the science of war, which had been carried to such exquisite 3. But if there were a painter, etc. Of. Paradise Lost, iv 210, seq., and 773. 22. M. Jourdain. From Moliere's Bourgeois Qentilhomme; but the words in the text do not occur in the play. 21. Quart ; tierce. Two of the ei^ht thrusts and parries in fencing. 24. M. Tomes. From Moliere's IS Amour Medecin, Act ii. sc. 3. LOUD BYRON. 41 perfection by Marsha] Daun. ' k In my youth we used to march and countermarch all the summer without gaining or losing a square league, and then we went into winter quarters. And now comes an ignorant hot-headed young man, who flies about from Boulogne to Ulm, and from Ulm to the middle of 5 Moravia, and lights battles in December. The whole system of his tactics is monstrously incorrect." The world is of opin- ion, in spite of critics like these, that the end of fencing is to hit, that the end of medicine is to cure, that the end of war is to conquer, and that those means are the most correct which best accomplish the ends. I0 And has poetry no end, no eternal and immutable prin- ciples ^ is poetry, like heraldry, mere matter of arbitrary regulation? The heralds tell us that certain scutcheons and bearings denote certain conditions, and that to put colors on colors, or metals on metals, is false blazonry. If all this were 15 reversed, if every coat-of-arms in Europe were new-fashioned, if it were decreed that or should never be placed but on argent, or argent but on or, that illegitimacy should be de- noted by a lozenge, and widowhood by a bend, the new science would be just as good as the old science, because both the new 20 and the old would be good for nothing. The mummery of Portcullis and Rouge Dragon, as it has no other value than that which caprice has assigned to it, may well submit to any laws which caprice may impose on it. But it is not so with that great imitative art, to the power of which all ages, the 25 rudest and the most enlightened, bear witness. Since its first great masterpieces were produced, everything that is change- able in this world has been changed. Civilization has been 1. Marshal Daun (1705-1766). Field -marshal of Austria, Geueralissimo of the Imperial troops in the Seven Years 1 War. 5. Who flies about, etc. Disappointed of the arrival of the French fleet under Villeneuve, Napoleon determined to break up the camp he had formed at Boulogne for the invasion of England, Aug 89, 1H05. Crossing the Rhine at the head of his army, he followed the line of the Snabian Alps so as to turn the position of General Mack, who had occupied Ulm on the Danube. Mack capitulated with 80.000 men, Oct. 17. Napoleon shortly after marched on Vienna through the Tyrol, and ended the campaign by crushing the Austrian and Russian armies at Austerlitz, Dec. 2. 14. Escutcheons, bearings, etc. See dictionary; pictures in back of dic- tionary will be helpful, bee also Boniell's Heraldry, 42 LOUD BYRON. gained, lost, gained again. Religion, and languages, and forms of government, and usages of private life, and modes of thinking, all have undergone a snecession of revolutions. Everything has passed away but the great features of nature, 5 and the heart of man, and the miracles of that art of which it is the office to reflect back the heart of man and the features of nature. Those two strange old poems, the wonder of ninety generations, still retain all their freshness. They still command the veneration of minds enriched by the literature 10 of many nations and ages. They are still, even in wretched translations, the delight of schoolboys. Having survived ten thousand capricious fashions, having seen successive codes of criticism become obsolete, they still remain to us, immortal with the immortality of truth, the same when perused in the 15 study of an English scholar, as when they were first chanted at the banquets of the Ionian princes. Poetry is, as was said more than two thousand years ago, imitation. It is an art analogous in many respects to the art of painting, sculpture, and acting. The imitations of the 20 painter, the sculptor, and the actor, are indeed, within certain limits, more perfect than those of the poet. The machinery which the poet employs consists merely of words; and words cannot, even when employed by such an artist as Homer or Dante, present to the mind images of visible objects quite so 25 lively and exact as those which we carry away from looking on the works of the brush and the chisel. But, on the other hand, the range of poetry is infinitely wider than that of any other imitative art, or than that of all the other imitative arts together. The sculptor can imitate only form ; the painter 30 only form and color; the actor, until the poet supplies him with words, only form, color, and motion. Poetry holds the outer world in common with the other arts. The heart of 16. Comment upon the diction of this paragraph. 17. Poetry in, as was said, etc. By Aristotle. 18. It is an art analogous, etc. " The following paragraphs are a brief summary of the conclusions arrived at by Lessing in his famous treatise on the limits and respective relations of poetry, painting, and sculpture— the Laocoon. The pupil should read, in Mr. Matthew Arnold's poem, the Epi- logue to [/XQCOOH. LORD BYRON". 43 man is the province of poetry, and of poetry alone. The painter, the sculptor, and the actor can exhibit no more of human passion and character than that small portion which overflows into the gesture and the face, always an imperfect, often a deceitful, sign of that which is within. The deeper 5 and more complex parts of human nature can be exhibited by means of words alone. Thus the objects of the imitation of poetry are the whole external and the whole internal universe, the face of nature, the vicissitudes of fortune, man as he is in himself, man as he appears in society, all things which really ro exist, all things of which we can form an image in our minds by combining together parts of things which really exist. The domain of this imperial art is commensurate with the imagi- native faculty. An art essentially imitative ought not surely to be subjected 15 to rules which tend to make its imitations less perfect than they otherwise would be ; and those who obey such rules ought to be called, not correct, but incorrect artists. The true way to judge of the rules by which English poetry was governed during the last century is to look at the effects which 20 they produced. It was in 1780 that Johnson completed his Lives of the Poets. He tells us in that work that, since the time of Dry- den, English poetry had shown no tendency to relapse into its original savageness, that its language had been refined, its 25 numbers tuned, and its sentiments improved. It may perhaps be doubted whether the nation had any great reason to exult in the refinements and improvements which gave it Douglas for Othello, and the Triumphs of Temper for the Fairy Queen. It was during the thirty years which preceded the appear- 30 23. Dryden. Poet-. 1631-1700. "I admire Dryden's talents and genius highly; but his is not a poetical genius. The only qualities I can find in Dryden that are essentially poetical are a certain ardor and impetuosity of mind, with an excellent ear. . , . There is not a single image from nature in the whole of his works' ' ( William Wordsworth). 28. Douglas. Tragedy by Home. '"The play is now almost forgotten, save for the quotation ' My name is Norval, 1 etc. 1 ' 29. Othello. Tragedy by Shakespeare. 29. Triumphs of Temper. By Hayley. Cf. Byron's English Bards and Scotch Reviewers. 29. Fairy Queeu. By Spenser, 44 LORD BYRON. ance of Johnson's Lives that the diction and versification of English poetry were, in the sense in which the word is com- monly used, most correct. Those thirty years are, as respects poetry, the most deplorable part of our literary history. They 5 have indeed bequeathed to us scarcely any poetry which de- serves to be remembered. Two or three hundred lines of Gray, twice as many of Goldsmith, a few stanzas of Beattie and Collins, -a few strophes of Mason, and a few clever pro- logues and satires were the masterpieces of this age of con- iosummate excellence. They may all be printed in one volume, and that volume would be by no means a volume of extraor- dinary merit. It would contain no poetry of the very highest class, and little which could be placed very high in the second class. The Paradise Regained or Comus would outweigh it 15 all. At last, when poetry had fallen into such utter decay that Mr. Hayley was thought a great poet, it began to appear that the excess of the evil was about to work the cure. Men be- came tired of an insipid conformity to a standard which de- 20 rived no authority from nature or reason. A shallow criti- cism had taught them to ascribe a superstitious value to the spurious correctness of poetasters. A deeper criticism brought them back to the true correctness of the first great masters. The eternal laws of poetry regained their power, and the tem- 25 porary fashions which had superseded those laws went after the wig of Lovelace and the hoop of Clarissa. 7. Gray. Poet; 1716-1771. The poetry of Gray, with the exception of the elegy— which everybody knows— has never become popular; yet in its own sphere it is very perfect; delicately if not richly imaginative, curiously studded with imagery; exquisitely finished, like miniatures painted on ivory. 7. Beattie. Poet and miscellaneous writer; 1735-1803. 8. Collins. Poet; 1721-1759. 8. Strophes. "In Greek choruses and dances, the movement of the chorus while turning from the right to the l£ft of the orchestra; hence the strain or part of the choral ode. sung during this movement. Also some- times used of a stanza of modern verse." (See etymology of word.) 8. Mason. Poet; 1725-1797. 9. Prologue. Greek Trpo'Aoyo?, to say beforehand. 14. Paradise Regained. Poem by Milton. 11. Comus. Poem by Milton. 22. Poetasters. Dabblers in poetry. 26. Lovelace. Hero in Richardson's novel, Clarissa Harlowe, published 1749. 20. Clarissa. Heroine in Clarissa Harhwe, LORD BYROK. 45 It was in a cold and barren season that the seeds of that rich harvest which we have reaped were first sown. While poetry was every year becoming more feeble and more mechan- ical, while the monotonous versification which Pope had intro- duced, no longer redeemed by his brilliant wit and his com- 5 pactness of expression, palled on the ear of the public, the great works of the old masters were every day attracting more and more of the admiration which they deserved. The plays of Shakespeare were better acted, better edited, and better known than they had ever been. Our fine ancient ballads 10 were again read with pleasure, and it became a fashion to imitate them. Many of the imitations were altogether con- temptible. But they showed that men had at least begun to admire the excellence which they could not rival. A literary revolution was evidently at hand. There was a ferment in 15 the minds of men, a vague craving for something new, a dis- position to hail with delight anything which might at first sight wear the appearance of originality. A reforming age is always fertile of impostors. The same excited state of public feeling which produced the great separation from the 20 see of Rome produced also the excesses of the Anabap- tists. The same stir in the public mind of Europe which overthrew the abuses of the old French government, pro- duced the Jacobins and Theophilanthropists. Macpherson and 9. The pl^ys of Shakespeare, etc. Acted by Garrick and Foote: edited by Pope, Warburton, Johnson, Stevens, Malone. 10. Our fine ancient ballads. Addison first pointed out the literary merits of English ballads by Ins criticism in the Spectator of Chevy Chase and of The Children in the Wood. In 1765 Bishop Percy published his Reliques of Ancient English Poetry. 21. See of Rome. The Pope or his court at Rome. 21. Anabaptists. A religious sect founded by Nicholas Storch, first the disciple, and then the bitter enemy, of Luther. The rebuptizers. They deny the validity of infant baptism. 24. Jacobins. The name was originally given (during the French Revo- lution) to a revolutionary club whose meetings were held in a house in the Rue St. Honore, this house having formerly been a convent of the Jacobins or Dominicans. There questions were discussed before being proposed in the National Assembly. The name has been since applied to any who hold ex- treme democratic principles. 24. Theophilanthropists. Friends of God and man; one of the nu- merous sects which sprang up at the time of the French Revolution. 24. Macpherson (1738-17%). Translated a mass of fragments of ancient poetry composed in the Gaelic or Erse dialect, and accumulated by him in his travels through the Highlands of Scotland. These fragments purported to have been written by Ossian, a Celtic bard. They were pretty conclusively proved to be forgeries. 46 LORD BYRON". Delia Crnsea were to the true reformers of English poetry what Knipperdoling was to Luther, or Clootz to Turgot. The success of Chatterton's forgeries, and of the far more con- temptible forgeries of Ireland, showed that people had begun 5 to love the old poetry well, though not wisely. The public was never more disposed to believe stories without evidence, and to admire books without merit. Anything which could break the dull monotony of the correct school was acceptable. The forerunner of the great restoration of our literature was 10 Cowper. His literary career began and ended at nearly the same time with that of Alfieri. A comparison between Al- fieri and Cowper may, at first sight, appear as strange as that which a loyal Presbyterian minister is said to have made in 1745 between George the Second and Enoch. It may seem 15 that the gentle, shy, melancholy Calvinist, whose spirit had been broken by fagging at school, who had not courage to 1. Delia Crusca. (Academy of the Sieve.) A celebrated literary association in Florence, Italy, founded in the 16th century, for the purpose of purifying and refining the Italian language and style. The name is better known, probably, to English readers as a designation applied to a class of sentimental writers in England during the last century, distinguished by their affected style of expression. 2. Knipperdoling. The most fanatical of the Anabaptists, appointed headsman by John of Leyden. 2. Luther. One of the greatest of church Reformers. 2. Clootz. A Prussian baron, who, as a Paris student, espoused in their wildest and most grotesque form the principles of the French Revolution. 2. Turgot. One of the ministers of Louis XVI. of France. An emi- nent statesman and political economist. 3. Chatterton. Poet (1752-1770). His name has become famous both by his extraordinary literary forgeries of so-called Old English poems, and by his sad fate. Stung to the core of his proud heart by neglect and in- creasing want, he took arsenic and died amid the fragments of his torn papers. Picturesque description is the leading charm of his poems. 4. Ireland. Deserves mention only on account of his Shakespearean forgeries, imposed upon the public while he was yet a boy. 9. (o) Find examples of the balanced sentence in this paragraph, (o) Are there examples of the figure Antithesis ? (c) Have you seen any examples in preceding paragraphs? 10. Cowper. See p. 21. 14. 1745. The year of Culloden (defeat of the Young Pretender). Cf. Cowper, Winter Walk at Noon, 1 658. 14. Enoch. Gen. v.; Enoch, one of the apocryphal books of the Old Testament. 15. Calvinist. Cowper. Calvhu'sts, followers of John Calvin, the great French Protestant Reformer (1509-1564). 15. Whose spirit, etc. Of one bully in particular he tells us in his autobiography: "I had such a dread of him that I did not dare lift my eyes to his face. I knew him best by his shoe-buck le." 16. Fagging. A fag is a school-boy who is obliged to do menial services for another boy of a higher form or class in English schools. 16. Who had not the courage. To qualify himself for a clerkship in LORD BYRON". 47 earn a livelihood by reading the titles of bills in the House of Lords, and whose favorite associates were a blind old lady and an evangelical divine, could have nothing in common with the haughty, ardent, and voluptuous nobleman, the horse-jockey, the libertine, who fought Lord Ligonier in Hyde Park, and 5 robbed the Pretender of his queen. But though the private lives of these remarkable men present scarcely any points of resemblance, their literary lives bear a close analogy to each other. They both found poetry in its lowest state of degrada- tion, feeble, artificial, and altogether nerveless. They both 10 possessed precisely the talents which fitted them for the task of raising it from that deep abasement.. They cannot, in strictness, be called great poets. They had not in any very high degree the creative power, " The vision and the faculty divine ; " 15 but they had great vigor of thought, great warmth of feeling, and what, in their circumstances, was above all things impor- tant, a manliness of taste which approached to roughness. They did not deal in mechanical versification and conven- tional phrases. They wrote concerning things the thoughts of 20 which set their hearts on fire ; and thus what they wrote, even when it wanted every other grace, had that inimitable grace which sincerity and strong passion impart to the rudest and most homely compositions. Each of them sought for inspira- tion in a noble and affecting subject, fertile of images which 25 had not yet been hackneyed. Liberty was the muse of Alfieri, religion was the muse of Cowper. The same truth is found the House of Lords he had to present himself at the bar of the House, and his first attack of madness was consequent on his morbid nervousness at appearing in public. 2. A blind old lady. Mrs. Unwin. She befriended Cowper, and. with her husband, did more than any other to make his life happy. He often speaks of her in his poems and letters. 3. An evangelical divine. The Rev. William Unwin. 4. The voluptuous nobleman, etc. Alfieri was a Piedmontese count of ancient family. He passed a dissipated youth in travel and adventure till the age of twenty-five. The duel with Lord Ligonier was iu consequence of an intrigue with his wife. The wife of Chales Edward, the last of the Stuarts, deserted him for Alfieri, whom she afterwards married. 15. The vision ami the faculty divine. Wordsworth's Excursion, bk. 1. 20. Liberty, etc. Alfieri was an ardent Republican. 48 LORD BYRON. in their lighter pieces. They were not among those who dep- recated the severity, or deplored the absence of an unreal mistress in melodious commonplaces. Instead of raving about imaginary Chloes and Sylvias, Oowper wrote of Mrs. Unwin's 5 knitting-needles. The only love-verses of Alfieri were addressed to one whom he truly and passionately loved. "Tutte le rime amorose che seguono," says he, "tutte sonO per essa, e ben sue, e di lei solamente ; poiche mai d'altra donna per certo non cantero." 10 These great men were not free from affectation. But their affectation was directly opposed to the affectation which gen- erally prevailed. Each of them expressed, in strong and bit- ter language, the contempt which he felt for the effeminate poetasters who were in fashion both in England and in Italy. 1 S Cowper complains that " Manner is all in all, whate'er is writ. The substitute for genius, taste, and wit." He praised Pope ; yet he regretted that Pope had " Made poetry a mere mechanic art, 20 And every warbler had his tune by heart " Alfieri speaks with similar scorn of the tragedies of his prede- cessors. " Mi cadevano dalle mani per la languidezza, trivi- ality e prolissita dei modi e del verso, sen/a parlare poi della snervatezza dei pensieri. Or perche mai questa nostra divina 25 lingua, si maschia anco, ed energica, e feroce, in bocca di Dante, dovra tdla farsi cosi sbiadata ed eunuca nel dialogo tragico?" To men thus sick of the languid manner of their contempo- raries ruggedness seemed a venial fault, or rather a positive 30 merit. In their hatred of meretricious ornament, and of what 5. Mrs. Unwin's knitting-needles. Cowper's Lines to Mary. 7. Tutte le rime, etc. "All the poems of love that follow are one to her, all are hers and of her ouly; for assuredly 1 shall never hereafter sin}? of another lady." 82. Mi cadevanos etc. " They fell from my hands by reason of the Ian- guidness, the triviality, and the prolixity of the style and versification, to say nothing of feebleness of thought. Now why should our divine tongue, still so masculine, so energetic, so vigorous in the mouth of a Dante, become so colorless and emasculated in tragic dialogue ?" LORD BYRON. 49 Cowper calls " creamy smoothness," they erred on the oppo- site side. Their style was too austere, their versification too harsh. It is not easy, however, to overrule the service which they rendered to literature. The intrinsic value of their poems is considerable. But the example which they set of 5 mutiny against an absurd system was invaluable. The part which they performed was rather that of Moses than that of Joshua. They opened the house of bondage; but they did not enter the promised land. During the twenty years which followed the death of Cow- 10 per, the revolution in English poetry was fully consummated. None of the writers of this period, not even Sir Walter Scott, contributed so much to the consummation as Lord Byron. Yet Lord Byron contributed to it unwillingly, and with con- stant self-reproach and shame. All his tastes and inclina- is lions led him to take part with the school of poetry which was going out against the school which was coining in. Of Pope himself he spoke with extravagant admiration. lie did not venture directly to say that the little man of Twickenham was a greater poet than Shakespeare or Milton ; but he hinted pretty 20 clearly that he thought so. Of his contemporaries, scarcely any had so much of his admiration as Mr. Gifford, who, consid- ered as a poet, was merely Pope, without Pope's wit and fancy, and whose satires are decidedly inferior in vigor and poignancy to the very imperfect juvenile performance of Lord Byron 25 himself. lie now and then praised Mr. Wordsworth and Mr. Coleridge, but ungraciously and without cordiality. When he attacked them, he brought his whole soul to the work. Of the most elaborate of Mr. Wordsworth's poems he could find nothing to say, but that it was "clumsy, and frowsy, and his 30 aversion." Peter Bell excited his spleen to such a degree that he evoked the shades of Pope and Dryden, and demanded of them whether it were possible that such trash could evade con- tempt ? • In his heart he thought his own Pilgrimage of Har- 10. Do you notice any mannerisms in tin's paragraph ? 19. Twi<:k«Miliain. Pope was called the wicked wasp of Twickenham, 31. Peter Bell. Poem by Wordsworth. 50 LORD BYRON. • old inferior to his Imitation of Horace's Art of Poetry, a feeble echo o\' Pope ami Johnson. This insipid performance he re- peatedly designed to publish, and was withheld only by the solicitations of his friends. Ho has distinctly declared his 5 approbation of the unities, the most absurd laws by which genius was ever held in servitude. In one of his works, we think in his letter to Mr. Bowles, he compares the poetry of the eighteenth century to the Parthenon, and that of the nine- teenth to a Turkish mosque, and boasts that, though lie had 10 assisted his contemporaries in building their grotesque and barbarous edifice, he had never joined them in defacing the remains of a chaster and more graceful architecture. In an- other letter he compares the change which had recently passed on English poetry to the decay of Latin poetry after the Au- 15 gustan age. In the time o\' Pope, he tells his friend, it was all Horace with us. It is all Claudian now. For the great old masters o[' the art he had no very enthusi- astic veneration. In his letter to Mr. Bowles he uses expres- sions which clearly indicate that he preferred Pope's Iliad to 20 the original. Mr. Moore confesses that his friend was no very fervent admirer of Shakespeare. Of all the poets of the first class. Lord Byron seems to have admired Dante and Milton most. Yet in the fourth canto of Childe Harold he places Tasso, a writer not merely inferior to them, but of quite a 25 different order of mind, on at least a footing of equality with them. Mr. Hunt is, we suspect, quite correct in saying that Lord Byron could see little or no merit in Spenser. But Byron the critic and Byron the poet were two very dif- ferent men. The effects of the noble writer's theory may in- 30 deed often be traced in his practice. But his disposition led him to accommodate himself to the literary tastes of the age in which he lived ; and his talents would have enabled him to accommodate himself to the taste of any age. Though he said much of his contempt for mankind, and though he boasted 35 that amidst the inconstancy of fortune and of fame he was all- 10 Claudian (865? 408?). The last of the Latin classic poets. 84. Tasso U341-15l>:>). An eminent Italian poet. LORD BYRON. 51 .sufficient to himself, his literary career indicated nothing of thai lonely and unsocial pride which he affected. We cannot conceive him, like Milton or Wordsworth, defying the criti- cism of his contemporaries, retorting their scorn, and laboring on a poem in the full assurance that it would be unpopular, 5 and in the full assurance th;ii it would be immortal. He has said, by the mouth of ones of his heroes, in speaking of politi- cal greatness, that "he musl serve who fain would sway;" and this he assigns as a reason for not entering into political life !!<■ did not consider that the sway which he had exer- 10 cised in literature had been purchased by servitude, by the sacrifice of his own taste to the taste of the public. He was the creature of his age ; and whenever he had lived he would have been the creature of his age. Under Charles the First, Byron would have been more quainl than Donne. 15 Under Charles the Second the rants of Byron's rhyming plays would have pitted n, boxed it, and galleried it, with those' of any Hayes or Bilboa. Under George the Firsl the monotonous smoothness of Myron's versification and the terseness of his expression would have made Pope himself envious. 20 As it was. he was the man of the last thirteen years of the eighteenth century, and of the first twenty three years of the nineteenth century. He belonged half to t lie old, and half to the new school of poetry. Bis personal taste led him to the former; his thirst of praise to the latter; his talents were 25 equally suited to both. His fame was a common ground on which the zealots of both sides, Gilford, for example, and Shelley, might meet. He was the representative, not of either literary party, but of both at once, and of their conflict, and 15. Donne (1753-1631). He is classed among the metaphysical poets. 10. Rants of Byron's rhyming plays. Alluding in particular to Dryden, nearly all of whose plays are written in rhyme. 18. Bayes or Bilboa. Dryden was satirized under the name of Mr. Bayes in the famous burlesque of The Rehearsal, written by the Duke of Buckingham, with the assistance of the author of Hudibras and others. Bayes first appeared under the title of BiU>». Geruiey calls his Figaro at once the signal ami the programme of the Revolution. n Dryden was the connecting link, etc. (a) Did the literature o\' James l.'s reign have any distinctive character ? lb) Has Macaula) heretofore praised the poets oi Queen Anne's reign? (Anne, 1708-171 1.' (c) Note that Queen Anne's age is typified by Oromasdes, the good genius 1 Ahrunan or Arimanes was the evil Principle or Being it). Oromasdes. ol the ancient Persians; the Prince of Darkness, as 16 Irimanes. opposed to OrmUSd or Oromasdes. the King of Light, LORD BYRON. 53 as the high-priesl of .'i worship of which nature was the idol- No poems have ever indicated a more exquisite perception of the beauty of the outer world, or a more passionate love and reverence for thai beauty. Yet they were nol popular; and ii is not likely that they ever will be popular as the poetry of 5 Sir Walter Scotl is popular. The feeling which pervaded them was too deep for general sympathy. Their style was often too mysterious for general comprehension. They made a few esoteric disciples, and many scoffers. Lord Byron founded what may be called an exoteric Lake school . and all the read- 10 ers of verse in England, we might say in Europe, hastened to sil ai his feet. Whal Mr. Wordsworth had <;\h\ like a recluse, Lord Byron said like a man of the world, with less profound feeling, but with more perspicuity, energy, and conciseness. We would refer our readers to the last two cantos of Childeis Harold and to Manfred in proof of these observations. Lord Byron, like Mr. Wordsworth, had nothing dramatic in his genius. He was indeed the reverse of a great dramatist, th<; very antithesis to a great dramatist. All his characi Harold looking on the sky, from which his country and the 20 sun are disappearing together ; tin- Giaour, standing apart in the gloom of the side aisle, and casting a haggard scowl from under his long hood at tin; crucifix and the censer; Conrad leaning on his sword by tin; watch-tower, Lara smiling on the dancers, Alp gazing steadily on the fatal cloud as it passes 25 before the moon, Manfred wandering among the- precipices of Berne, A.zzo on the judgment seat, Ugo at the bar, Lambro lo! Exoteric, f Note etymology and meaning. 10. Lake School, rhe Lake School derived its name from the fact that its three most conspicuous members, Wordsworth, 'Southey. and Coleridge, lived near the English lakes. Originally a contemptuous name, it has grad ually come to be the recognized title of Wordsworth and his disciples. 12. What Mr. Wordsworth had s;iid like a recluse. The differ- ence lies deeper than this Wordsworth loved Nature for herself, as a sharer of his joys and sorrows, as at once reflecting and snj his rank or to his 15. Minerva Press. A sobriquet for fashionable novels, such as Lady ftlessington's, etc. 18. On whom the freshness of the heart. Don Juan, canto i. cciv. 89. Potency. Etymology? Kindred words in our language? G4 LORD BYRON. * 1 private history. That his poetry will undergo a severe sifting, that much of what has been admired by his contemporaries will be rejected as worthless, we have little doubt. But we have as little doubt, that, after the closest scrutiny, there will 5 still remain much that can only perish with the English lan- guage. ENGLISH CLASSIC SERIES, FOR Classes in English Literature, Reading, Grammar, etc. EDITED BY EMINENT ENGLISH AND AMERICAN SCHOLARS, Each Volume contains a Sketch of the Author's Life, Prefatory and Explanatory Notes, etc., etc. 1 Byron's Prophecy of Dante. (Cantos I. and II.) •2 Milton's L' Allegro, and II Pen- seroso. 3 Lord Bacon's Essays, Civil and Moral. (Selected.) 4 Byron's Prisoner of Chillon. 5 Moore's Fire Worshippers. (Lalla Rookh. Selected.) 6 Goldsmith's Deserted Village. 7 Scott's Marmion. (Selections from Canto VI.) 8 Scott's Lay of the Last Minstrel. (Introduction and Canto I. ) 9 Burns'sCotter'sSaturdayNight, and other Poems 10 Crabbe's The Village. 11 Campbell's Pleasures of Hope. (Abridgment of Part I.) 13 Macaulay's Essay on Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress. 13 Macaulay's Armada, and other Poems. 14 Shakespeare's Merchant of Ve- nice. (Selections from Acts I., m., and IV.) 15 Goldsmith's Traveller. 16 Hogg's Queen's Wake, and Kil- ns eny. 17 Coleridge's Ancient Mariner. 18 Addison's Sir Roger de Cover- ley. 19 Gray's Elegy in a Country Churchyard. SO Scott's Lady of the Lake. (Canto I.) 21 Shakespeare's As You Like It, etc. (Selections.) 23 Shakespeare's King John, and Richard II. (Selections.) 23 Shakespeare's Henry IV., Hen- ry V., Henry VI. (Selections.) 24 Shakespeare's Henry VIIL, and Julius Caesar. (Selections.) 25 Wordsworth's Excursion. (Bk.I.) 26 Pope's Essay on Criticism. 27 Spenser'sFaerieQueene. (Cantos I. and II.) 28 Cowper's Task. (Book I.) 29 Milton's Comus. 30 Tennyson's Enoch Arden, The Lotus Eaters, Ulysses, and Tithonus. 31 Irving's Sketch Book. (Selec- tions.) 32 Dickens's Christmas Carol. (Condensed.) 33 Carlyle's Hero as a Prophet. 34 Macaulay's Warren Hastings. (Condensed.) 35 Goldsmith's Vicar of Wake- field. (Condensed.) 36 Tennyson's The Two Voices, and\V Dream of Fair Women. 37 Memory Quotations. 38 Cavalier Poets. 39 Dryden's Alexander's Feast, and MacFlecknoe. 40 Keats's The Eve of St. Agnes. 41 Irving.'s Legend of Sleepy Hol- low. 42 Lamb's Tales from Shake- speare. 43 Le Row's How to Teach Read- ing. 44 Webster's Bunker Hill Ora- tions. 45 The Academy Orthoiipist. A Manual of Pronunciation. 46 Milton's Lycidas, and Hymn on the Nativity. 47 Bryant's Thanatopsis, and other Poems. 48 Ruskin's Modern Painters. (Selections., 49 The Shakespeare Speaker. 50 Thackeray's Roundabout Pa- pers. 51 Webster's Oration on Adams and Jefferson. 53 Brown's Rab and his Friends. 53 Morris's Life and Death of Jason. 54 Burke's Speech on American Taxation. 55 Pope's Rape of the Lock. 56 Tennyson's Elaine. 57 Tennyson's In Memoriam, 58 Church's Story of tbe ^Eneid. 59 Church's Story of the Iliad. 60 Swift's Gulliver's Voyage to Lilliput. 61 Macaulay's Essay on Lord Ba- con. (Condensed.) 62 The Alcestis of Euripides. Eng- lish Version by Rev. R. Potter.M. A. {Additional numbers on next page.) English Classic Series-Continued. 63 Th© Antigone of Sophocles. English Version by Thos. Franck- lin, D.D. 64 Elizabeth Barrett Browning. (Selected Poems.) 65 Robert Browning. (Selected Poems.) 66 Addison's Spectator. (Selec'ns.) 67 Scenes from George Eliot's Adam Bede. 68 Matthew Arnold's Culture and Anarchy. 69 DeQuincey's Joan of Arc. 70 Carlyle's Essay on Burns. 71 Byron's Childe Harold's Pil- grimage. 72 Poe's Raven, and other Poems. 73 & 74 Macaulay's Lord Clive. (Double Number.) 75 Webster's Reply to Hayne. 76&77 Macaulay's Eays of An- cient Rome. (Double Number.) 78 American Patriotic Selections: Declaration of Independence, Washington's Farewell Ad- dress, Lincoln's Gettysburg Speech, etc. 79 & 80 Scott's L.ady of the Lake, (Condensed.) 81 & 83 Scott's Marmion. 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