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Weigh the vessel up,

Once dreaded by our foes!
And mingle with our cup

The tear that England owes.

Her timbers yet are sound,

And she may float again,

Full charged with England's thunder,

And plough the distant main.

But Kempenfelt is gone,

His victories are o'er;

And he, and his eight hundred,

Shall plough the wave no more."

No poet of the last century did as much as Cowper for the restoration of the admirable music of the then neglected blank verse. When Cowper died, in the year 1800, exactly one hundred years after the death of Dryden, English poetry was again in possession of all its varied endowment of verse. In a course of lectures which I delivered here some ten years ago, I concluded a lecture on Cowper by quoting a poem then new and little known —the stanzas entitled "Cowper's Grave," by Elizabeth Browning, then known by her maiden name of Barrett. While I have avoided, as far as possible, repetitions from my former courses, I am tempted to repeat the stanzas now, because on the former occasion they made, as I have been informed, an impression that was not lost. The merit of the poem is not only in the happy allusions to Cowper's character and career of checkered cheerfulness and gloom, but also in its depth of passion and imagination.

COWPER'S GRAVE.

It is a place where poets crowned
May feel the heart's decaying—
It is a place where happy saints
May weep amid their praying-

Yet let the grief and humbleness,
As low as silence, languish;

Earth surely now may give her calm
To whom she gave her anguish.

O poets! from a maniac's tongue
Was poured the deathless singing!
O Christians! at your cross of hope
A hopeless hand was clinging!
O men! this man in brotherhood,
Your weary paths beguiling,
Groaned inly while he taught you peace,
And died while ye were smiling!

And now, what time ye all may read
Through dimming tears his story-
How discord on the music fell,

And darkness on the glory

And how, when, one by one, sweet sounds And wandering lights departed,

He wore no less a loving face,

Because so broken-hearted

He shall be strong to sanctify
The poet's high vocation,

And bow the meekest Christian down

In meeker adoration:

Nor ever shall he be in praise

By wise or good forsaken :

Named softly, as the household name
Of one whom God hath taken.

With quiet sadness, and no gloom,
I learn to think upon him;
With meekness that is gratefulness,

To God whose heaven hath won him

Who suffered once the madness-cloud,

To his own love to blind him;

But gently led the blind along

Where breath and bird could find him:

And wrought within his shattered brain
Such quick poetic senses,

As hills have language for, and stars
Harmonious influences!

The pulse of dew upon the grass
Kept his within its number;
And silent shadows from the trees
Refreshed him like a slumber.

Wild timid hares were drawn from woods
To share his home caresses,
Uplooking to his human eyes
With sylvan tendernesses:
The very world, by God's constraint,
From falsehood's ways removing,

Its women and its men became,
Beside him, true and loving!-

But while, in blindness he remained
Unconscious of the guiding,

And things provided came without
The sweet sense of providing,
He testified this solemn truth,
Though frenzy-desolated-
Nor man nor nature satisfy,
Whom only God created!

Like a sick child that knoweth not
His mother while she blesses,
And drops upon his burning brow
The coolness of her kisses;

That turns his fever'd eyes around-
"My mother! where's my mother?”—

As if such tender words and looks
Could come from any other!-—

The fever gone, with leaps of heart
He sees her bending o'er him;
Her face all pale from watchful love,
The unweary love she bore him!

Thus woke the poet from the dream
His life's long fever gave him,
Beneath those deep pathetic Eyes,
Which closed in death to save him.

Thus! ob, not thus! no type of earth
Could image that awaking,
Wherein he scarcely heard the chaunt
Of seraphs round him breaking-
Or felt the new immortal throb

Of soul from body parted;
But felt those eyes alone, and knew
"My Saviour! not deserted!"

Deserted! who hath dreamt that when

The cross in darkness rested

Upon the Victim's hidden face,

No love was manifested?

What frantic hands outstretched have e'er

The atoning drops averted

What tears have washed them from the soul→→→

That one should be deserted?

Deserted! God could separate

From his own essence rather:
And Adam's sins have swept between
The righteous Son and Father;
Yea! once Immanuel's orphaned cry
His universe hath shaken-

It went up single, echoless,
"My God, I am forsaken !"

It went up from the Holy's lips

Amid his lost creation,

That of the lost, no son should use

Those words of desolation;

That, earth's worst frenzies, marring hope,

Should mar not hope's fruition;

And I, on Cowper's grave, should see

His rapture, in a vision !

LECTURE Vili.*

Literature of the Nineteenth Century.

Literature of our own times-Influence of political and social relations-The historic relations of literature-The French Revolution, and its effects-Infidelity-Thirty years' Peace-Scientific progress coincident with letters-History-Its altered tone-Arnold-Prescott-Niebuhr-Gibbon-Hume-Robertson-Religious element in historical style-Lord Mahon-Macaulay's History-Historical romance-Waverley Novels―The pulpit-Sydney Smith—Manning— Poetry of the early part of the century-Bowles and Rogers-Campbell-Coleridge's Christabel-Lay of the Last Minstrel-Scott's poetry.

In my last lecture, I noticed the date of the death of Cowper, in the year 1800, as conveniently marking the close of the literature of the eighteenth century. The excellence of his prose, as well as of his poetry, and his share in that literary revival which began during the latter part of that century, make such a use of his name subservient, in a reasonable rather than an arbitrary manner, to the purposes of literary chronology. We pass thence into what may be entitled "The Literature of our own Times," or, having nearly completed its era of fifty years, "The Literature of the first half of the Nineteenth Century." It has its characteristics-distinctive qualities, with their origin from within, in the minds of those whose writings make the literature, and from without, in the influence exerted on those minds by the world's doings

* January 21, 1850.

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