Oldalképek
PDF
ePub
[merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][graphic][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

I've courted the breath of a balm southern clime,
Where sweetest of flow'rs, soft tendrils entwine;
Have listed the song bird's notes borne on the air,
That wakens and wafts the rich odors elsewhere;
As tones on the ear so the dream of the past,
Softly plays round the heart-green isle of the waste;
Yes! 't was all a life-dream, and still 't is not gone,
Oh, 't is home where the heart is, where the heart is
't is home.

THIRD VERSE.

I've cross'd the blue sea, I've sought out a home
In the land of the free, freedom beckon'd me come;
And friends of the stranger have sooth'd the sad heart,
With kindness and sympathy, sweet balm for the smart;
The light of the soul, doth play round it still,
Like the perfume the urn, in which roses distil;
Thoughts of affection forbid me to roam,

Oh, 'tis home where the heart is, where the heart is 't is home.

REVIEW OF NEW BOOKS.

Hawkstone: A Tale of and for England in 184-. New
York: Standford & Swords. 2 vols. 12mo.

less they do it under the sanction and control of the church. He considers it the duty of a church minister to excommunicate every man in his parish who is guilty of schism -that is, who has the wickedness to be a papist or dissenter. But it is useless to proceed in the enumeration of our author's dogmatisms. If the reader desires to know them, let him conceive the exact opposite of every liberi principle in politics, political economy and theology, which at present obtains in the world, and he will have the sys tem of "Hawkstone."

We were attracted to this novel by seeing the words "fifth edition" on its title page. After reading it, it is easy to account for its popularity. It is at once a most exciting romance and a defence of an unpopular religious body, The author (said to be Professor Sewall,) belongs to the Oxford School of Episcopalians, or to adopt his own view of the matter, to the one Catholic church. The object of the novel is to present the ideas of Church and State held by that class of religionists who are vulgarly called Puseyites. This is done partly in the representation of character and narration of incident, which constitute the romance of the book, and partly by long theological conversations which occur between a few of the characters. The interest of the work never flags, and it is among the few religious novels which are not positive bores to all classes of readers. In respect to its theology, it gives the most distinct view of the doctrines of the High Church party of Oxford which we have seen. The author is as decisive and bitter in his condemnation of Romanism as of dissent. He considers that the peculiar doctrines and claims which distinguish the Roman Catholic church from the Church of England are novelties, unknown to the true church of the apostles and the fathers. He has no mercy for the Romanists, and but little for the young men of his own school who favor the Papacy. Those who are accustomed to associate Puseyism with a set of sentimentalists, who mourn the Reformation, wish for the return of the good old times of the feudal ages, and give Rome their hearts and Canterbury only their pockets, will find that such doctrines and practices find no favor in the present volumes. The greatest rascal in the novel is a piece of incarnate ma-church, from a regard to the prejudices of his countrymen. lignity named Pearce-a Jesuit, whom the author represents as carrying out the principles of Romanism to their logical results in practice.

A good deal of the zest of the novel comes from the throng of paradoxes in which the author wantons. He has a complete system of thought to kill out all the mind of the English people, and render them the mere slaves of a hierarchy, and all for the most benevolent of purposes. In his theory he overlooks the peculiar constitution and character of the English people, and also all the monstron abuses to which his system would inevitably lead, in his desire to see a practical establishment of the most obnoxious and high-toned claims of his church. He is evi dently half way between an idealist and a sentimentalist, with hardly an atom of practical sagacity or knowledge of affairs. The cool dogmatism with which he condemne the great statesmen of his country, is particularly offensive as coming from a man utterly ignorant of the difficulties which a statesman has to encounter. It is curious also to see how extremes meet; this theory of absoluteism "fraternizes" with that of socialism. A person reading, in the second volume, the account of Villiers' dealings with he tenantry, and his new regulations regarding manufactures, would almost think that Louis Blanc had graduated at Oxford, and left out in his French schemes the agency of the

With all its peculiarities and heresies, however, the novel will well reward the attention of readers of all classes. It is exceedingly well written, and contains many

these advantages it may also claim the honor of being the most inimitable specimen of theological impudence and pretension which the present age has witnessed.

But if the reader will find his common notions of Pusey-scenes of uncommon power, pathos and beauty. With ism revolutionized by the present novel, he will be a little startled at its real doctrines and intentions. The author has the most supreme and avowed contempt for liberal ideas in Church and State; and for every good-natured axiom about toleration and representative government he spurns from his path as a novelty and paradox. There is nothing dominant in England which he does not oppose. The Whig party he deems the avowed enemies of loyalty, order and religion. The Conservatives, with Sir Robert Peel and the Duke of Wellington at their head, he con. ceives destitute of principle, and the destroyers of the British empire. There is not a concession made to liberal ideas within the present century which he does not think wicked and foolish. The manufacturing system and free trade, indeed the whole doctrines of the political economists in the lump, he looks upon alternately with horror and disdain. He seems to consider the State and Church as an organized body for the education of the people, whose duty is obedience, and who have no right to think for themselves in religion or politics, for they would be pretty sure to think wrong. All benevolent societies, in which persons of different religious views combine for a common object, he considers as productive of evil, and as an assumption of powers rightly belonging to the church. Indeed, in his system, it is wrong for any popular association to presume to meddle with ignorance and crime, un

The Planetary and Stellar Worlds: A Popular Exposi
of the Great Discoveries and Theories of Modern Astrae
my. In a Series of Ten Lectures. By O. M. Miche,
A. M. New York: Baker & Scribner. 1 vol. 12mo.
Mr. Mitchell is not only an accomplished astronomer, it
every respect qualified to be the interpreter of the m
teries of his science to the popular mind, but, if we may
judge from the style of his book, is a fine, frank, wuB-
hearted, enthusiastic man. On every page he gives er
dence of really loving his pursuit. By a certain sensitive-
ness of imagination, and quickness of sensibility, every
thing he contemplates becomes alive in his mind, and
object in which he takes a personal interest. This give
wonderful distinctness to his exposition of natural laws.
and his delineation of the characters and pursuits of ma
of science. His Copernicus, Kepler, Gallileo and Newan
are not dry enumerations of qualities, but vivid portress ?
persons. He seems in close intellectual fellowship with
them as individuals, and converses of them in the style
a friend, whose accurate knowledge is equalled by bs in-
tense affection. So it is with his detail of the discovery di

a new law, or fact in science. His mind "lives along the line" of observation and reasoning which ended in its detection, and he reproduces the hopes, fears, doubts, and high enthusiasm of every person connected with the discovery. His delineation of Kepler is especially genial and striking. By following this method he infuses his own enthusiasm into the reader, bears him willingly along through the most abstruse processes of science, and at the end leaves him without fatigue, and ready for a new start. In the treatment of scientific discoveries, by minds like Mr. Mitchell's, we ever notice an unconscious personification of Nature, as a cunning holder of secrets which only the master-mind can wrest from her after a patient siege. The style of our author glows in the recital of the exploits of his band of astronomers, as that of a Frenchman does in the narration of Napoleon's campaigns. This is the great charm of his book, and will make it extensively popular, for by it he can attract any reader capable of beng interested in a tale of personal adventure, ending in a reat achievement. We can hardly bring to mind a popuar lecturer or writer on science, who has this power to he extent which Mr. Mitchell possesses it. He himself as it by virtue of the mingled simplicity and intensity of is nature.

One of the most striking lectures in Mr. Mitchell's voume is that on the discoveries of the primitive ages, in which he represents the processes of the primitive observer, with his unarmed eye, in unfolding some of the laws of he heavens; and he indicates with great beauty what would be his point of departure, and what would be the mit of his discoveries. This lecture is a fine prose poem. There is a passage in the introductory lecture which randly represents the continual watch which man keeps n the heavens, and the slow, silent and sure acquisitions new truths, from age to age. "The sentinel on the watchtower is relieved from duty, but another takes his lace, and the vigil is unbroken. No-the astronomer ever dies. He commences his investigations on the hillps of Eden-he studies the stars through the long centues of antideluvian life. The deluge sweeps from the arth its inhabitants, their cities and their mountains-but hen the storm is hushed, and the heavens shine forth in eauty, from the summit of Mount Arrarat the astronomer sumes his endless vigils. In Babylon he keeps his watch, d among the Egyptian priests he inspires a thirst for the cred mysteries of the stars. The plains of Shinar-the mples of India-the pyramids of Egypt, are equally his atching places. When science fled to Greece, his home as in the schools of her philosophers: and when darkss covered the earth for a thousand years, he pursues his ver-ending task from amidst the burning deserts of Ara1. When science dawned on Europe, the astronomer as there-toiling with Copernicus-watching with Tycho suffering with Gallileo-triumphing with Kepler." We trust that this volume will have an extensive circuion. It will not only convey a great deal of knowledge the general reader, but will also inspire a love for the ence of which it treats.

arold, the last of the Saxon Kings. By Sir Edward BulDer Lytton, Bart. New York: Harper & Brothers.

This is Bulwer's most successful attempt at writing an torical novel, but with all its merits, it is still rather an empt than a performance. Considered as a history of Norman invasion, it contains many more facts than can found in Thierry, at least in that portion of his work Foted to Harold and William. Bulwer seems to have ained his knowledge at the original sources, and the wel is certainly creditable to his scholarship. But he has

not managed his materials in an imaginative way, and fact and fiction are tied rather than fused together. The consequence is that the work is not homogeneous. At times it appears like history, but after the mind of the reader has settled down to a historical mood, the impression is broken by a violent intrusion of fable, or an introduction of modern sentiment and thought. It has therefore neither the interest of Thierry's exquisite narrative of the same events, nor the interest which might have been derived from a complete amalgamation of the materials into a consistent work of imagination. Considered also as a reproduction of ancient men and manners it is strikingly defective. With many fine strokes of the pencil, where the author confines himself to the literal fact, his portraits, as a whole, are overcharged with Bulwerism. His imagination is not a mirror. It can reflect nothing without vitiating it. He does not possess the power of passing a character through his mind and preserving its individuality. It goes in as Harold, or Duke William, or Lafranc, but it comes out as Sir E. Bulwer Lytton, Bart.

The novel contains much of that seductive sentiment, half romantic, half misanthropic, which is the characteristic of Bulwer's works, and it is expressed with his usual beauty and brilliancy of style. Here and there we perceive allusions to his own domestic affairs, which none but Lady Bulwer can fully appreciate. Every reader of the novel must be struck with its attempt at the moral tone. Edith, the heroine, is the bride of Harold's soul, and Platonism appears in all its splendor of self-denial and noble sentiments in a Saxon thane and his maiden. History pronounces this lady to be his mistress, and it certainly is a great stretch of the reader's charity to be compelled to view her in the capacity of saint. Not only, however, in the loves of Harold and Edith, but all over the novel, there is a constant intrusion of ethical reflections, which will doubtless much edify all young ladies of a tender age. These would be well enough if they appeared to have any base in solid moral principle, but they are somewhat offensive as the mere sentimentality of conscience and religion, introduced for the purposes of fine writing. Suspicion, also, always attaches to the morality which exhibits itself on rhetorical stilts, and the refinement which is always proclaiming itself refined. Since the time of Joseph Surface there has been a great decline in the market price of noble sentiments.

The History of England, from the Invasion of Julius Ca sar to the Reign of Victoria. By Mrs. Markham. A New Edition. New York: D. Appleton & Co. 1 vol. 12mo. This is a new and revised edition of a work which has long been used in the education of boys and girls. Its information is, of course, milk for babes. We think that books of this class should be prepared by persons very different from Mrs. Markham. She, good lady, was the wife of an English clergyman by the name of Penrose, and she wrote English history as such a person might be supposed to write it. With every intention to be honest, her book has many facts and opinions which boys and girls will have to take more time to unlearn than they spent in learning, unless they intend to be children their whole lives.

There is, however, a story in the volume regarding the Duke of Marlborough, which we think few of our readers have seen. The duke's command of his temper was almost miraculous. Once, at a council of war, Prince Eugene advised that an attack on the enemy should be made the next day. As his advice was plainly judicious, he was much exasperated at the refusal of the duke's consent, and immediately called him a coward and challenged him.

Marlborough cooly declined the challenge, and the enraged prince left the council. Early the following morning he was awoke by the duke, who desired him instantly to rise, as he was preparing to make the attack, and added, "I could not tell you of my determination last night, because there was a person present who I knew was in the enemy's interest, and would betray us. I have no doubt we shall conquer, and when the battle is over I will be ready to accept your challenge." The prince, seeing the superior sagacity of Marlborough, and ashamed of his own intemperance, overwhelmed the duke with apologies, and the friendship of the two generals was more strongly cemented than ever. The anecdote is of doubtful origin, but it is an admirable illustration both of the character of Marlborough and Eugene.

Letters from Italy: and The Alps and the Rhine. By J. T. Headley. New and Revised Edition. New York: Baker & Scribner. 1 vol. 12mo.

We believe that these were Mr. Headley's first productions, and were origin lly published in Wiley & Putnam's Library. The present edition has a preface, devoted to the consideration of the new aspect Italy has assumed since the book was written, and a very judicious flagellation is given to that arch traitor and renegade, Charles Albert, King of Sardinia, whom events have transformed from a trickster and tyrant into a patriot leader. We agree with Mr. Headley in thinking that the Italians are more likely to be endangered than benefitted by his position at the head of their armies.

"The Alps and the Rhine" is, in our opinion, Mr. Headley's most agreeable work. The descriptions of scenery are singularly vivid and distinct, and are given in a style of much energy and richness. The chapters on Suwar

row's Passage of the Glarus, Macdonald's Pass of the Splugen, and the Battle of Waterloo, are admirably done. That on Macdonald is especially interesting. Those who doubt Mr. Headley's talents will please read this short extract: "The ominous sound grew louder every moment, and suddenly the fierce Alpine blast swept in a cloud of snow over the mountain, and howled like an unchained demon, through the gorge below. In an instant all was blindness and confusion and uncertainty. The very heavens were blotted out, and the frightened column stood and listened to the raving tempest that made the pine trees above it sway and groan, as if lifted from their rock-rooted places. But suddenly a still more alarming sound was heard 'An avalanche! an avalanche!' shrieked the guides, and the next moment an awful white form came leaping down the mountain, and striking the column that was struggling along the path, passed strait through it into the gulf below, carrying thirty dragoons and their horses with it in its wild plunge."

Principles of Zoology. Touching the Structure, Development, Distribution and Natural Arrangement of the Races of Animals, Living and Extinct. Part I. Comparative Physiology. By Louis Agassiz and Augustus A. Gould Boston: Gould, Kendall & Lincoln. 1 vol. 12mo.

The name of Professor Agassiz, the greatest of living naturalists, on the title page of this volume, is of itself a guarantee of its excellence. The work is intended for schools and colleges, and is admirably fitted for its purpose, but its value is not confined to the young. The general reader, who desires exact and reliable knowledge of the subject, and at the same time is unable to obtain the larger works of Professor Agassiz, will find in this little volume an invaluable companion. It has all the necessary plates

and illustrations to enable the reader fully to comprend its matter. The diagram of the crust of the earth, lated to zoology, is a most ingenious contrivance to sent, at one view, the distribution of the principal type d animals, and the order of their successive appearance the layers of the earth's crust. The publishers have imet the work in a style of great neatness and elegance.

The Writings of Cassius

Marcellus Clay, including Edited with a Preface d New York: Harper &

Speeches and Addresses.
Memoir by Horace Greely,
Brothers.

This is a large and beautiful octavo, and is embelline with an admirable likeness of Mr. Clay. The people ef this country are so well acquainted with the pecularis of Cassius M. Clay's manner, that we will not passen characterize it; and his views upon public subjects an u partisan that we leave their discussion to the politiems the country. The eminent abilities of Mr. Greely displayed in the execution of the duties of editor; al the memoir which introduces the work does fall jutis to the subject.

The Odd Fellows' Amulet, or the Principles of Odd Films ship Defined; the Objections to the Order Answerd, ind its Advantages Maintained. By Rev. D. W. Bra Auburn: Derby, Miller & Co.

This is a beautiful little volume, admirably illustrated It is well written; will be read with interest by the general reader, and should be in the possession of every member of the great and beneficent order which it adre cates and vindicates.

Grey, who is recognized as one of the most accompliste The Baronet's Daughters, and Harry Monk-Mn

female novelists of the present day, has recently given la the public another interesting volume, bearing the aban title. There are two stories, both of which are mari by the ability which characterizes the whole of Mr Grey works, and are well calculated to make a sultry after pass agreeably away. The American publisher is Mr.T B. Peterson, who furnishes a neat and uniform editum of Mrs. Grey's novels.

TO OUR READERS.

The Proprietors of "Graham's Magazine,” desirous d maintaining for it the high reputation it has secured in the estimation of the people of the United States, are deter mined to spare no pains to increase its value, and make d universally regarded as the best literary publication in the country. To this end they have placed in the hef several of our best engravers a series of plates, be truly remarkable for their superiority in design m execution. As usual, the pens of the best American w ters will be employed in giving grace and excellence is in pages, and in addition to articles which have been securel from new contributors of acknowledged ability, they have the pleasure of announcing that an engagement has bee effected with J. BAYARD TAYLOR, Esq., whose writing are so extensively known and admired, by which his valu able assistance will be secured in the editorial depart of this Magazine exclusively. This arrangement wil, we are assured, be hailed with pleasure by the host of friends which the Magazine possesses throughout the Unis, u an earnest that no efforts will be omitted to show the sense the proprietors entertain of past favors, by rendering thei work still more attractive and deserving of patronage i the future.

[graphic]

Chapeau de Mme Baudry v. Richelieu. 87-Robes de Camille.

telles de Violard r.de Choisent, 2 bis Etoffes et Echarpe de la Centation. f7 S. Antoine, 67 & Graham's Magazine

« ElőzőTovább »