bad neighbours, or poverty, or mutilation, or at the rumour of revolution or of wonder! If I quake, what matters it what I quake at? Well and truly did Carlyle write to Emerson, 'You are a new era, my man, in your huge country.' Emerson's poetry has at least one of the qualities of true poetry-it always pleases and occasionally delights. Great poetry it may not be, but it has the happy knack of slipping in between our fancies, and of clinging like ivy to the masonry of the thought-structure beneath which each one of us has his dwelling. I must be allowed room for two quotations, one from the stanzas called Give all to Love, the other from Wood Notes. Cling with life to the maid; First shadow of surmise, Flits across her bosom young Of a joy apart from thee, Free be she, fancy-free, Nor thou detain her vesture's hem, Nor the palest rose she flung From her summer's diadem. Though thou loved her as thyself, As a self of purer clay, Tho' her parting dims the day, Stealing grace from all alive; Heartily know When half-gods go, The gods arrive.' The lines from Wood Notes run as fol lows: 'Come learn with me the fatal song Which knits the world in music strong, Kindled with courageous fancies; Come lift thine eyes to lofty rhymes Of things with things, of times with times, Of sound and echo, man and maid; Body with shadow still pursued. For nature beats in perfect tune Or dip thy paddle in the lake, But it carves the bow of beauty there, And the ripples in rhymes the oar forsake. But to each thought and thing allied, What place Emerson is to occupy in American literature is for America to determine. Some authoritative remarks on this subject are to be found in Mr. Low ell's essay on 'Thoreau,' in My Study Windows; but here at home, where we are sorely pressed for room, it is certain he must be content with a small allotment, where, however, he may for ever sit beneath his own vine and fig-tree, none daring to make him afraid. Emerson will always be the favourite author of somebody; and to be always read by somebody is better than to be read first by everybody and then by nobody. Indeed, it is hard to fancy a pleasanter destiny than to join the company of lesser authors. All their readers are sworn friends. They are spared the harsh discords of ill-judged praise and feigned rapture. Once or twice in a century some enthusiastic and expansive admirer insists upon dragging them from their shy retreats, and trumpeting their fame in the market-place, asserting, possibly with loud asseverations (after the fashion of Mr. Swinburne), that they are precisely as much above Otway and Collins and George Eliot as they are below Shakspeare and Hugo and Emily Brontë. The great world looks on good-humouredly for a moment or two, and then proceeds as before, and the disconcerted author is left free to scuttle back to his corner, where he is all the happier, sharing the raptures of the lonely student, for his brief experience of publicity. Let us bid farewell to Emerson, who has bidden farewell to the world, in the words of his own Good-bye. 'Good-bye to flattery's fawning face, To crowded halls, to court and street, A spot that is sacred to thought and God.' THE OFFICE OF LITERATURE. DR. JOHN BROWN'S pleasant story has become well known, of the countryman who, being asked to account for the gravity of his dog, replied, 'Oh, sir! life is full of sairiousness to him get eneugh o' fechtin'.' he can just never Something of the spirit of this saddened dog seems lately to have entered into the very people who ought to be freest from it our men of letters. They are all very serious and very quarrelsome. To some of them it is dangerous even to allude. to a theory or period, uxorious of husbands Many are wedded and are the most ever ready to re sent an affront to their lady. This devotion makes them very grave, and possibly very happy after a pedantic fashion. One remembers what Hazlitt, who was neither happy nor pedantic, has said about pedantry: |