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While THOU hast sweetly gurgled down the vale,
Fill'd up the pause of love's delightful tale!
While, ever as she read, the conscious maid,
By faltering voice and downcast looks betray'd,
Would blushing on her lover's neck recline,
And with her finger-point the tenderest line.
But these are past: and, mark me, Laura! time,
Which made what then was venial, now a crime,
To more befitting cares my thoughts confined,
And drove, with youth, its follies from my mind,

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Though clouds obscured the morning hour,
And keen and eager blew the blast,
And drizzling fell the cheerless shower,
As, doubtful, to the skiff we pass'd;
All soon, propitious to our prayer,
Gave promise of a brighter day:
The clouds dispersed in purer air,
The blast in zephyrs died away.
So have we, love, a day enjoy'd,

On which we both,--and yet, who knows?— May dwell with pleasure unalloy'd

And dread no thorn beneath the rose.
How pleasant, from that dome-crown'd hill
To view the varied scene below,
Woods, ships, and spires, and, lovelier still,
The circling Thames' majestic flow!
How sweet, as indolently laid,

We overhung that long-drawn dale,
To watch the checker'd light and shade
That glanced upon the shifting sail!
And when the shadow's rapid growth
Proclaim'd the noontide hour expired,
And, though unwearied, 'nothing loath,'
We to our simple meal retired;
The sportive wile, the blameless jest,
The careless mind's spontaneous flow,
Gave to that simple meal a zest

Which richer tables may not know.-
The babe that, on the mother's breast,
Has toy'd and wanton'd for a while,
And, sinking to unconscious rest,

Looks up to catch a parting smile,
Feels less assured than thou, dear maid
When, ere thy ruby lips could part,
(As close to mine thy cheek was laid,)
Thine eyes had open'd all thy heart.
Then, then I mark'd the chasten'd joy
That lightly o'er thy features stole,
From vows repaid, (my sweet employ,)
From truth, from innocence of soul:
While every word dropp'd on my ear,
So soft, (and yet it seems to thrill,)
So sweet, that 'twas a heaven to hear,
And e'en thy pause had music still.-

And O! how like a fairy dream,

To gaze in silence on the tide,
While soft and warm the sunny gleam
Slept on the glassy surface wide!
And many a thought of fancy bred,
Wild, soothing, tender, undefined,

Play'd lightly round the heart, and shed
Delicious languor o'er the mind.

Since this, while Merry and his nurslings die,
Thrill'd by the liquid peril of an eye ;*
Gasp at a recollection, and drop down
At the long streamy lightning of a frown;
I soothe, as humour prompts, my idle vein,
In frolic verse, that cannot hope to gain
Admission to the Album, or be seen
In L's Review, or Urban's Magazine.

O, for thy spirit, Pope! Yet why, my lays, Which wake no envy, and invite no praise,

So hours like moments wing'd their flight,
Till now the boatman, on the shore,
Impatient of the waning light,
Recall'd us by the dashing oar.

Well, Anna, many days like this
I cannot, must not hope to share;
For I have found an hour of bliss
Still follow'd by an age of care.
Yet oft, when memory intervenes-
But you, dear maid, be happy still,
Nor e'er regret, 'mid fairer scenes,

The day we pass'd on Greenwich Hill.

THE GRAVE OF ANNA.

I wish I was where Anna lies,
For I am sick of lingering here;
And every hour affection cries,

Go, and partake her humble bier.

I wish I could! For when she died,
I lost my all; and life has proved,
Since that sad hour, a dreary void,

A waste unlovely and unloved.-
But who, when I am turn'd to clay,
Shall duly to her grave repair,
And pluck the ragged moss away,

And weeds that have no business there?'
And who, with pious hand, shall bring
The flowers she cherish'd, snow-drops cold,
And violets that unheeded spring,

To scatter o'er her hallow'd mould?
And who, while memory loves to dwell
Upon her name for ever dear,
Shall feel his heart with passion swell,
And pour the bitter, bitter tear?

I did it: and, would fate allow,

Should visit still, should still deplore-
But health and strength have left me now,
And I, alas! can weep no more.
Take then, sweet maid, this simple strain,
The last I offer at thy shrine;
Thy grave must then undeck'd remain,
And all thy memory fade with mine.
And can thy soft, persuasive look,
Thy voice, that might with music vie,
Thy air, that every gazer took,
Thy matchless eloquence of eye;
Thy spirits, frolicsome as good,

Thy courage, by no ills dismay'd,
Thy patience, by no wrongs subdued,

Thy gay good-humour-Can they 'fade? Perhaps but sorrow dims my eye:

Cold turf, which I no more must view, Dear name, which I no more must sigh, A long, a last, a sad adieu!

* Thrill'd, &c.

"Bid the streamy lightnings fly

In liquid peril from thy eye."-Della Crusca.

"Ne'er shalt thou know to sigh,

Or on a soft idea die,

Ne'er on a recollection grasp

Thy arms."-Ohe ! jam satis est.-Anna Matilda.

THE MEVIAD.

Half creeping and half flying, yet suffice t
To stagger impudence and ruffle vice.
An hour may come, so I delight to dream,
When slowly wandering by the sacred stream,
Majestic Thames! I leave the world behind,
And give to fancy all th' enraptured mind:
An hour may come, when I shall strike the lyre
To nobler themes; then, then the chords inspire
With thy own harmony, most sweet, most strong,
And guide my hand through all the maze of song!
Till then, enough for me, in such rude strains
As mother-wit can give, and those small pains
A vacant hour allows, to range the town,
And hunt the clamorous brood of folly down;
Force every head, in Este's despite, to wear
The cap and bells by nature planted there;
Muffle the rattle, seize the slavering sholes,
And drive them, scourged and whimpering, to their
holes.

Burgoyne, perhaps, unchill'd by creeping age,
May yet arise and vindicate the stage;
The reign of nature and of sense restore,
And be-whatever Terence was before.
And you, too, whole Menander !† who combine
With his pure language, and his flowing line,
The soul of comedy, may steal an hour
From the foul chase of still escaping power;
The poet and the sage again unite,
And sweetly blend instruction with delight.

And yet Elfrida's bard, though time has shed
The snow of age too deeply round his head,
Feels the kind warmth, the fervour which inspired
His youthful breast, still glow uncheck'd, untired:
And yet though, like the bird of eve, his song
"Fit audience finds not" in the giddy throng,
The notes, though artful, wild, though numerous,
chaste,

Fill with delight the sober ear of taste.

But these, and more, I could with honour name,
Too proud to stoop, like me, to vulgar game,
Subjects more worthy of their daring choose,
And leave at large th' abortions of the muse.
Proud of their privilege, the innumerous spawn,
From bogs and fens, the mire of Pindus, drawn,
New vigour feel, new confidence assume,
And swarm, like Pharaoh's frogs, in every room.

Sick of th' eternal croaks, which, ever near,
Beat like the death-watch on my tortured ear;
And sure, too sure, that many a genuine child
Of truth and nature check'd his wood-notes wild,t

Burgoyne.-See note*, 2d col. p. 174.

And you, too, whole Menander, &c.-O spem fallacem! Our Menander has since "stolen an hour" (it would be injustice to suppose it more) from public pursuits, and prostituted it to the reproduction of a German sooterkin.

Check'd his wood-notes wild.-Etwπησavтwv kodolwr, acovтaι KvKVOL. But this is better illustrated in a most elegant fable of Lessing, to which I despair of doing justice in a translation.

"Du zürnest, Liebling der Musen," &c. &c. Thou art troubled, darling of the Muses, thou art troubled at the clamorous swarms of insects which infest Parnassus. O hear from me what once the nightingale heard from the shepherd.

(Dear to the feeling heart,) in doubt to win
The vacant wanderer 'mid the unceasing din
Of this hoarse rout; I seized at length the wand;
Resolved, though small my skill, though weak my
hand,

The mischief, in its progress, to arrest,

And exorcise the soil of such a pest.

HENCE! IN THE NAME-I scarce had spoke, when lo!

Reams of outrageous sonnets,* thick as snow,

indeed, replied the shepherd; but thy silence alone is the cause of it.

"There's comfort yet!"

* Reams of outrageous sonnets. Of these I have collected a very reasonable quantity, which I purpose to prefix to some future edition of the Mæviad, under the classic head of

INSIGNIUM VIRORUM

ALIQUOT TESTIMONIA

QUI

BAV: ET MEV: INCLYTISS: AUCTORIS

MEMINERUNT.

Meanwhile I shall present the reader with the first two which occur, as a specimen of the collection.

SONNET I.

"To the anonymous author of the Baviad, occasioned by his scurrilous and most unmerited attack on Mr. Weston.

"Demon of darkness! whosoe'er thou art,

That darest assume the brighter angel's form,
And o'er the peaceful vale impel the storm,
With many a sigh to rend the honest heart,
Force from th' unconscious eye the tear to start,
And with just pride th' indignant bosom warm;
Avaunt! to where unnumber'd spirits swarm,
Foul and malignant as thyself, depart.
Genius of Pope, descend, ye servile crew

Of imitators vile, intrude not!!! I appeal
To thee, and thee alone, from outrage base;

Tell me, though fair the forms his fancy drew,
Shouldst thou the secrets of his heart reveal,
Would fame his memory crown, or cover with dis-
J. M.-Gent. Mag. Aug. 1792.
grace?
This poor driveller, who is stupid enough to be Weston's
admirer, and malignant enough to be his friend, I take
to be one Morley ; whom I now and then observe, in the

1 I was right. Mr. Morley, who, I understand, is a clergyman, and who, like Mr. Parsons, exults in the idea of having first attacked me, has since published a "Tale," the wit, or rather dulness of which, if I recollect right, consists in my being disappointed of a living.

Here follow a few of the introductory lines, which for poetry and pleasantry can only be exceeded by those of Mr. Parsons.

"What if a little once I did abuse thee?

Worse than thou hadst deserved I could not use thee:

For when I spied thy satyr's cloven foot,

'Tis very true I took thee for a brute;

And, marking more attentively thy manners,

I since have wish'd thy hide were at the tanner's.

But if a man thou art, as some suppose,

O! how my fingers itch to pull thy nose!
As pleased as Punch, I'd hold it in my gripe,

Till Parkinson had stuff'd thee for a snipe!!!"

It is rather singular that this still-born lump of insipidity should be introduced to the bookseller under the auspices of Dr. Parr. If that respectable name was not abused on the occasion, I can only say that politics, like misery, "bring a man acquainted with strange bedfellows!"

For the rest, I will present Mr. Morley with a couple of lines, which, if he will get them construed, and seriously reflect upon, before he next puts pen to paper, may be of more service to him than all the instruction, and all the encouragement the Doctor, apparently, ever gave him.

Cur ego laborem notus esse tam prave,
Cum stare gratis cum silentio possim !

I find, from a letter which my publisher has received from Dr. Parr, that

degree of uneasiness.

Sing then, said he to the silent songstress, one lovely this note (which I have left in its original state) has given him some slight evening in the spring, sing then, sweet nightingale! Alas! said the nightingale, the frogs croak so loud, that I have lost all desire to sing: dost thou not hear them? I do,

It is satisfactory to me to reflect that this uneasiness is founded on a misapprehension. When I remarked on the "singularity of Mr. Morley's 'Tale'

Flew round my head; yet, in my cause secure,
"Pour on," I cried, " pour on, I will endure."
What! shall I shrink, because the noble train,
Whose judgment I impugn, whose taste arraign,
Alive, and trembling for their favourite's fate,
Pursue my verse with unrelenting hate?

No save me from their PRAISE, and I can sit
Calm, unconcern'd, the butt of Andrews' wit
And Topham's sense; perversely gay can smile,
While Este, the zany, in his motley style,
Calls barbarous names; while Bell and Boaden rave,
And Vaughan, a brother blockhead's verse to save,
Toils day by day my character to draw,
And heaps upon me every thing-but law.
But do I then (abjuring every aim)
All censure slight, and all applause disclaim?
Not so where judgment holds the rod, I bow
My humbled neck, awed by her angry brow;

Where taste and sense approve, I feel a joy
Dear to my heart, and mix'd with no alloy.
I write not to the modish herd: my days,
Spent in the tranquil shades of letter'd ease,
Ask no admiring stare from those I meet,
No loud "that's HE!" to make their passage sweet:
Pleased to steal softly by, unmark'd, unknown,
I leave the world to Holcroft, Pratt,* and Vaughan.
Of these enough. Yet may the few I love
(For who would sing in vain ?) my verse approve ;
Chief THOU, my friend! who from my earliest years,
Hast shared my joys, and more than shared my cares.
Sure, if our fates hang on some hidden power,
And take their colour from the natal hour,
Then, IRELAND + the same planet on us rose,
Such the strong sympathies our lives disclose!

*PRATT. This gentleman lately put in practice a very notable scheme. Having scribbled himself fairly out of

Gent. Mag., ushering his great prototype's doggrel into notice, he found it expedient to retire to the continent for notice, with an importance truly worthy of it.

SONNET II.

"To the execrable Baviad.

"Monster of turpitude! who seem'st inclined

Through me to pierce with thy impregnate dart,
The fine-spun nerve of each full-bosom'd mind,1
And rock in apathy-the sensive heart,
Tremble! for lo! my Oracle-so famed—

Shall ring each morn in thy accursed ear
A griding pang! So-when the Grecian Mare
Enter'd the town, old Pyramus exclaim'd,

I see! I see!-and hurl'd his lightning spear,
While Capaneus drew back his head-for fear,
And godlike Alexander-gazing round,
Unconscious of his victories-to come,
Approach'd the monarch, and with sobs profound,
Explain'd th' impending wrath o'er Ilium's royal

dome."

J. Bell.

being introduced under the auspices of Dr. Parr," I merely alluded to a con

a few months-to provoke the inquiries of Mr. Lane's indefatigable readers.

Mark the ingratitude of the creatures! No inquiries were made, and Mr. Pratt was forgotten before he had crossed the channel. Ibi omnis effusus labor.-But what! "The mouse that is content with one poor hole Can never be a mouse of any soul."

Baffled in this expedient, he had recourse to another, and, while we were dreaming of nothing less, came before us in the following paragraph:

"A few days since died, at Basle in Switzerland, the ingenious Mr. Pratt. His loss will be severely felt by the literary world, as he joined to the accomplishments of the gentleman the erudition of the scholar."

This was inserted in the London papers for several days successively. The country papers, too, "yelled out like syllables of dolour." At length, while our eyes were yet wet for the irreparable loss we had sustained, came a second paragraph:

"As no event of late has caused a more general sorrow

versation which Mr. Morley himself was said to have had with his bookseller; than the supposed death of the ingenious Mr. Pratt, we

--and I then suspected (what I now find, from the Doctor's letter, to be the case) that this respectable name (Dr. Parr's) was abused, i. e. introduced upon the occasion "without his consent, or even knowledge."

If my words conveyed the idea (which I now apprehend they may) that Dr. Parr himself had recommended the "Tale," it was far from my inten tion, and I am sorry for it. Indeed, I am sorry that his name was mentioned at all in the Mæviad. It is totally out of its place; and I can only regret, that a juster estimation both of Doctor Farr and of Mr. Morley had not changed my "suspicion" of the latter into certainty, and induced me to attribute his recommendatory story to vanity, and something else not altogether so venial. In conclusion: though Dr. Parr gives up Mr. Morley's poetry, yet he seems to think I have undervalued his other attainments- his Latin, Greek, and Hebrew, and his vigorous and elegant prose."-Of all these I knew nothing. When "there is no occasion for such vanity, I doubt not but Mr. Morley will take care to let them appear;" meanwhile, I must be content to judge him from what I know-his sonnets and his tale. It is bat fair to add, however, that the sound and salutary advice which Dr. Parr gave this poor addle-headed man (to say nothing of the tenderness with which he speaks of him) does no less honour to his friendship, than the reprobation of his poetry does to his taste.

1 Quere, full-bottomed.-Printer's Devil.

2 Grecian Mare.-This has been hitherto, inaccurately enough, named the Trojan horse; and, indeed, I myself had nearly fallen into the unscholarlike error, when my learned friend Greathead convinced me (from Pope's emen. dations of Virgil, under the fantastic name of Scriblerius) that the animal in question was a marc-She being there said to be forta armis, armed with a fatus. Let us hear no more, therefore, of the Trojan horse.

The patronymic Trojan is still more absurd. Homer expressly declares the mare to have been produced by Pallas-Palladis arte: now Pallas was a Grecian goddess, as is sufficiently manifest from her name, which is derived from aλAw, vibro.-J. Ball.

3 Godlike; that is Orosions from 910, God, and uns, like. Vide Hom, Translators in general (1 except a late one) are too inattentive to the compound epithets of this great poet. But why does Homer call Alexander god. like, when he appears, from Curtius Quintius's tedious gazette in verse, to have had one shoulder higher than the other? My friend Vaughan thinks it was purely to pay his court to him, in hopes of getting into his will, or rather into his mistress's. It may be so; but 'tis strange the absurdity was never noticed before.-J. Bell.

are happy to have it in our power to assure his numerous admirers, that he is as well as they can wish, and (what they will be delighted to hear) busied in preparing his TRAVELS for the press."

"Laud we the gods!"

Here, on account of its connexion with the person mentioned in the text, I shall take the liberty-extremum hunc mihi concede-of inserting the following "imitation," addressed to him several years since. It was never printed, nor, as far as I know, seen by any one but himself; and I transcribe it for the press with mingled sensations of gratitude and delight, at the favourable change of circumstances which we have both experienced since it was written.

TO THE

REV. JOHN IRELAND.
IMITATION OF HORACE. LIB. II. ODE 16.
Otium Divos rogat, &c.
When howling winds, and lowering skies,
The light, untimber'd bark surprise

Near Orkney's boisterous seas;
The trembling crew forget to swear,
And bend the knees unused to prayer,
To ask a little ease.

For ease the Turk, ferocious, prays,
For ease the barbarous Russe-for ease,
Which Palk could ne'er obtain;
Which Bedford lack'd amid his store,
And liberal Clive, with mines of ore,
Oft bade for-but in vain.

1 Now prebendary of Westminster.

Thou know'st how soon we felt this influence bland,

And sought the brook and coppice, hand in hand,
And shaped rude bows, and uncouth whistles blew,
And paper kites (a last, great effort) flew ;
And, when the day was done, retired to rest,
Sleep on our eyes, and sunshine in our breast.

For not the liveried tribes which wait
Around the mansions of the great,

Can keep, my friend, aloof,
Fear, that attacks the mind by fits,
And care that, like a raven, flits
Around the lordly roof.

"O well is he !" to whom kind heaven
A decent competence has given !
Rich is the blessing sent;
He grasps not anxiously at more,
Dreads not to use his little store,
And fattens on content.

"O well is he !" for life is lost
Amid a world of passions toss'd;

Then why, dear Jack, should man, Magnanimous ephemera! stretch His eager views beyond the reach

Of his contracted span ?

Why should he from his country run,
In hopes beneath a foreign sun

Serener hours to find }

Was never one in this wild chase,
Who changed his nature with his place,
And left himself behind.

Lo! wing'd with all the lightning's speed,
Care climbs the bark, care mounts the steed,
An inmate of the breast:

Nor Barca's heat, nor Zembla's cold,
Can drive from that pernicious hold
The too tenacious guest.

He whom no anxious thoughts annoys,
Grateful, the present hour enjoys,

Nor seeks the next to know;
To lighten every ill he strives,
Nor ere misfortune's hand arrives,
Anticipates the blow.

Something must ever be amiss:
Man has his joys; but-perfect bliss-
A phantom of the brain!

We cannot all have all we want
And Chance, unask'd, to this may grant
What that has begg'd in vain.

Wolfe rush'd on death in manhood's bloom,
Paulet crept slowly to the tomb;

Here breath, there fame was given; And that wise power, who weighs our lives, By contras and by pros contrives

To keep the balance even.

To thee she gave two piercing eyes,
A body just of Tydeus' size,

A judgment sound and clear;

A mind with various science fraught,
A liberal soul, a threadbare coat,
And forty pounds a year.

To me, one eye not over good,
Two sides that, to their cost, have stood
A ten years' hectic cough;
Aches, stitches, all the numerous ills
Which swell the devilish doctor's bills,
And sweep poor mortals off:

A coat more bare than thine, a soul
That spurns the crowd's malign control,
A fix'd contempt of wrong;
Spirits above affliction's power,
And skill to charm the lonely hour
With no inglorious song.

In riper years, again together thrown, Our studies, as our sports before, were one. Together we explored the stoic page

Of the Ligurian, stern though beardless sage.
Or traced th' Aquinian through the Latine road,
And trembled at the lashes he bestow'd.
Together, too, when Greece unlock'd her stores,
We roved, in thought, o'er Troy's devoted shores,
Or follow'd, while he sought his native soil,
"That old man eloquent," from toil to toil;
Lingering, with good Alcinöus, o'er the tale,
Till the east redden'd, and the stars grew pale.
So pass'd our life, till fate, severely kind,
Tore us apart, and land and sea disjoin'd,
For many a year: Now met, to part no more,
Th' ascendant power, confess'd so strong of yore,
Stronger by absence, every thought controls,
And knits, in perfect unity, our souls.

O, IRELAND! if the verse, which thus essays
To trace our lives "e'en from our boyish days,"
Delight thy ear, the world besides may rail-
I care not at th' uninteresting tale;

I only seek, in language void of art,

To ope my breast, and pour out all my heart;
And, boastful of thy various worth, to tell
How long we loved, and, thou canst add, HOW WELL!
Thou too, MY HOPPNER!* if my wish avail'd,
Shouldst praise the strain that but for thee had fail'd;

Since this edition was prepared for the press, the country has been deprived of this distinguished and enlightened artist, whose hard destiny it was to struggle with many difficulties through the intermediate stages of an arduous profession, and to be snatched from the world at the moment when his "greatness was a ripening," and the full reward of his labours and his genius securely within his grasp. His art, by his untimely fate, has sustained a loss which will not easily be repaired; for he was, in all respects, a very eminent man, and, while he lived, most vigorously supported by his precept, as well as by the example of his own productions, those genuine principles of taste and nature which the genius of Reynolds first implanted among us. But though Mr. Hoppner well knew how to appreciate that extraordinary person, and entertained the highest veneration for his professional powers, he was very far from his copyist; occasionally, indeed, he imitated his manner, and formed his pictures on similar principles; but what he thus borrowed he made his own with such playful ingenuity, and adorned and concealed his plagiarism with so many winning and original graces, that his pardon was sealed ere his sentence could be pronounced. The prevailing fashion of the times, together with his own narrow circumstances in early life, necessarily directed his atten tion, almost exclusively, to the study of portrait-painting: in a different situation, the natural bent of his genius, no less than his inclinations, would probably have led him to landscape, and the rural and familiar walks of life; for when he exercised his talents upon subjects of this nature, he did it with so much case and pleasure to himself, and was always so eminently successful, that it furnishes matter for regret, that the severe and harassing duties of his principal occupation did not allow him more frequent opportunities of indulging his fancy in the pursuit of objects so congenial with his feelings and disposi tion. Of his exquisite taste in landscape, the backgrounds which he occasionally introduced in his portraits will alone afford sufficient evidence, without considering the beautiful sketches in chalk, with which he was accustomed to amuse his leisure hours. These are executed with a vigour and felicity peculiar to himself, and discover a knowledge and comprehension of landscape which would do honour to a Gainsborough. Indeed, in several

Thou know'st, when indolence possess'd me all,
How oft I roused at thy inspiring call;
Burst from the siren's fascinating power,
And gave the muse thou lovest one studious hour.
Proud of thy friendship, while the voice of fame
Pursues thy merits with a loud acclain,
I share the triumph; not unpleased to see
Our kindred destinies :-for thou, like me,

Wast thrown too soon on the world's dangerous
tide,

To sink or swim, as chance might best decide.

respects, there appear to have been many points of similarity between these extraordinary men, not only in particular parts of their art, but also in their conversation, disposition, and character.

ME, all too weak to gain the distant land,
The waves had whelm'd, but that an outstretch'd
hand

Kindly upheld, when now with fear unnerved,
And still protects the life it then preserved.
THEE, powers untried, perhaps unfelt before,
Enabled, though with pain, to reach the shore,
While West stood by, the doubtful strife to view,
Nor lent a friendly arm to help thee through.
Nor ceased the struggle there; hate, ill-suppress'd,
Her vantage took of thy ingenuous breast,

and distinct, yet so artfully and judiciously broken, that it requires an experienced eye to detect the delicate process by which the effect is accomplished. In the flesh of his best female portraits, in particular, there is a union of airiness with substance, of lustre with refined softness, which has rarely been surpassed, except by that great original hand, which, in the formation of its "last, best

The absorbing quality of his principal pursuit seldom allowed Mr. Hoppner to turn his attention practically to the more elevated departments of art, yet he had a sincere respect for the noble productions of the Italian schools, and the writer of these pages still remembers with pleasure the enthusiastic delight which he evinced upon first entering the Louvre, and viewing the wonders of that magnificent collection.-Taste in the arts and elegances of life he possessed in a very uncommon degree. It formed the distinguishing feature of his character, and shone alike conspicuously, whether his talents were exercised upon music or painting, in writing or conver sation. His colloquial powers, indeed, have not often been excelled; for, in his happiest moments, there was a novelty of thought, a playful brilliancy, and a boundless fertility of invention, which affixed to all he uttered the stamp of originality and genius, and delighted every hearer.-Sometimes, indeed, he indulged in a severity of sarcasm, which, to such as are unaccustomed to make allowances for the quick perceptions and irritable feel

In portrait, however, Mr. Hoppner was decidedly superior, and so far outstripped Gainsborough in this department of art, that it would be the highest injustice to attempt a comparison of their powers. The distinguish-work," rendered all chance of rivalship hopeless. ing characteristic of Mr. Hoppner's style is an easy and unaffected elegance, which reigns throughout all his works: his naturally refined taste appeared to have given him almost intuitively an aversion from every thing which bordered on affectation and vulgarity; and enabled him to stamp an air of gentility and fashion on the most inveterate awkwardness and deformity. Few men ever sacrificed to the graces more liberally or with greater success: at his transforming touch, harshness and asperity dimpled into smiles, age lost its furrows and its pallid hues, and swelled on the sight in all the splendour of youthful exuberance. This power of improving what was placed before him, without annihilating resemblance, obtained him a decided preference to all the artists of his day among the fairer part of fashionable society, with whom, it is probable, even Sir Joshua himself was never so great a favourite. Reynolds was too apt to be guilty of the sin of painting all he saw, and now and then would maliciously exaggerate any little defect, if he could thereby increase the strength of the character which he was depicting. Mr. Hoppner pursued a different plan: heings of genius, appeared to partake somewhat too much painted his beauties not always exactly as they appeared, but as they wished to appear; and to those whose charms were "falling into the sear, the yellow leaf," his pictures were the most agreeable, and consequently the truest of all mirrors. The same qualities which rendered him so highly successful in his portraits of women, did not, perhaps, afford him equal advantages in those of the other sex, in which strength and character ought to take the lead of almost every other consideration; his portraits of men were generally, if the expression be allowable, too civilized and genteel to be very striking and forcible; and in his constant wish to represent the gentleman, he sometimes failed to delineate the man. To this observa-vity of his mind, that this original defect was visible only tion, however, it must be acknowledged, that many of his best works form very splendid exceptions; and those who have viewed and attentively examined his admirable portraits of the Archbishop of York, Lord Spencer, Dr. Pitcairn, Mr. Pitt, &c., may rather feel inclined to regret that the prevailing fashion of the day should, in this instance, have produced a misapplication of his powers, than to lament their natural deficiency.

of bitterness and asperity; possibly, when engaged in mixed society, this notion might not be altogether void of foundation; but they who were accustomed to enjoy his company under different circumstances, amid the tranquil scenes of rural retirement, when his mind was free from the little cares and fretting incidents of the world, and his character and feelings were allowed their full scope, will ever remember, with a sensation of mingled sorrow and delight, the fancy, the enthusiasm, and the sentimental tenderness, which, on such occasions, breathed throughout his discourse. His education had been neglected: such, however, was the energy and acti

to the few who were in habits of the closest intimacy with him. He read much, and with discrimination and judgment: the best English authors were familiar to him; and there was scarcely a topic of conversation into which he could not enter with advantage, or a subject, however remote from his ordinary pursuits, which his taste could not embellish, and his knowledge illustrate.

He died on the 23d of January, 1810, of a lingering and In his portraits of children he was peculiarly fortunate: doubtful disease, at the age of fifty-one years. In the he entered completely into the infantine character, and early progress of his complaint, he did not appear to arranged his compositions of this species with that unaf- entertain the slightest idea of its fatal termination; but fected ease and playful grace which so pleasingly mark a few months previously to his death, it is evident, from the early periods of human life. One great charm of his the following affecting incident, that he was fully sensipictures arises from the air of negligence and facility ble of his approaching dissolution. Toward the close which pervades them; their production appears to have of autumn, as he was walking on the sunny side of St. cost no effort, and the careless boldness of his handling, James's-square, which, from its warm and sheltered situaequally removed from insipidity and handicraft, stamps tion, he was in the habit of frequenting, he was met by a the hand of a master upon the most trifling of his per- near relation of the writer, who, after accompanying him formances. His colouring is natural, chaste, and power- for a short distance, prepared to quit him. "No; don't ful, and his tones, for the most part, mellow and deep; go yet," said he, "my good fellow; stay and take another the texture of his flesh is uniformly excellent, and his turn or two with me.-I like to walk in the decline of the penciling rich and full; his carnations transparent, fresh, ❘ last summer's sun which I shall ever live to enjoy."

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