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And of spirit consign'd to the realms of the dead, 'Twere baseness that aught like reproof should be

said.

'Tis the produce of mind, not the labour of man,

I, Sir Scribblecumdash, here endeavour to scan: So, pleas'd, I must greet our true Bard with applause,

Whose genius, divested of classical laws,

Combin'd sterling wit, vigor, pathos, and ease;
And point, feeling, energy, always must please:(9)

(q) Independently of the works published during the lifetime of Burns, which have excited, and so justly continue to excite public applause, the world is also indebted to the persevering and praiseworthy researches of the late Mr. Cromk for the poetical and prose remains of this offspring of talent; which not only tend to enhance the Bard in the estimation of literary characters, but also display him in that social point of view which truly delineates the soul of this unsophisticated child of Caledonian song.

In fine, 'twas as easy with Burns to excel,

As for thousands to chime forth stupidity's knell.

The recent horrors still appear:

Oh! may they never cease to awe!
Still be the King of Terrors near,
Whom late in all his pomp I saw.

Torture and grief prepar'd his way,

And pointed to a yawning tomb;

Darkness behind eclips'd the day,

And check'd my forward hopes to come.

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Bloomfield.

Tantum de medio sumptis accedit honoris.

Horace.

A certain portion of honor is due to those labours which are derived from middle or common life.

To chronicle Bloomfield I cannot refuse,
Renown'd for one flight of Simplicity's Muse;

The poor Farmer's Boy, his sole offspring of merit,
Each subsequent effort divested of spirit.

He pictur'd the scenes which in childhood he

knew,

His style unaffected;-his portraiture true:

Thus the poem, as effort didactic, must stand
Rusticity's tale from Veracity's hand. (s)

(s) If the rapid sale of a work can speak for its merits, the Farmer's Boy must claim the most unbounded commendation : beauties it certainly does possess, what will ever deservedly rank it a favourite with a British public. As for the subsequent labours of Mr. Bloomfield, they so far fall short of this dawning effusion as scarcely to appear the performances of the same writer: and I am by no means singular in my opinion, when I aver that had this gentleman dropped the pen upon the completion of the Farmer's Boy, his poetic talent would not have experienced any diminution in the judgment of literary censors. Urged, as I conjecture, by the success of his brother, Mr. Nathaniel Bloomfield also enlisted himself under the auspices of the Nine; but his attempts can never place him upon a par with his relative, when the Farmer's Boy becomes the subject of consideration. Among other poems of this description, an anonymous writer has favoured the public with The Fisher Boy, Sailor Boy, Cottage Girl, and Jack Junk; four productions which have met with considerable applause. They portray the unvarnished delineations of life, as far as the scenes extend which they were composed to delineate; and if morality, patriotism, and an easy style of versification can gratify a reader, these poems are not unworthy the patronage already conferred upon them.

Such praise claims the bard, nor shall candour

disown it;

I love native worth, and will ever enthrone it:

Ne'ertheless, in their plaudits some friends over

warm,

The dictates of reason wou'd fain take by storm;
Such critics as boldly advanc'd potent reasons,
To prove Farmer's Boy vied with Thomson's fam'd
Seasons: (t)

(t) Mr. Capel Loft, the annotator of the Farmer's Boy, has not only lavished the most unqualified praises upon this work, but, in imitation of Messrs. Malone, Steevens, Chalmers, and such laborious commentators, enlisted, as his auxiliaries, the Greek and Latin poets, in order to prove that Mr. Bloomfield, having eyes, could sometimes see, form his opinions, and express himself in terms not dissimilar to the style of those antique gentlemen. By this scientific research the public is favoured with a volume containing twice the quantum of paper and print which the poem itself would expend; and for which every purchaser of course must pay, although not one in five hundred ever takes the trouble of wading through notes which only tend to confuse the text of a writer whose excellence consists in the simplicity of his tale, and the perspicuity of style which characterizes the effusion of his Muse.

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