11t was, we Deneve-anu unnappuy the character is as rare as it is admirable-a patron to whom we can trace but few acts of patronage; one of those who "Do good by stealth, and blush to find it fame." The plan of his poem necessarily led him among all the grander and more beautiful objects of Nature, in the classic land through which he travelled. He describes them in a manner at once graceful and graphic; and it would be difficult to find any writer who more clearly and distinctly brings them before the reader. It is, however, in allusions to the ancient histories of the Italian cities that he most excels. At times, he rises into absolute sublimity: there are passages in his poem that would not lose by comparison with the most vigorous and energetic compositions in the language. He was a scholar, and "a ripe and good one;" occasionally, the hue academic is over his page, but he never renders it repulsive. It will not be easy now-a-days, to obtain readers for his volume; but we venture to assert, that those who may be induced to WHERE stood Salvator, when with all his storms Around him winter rav'd, When being, none save man, the tempest brav'd? When on her mountain crest The eagle sank to rest, Nor dar'd spread out her pennons to the blast : The famish'd wolf around the sheep-cote prowl'd? Where stood Salvator, when the forest howl'd, And the rock-rooted pine in all its length Where stood Salvator, when the summer cloud Gather'd the tempest, from whose ebon shroud, I see him where the spirit of the storm His daring votary led: Firm stands his foot on the rock's topmost head, An avalanche cataract, whirl'd in thunder o'er The promontory's height, Bursts on the rock: while round the mountain brow, Spreads wide a sea of foam evanishing in light. ROME. I SAW the ages backward roll'd, The scenes long past restore : And when fierce gales bow'd the high pines, when blaz'd Some unknown godhead heard, and, awe-struck, gaz'd On Jove's imagin'd form : And in that desert, when swoln Tyber's wave Went forth the twins to save, Their reedy cradle floating on his flood : While yet the infants on the she-wolf clung, While yet they fearless play'd her brow beneath, And mingled with their food The spirit of her blood, As o'er them seen to breathe With fond reverted neck she hung, And lick'd in turn each babe, and formed with fostering tongue: And when the founder of imperial Rome Fix'd on the robber hill, from earth aloof, His predatory home, And hung in triumph round his straw-thatched roof Of branching antlers wide : And tower'd in giant strength, and sent afar Stern preluding the war: And when the shepherds left their peaceful fold, And from the wild wood lair, and rocky den, Round their bold chieftain rush'd strange forms of barbarous men: Then might be seen by the presageful eye And temples roof'd with gold. And in the gloom of that remorseless time, Forging a chain for earth : And tho' slow ages roll'd their course between, His war-worn legions on, Troubling the pastoral stream of peaceful Rubicon. Such might o'er clay-built Rome have been foretold And the globe Cæsar's footstool, who, when Rome Link a Faustina to an Antonine On their polluted temple; who but thou, Yet, ere that destin'd time, The love-lute, and the viol, song, and mirth, A voice borne back on every passing wind, One voice, as from the lip of human kind, The echo of thy fame?-Flow they not yet, The chosen of the world, on pilgrimage, Where genius dwells enthron'd? Rome! thou art doom'd to perish, and thy days, Like mortal man's, are numbered : number'd all, Ere each fleet hour decays. Though pride yet haunt thy palaces, though art Thy sculptur'd marbles animate: Though thousands, and ten thousands throng thy gate; Yet traffic, and thy throned priest adore : Thy second reign shall pass, -pass like thy reign of yore. THE GROTTO OF EGERIA. CAN I forget that beauteous day, No zephyr on the leaflet play'd, |