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poet, the poetry, and every thing except the palpable illusion which, for the moment, captivates his attention. It is like looking down into a concave mirror, in a darkened room, when, expecting to see our own features reflected, we are startled by the appearance of a strange countenance* rising towards us, and on the instant are completely deceived. An example will explain this better than ten periods of definition, or a long string of metaphorical illustrations. Take the picture of a corn-stack, from the "British Georgics."

"Of forms the circular is most approved, As offering, in proportion to its bulk,

The smallest surface to the storm's assault.

To turn the driving rains, the outer sheaves,
With bottoms lower than the rustling tops,
Should sloping lie. When, to the crowning sheaf
Arrived, distrust the sky; the thatch lay on,
And bind with strawy coils. O, pleasant sight;
These lozenged ropes, that, at the tapering top,
End in a wisp-wound pinnacle- a gladsome perch,
On which already sits poor Robin, proud,

And sweetly sings a song to harvest-home!"

In these lines, nothing can be more dry or unentertaining than all that immediately belongs to the subject; but just when the reader is congratulating himself that the paragraph is within a couplet of the close, he sees- he hears" poor Robin," perched and singing on the twisted pinnacle; and,

* The countenance of a person placed opposite, without our knowledge, and looking into the mirror at the same time.

instead of a mere recipe to make a corn-stack, the bodily image of one, newly thatched, is at once placed before his eye, while his ear is regaled with the sweet small notes of the bird of autumn.

The fashionable as well as the familiar poetry of the present day sparkles with fanciful yet true descriptions, of which the subjects are, in general, among the most obvious, and yet the least noticed circumstances, recurring every day, and every where. The brilliant parterres of Miss Landon's enclosure, on the south of Parnassus, where ideas, like hummingbirds, are seen flying about in tropical sunshine, or fluttering over blossoms of all hues and all climes; and the home meadows of John Clare, the Northamptonshire peasant, whose thoughts, like bees, are ever on the wing in search of honey from "the meanest flower that blows;" are equally productive of these "curiosities of literature." A specimen from the latter (as less known of the two) will show to what perfection the art of making much of a little has lately been carried.

THE THRUSH'S NEST.

"Within a thick and spreading hawthorn bush,
That overhung a mole-hill large and round,
I heard, from morn to morn, a merry thrush
Sing hymns of rapture, while I drank the sound
With joy; and oft, an unintruding guest,

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I watch'd her secret toils from day to day, How true she warp'd the moss to form her nest, And modell'd it within with wood and clay.

And by and by, like heath-bells gilt with dew,
There lay her shining eggs as bright as flowers,
Ink-spotted over, shells of green and blue :
And there I witness'd, in the summer hours,
A brood of nature's minstrels chirp and fly,
Glad as the sunshine and the laughing sky."

JOHN CLARE.

Here we have in miniature the history and geography of a "Thrush's Nest," so simply and naturally set forth, that one might think such strains

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but let the heartless critic who despises them try his own hand, either at a bird's nest, or a sonnet like this; and when he has succeeded in making the one, he may have some hope of being able to make the other.

The happy peculiarities of that kind of descriptive poetry, which with us is indigenous-nothing of similar growth having been preserved in the remains of antiquity, nor any thing to compare with it found among the luxuriant products of modern Italy,—may be illustrated by a quotation or two from the writings of a bard of the same humble class with John Clare, but who was not less curious in marking, and skilful in delineating, the charms of external nature, and the occupations of rural industry, than the poet of "The Seasons" himself. The author of the "Farmer's Boy" was exalted above his deserts at the beginning of his career; and, according to the usual re-action of things in this perverse world, depreciated as much

below them in the sequel. Death, the universal administrator of those who die leaving an inheritance which cannot be willed, is adjusting the claims of posterity to what he has left behind which may be worthy of preservation; and he has already obtained that place in the esteem of those whose judgments are final, which he will probably hold during his century of probation. Robert Bloomfield's Country Muse resembled the Country Maiden, which he paints so prettily in his "Rural Tales: "—

"No meadow-flower rose fresher to the view,
That met her morning footsteps in the dew;
When, if a nodding stranger eyed her charms,
The blush of modesty was up in arms;

Love's random glances struck the' unguarded mind,
And beauty's magic made him look behind."

Thus, the public fell in love with the simple Suffolk Muse at first sight; and turning to look, when she had passed by, praised her gait, her shape, her countenance, and air, as all enchanting and unrivalled. But meeting her repeatedly afterwards in the walks of Parnassus, and deeming her less fascinating at every interview, that public, whose affections are more variable than the clouds, which change colour in every light, and form in every breeze, soon discerned her homeliness of feature, rusticity of accent, and inelegance of manners.Hence, though familiarity never bred contempt, her modest graces were successively eclipsed by the dazzling pretensions of higher born and higher gifted rivals, so that few continued to behold her with the

partiality of Walter to Jane, in his first love. This poet's real merits must, at any rate, have been considerable, to have survived the indiscreet panegyrics of mistaken friends, and the carping criticisms of fastidious enemies.

Bloomfield excels in description, because he presents images and pictures both of living and inanimate nature, which every unperverted eye recognises at once, and which often occasion not only an emotion of pleasure at finding them in verse, but of surprise also that they were never found there before; because, though perfectly familiar, the originals themselves never touched us so exquisitely as the poet's exhibition of them does. I prefer an extract on one of the most hackneyed themes of vulgar rhyme, on which he who could produce novelty must have been well entitled to poetic honours. Mentioning the task of Giles, in spring, to watch the new-sown crops, and himself to frighten away the rooks,—or having shot a few of the marauders to hang them up as scarecrows, or spread them out dead on the ground, to warn away their pilfering companions, these lines occur:

"This task had Giles in fields remote from home ;
Oft has he wish'd the rosy morn to come;
Yet never was he famed, nor foremost found,
To break the seal of sleep his sleep was sound;
But when, at daybreak, summon'd from his bed,
Light as the lark that caroll'd o'er his head:
His sandy way, deep-worn by hasty showers,
O'erarch'd with oaks that form'd fantastic bowers,
Waving aloft their towering branches proud,
In borrow'd tinges from the eastern cloud,

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