ND this place my forefathers made for man! This is the process of our love and wisdom To each poor brother who offends against usMost innocent, perhaps and what if guilty? ["Of all our writers of the briefer narrative poetry," says Leigh Hunt, "Coleridge is the finest since Chaucer, and assuredly he is the sweetest of all our poets. Wallis's music is but a court flourish in comparison; and though Beaumont and Fletcher, Collins, Gray, Keats, Shelley, and others, have several as sweet passages, and Spenser Is this the only cure? Merciful God! And stagnate and corrupt, till, changed to poison, And friendless solitude, groaning, and tears, Circled with evil, till his very soul With other ministrations thou, O Nature, Thy sunny hues, fair forms, and breathing sweets, To be a jarring and a dissonant thing is, in a certain sense, musical throughout, yet no man has written whole poems, of equal length, so perfect in the sentiment of music, so varied with it, and yet leaving on the ear so unbroken and single an effect." SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE, whose works are unsurpassed for grandeur of imagination and command of expression, was born at Bristol, in 1771, and educated at Christ's Hospital, and afterwards at Cambridge. After a long and chequered career, at one period of which he served as a private in a cavalry regiment, he died at Highgate, in 1834. It is related of him that, on his enlistment, the captain of his troop asked him if he could run a Frenchman through the body. "I do not know," replied the valiant poet, " but he shall run me through the body before I will run away."] THE NEGLECTED CHILD. Amid this general dance and minstrelsy, COLERIDGE. 47 48 THE NEGLECTED CHILD. How blessed are the beautiful! I learned to know thy worth; Forsaken and forlorn ; And wished-for others wished it too— I'm sure I was affectionate,-- There was a look of love that claimed A smile or an embrace. But when I raised my lips, to meet But oh, that heart too keenly felt I envied her the privilege But soon a time of triumph came- For Sickness o'er my sister's form THE NEGLECTED CHILD. 49 The features, once so beautiful; From her infectious breath. 'Twas then, unwearied, day and night, And fearlessly upon my breast I pillowed her poor head. She lived and loved me for my care! My grief was at an end; I was a lonely being once, But now I have a friend. BAYLEY. [THOMAS HAYNES BAYLEY (born 1797, died 1839) has not produced any poem of sufficient merit to entitle him to a position among our great poets; but many of his productions, scattered throughout annuals and magazines, display a considerable amount of grace and feeling. The popularity of many of his poems has certainly been somewhat evanescent.] |