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Showers soft and steaming,
Hot and breathless air.
Tired of listless dreaming,
Through the lazy day:
Jovial wind of winter
Turn us out to play!
Sweep the golden reed-beds;
Crisp the lazy dyke;
Hunger into madness
Every plunging pike.
Fill the lake with wild fowl;
Fill the marsh with snipe;
While on dreary moorlands
Lonely curlew pipe.
Through the black fir-forest
Thunder harsh and dry,
Shattering down the snow flakes
Off the curdled sky.
Hark! The brave North-easter!
Breast-high lies the scent,
On by holt and headland,
Over heath and bent.
Chime, ye dappled darlings,
Through the sleet and snow.
Who can over-ride you?
Let the horses go!
Chime, ye dappled darlings,
Down the roaring blast;
You shall see a fox die
Ere an hour be past.
Go! and rest to-morrow,
Hunting in your dreams,
While our skates are ringing
O'er the frozen streams.
Let the luscious South-wind
Breathe in lovers' sighs,
While the lazy gallants
Bask in ladies' eyes.
What does he but soften
Heart alike and pen?
'Tis the hard gray weather
Breeds hard English men.
What's the soft South-wester?
'Tis the ladies' breeze,
Bringing home their trueloves
Out of all the seas:
But the black North-easter,

the north-easter should be more parpass, ticularly under divine guidance, we confess we do not understand; except, indeed, that the poet is thereby assisted to a fitting rhyme and a forcible finish. We notice what is obviously a very subordinate blemish, because we think that Mr. Kingsley is prone to make use of this and similar forms of expression. In the poem named The Outlaw, a poacher, for instance, justifies his occupation

'I do but hunt God's cattle upon God's ain hills."

No doubt there has been, alike in our literature and in the other forms of our social intercourse, too marked a line of demarkation drawn between things sacred and things profane; but we doubt whether the miscellaneous application of our Maker's name be the right way to cure this, or to induce a simpler, or more constant and reverent recognition of that divine life in which we live, and move, and have our being.

We are fault-finding, and we wish to quit this part of our task as soon as may be. So let us at once suggest to Mr. Kingsley that the form of one of his poems, Saint Maura-a very powerful and striking poem in many respects--is open to certain rather serious objections. We do not speak of the sentiments the Saint expresses: for what a saint should or should not say under the circumstances, is a matter on which we do not pretend to speak with authority. But we are disposed to object to the "situation." Saint Maura is being crucified alongside her husband; and to wile away the hours till dawn for him, she utters a discourse which occupies some twelve or fourteen pages of moderate-size print. Now, we do not absolutely affirm that it would be impracti cable for any poet to make this subject attractive, or a fit theme for artistic delineation. Even Shakspeare, however, with his intense dramatic energy, would have hesitated to employ it; and if he had ventured, the pained shape of the martyr-girl would have been lightly indicated rather than drawn in full. Most of us have read Mr. Aytoun's Bothwell; and most of us have felt that, as the soliloquy of a man chained in a dungeon, its construction is open to a fatal objection, which the most careful and skillful recasting of parts (and we are bound to own Why, in preference to the winds which that the last edition is an immense imcome from the other points of the com-provement on its predecessors) can not

Through the snow-storm hurled,
Drives our English hearts of oak
Seaward round the world.
Come, as came our fathers,
Heralded by thee,
Conquering from the eastward,
Lords by land and sca.
Come; and strong within us
Stir the Viking's blood;
Bracing brain and sinew;

Blow, thou wind of God!"

A most vigorous discourse-with the exception, indeed, of the last line, which we do not like:

"Blow, thou wind of God!"

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breath

And blaze of all the garden slopes below,
And through the harvest-voices, and the moan
Of cedar-forests on the cliffs above,

And round the shining rivers, and the peaks
Which hung beyond the cloud-bed of the west,
And round the ancient stones about my feet.”

But a vivid and spirited description of
natural scenery coming from a woman
who is slowly dying on the cross is some-
what repugnant to our ideas of truth and
nature. No. If we are to make the cross
the scene of dramatic action, the lines must
be light, rapid, and intense; not the ima-
ginative and picturesque address, but the
pain-wrung "My God, my God! why hast
thou forsaken me ?"-the solemn and
simple "It is finished."

Otherwise the book, as already intimated, is eminently healthy. Nor do we except from this verdict the political songs, some of which might be thought to indicate a certain morbidness in the way that social evil and injustice are looked at. But they indicate, as we think, nothing of the kind.. They are the natural expression of a very indignant, but of a perfectly healthy mind. There is no dejection, denot to be destroyed, but restored; and spondency, nor moodiness. The world is the strong heart and the brawny arm are ready to aid the restoration:

"Forward! Hark, forward's the cry!

One more fence and we're out on the open, So to us at once, if you want to live near us! Hark to them, ride to them, beauties! as on they go, Leaping and sweeping away in the vale below! Cowards and bunglers, whose heart or whose eye is slow

Find themselves staring alone."

There is a scriptural simplicity, a grave severity, in certain of these pieces, which remind us of the old preachers of the Covenant; stern, sour-visaged, iron-handed men, who in the retirement of healthy country manses girded on the sword of the Lord and of Gideon, and went out to

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battle against the Philistine-hardy of body and resolute at heart:

THE DAY OF THE LORD.

"The Day of the Lord is at hand, at hand!
Its storms roll up the sky:
The nations sleep starving on heaps of gold;
All dreamers toss and sigh;
The night is darkest before the morn;
When the pain is sorest the child is born,
And the Day of the Lord at hand.

"Gather you, gather you, angels of God-
Freedom, and Mercy, and Truth;
Come! for the Earth is grown coward and old;
Wisdom, Self-Sacrifice, Daring, and Love,
Come down, and renew us her youth.
Haste to the battle-field, stoop from above,
To the Day of the Lord at hand.

"Who would sit down and sigh for a lost age
of gold,

True hearts will leap up at the trumpet of God,
While the Lord of all ages is here?
Each old age of gold was an iron age too,
And those who can suffer, can dare.
And the meekest of saints may find stern work
to do,

In the Day of the Lord at hand."

There is of course, and admittedly, a very which contemporary political subjects are obvious distinction between the way in treated by Mr. Kingsley, and in which the Laureate, for instance, treats them. Both poets show indeed an intense sympathy with the time; but Mr. Kingsley is the combatant, the partisan. There is therefore heat, temper, fierce likings and dislikings, in his rhymes. The Laureate, the drifting sea-foam of the storm. In his on the other hand, is serene and impar tial. He crystallizes and renders shapely amber the fluttering insect is staid and petrified. Our sayings and doings have acquired an historic air when they reappear in his poetry-"suffered a sea-change, he has said about us are the things, we into something rich and strange." What to be said about us for a good many genemay be pretty sure, which will continue rations to come. Still, we can afford to like both men-Hofer, who fights while he sings; Goethe, who sits apart on his Olympus.

And this difference of circumstance must be taken into account before we can fairly estimate our author's poetical claims. "These poems of Mr. Kingsley," said an acute but evasive critic to us the other day, after the manner of his craft,

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are very good; but not good enough." | the greatest poets-Burns, Keats, TennyThis is probably what many readers have son. The Sands of Dee-with the added felt. They expected more; and they are charms of music and girlish voices-our disappointed. "They are good; but they readers have, no doubt, often heard; but are not good enough." But it must be Airly Beacon and The Night Bird will remembered that the making of poems, probably be new to some of them; and so to speak, has not formed the serious we quote these pieces the more readily business of Mr. Kingsley's life, as it has of because they illustrate another noticeable the Laureate's. These snatches of music quality of the lyric-its suggestiveness. are evidently the interludes in a more en- It is the feeling and not the environment grossing drama, "short swallow-flights of (which ought to be subordinated and used song." A thought has risen up occasion- only in so far as really necessary to give ally during reading or work that required body and concreteness to the feeling) expression, and it fitted itself naturally which forms the supreme interest of the into melodious words. Such we take to lyrist; and there is consequently much be the explanation of the contents of this more opportunity for implication, and book; excepting, indeed, the Andromeda, delicate and subdued handling in his than of which a word presently; and such a in any other form of poetry. book must be judged by a very different standard from one which is avowedly the fruition and crown of a life-long devotion to the craft.

That Mr. Kingsley lacks genuine poetic insight, is another averment to which it is difficult to reply. What is this subtle and delicate Ariel which men call the spirit of Poetry? No two of the critics are agreed. It is, and will be forever, a question exclusively of feeling, sentiment, individual or national caprice. Whether Mr. Kingsley be a poet in this sense must therefore be left to the determination of each particular reader. But we think most readers of taste will agree with us when we say that these songs and ballads display great force and felicity of expression, much clever and vivid appreciation of natural beauty; that they are distinguished by remarkable breadth, and an almost primitive literalness and simplicity of handling; that the imitative or sympathetic faculty, which metaphysicians have shown to be intimately allied with the imaginative, is strongly developed; and that the close texture and rare compression of the style afford a most effective and much-needed protest against the looseness and lawlessness of recent poetic practice. If he be not a poet, the man who possesses all these qualifications must have at least a very fine instinct for what poetry should be.

And whatever criticism may urge to the contrary, Mr. Kingsley, we are convinced, is a true lyric poet. Though the lyric feeling in this volume is more conspicuous, perhaps, than the power of lyric expression, yet one or two of the songs are characterized by a perfection and completeness of form which is not found except in

"AIRLY BEACON.

"Airly Beacon, Airly Beacon;

Oh! the pleasant sight to see
Shires and towns from Airly Beacon,
While my love climbed up to me!
"Airly Beacon, Airly Beacon;

Oh! the happy hours we lay
Deep in fern on Airly Beacon,
Courting through the summer's day!
"Airly Beacon, Airly Beacon;

Oh! the weary haunt for me,
All alone on Airly Beacon,
With his baby on my knee!"

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"A floating, a floating
Across the sleeping sea,
All night I heard a singing bird
Upon the topmast tree.

"Oh! came you off the isles of Greece,
Or off the banks of Seine;
Or off some tree in forests free,

Which fringe the western main?' "I came not off the old world

Nor yet from off the new-
But I am one of the birds of God,

Which sing the whole night through.'
"Oh! sing, and wake the dawning-
Oh! whistle for the wind;
The night is long, the current strong,
My boat it lags behind.'

"The current sweeps the old world,

The current sweeps the new;
The wind will blow, the dawn will glow,
Ere thou hast sailed them through.'"

The man who can write a song should be able to write a ballad also; for to pro

duce a really excellent old ballad, infers a good deal of the same sort of power; and many of Mr. Kingsley's are very charming. It is in these that we note more particularly the simplicity and breadth of handling to which we have referred; that union of the homely and the picturesque which is found in the poetry of primitive peoples, and which so few modern poets have been able to compass. The Longbeard's Saga, in this respect, is probably the most characteristic; but The Weird Lady-an early production-is even more to our liking.

THE WEIRD LADY.

"The swevens came up round Harold the Earl,
Like motes in the sunnés beam ;
And over him stood the Weird Lady,
In her charmed castle over the sea,
Sang, 'Lie thou still and dream.'

"Thy steed is dead in his stall, Earl Harold,
Since thou hast bid with me;
The rust has eaten thy harness bright,
And the rats have eaten thy greyhound light,

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That was so fair and free.'

Mary Mother she stooped heaven;

"Earl Harold came to a house of nuns,

And he heard the dead-bell toll;
He saw the sexton stand by a grave;
'Now Christ have mercy, who did us save,
Upon yon fair nun's soul.'

"The nuns they came from the convent-gate
By one, by two, by three;

They sang for the soul of a lady bright
Who died for the love of a traitor knight:
It was his own lady.

"He staid the corpse beside the grave;

'A sign, a sign!' quod he,
'Mary Mother who rulest heaven,
Send me a sign if I be forgiven

By the woman who so loved me.'
"A white dove out of the coffin flew ;
Earl Harold's mouth it kist;
He fell on his face, wherever he stood;
And the white dove carried his soul to God
Or ever the bearers wist."

But after all there is no surer test of the excellence of a song or a ballad than its capacity to affect all kinds and conditions of men; and, as our fishing ally of the morning, Tom Morrice, is just now passing with his well-filled creel slung across his back, we may try the experiment at once. Tom is a keen fisher, and used, consule Planco, to be a considerable

She wakened Earl Harold out of his sweven, bit of a poacher; not the moody, savage,

To don his harness on;

And over the land and over the sea
He wended abroad to his own countrie,
A weary way to gon.

"Oh! but his beard was white with eld,

Oh! but his hair was gray;
He stumbled on by stock and stone,
And as he journeyed he made his moan
Along that weary way.

"Earl Harold came to his castle-wall;
The gate was burnt with fire;
Roof and rafter were fallen down,
The folk were strangers all in the town,
And strangers all in the shire.

and murderous miscreant who sends a double charge of slugs into the poor wretch who watches My Lord's pheasants, without a touch of compunction, but the genuine Scotch poacher, who enjoys the danger and romance of his calling, and feels no grudge against either game-preserver or game-keeper, considering the sport a fair trial of skill between himself and the laird, a species of knightly encounter of arms, over which the pale-faced moon sits arbitress.

"What think you of this, Tom?" and we read him

แ THE THREE FISHERS.

"Three fishers went sailing away to the West,
Away to the West as the sun went down;

Each thought on the woman who loved him the best,
And the children stood watching them out of the town;
For men must work, and women must weep,
And there's little to earn, and many to keep,
Though the harbor-bar be moaning.

"Three wives sat up in the lighthouse tower,

And they trimmed the lamps as the sun went down ;
They looked at the squall, and they looked at the shower,
And the night-rack came rolling up ragged and brown.

But men must work, and women must weep,
Though storms be sudden, and waters deep,
And the habor-bar be moaning.

"Three corpses lay out on the shining sands

In the morning gleam as the tide went down,
And the women are weeping and wringing their hands
For those who will never come home to the town;
For men must work, and women must weep,
And the sooner it's over, the sooner to sleep;
And good-by the bar and its moaning.'

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"It has a gran soun," says Tom, repeating it to himself. "I've seen't aften on the sea aboot the fa"."

Thank you, Tom; we thought you would like it; and the Rector of Eversley may rest satisfied that he has written one genuine poem.

one of the common-places of history. "The influence of the sea on English lit: erature," would form a tolerably attractive subject for discourse at a literary institute in these days, when almost every literary topic of interest has been written

out and exhausted, and the literary man, like the hand-loom weaver and the kelp-burner, begins to despair of his craft.

And this poem of "Andromeda ”—of which it remains to speak-is essentially a "sea-story." It is a clear and vivid picture of the sea at dawn, at noon-tide, and at night. As a piece of rich and su perb coloring-and this was probably the principal object aimed at in the selection

Tintoret or Titian might have mixed the colors; and its warm and voluptuously idealized enjoyment of the powers of life and nature would not have unbefitted the painters of the "Venus" and the "Europa," and is eminently characteristic of the refined sensuousness of the Greek intellect. It needs not to sift more curiously the merits of a poem borrowed from such a source; if it is graceful, sunny, and richly toned, more can not be competently asked. But listen to a page or two of these obnoxious English hexameters ere we put the book away.

But, indeed, Mr. Kingsley is always great on the sea-shore, and few men have said better or truer things about it-at-it is eminently happy and successful; least since the grand old ballad of Sir Patrick Spens was written. "The sea," according to a certain dark-eyed critic, "is the poetic side of Mr. Kingsley's mind." Just and true; as that goldentongued criticism always is; but, indeed, of how many English and Scotch men is the sea not the poetic side? We used to fancy that we could detect the "monotonous undertone" in ever so much of our literature-as we could, surely and sensibly, in the habit of thought, nay sometimes in the cadenced speech, of those who had lived much within sight and hearing of its surge. But it was not till we saw Venice-till we learned how that constant companionship had forced itself upon the brick and marble of a great city, on the art and architecture of a conquering people-it was not till then we were assured that our vague suspicion was only

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It is evening, and Andromeda, "a snowwhite cross on the dark green walls of the sea-cliff," has been left, by her mother and the priests, as a sacrifice to the angry sea-gods:

Watching the pulse of the oars die down, as her own died with them,
Tearless, dumb with amaze she stood, as a stormed-stunned nestling
Fallen from bough or from eave lies dumb, which the home-going herdsman
Fancies a stone, till he catches the light of its terrified eye-ball.
So through the long long, hours the maid stood helpless and hopeless,
Wide-eyed, downward gazing in vain at the black blank darkness."

As she passionately reproaches the sea, which she had loved from girlhood,

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