ART. Page VIII.-Memoirs of John Napier of Merchiston, his Lineage, Life, and Times. By Mark Napier, Esq. IX.-1, Speech of Henry, Lord Bishop of Exeter, on occa- 3. The Danger of Abrogating the Religious Tests and 4. The Admission of Dissenters to graduate in the Uni- 5. A Letter to the Rev. Thomas Turton, D.D., &e. By X-1, Dacre, a Novel. Edited by the Countess of Morley, By Charles Tilstone Beke . XII.-Louis Philippe et la Contre-Revolution de 1880. Par 443 466 488 496 ⚫ 519 569 E lately reviewed the life and mean hereafter to refer the works, of om departed Cable. Let me he induled, in the mean time, in this appistumite of making a few remarks on the gruine of the extradimax man whose poems, now for the first time completely collected me named at the head of this sutile. The large part of this publication is, of router, at whit date, and the authot still lites: vet. Besides the considerable amount of new matter in this edition, which might of itself in the prent dearth of anothing eminenth original in terse, justify an er, we think the great, and cut somewhat host, redebit of stetider, and the ill understood character of his poetry, will he the opinion of a majority of am readers, more than an excuse a feu elucidator remarks upon the enhjert. I died by man, and werd without simple be more, the poet of Christabel and the Ancient Mariner is but little bule known in that common literary world, which, without the prerogative of contenting fame hereafter, can met emelt gite at pretent popularite fist the preent In that circle he commonly pre lui a man of prifte, who has written some terx beautini retses, but whose viginal powers, whatever they were, have been long since lost of Puttfounded in the pursuit of metaphysic dreams. We marktes tem te to think teie different of Mr Coleridge, both me a part and #philosopher, although we me well enough aware that nothing which we can eat will, as matters mow stain, much advance his chamer of becoming a fashionable author. Indeed, as we inther Believe, we should ran small thanks hom him so happiest exertions in such a case: fot rettainly, of all the men at fetters whom it has been am fortune to knott, we meter met aux one who wee en utter regardless of the reputation of the mere author as Me Coleridge me en lavish and indiscriminates in the exhibition at his own intellectual wealth betine anx and exert peram, ma matter who ate en werklees who might reap where he had most postipalle suun and watered. tud kuus me the one beaut fom exclaim upon the subject of his mupublished system est philo *BE. THE RB, H. |