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ment, from imperious superstition. What "Added to all these domestic cares, I was village parson, village doctor, village comforter, village magistrate, and Edinburgh Reviewer; so you see I had not much time left on my hands to regret London.”

It is impossible not to be reminded of and to compare this with the life of Sir Walter Scott. There is the same strong sense, the same glowing, natural pleasure, the same power of dealing with men, the same power of diffusing common happiness. Both enjoyed as much in a day, as an ordinary man in a month. The term "animal spirits " peculiarly expresses this bold enjoyment; it seems to come from a principle intermediate between the mind and the body; to be hardly intellectual enough for the soul, and yet too permeating and aspiring for crude matter. Of course

health is to the animal, Liberalism is to the polity. It is a principle of fermenting enjoyment, running over all the nerves, inspiring the frame, happy in its mind, easy in its place, glad to behold the sun. All this Sydney Smith, as it were, personified. The biography just published of him will be very serviceable to his fame. He has been regarded too much as a fashionable jester, and metropolitan wit of society. We have now for the first time a description of him as he was,-equally at home in the crude world of Yorkshire, and amid the quintessential refinements of Mayfair. It is impossible to believe that he did not give the epithet to his parish it is now called Forton le Clay. It was a "mute inglorious" Sydney of the district, that invented the name, if it is really there is an immense imaginative world in older than the century. It is a heavy parish Scott's existence to which Sydney Smith had no of obtuse soil, inhabited by stiff-clayed York- claim. But they met upon the present world; shiremen. There was nobody in the parish they enjoyed the spirit of life; they loved to speak to, only peasants, farmers, and such the world, and the world them;" they did not like (what the clergy call parishioners par pain themselves with immaterial speculation excellence), and an old clerk who thought -roast beef was an admitted fact. A cerevery one who came from London a fool, tain, even excessive, practical caution which "but you I do zee, Mr. Smith, be no fool." is ascribed to the Englishman, Scott would This was the sort of life. have been the better for. Yet his biography would have been the worse. There is nothing in the life before us comparable in interest to the tragic, gradual cracking of the great mind; the overtasking of the great capital, and the ensuing failure; the spectacle of heaving genius breaking in the contact with misfortune. The anticipation of this pain increases the pleasure of the read er; the commencing threads of coming calamity shade the woof of pleasure; the proximity of suffering softens the usos, the terrible, fatiguing energy of enjoyment.

"I turned schoolmaster, to educate my son, as I could not afford to send him to school. Mrs. Sydney turned schoolmistress, to educate my girls, as I could not afford a governess. I turned farmer, as I could not let my land. A man-servant was too expensive; so I caught up a little garden-girl, made like a milestone, christened her Bunch, put a napkin in her hand, and made her my butler. The girls taught her to read, Mrs. Sydney to wait, and I undertook her morals; Bunch became the best butler in the county.

"I had little furniture, so I bought a cartload of deals; took a carpenter (who came to me for parish relief, called Jack Robinson) with a face like a full-moon, into my service; established him in a barn, and said, 'Jack, furnish my house.' You see the result.

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A great deal of excellent research has been spent on the difference between "humor," and wit," into which metaphysical probter. There is, however, between them, the our limits," of course, forbid us to en"At last it was suggested that a carriage was distinction of dry sticks and green sticks; much wanted in the establishment; after dili- there is in humor a living energy, a diffused gent search I discovered in the back settlements potency, a noble sap; it grows upon the of a York coach-maker, an ancient green char- character of the humorist. Wit is part of iot, supposed to have been the earliest invention the machinery of the intellect; as Madame of the kind. I brought it home in triumph to de Stael says, "La gaieté de l'esprit est facile my admiring family. Being somewhat dilapi- à tous les hommes de l'esprit." We wonder dated, the village tailor lined it, the village Mr. Babbage does not invent a punning-enblacksmith repaired it; nay (but for Mrs. Syd- gine; it is just as possible as a calculating ney's earnest entreaties), we believe the village one. Sydney Smith's mirth was essentially painter would have exercised his genius upon humorous; it clings to the character of the the exterior; it escaped this danger, however, man; as with the sayings of Dr. Johnson, and the result was wonderful. Each year added to its charms: it grew younger and younger; a there is a species of personality attaching to new wheel, a new spring; I christened it the it; the word is more graphic because Sydney Immortal; it was known all over the neighbor- Smith-that man being the man that he hood; the village boys cheered it, and the vil-was-said it, than it would have been if lage dogs barked at it; but Faber meæ fortu- said by any one else. In a desponding mona' was my motto, and we had no false shame.ment, he said he was none the better for the

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jests which he made, any more than a bottle | heart; but his mind, his brain had a frightfor the wine which passed through it: this is ful capacity for secret pain; his sharpness a true description of many a wit, but he was was the sharpness of disease; his power, the very unjust in attributing it to himself.

sore acumen of morbid wretchedness. It is impossible to fancy a parallel more proper to show the excellence, the unspeakable superiority, of a buoyant and bounding writer.

Sydney Smith is often compared to Swift; but this only shows with how little thought our common criticism is written. The two men have really nothing in common, except that they were both high in the church, At the same time, it is impossible to give and both wrote amusing letters about Ireland. to Sydney Smith the highest rank, even as a And a critic, whom one would have fancied humorist. Almost all his humor has referto have an opposite prejudice, has lately pre-ence to the incongruity of special means to ferred the Drapier's letters to" Peter Plym- special ends. The notion of Plymley is want ley. Of course, to the great constructive of conformity between the notions of " my and elaborative power displayed in Swift's brother Abraham," and the means of which longer works, Sydney Smith has no preten- he makes use; of the quiet clergyman, who sion; he could not have written "Gulliver's was always told he was a bit of a goose, adTravels;" but so far as the two series of vocating conversion by muskets, and stopIrish letters goes, it seems to us plain that he ping Bonaparte by Peruvian bark. The nohas the advantage. Plymley's letters are tion of the letters to Archdeacon Singleton is, true; the treatment may be incomplete-the a bench of bishops, placid, and pleasantly Catholic religion may have latent dangers destroying the church. It is the same with and insidious attractions which are not there most of his writings. Even when there is mentioned — but the main principle is sound; nothing absolutely practical in the idea, the the common sense of religious toleration is subject is from the scenery of practice, from hardly susceptible of better explanation. concrete entities, near institutions, superfiDrapier's letters, on the contrary, are essen- cial facts. You might quote a hundred intially absurd; they are a clever appeal to stances. This is one: "A gentleman, in ridiculous prejudices. Who cares now for a speaking of a nobleman's wife of great rank disputation on the evils to be apprehended a and fortune, lamented very much that she had hundred years ago from adulterated half- no children. A medical gentleman who was pence, especially when we know that the present observed, that to have no children halfpence were not adulterated, and that if was a great misfortune, but he had often obthey had been, those evils would never have served it was hereditary in families." This arisen? Any one, too, who wishes to make is what we mean by saying his mirth lies in a collection of currency crotchets, will find the superficial relations of phenomena (some those letters worth his attention. No doubt will say we are pompous, like the medical there is a clever affectation of common sense man); in the relation of one external fact to in these, as in all of Swift's political writ- another external fact; of one detail of comings, and the style has an air of business; mon life to another detail of common life. yet, on the other hand, there are no passages But this is not the highest topic of humor. which any one would now care to quote for Taken as a whole, the universe is absurd. their manner and their matter; and there There seems an unalterable contradiction beare many in " Plymley" that will be con- tween the human mind and its employments. stantly cited, so long as existing controver- How can a soul be a merchant? What resies are at all remembered. The whole genius lation to an immortal being have the price of of the two writers is emphatically opposed. linseed, the fall of butter, the tare on talSydney Smith's is the ideal of popular, low, or the brokerage on hemp? Can an buoyant, riotous fun; it cries and laughs undying creature debit "petty expenses," with boisterous mirth; it rolls hither and and charge for "carriage paid?" All the thither like a mob, with elastic and common- world's a stage; "the satchel, and the place joy. Swift was a detective in a dean's shining morning face"-the "strange wig; he watched the mob; his whole wit is oaths; -"the bubble reputation"—the a kind of dexterous indication of popular frailties; he hated the crowd; he was a spy "Eyes severe and beard of formal cut, on beaming smiles, and a common informer against genial enjoyment. His whole essence was a soreness against mortality; show him innocent mirth, he would say, How absurd! He was painfully wretched, no doubt, in himself: perhaps, as they say, he had no

* See the last number of the Edinburgh Review.

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Full of wise saws and modern instances." Can these things be real? Surely they are acting. What relation have they to the truth as we see it in theory? What connexion with our certain hopes, our deep desires, our craving and infinite thought?"In respect of itself, it is a good life; but in respect it is a shepherd's life, it is nought." The soul

ties its shoe; the mind washes its hands in a innumerable persons (may we not say the basin. All is incongruous.

Shallow. Certain, 't is certain; very sure, very sure; death, as the Psalmist saith, is certain to all; all shall die. How a good yoke of

bullocks at Stamford fair?

Silence. Truly, cousin, I was not there.
Shallow. Death is certain. Is old Double,

of your town, living yet?
Silence. Dead, Sir.

majority of mankind?) who have a belief in God and immortality, have, nevertheless, scarcely any consciousness of the peculiar doctrines of the Gospel. They seem to live aloof from them in the world of business or of pleasure, the common life of all men,' not without a sense of right, and a rule of truth and honesty, yet insensible" to much which we need not name. "They have never in their whole lives experienced the love of God, the sense of sin, or the need of for

Shallow. Dead. See! See! He drew a good bow, and dead. He shot a fine shoot. John of Gaunt loved him well, and betted much mon-giveness. Often they are remarkable for the ey on his head. - Dead! He would have clapped i' the clout at fourscore, and carried you a forehandshaft, a fourteen and fourteen and-a-half, that it would have done a man's heart good to

see. How a score of ewes now?

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Silence. Thereafter as they be; a score of ewes may be worth ten pounds.

Shallow. And is old Double dead!

It is because Sydney Smith had so little of this Shakspearean humor, that there is a glare in his pages, and that in the midst of his best writing, we sigh for the soothing superiority of quieter writers.

purity of their morals; many of them have strong and disinterested attachments and quick human sympathies; sometimes a stoical feeling of uprightness, or a peculiar sensitiveness to dishonor. It would be a mistake to say that they are without religion. They join in its public acts; they are offended at profaneness or impiety; they are thankful for the blessings of life, and do not rebel against its misfortunes. Such men meet us at every step. They are those whom we know and associate with; honest in their dealings, respectable in their lives, decent in Sydney Smith was not only the wit of the their conversation. The Scripture speaks first Edinburgh, but likewise the divine. He to us of two classes, represented by the was, to use his own expression, the only church and the world, the wheat and the clergyman who in those days "turned out tares, the sheep and the goats, the friends to fight the battles of the Whigs. In some and enemies of God. We cannot say in sort this was not so important. A curious which of these two divisions we should find abstinence from religious topics characterizes a place for them." They believe always the original Review. There is a wonderful a kind of "natural religion." Now these omission of this most natural topic of specu- are what we may call, in the language of lation in the lives of Horner and Jeffrey. In the past, Liberals. Those who can rememtruth, it would seem, that living in the in-ber, or who will re-read, our delineation of cessant din of an essentially Calvinistic coun- the Whig character, may observe its contry, the best course for thoughtful and seri- formity. There is the same purity and delous men was to be silent, at least they icacy, the same tranquil sense; an equal instinctively thought so. They felt no invol- want of imagination, of impulsive enthusiuntary call to be theological teachers them-asm, of shrinking fear. You need not speak selves, and as refined and gentle men neces-like the above writer of " peculiar docsarily recoiled from the coarse admonition trines," the phenomenon is no speciality of around them. Even in the present milder a particular creed. Glance over the whole time, few cultivated persons willingly think of history, as the classical world stood beon the special dogmas of distinct theology. side the Jewish; as Horace beside St. Paul; They do not deny them, but they live apart from them they do not disbelieve them, but they are silent when they are stated. They do not deny the existence of Kamschatka, but they have no call to busy themselves with Kamschatka; they abstain from peculiar tenets. Nor in truth is this, though much aggravated by existing facts, a mere accident of the present times. There are some people to whom such a course of conduct is always natural: there are certain persons who do not, as it would seem cannot, feel all that others feel; who have, so to say, no ear for much of religion; who are in some sort out of its reach. "It is impossible," says a late divine of the Church of England," not to observe that

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like the heavy ark and the buoyant waves, so are men in contrast with one another. You cannot imagine a classical Isaiah; you cannot fancy a Whig St. Dominic; there is no such thing as a Liberal Augustine. The deep sea of mysticism lies opposed to some natures; in some moods it is a sublime wonder; in others an "impious ocean," they will never put forth on it at any time.

All this is intelligible, and in a manner beautiful as a character; but it is not equally excellent as a creed. A certain class of Liberal divines have endeavored to petrify into a theory a flowing and placid disposition. In some respects Sydney Smith is one of these; his sermons are the least excellent

of his writings; of course they are sensible ble men connected at its origin with the Edand well-intentioned, but they have the de-inburgh Review. And that exception is a fect of his school. With misdirected energy, man of too fitful, defective, and strange these divines have labored after a plain re-greatness to be spoken of now. Henry ligion; they have forgotten that a quiet and Brougham must be left to after-times. Indefinite mind is confined to a placid and defi- deed, he would have marred the unity of our nite world; that religion has its essence in article. He was connected with the Whigs, awe, its charm in infinity, its sanction in but he never was one. His impulsive ardor dread; that its dominion is an inexplicable is the opposite of their coolness; his irregudominion; that mystery is its power. There lar, discursive intellect contrasts with their is a reluctance in all such writers; they quiet and perfecting mind. Of those of whom creep away from the unintelligible parts of we have spoken, let us say, that if none of the subject; they always seem to have some- them attained to the highest rank of abstract thing behind; not to like to bring out what intellect; if the disposition of none of them they know to be at hand. They are in their was ardent or glowing enough to hurry them nature apologists; and, as George the Third forward to the extreme point of daring greatsaid, "I did not know the Bible needed an ness; if only one can be said to have a lastapology." As well might the thunder being place in real literature, it is clear that ashamed to roll, as religion hesitate to be they vanquished a slavish cohort; that they too awful for mankind. The invective of upheld the name of freemen in a time of Lucretius is truer than the placid patronage bondsmen; that they applied themselves to of the divine. Let us admire Liberals in that which was real, and accomplished much life, but let us keep no terms with Paleyans which was very difficult; that the very critin speculation. ics who question their inimitable excellence will yet admire their just and scarcely imitable example.

And so we must draw to a conclusion. We have in some sort given a description of, with one great exception, the most remarka

HIGGLEDY PIGGLEDY. - I can offer an amusing illustration of the use of this term in the sense of tantum quantum, as indicated by the Latin quotation of T. B. M. The party I well knew, and the occurrence I well remember, though it was long years ago. An old farmer in Staffordshire sent for a lawyer to make his will. Upon the legal gentleman inquiring for some preliminary instructions how the property was to be distributed, the old man replied that he meant to leave it higgledy piggledy. The lawyer observed that he did not understand what he meant, and begged him to explain, which elicited this ungracious rejoinder: "If you dunna know what higgledy piggledy means, you bayn't fit to be a lawyer." Now, the honest farmer intended, as he proceeded to explain, that his property should be equally divided among his children; which shows the use of the term in the very sense of tantum quantum. —Notes and Queries.

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then we come to a time when the club took ex-
clusive possession of the house, and strangers
could be only introduced, under regulations, by
the members; in the third stage, the clubs build
houses, or rather palaces, for themselves. The
club at the Mermaid Tavern in Friday Street was,
according to all accounts, the first select company
established, and owed its origin to Sir Walter
Raleigh, who had here instituted a meeting of men
of wit and genius, previously to his engagement
with the unfortunate Cobham. This society com-
prised all that the age held most distinguished
for learning and talent, numbering amongst its
members Shakspeare, Ben Jonson, Beaumont
and Fletcher, Selden, Sir Walter Raleigh, Donne,
Cotton, Carew, Martin, and many others. There
it was that the "wit-combats" took place be-
tween Shakspeare and Ben Jonson, to which,
probably, Beaumont alludes with so much affec-
tion in his letter to the old poet, written from the
country:

"What things have we seen
Done at the Mermaid! heard words that have been
So nimble and so full of subtle flame,
As if that every one from whom they came
Had meant to put his whole wit in a jest."

Ben Jonson had another club, of which he ap-
pears to have been the founder, held in a room
of the old Devil Tavern, distinguished by the
name of the "Apollo." It stood between the
Temple Gates and Temple Bar. It was for this
club that Jonson wrote the " Leges Conviv-
iales," printed among his works. Notes and
Queries.

From The Independent.

THE WIND IN THE PINE.

O WAILING Wind! what words are thine,
As through the dark, o'erhanging pine,
Beneath whose waving shadow's play
I dream September's noon away,
Thou breathest now with voice as sad
As if thy heart were never glad, —
As if this lowly-bending tree
Were all of life and love to thee,
And only through its branches dim
Could rise thy low mysterious hymn!

Thou shouldst not breathe so sad a lay
On autumn's clearest, richest day;
For up the sombre branches through
I see the sky's delicious blue,

And bright the mountain track across
The sunshine falleth on the moss,
And shows the white Eternal Flower

That meekly stands through shine and shower,
In wild luxuriance mid the fern
That deepens by the crystal burn,
And far within the forest gloom
Lights up the Aster's purple bloom,
And gilds the Golden Rods that glow
Like living jewels far below,

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While deep within the leafy wood I hear a birdling's silver call,

That maketh glad the solitude
With many a tuneful rise and fall.

O! I have seen thee shut the Rose
So tenderly at daylight's close!
And heard thee sing as sweet a hymn,
While high in heaven the stars were dim,
As ever stole from cloistered nun

By holy shrine at set of sun,
When, lost to every earthly feeling,
Her soul in song was upward stealing.
And, lying on a bank of flowers

That, sloping southward to the sun,
Unfolded in the vernal showers

Its radiant blossoms one by one, I've seen thee brush the gleaming dew From off the Violet's leaves of blue, And whisper to a bunch of Daisies Just open to the light, such praises As would have made a maiden's cheek With blushes eloquently speak. And then, so fickle was thy love, I've seen thee nestle in the bosom Of a young Lily's pearly blossom, All in the face of the blue heaven, As if to roving winds 't were given To gain the sweets of every flower, And make each cup a bridal bower, When summer suns shone out above.

But now those joyous tones are fled,
And, like a wail above the dead,
Thy mournful breathings rise and fall;
O have they stirred a funeral pall
Folded mutely, coldly over

Some maiden's fond and faithful lover?

Or, where the misty northern seas
Roll round the stormy Hebrides,
Hast seen the bark the fisher gave
At morn in gladness to the wave,
Go down at eve beside the shore,
Where loving eyes will gaze no more
Across the white, tempestuous foam,
To see it gaily bounding home?
But haply, when a sea-bird springs
From ocean cave with snowy wings,
Will deem it is the soul of him
Who sleeps in quiet where the fall
Of lapsing waters lulleth all

Within some cavern greenly dim!
Or, sadder far than this, than all,
O! hast thou seen the living death
Of one to whom a funeral pall,
A pang to steal the lingering breath,
A green and quiet burial sod,
Apart from men, alone with God,
Would be a joy, a welcome bed,
For love and hope alike were fled?
And, blending sorrow's tone with thine,
Hast stolen to this answering pine?

O, wailing Wind! thy mournful sighs
Have found an echo in my heart,
And tears are stealing to my eyes
As 'neath those sombre boughs we part;
But night is coming o'er the hill,

The stars are looking forth in heaven, And all the air is hushed and still,

Save when a mountain bird has given Its rushing pinions to the blue And silent depths it wanders through Up to its nest beneath the shade

Some cliff's o'erhanging brow has made;
And I must to the valley go

That lies so tranquilly below.
There sleepy robins gently fold

Their wings above their breasts of gold,
But yet another note they 'll try,
When they shall hear me gliding by;
And pleasant whispers in the grass
Will greet me sweetly as I pass,
And many a light caressing breeze
In blessings murmur through the trees,
And honeysuckles tenderly

Droop round the door to welcome me.

But often when the skies are clear
And not a whisper 's in the vale, —
If down the mountain floats a tone
Sad, and sorrowful, and lone,
Like music blended with a moan,
I'll climb this rocky steep to hear
Beneath the pine thy mournful tale,
And I will tell thee all my heart,

And thou shalt give me back thine own,
And, haply thus, when next we part
Thy burden will have lighter grown.
Farewell! a kind farewell to thee,
O! singer in the dark pine tree'

New Hampshire, Sept., 1855.

DEAN.

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