Mirandola, more animated than the Martyr of Antioch, and written in better verse than Sir Marmaduke Maxwell. It is true, they are intelligible throughout; but this is no more than may be said of Halidon Hill, and other compositions, which are nevertheless read. Still they are not suited to the taste of the age. They are too antiquated-too tramontane in their subjects-too gross (see ourselves on Adam Blair, and Gerard Montgomery on ourselves)-above all, they are a great deal too loyal. There is likewise a patchy choppiness in the disposition of the scenes (to use the words of Leigh Hunt's happiest imitator) which tears the interest into mere shreds. The plays before us are, in fact, neither more nor less than a series of brisk dialogues, carried on amidst an infinity of bustle and intrigue, between heroes of the Redmond O'Neale stamp, and pretty, meek-eyed, obliging young ladies, with knaves and fools conformable; for none of whom do we (the present writer) care three pages of the Old Monthly Magazine. They are made up of fighting, kissing, drinking, plotting, hoaxing, and controversies on politics and Platonic love. Suckling's animal spirits were his Muse, and his writings are full of mirth and aimless jollity even to overflowing. Of Suckling's character as a poet, however, a congenial spirit has already said better things than we are ever likely to say: and our purpose is not so much to criticise as to extract a few of the passages, sententious, fanciful, or impassioned, which appeared to us in the perusal calculated to minister delight or edification. Proceed we therefore to business, with Lady Mary's leave; first warning the reader not to stumble against the versification, which we fear in some parts must appear intolerably rugged, even to those who have read Barry Cornwall's Dramatic Scenes. An ambitious Court-intriguer thus soliloquizes: Ambition seems all things, and yet is none, And knows not that to heaven it once did bear The high-flown and self-lessening bird, will think, A pair of disappointed courtiers philosophize as follows: Brennoralt. I say, the Court is but a narrow circuit, A kind of ant's nest in the great wild field, As fast does throw abroad. Doran. Good; A most eternal place of low affronts, (Here Julia Vernon began to shew unequivocal symptoms of weariness; and Clara Howard hung her lovely little head, like a rose-de-Meaux in a bower: we therefore skipped the remainder of this extract.) A lover is approaching the retirement of his mistress : Softly, as death itself comes on, When it doth steal away the sick man's breath And standers-by perceive it not, Have I trod the way unto these lodgings. How wisely do the powers That give us happiness, order it! Sending us still fears to bound our joys, Which else would overflow and lose themselves. See where she sits, Like day retir'd into another world. Dear Mine! where all the beauty man admires In scattered pieces, does united lie; Where sense does feast, and yet where sweet desire Lives in its longing, like a miser's eye, That never knew, nor saw satiety; Tell me, by what approaches must I come To take in what remains of my felicity? We shall string a few more pearls together at random. Leave me; for to a soul so out of tune When once the mainspring, Hope, is fall'n into Desire and Joy, stand still: my thoughts, like bees Wander confusedly up and down, Could I but call thee back as easily now! Of the mysterious number, so that men shall Come thither not as to a tomb, but to an oracle. What a strange glass they have shown me now myself in! Our sins, like to our shadows, When our day is in its glory scarce appear, Towards our evening how great and monstrous They are! The dialogue which follows is a little out of Sir John's usual way, and very pretty. Orsabrin. Keep off, keep off, thou brighter excellence, I shall grow saucy in desire again, And entertain bold hopes, which will but draw Reginella. I see y' are angry, Sir; Rather than those I live with; this is all, Believ't. Ors. With me? Oh thou kind Innocence! Witness all that punish falsehood, That I could live with thee, Ev'n in this dark and narrow prison, And think all happiness confin'd within the walls! Oh, hadst thou but as much of love as I! Reg. Of love! what's that? Ors. Why, 'tis a thing that's had before 'tis known; A gentle flame that steals into a heart, And makes it like one object so, that it scarce cares For any other delights, when that is present, And is in pain when 't 's gone; thinks of that alone, Reg. If this be love, sure I have some of it. Ors. Oh most divine! The best of all the gods strangely abound in 't, And mortals could not live without it; it is The soul of virtue, and the life of life. Reg. Sure I should learn it, sir, if you would teach it. Ors. Alas, thou taught'st it me; It came with looking thus. (They gaze upon one another.) Moore (whose graceful footmarks may be traced throughout all the amatory poets of this period) is evidently familiar with Suckling. A princely gift, sir-but it comes too late; Like sunbeams on the blasted blossoms, do Your favours fall; you should have given me this When 'twould have rais'd me in men's thoughts, and made No end, since she is not. She's gone She's gone! Life like a dial's hand hath stolen From me the fair figure ere it was perceiv'd. What will become of me ?-Too late, too late Y'are come; you may persuade wild birds, that wing Her wandering spirit back. It (her lip) keeps a sweetness yet, As stills from roses, when the flowers are gone. One more extract, and we have done. Two young ladies are both enamoured of the same object, who is supposed dead. Blush not, Orithie; 'tis a sin to blush For loving him, though none at all to love him. I can admit of rivalship without A jealousy: nay shall be glad of it; We two will sit, and think, and think, and sigh, And sigh, and talk of love-and of Thersames. Like this thing said thus, th' other thing thus done, E. H. 264 MY FIRST FOLLY. "L'imagination grossit souvent les plus petits objets par une estimation fantastique jusqu'à remplir notre ame."-PENSEES DE PASCAL. "I have spent all my golden time, O willow, willow, willow tree, Yet can I not beleeved bee."-OLD BALLAD. "Do you take trifle?" said Lady Olivia to my poor friend Halloran. "No, Ma'am, I am reading philosophy," said Halloran; waking from a fit of abstraction, with about as much consciousness and perception as exists in a petrified oyster, or an alderman dying of a surfeit.-Halloran is a fool. A trifle is the one good thing, the sole and surpassing enjoyment. He only is happy who can fix his thoughts, and his hopes, and his feelings, and his affections, upon those fickle and fading pleasures, which are tenderly cherished and easily forgotten, alike acute in their excitement and brief in their regret. Trifles constitute my summum bonum. Sages may crush them with the heavy train of argument and syllogism; schoolboys may assail them with the light artillery of essay and of theme; members of parliament may loath, doctors of divinity may contemn:-bag wigs and big wigs, blue devils and blue stockings, sophistry and sermons, reasonings and wrinkles, Solon, Thales, Newton's Principia, Mr. Walker's Eidouranion, the King's bench, the bench of Bishops-all these are serious antagonists; very serious!-but I care not; I defy them; I dote upon trifles; and my name is Vyvyan Joyeuse, and my motto is Vive la Bagatelle.' There are many persons who while they have a tolerable taste for the frivolous, yet profess remorse and penitence for their indulgence of it; and continually court and embrace new day-dreams, while they shrink from the retrospect of those which have already faded. Peace be to their everlasting laments, and their ever-broken resolutions! Your true trifler, meaning your humble servant, is a being of a very different order. The luxury which I renew in the recollection of the past, Is equal to that which I feel in the enjoyment of the present, or create in the anticipation of the future. I love to |