lay-impropriations, in tracts of country where | sober-minded admit that, in general views, my ministers are few and meagrely provided for. A claim still stronger may be acknowledged by those who, round their superb habitations, or elsewhere, walk over vast estates which were lavished upon their ancestors by royal favouritism or purchased at insignificant prices after church-spoliation ; such proprietors, though not consciencestricken (there is no call for that) may be prompted to make a return for which their tenantry and dependents will learn to bless their names. An impulse has been given; an accession of means from these several sources, co-operating with a well-considered change in the distribution of some parts of the property at present possessed by the church, a change scrupulously founded upon due respect to law and justice, will, we trust, bring about so much of what her friends desire, that the rest may be calmly waited for, with thankfulness for what shall have been obtained. Let it not be thought unbecoming in a layman, to have treated at length a subject with which the clergy are more intimately conversant. All may, without impropriety, speak of what deeply concerns all; nor need an apology be offered for going over ground which has been trod before so ably and so often without pretending, however, to any thing of novelty, either in matter or manner, something may have been offered to view, which will save the writer from the imputation of having little to recommend his labour, but goodness of intention. It was with reference to thoughts and feelings expressed in verse, that I entered upon the above notices, and with verse I will conclude. The passage is extracted from my MSS. written above thirty years ago: it turns upon the individual dignity which humbleness of social condition does not preclude, but frequently promotes. It has no direct bearing upon clubs for the discussion of public affairs, nor upon political or trade-unions; but if a single workman-who, being a member of one of those clubs, runs the risk of becoming an agitator, or who, being enrolled in a union, must be left without a will of his own, and therefore a slave should read these lines, and be touched by them, I should indeed rejoice, and little would I care for losing credit as a poet with intemperate critics, who think differently from me upon political philosophy or public measures, if the affections have been moved, and my imagination exercised, under and for the guidance of reason. 'Here might I pause, and bend in reverence Pour rapture, tenderness, and hope; my theme As found among the best of those who live, Not unexalted by religious faith, Nor uninformed by books, good books, though few, And miserable love that is not pain M The Emigrant Mother, 87 The Excursion, 444 The Faery Chasm, 288 The Fall of the Aar, 257 The Farmer of Tilsbury Vale, 427 suggested by the Monument of The Fountain, 366 suggested by the view of Lan- - 209 suggested by Westall's Views, Valley of Dover, 268 The French and the Spanish Guerillas, - The French Army in Russia, 247 upon a blank leaf in the Com- The Gleaner, 398 upon the late general fast, 386 written in London, Sept.1802,238 Stanzas. Catholic Cantons, 258 in Germany, 364 in the Simplon Pass, 265 on the Power of Sound, 181 Sept. 1819, 375 Sept. 1819, 375 387 St. Bees, 350 The Green Linnet, 118 The Idle Shepherd-boys, 59 The Kitten and Falling Leaves, 129 The Last Supper, 262 The Liturgy, 329 The Longest Day, 63 The Marriage Ceremony, 331 The Matron of Jedborough and her The Monument called Long Meg and The Mother's Return, 55 The Norman Boy, 64 The Norman Conquest, 317 The Oak and the Broom, 115 The Oak of Guernica, 245 The old Cumberland Beggar, 425 The Pass of Kirkstone, 166 The Pilgrim's Dream, 126 |