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MORNING.

THERE is a parting in Night's murky veil,
A soft, pale light is in the eastern sky;
It steals along the ocean tremblingly,
Like distant music wafted on the gale.
Stars, one by one, grow faint, and disappear,
Like waning tapers, when the feast is o'er;
While, girt with rolling mists, the mountains hoar
High o'er the darkling glens their tops uprear.
There is a gentle rustling in the grove,
Though winds be hush'd; it is the stir of wings,
And now the sky-lark from her nest up springs,
Trilling, in accents clear, her song of love;
And now heaven's gate in golden splendour burns—
Joy to the earth, the glorious Sun returns!

NIGHT.

I LOVE thee when thou comest, glorious Sun,
Out of the chambers of thy watery dwelling;
I love thee when thy early beam is telling
Of worlds awaken'd, and man's toil begun;
I love thee, too, when o'er the western hill

Thy parting ray in golden hue is stealing,
For then the gush of soft and pensive feeling
Speaks to the labouring bosom, peace, be still;
But thou art not so lovely to mine eye

At morning, balmy eve, or busy noon,
As is thy gentle sister, the pale Moon,
Which shineth now in yon unclouded sky:
Then let me forth, to drink her mellow ray;
Who would exchange it for the gaudy day?
R. G.

ΤΟ

OH! Lady, now the time is past

When passion held her darkling sway,
And gentle Peace hath shed at last
O'er our poor hearts her ray.

Why are there in our greetings still
Such wanderings of the thought and eye,
As if we had not drunk our fill

Of joy and misery?

Our speaking glances cannot meet,
I cannot gaze upon that brow,

But o'er my brain strange fancies fleet,
Such as oppress me now.

And yet I do not love thee now,

At least not as I loved before,

Because our lips have breathed a vow
That we should love no more.

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BEHOLD a madman!-on the thirsty sands
He builds in summer hour his gorgeous pile
Up to the clouds, unmindful, all the while,
How fleet shall be the labour of his hands,—

For lo! the sky is changed, the lightning flies,
The thunders roll, winds beat, and torrents pour,
And, when returning daylight gilds the shore,

A prostrate wreck the mighty fabric lies!—
What better are the visions of our youth?
What better are our plans of riper years?
We ever hope for happiness, but Truth
Amid life's desert distant far appears,
And, as we build our palaces of thought,

R. G.

The wand of Ruin crumbles them to nought.

A

No. II.

THE WORLD.

THERE is a tumult in the wilderness-
Behold, with fiery breath the fierce Simoom
Rushes resistless onward, death and gloom
Darkening behind it in their dreariness!
It is the witherer of Beauty, lo!

Strength and the powers of life abide it not,
Each living thing sinks down upon the spot
Lifeless, with all the leaves on every bough!-
Thus is it with that many-headed thing,

The monstrous world, which, passing o'er the mind
Of unsuspecting Youth, leaves nought behind
Except the shadowy darkness of its wing,

And Guilt, and writhing Anguish: Hope can bring
No balsam, nor can Life a succour find.

No. III.

DESTRUCTION.

SEE how that Giant, on his iron car,
With wheels of fury traverses the earth,
Men, and the works of man, in hellish mirth
He treads and tramples down, eternal war
With Order waging and Tranquillity:
He riots in the tempest; on the land,
And on the sea, the traces of his hand

Are visible; and, to the wondering sky,
Up from the bowels of the hills he throws
Rocks, lava, and bitumen, in a stream;
His breathing is the hurricane; a beam
Of lightning is his eye-glance; round his brows
Twine adders wreathed with hemlock; awful fame
Is his Destruction is the Giant's name.

No. IV:

HUMAN LIFE.

How change our days! not oftener doth its hue
The lank cameleon change, than we our joys,—
The hope that feeds upon our hearts destroys;
Little is done while much remains to do;

We fix our eyes on phantoms, and

pursue;

We chase the airy bubbles of the brain;

We leave for Fancy's lures the fix'd and true;

Destroy what Time hath spared, and build again:

Years o'er us pass, and Age, that comes to few,

Comes but to tell them they have lived in vain!

Sin blights-Death scatters-Hope misleads-Thought errsJoy's icicles melt down before the sun

And, ere the ebbing sands of life be run, Another generation Earth prefers!

A

THOUGHTS UPON THOROUGHFARES.
"Dextra, ac sinistra, domunculæ construuntur."

"On est etranger a son voisin!" observes Le Mercier, in one of his chapters upon "Life in Paris ;" and the carelessness of citizens, perhaps generally, as to that which passes immediately before their doors, might be proverbial. Accustomed, in fact, to the view of an infinity of objects, at an age when they want understanding to appreciate them, reflection seldom arises in after-life upon matters with which the senses are already familiar. It were a magazine of marvels for a man in London, who could only walk, with his eyes open, from one end of the city to the other; but how few men, who are habitually residents in London, would be capable (as regards the "mind's eye") of executing such a task!

For the mere Town, to a man who looks back for twenty years-even though he himself has all the while resided in it—is a wonder! We are so bound up always, either in our business or our pleasure; the distance is so formidable from one extremity of suburb to another; each "Quarter" provides for its own wants so completely within itself; and there is such an apathy about seeing even novelties, when we may see them every day, that a colony of negroes might be planted at Shoreditch, and the fact remain unknown (except by the newspapers) to those who dwell in Lambeth. There are thousands, perhaps, among the inhabitants of Mary-labonne, who have never walked across the "Southwark" bridge, since that convenience was erected; and almost whole parishes, east of the Royal Ex

VITRUVIUS.

change and the India House, who would as soon expect to hear of a pavement across the Atlantic Ocean, as over Primrose Hill.

And yet it is beyond a chance, (though not believed in Birchin-lane,) that the next twenty years will bring about that consummation-shutting out green fields and hedges, even in a Sunday walk, from the poets of Holborn; and leaving no memento of the glories of Chalk-Farm but in its Sign! We have already got a complete succession of " places"-" terraces""squares" and "crescents," from Tottenham-Court-Road, reaching all the way to Kentish-Town; and Kentish-Town has crept on until it almost reaches Hampstead. These erections skirt the Regent's Park, almost en◄ tirely, upon the east; on the west, a new town-called, distinctively, "Portland Town"-extends itself from Paddington to the foot (westward) of Primrose Hill. There needs now but a short street farther of communication from this last "Town," across the Mons Coquinarius,* to Hampstead; and the duels which have been fought in "Mary-la-bonne Park" will then become as merely matters of record and recollection, as those encounters of a century past, which stand chronicled in our older comedies, when the "peerage" was "thinned" at "Barn Elms"-in" the Ring" or "behind Montague House."

And of all the directions, too, (which rather ekes out this probability,) in which new buildings have increased on the roads out of London, those very innovations which run pretty

"Mons Coquinarius, or "Mount of Cooks," so called (see Tacitus) by Julius Agricola, on account of its proximity to the city. Hence (Coquinaris, or Coquinarius) no doubt, the term Cockney;' which some writers will have to be only a corruption of the French Coquin né-two words which need no explanation. I think it most likely, however, and indeed certain, that the French Coquin, itself, is from the Latin Coquus; that substantive being frequently used to designate a knave (metaphorically) by the later Roman writers, on account of the roguish, peculating habits of the servants employed by that people in their kitchens. Thus we find Cato haranguing his household upon the general corruptness of the age, when a Greek slave, a scullion, had been detected in eating a piece of an eel. I should say, clearly, “ Co. quin'-from Coquus.' But there be those who are more learned in such matters than I am."-Harwood's Antiquities, 1642.

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VOL. XVII.

X

66

nearly north, have been the most lucrative and desirable. Towards Islington, we have walked out in great force -Bagnigge Wells Tea-gardens will soon be too valuable ground for prentices to sup bohea upon. Cold-BathFields Prison is already surrounded on three sides with houses; Sadlers' Wells theatre will shortly stand within the city, and draw an audience from its own immediate neighbourhood. We have a paved street, I believe, uninterrupted, running from the Edgewareroad to "The Angel," beyond Pentonville; and, still later, the erections which surround Burton Crescent, have filled up all that tract of fields which lay between Gray's-Inn-Lane and Tottenham-Court-Road, formerly east and west-Holborn and the New Road, north and south. But these latter foundations have never taken," as the technical phrase is, upon the whole, so well, (frem some cause or other,) as those about Paddington and St John's Wood.

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The buildings first commenced in this quarter throve, and the higher rented ones thrive well still. But some streets of a smaller calibre were afterwards imagined-houses showily got up, but cheaply-containing four or five rooms only each-to "supersede the necessity of small families living in lodgings," and this experiment, which was nearly or altogether the first of its kind that had been made in town, in a very few months conveyed a most strange and dolorous aspect to the neighbourhood.

The new Independencies were finished in the very extreme of gentility, and they were amazingly sought after (the projector thought of a coach-and-six) in the beginning. A great many very "genteel small fami

lies" came in almost before the houses were dry-who "disliked living under the same roof with a landlord"particularly towards " quarter-day."

Negotiants of another class too soon perceived the advantage of inhabiting the entirety of a dwelling ; in as much as that the right, absolute, of entry and sortie, (without reference restrietive as to hours or parties,) remained in such case peculiarly in the disposal and discretion of the lessee. By degrees, however, most of these retiring souls, who were so desirous of privacy upon ordinary occasions, came, upon extraordinary ones, (such as will occur four times a-year,) to be invisible altogether. Doors were seen opened" ajar" too often, and with the "chains" kept up. A custom grew up among those who were "moving," of ordering their conveyances in the dead of the night. And the result was, that the whole Lilliputian district descended gradually into that three per cents at forty-two sort of occupation, to see which fills the contemplative soul with sadness, and the taxgatherer with despair.*

Ex. "Ironing boards," and cashiered shutters, were put into new commission as brevet" counters;" and pippins and gingerbread courted the gourmand's eye in little dining parlours-fitted up for clerks at ninety pounds a-year to take their chop in! "Red cows," and notices relevant to "mending shoes," deformed “stuccoed fronts," and street doors that had boasted of fan lights and brass-knockers to them! Area-steps, meant once to keep plebeians out of "the hall," now became an unexpected convenience to the old woman who took in washing in "the kitchen." Children's legs, and liberal offers for "old rags,"

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"The symptoms of failure in a town vicinity are commonly gradual, and their character depends entirely upon the style of the quarter which is afflicted with them. In a fashionable square, (not mercantile,) the first omen of danger is commonly the appearance of a solicitor,'-his departure is prophetic of certain, and ready, dissolution. Two 'plates' upon one door, in any Place' of pretension, are suspicious. A 'doctor,' unless he be of known practice, is always a dangerous newcomer; he is too apt to have a 'first and second floor' to let' furnished or unfurnished. Tooth-drawers are getting to infest streets with very good names to them now-nice minds will be jealous of such propinquity. It has a very vile appearance when you find a boarding-house' opened in the same Row' with you. If you value your character, give warning as soon after such an event as possible. A foot boy kept in it-the parish shoe-black calling at any house in a morning-a chariot, with one horse, passing even through it-or a door answered from up the area-any one of these casualties, in my view, renders a street or terrace' no longer correctly practicable."-BACON's Decline of Parishes (within the Bills of Mortality.)

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