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Never be without a certain amount of pride-I mean the pride that elevates man in the social scale, not that bastardised counterfeit begotten of arrogance and ignorance. Be choice in the selection of your companions, affable with all, open to few. Never let a well-cut coat, or a nicelyrounded speech, entirely win your confidence, nor a shabby suit and a plain appearance prejudice your judgment. Worthless pebbles often boast a gilded setting, whilst priceless pearls may lie unnoted in an oystershell. Never look upon a man as a friend merely because he has nodded to you over a glass of wine, proposed your health, or applauded your song; nor consider him perfectly disinterested because he speaks sharply to the waiter for bringing you mutton at dinner when there is venison upon the table. Disinterested friends, as the words ought to be construed, are a people that exist only where such travellers as Gulliver have been. We hear of them and read of them; so, also, we may of the Liliputians, and the sphinx, and the phoenix; we meet with the effigies of all such fabulous creatures, and think that they look like life and reality. But where are the originals?—what we see are impositions. The tangibility of the one in mortal flesh is as mythological as the history of the others; and, so far as existence is concerned, I am sorry to inform you that they are coequal.

"Never drink a glass of any liquor over your quantum merely for the sake of appearing social, and assisting another in emptying the decanters. Better leave it for the consumption of the waiter than take it to engender consumption in yourself. During my life I have known many a fine promising young fellow, who sat every bottle out upon one journey, drinking cod-liver oil on the next, and looking as though he were booked for a destination where refreshments are not required. Be advised by me, and never exceed your pint of sherry, or port, or whatever it may be. Remember that incontinence in youth overtakes helpless old age before life's half-way house has been reached. The steady pace keeps longest on the course. Practised runners husband their energies; impetuous amateurs expend theirs before the race has well commenced. I augur good things of you. You brook censure patiently, and do not despise the cautions of an elder. Continue ever to act upon the same principle. Many roses lie in your path; never trample upon the smallest, it will bud in time. Pluck them all if you will, but do not lacerate your fingers with their prickly stems. When the experience of others is offered to you gratuitously, accept it thankfully. It costs those a high price who have been compelled to purchase it. And now that I have concluded my lecture, I hope you are not annoyed."

"My dear sir, on the contrary, every word you have spoken is already graven in my memory. This evening the better part of it shall ornament my diary."

"Do you generally keep one?"

"I do," I replied.

"I honour you for it, my boy," he cried, enthusiastically, grasping my hand warmly. "When the gleanings of every day are sifted and conveyed to paper, you build for yourself the privilege of living younger moments over again when in after years you peruse the pages. Bobbin, I honour you for it."

Mr.

I was not a little vain of his good opinion, for I felt that it was worth the holding, so I said,

"Since I have been so fortunate as to have gained a position in your esteem, Mr. Cripps, suffer me to express one selfish wish."

"Well, what is it ?"

"That you will never permit me to forfeit your respect until I have proved either a thankless listener or an incorrigible pupil."

"Rest assured of it I shall not, my lad."

We had previously retraced our steps, and were then at the door of the hotel. He again gave me his hand as though he wished to convince me of his determination, and with a hearty "God bless you!" we parted.

The Minehead Pilots.

The belief is still current at Minehead that the Phantom Ship occasionally appears to lure pilots to their doom, and, when her object is accomplished, disap

pears.

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But most of all

Their armour's thrall
A certain point will fray
The tale that tells
Of potent spells

That parted sprites obey,
Of fleshless men,
Who float again

Upon the sea's highway.

The storm-mew calls,
The wind in squalls

Harries the seething sea,
Whirlwind and wave
In grotto and cave

Howl for the mastery;
If thou canst leap,
Climb on the steep,

And keep a look out with me.

Yon speck that braves

The wilderness waves,

That break about it in crowds, Bears it a flag,

Or is it a crag,

Or only a bank of clouds?

Thro' the vista'd storm

'Tis a vessel's form,

With hull, and masts, and shrouds.

No time to debate

Her possible freight,

So deadly is her bane;

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New-Book Notes by Monkshood.

MACAULAY'S HISTORY OF ENGLAND.*

Ir is a little unreasonable to assume that Mr. Macaulay's next and subsequent volumes must needs, for form and consistency's sake, take the same time to appear, and occupy an equal space in the narrative of events Kar" "Evavrov, as these portly twain, the third and fourth. It is rather too matter-of-fact and mechanical a mode of calculation, to infer from the number of pages absorbed by the years 1689 and 1690, the inevitable quantum of any other given year in the hundred following. A year crowded with events, or pregnant with the germs of events, is not identical in philosophic eyes with a year of inaction and repose, though both have an equal tale of months and weeks and days, and fill a pretty equal space in the chronicles of a mere Annual Register. The seven years from 1691 to 1697 are disposed of in one of these two volumes, and an accelerated rate of movement may be expected in certain advanced stages of the history. Were it otherwise, there were small hope indeed of an even approximate fulfilment of the historian's design. To reach even half-way to his proposed terminus ad quem, he would, in that case, need to be as immortal in a physical, as an admiring public already proclaims him in a literary, sense. Nevertheless, making the fullest allowance for the difference between year and year, and between the time required for collecting historical matter and that for writing history, there is overmuch reason for misgivings that Mr. Macaulay has overshot his mark in dating so far onwards the finis which is to "crown" his "work"-his opus magnum. Happy we shall think him if he live to write, happy we shall think ourselves if we live to read, his History of England down to that epoch which forms the final catastrophe" in the great drama of the Revolution-down to that year which shattered the last hopes of the Stuarts and made doubly sure the assurance of safety to constitutional power-down to the '45 which rehabilitated, re-affirmed, and gave the approving "last word" to the grand experiment of the '89.

66

The present instalment, if it does not increase, at least keeps up, the interest of the opening volumes. There is little change perceptible in the characteristic qualities of the author. He does not become more of the historian and less of the essayist as he goes on. Indeed, the twelve chapters read like twelve essays, such as made his fortune in the Edinburgh Review; and a more indolent man might be tempted to insert in the body of his work, as it

*The History of England from the Accession of James the Second. By T. B. Macaulay. Vols. iii., iv. Longman.

66

progresses, each as a chapter complete in itself, those brilliant papers" on Sir William Temple, and the War of Succession in Spain, and Walpole, and Chatham, which we all know and esteem right well. He has not much altered his pace or his gait in advancing from Review (once a quarter) to History (once in seven years), far less mounted on stilts, or stiffened into the traditional "dignity" of History. He is as rich in enlivening details, piquant asides, and pleasant personal talk, as when his theme was Moore's Life of Byron or Boswell's Life of Johnson. He fails not to put on record any bit of gossip that will amuse, any choice ana that will tell. How William, when the Princess Anne dined with him, and when the first green peas of the year were put on the table, devoured the whole dish without offering a spoonful to her Royal Highness; how a certain Jacobite clergyman, after performing divine service on a fast day appointed by William and Mary, dined on a pigeon pie, and while he cut it up, uttered a wish that it was the usurper's heart; how Sherlock was henpecked out of non-juror principles by a high-spirited Xantippe who cared much. more about her house and carriage, the plenty of her table and the prospects of her children, than about the patriarchal origin of government or the meaning of the word Abdication; how William was sometimes provoked into horsewhipping his coachmen, footmen, and cooks out of the trenches before Namur, when he caught them skulking there to get a peep at the fighting;-no illustration of this kind, be it fiction or fact, is refused if it can be turned to account. The liberal drafts Mr. Macaulay makes on capital of this coinage, go far to explain the popularity he commands at circulating libraries. Novel-readers vow that his History reads like a novel. He would not thank them for the compliment -(they suppose it to be one). But he may thank his knowledge. of popular tastes, and his ability to suit them by an unstinted seasoning of the "savoury" and the "spicy," for much of the demand which justifies Mudie's order of 2750 copies of the History, for a single library. How can that History be other than readable, and in request, which is so cunningly interspersed with tidbits about the Fat Man of Londonderry, and the tossing in a blanket of the Mayor of Scarborough, and the hole-and-corner tactics of the Jacobite press; and the account of the Imperial noble who swallowed so many bumpers, in honour of William's visit to the Hague, that he tumbled into the turf fire, and was not pulled out till his fine velvet suit had been burned; and of the multitude of dogs that came to feast on the carnage of the battle-field of Aghrim, and that "became so fierce, and acquired such a taste for human flesh, that it was long dangerous for men to travel this road otherwise than in companies;" and of the feud between the New and Old East India Companies, which was sometimes as serious an impediment to the course of true love in London as the feud of the

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