recti ons, and you will not have to reproach discovered, in a corner of the picture, a yourself with having taken his away from small portion of a Marshal's baton, as if him. Come, come, be a little obliging; we to indicate, that, at least, he merited it."are all sent on earth mutually to assist each "If he had been in the service," whispered other; describe to this gentleman the fea- || I.-" I wish also," continued he, "that my tures and phisiognomy of your father, ac-father may have the appearance of a veteran cording to the best of your recollection; tell him what was unpleasant about him, and what alteration he shall make; add and diminish all that may tend to the glory of your family, and the success of your own individual interest. I will be answerable for his docility in complying with your will."-" Well," said Lambert to the young painter, "I wish my father to be represented as a little man, between fifty-five and sixty years of age; who shall have the appearance of having grown old in the midst of honours, and who, on a blue coat, shall have two General's epaulettes, and five or six ribbons of the most striking colours; if possible, I should wish to be officer, and the flexible features of an adroit courtier; that his smile may be that of a man of sense, and his whole phisiognomy like that of a man accustomed to courts." "I know, then, how to suit you," replied the modern Apelles; " you will then see, without a doubt, the portrait of a certain personage that walks regularly every day, from two to four, on the Terrace des Feuillans; I expect to meet him on my return; and if, the day after to-morrow I bring you your father-"-" Then," said Lambert, smiling, "I will restore you your's with pleasure." S. G. TO THE EDITOR OF LA BELLE ASSEMBLEE. SIR,-I flatter myself your fair readers will not think you deviate from the principles of an elegant miscellany, though a few columns are occupied by the reflections of a husband and a father, who gratefully offers a testimony to their bliss-imparting virtues. Having "By blest experience try'd, "How much the wife is dearer than the bride," only public display, they will, probably, accord an indulgent perusal to an elucidation of the impediments to success for their manœuvres, with the cause of leaving in celibacy such fair creatures as cannot furnish an equivalent to support the increasing expences of an increasing family. Nearly twelve years have elapsed since my return from a foreign country to take possession of a large estate, devolved to me by the death of a distant relation. I was still young, and had been so judiciously stimulated to diligence, in preparing myself to acquire independence by professional exertions, that I had no leisure for vicious addiction. Prepossessed by the placid affection and concord in the domestic association of my parents, though struggling with a narrow income, to educate six boys, and to maintain an appearance suitable to their highly respectable connections, I naturally inferred, that an affluent fortune could enhance the enjoyments of well assorted marriage; but believe I should have hesitated to reveal those sentiments to my only near relation, a bachelor uncle, if he had not bewailed his own improvidence in LETTER TO THE EDITOR. trusting to contingencies for the care of his helpless old age. "Get married-get married, George," said he, " if you would not, in sickness and decrepitude, throw yourself upon the mercy of a prosing housekeeper and mercenary valet-when, like me, you are unfit to take care of your decayed body, or your affairs. A wife, a daughter, or even a sister, would be worth more than wealth to me, when I can neither think nor act for myself, and am incapable of receiving any comfort, but in tender assiduities, and kind sympathy. As I am at present tolerably well, and the season is mild, I shall accompany you to visit our neighbours. Young ladies are seen, in their true colours, far more readily in rural scenes than in town; and young men, I imagine, are more apt to make a selection among a dozen captivating objects, than when their fancy is distracted by scores of bloomers. Cupid flutters about in assemblies, routs, and theatres, but 33 nor imitation, a similar character. Don't interrupt me, George. I have no evil to say of Louisa; and after you hear some facts of her mother, you will agree with me, that you cannot too warily proceed in your love affair, lest latent foibles may, too late, break the charm. Mrs. Swinburne's father, as a wharfinger, in a West-India colony, acquired a competency which enabled him to give a shewy education to five sprightly daughters: their dashing manners gained them husbands, in dotage or minority. Swinburne was no more than nineteen, when, a few days after his introduction to a belle of five-and-twenty years old, he offered her his hand. He had a valuable property, but the returns depended upon following a system which deceased father, and had successfully con the young man learned from his lately ducted during his tedious illness. While he could prevail with his wife to remain in the island, prosperity crowned his well his altars are erected only among the house-directed attentions; but the lady had been hold gods, or in gardens, woods, and fields. I would as soon choose a wife by seeing her picture at an exhibition, as by contemplating her features or figure at public places." finished at a London boarding-school, and she languished for gaities, of which having only partial glimpses, her imagination pourtrayed as the ne plus ultra of enjoyment. She wheedled her husband, at the To abbreviate my egotisms, I shall pass over intermediate occurrences, to tell, inland. He was a Creole, brought up on the end of four years, to take a trip to Eng. few words, that a slight acquaintance in-spot of his nativity; and a total stranger in clined me to prefer the ever-gay and insinuating Louisa; and her mother seemed more pleasantly amusing than Mrs. Islesworth, with all her advantages of person, and greater fortune. My uncle perceived the nascent passion. the emporium of pleasure and profusion, he depended entirely on his wife's guidance. She became, and still is, a fine lady, a very fine lady; but an usurper of altitude in society is no more to be tolerated than the usurper of a throne; since, in both cases, we may discern the absence of a pure and high moral rectitude. I condemn all that sport away, in personal adornment and selfish gratification, the superfluity of wealth that would relieve the distresses of many indigent fellow-beings-but immeasurably more culpable is she, that has cajoled a tooeasy husband to desert his most important interests, and who squanders his revenue in giving routs, and playing cards with "Wait," said he, "till you become a little intimate in both houses: I have a moral certainty, that, in general, the most accommodating mothers, or the most attractive daughters, are not always the most delightful companions in daily intercourse. I am a downright Englishman, and always thought Mrs. Swinburne over anxious to recommend herself and her daughter to rich young or old men; and I have seen her haughty as a Spanish Princess to penny-peeresses, when she should be acting her less merit: but my old friend, Adleeron, | part in economizing for the benefit of her whom I have not seen these seven-andtwenty years till last Monday, gave me a history which should deter you from yielding your heart to her eleve, until assured she has, neither by hereditary disposition, No. 112. Vol. XVIII. progeny, and taking care of their health, point out the most deserving matron with a marriageable daughter?" "You are a sly rogue. You very well know my favourite; and should I do any justice to Mrs. Islesworth, you will say I am in love with her, or have predestined her Isabella for you. You smile: well, I shall even give you that opening, to retort severities. Mr. Islesworth was the ward of Mr. Cavendish, and had frequent opportunities of seeing his lovely daughter. They formed an early attachment; but Mr. Cavendish did not think Isleworth's estate equal to the pretensions of his daughter; he was, however, moved by her uncomplaining dejection, and consented to her union with Islesworth: warning him that a few thousand pounds was all the portion he intended to bestow. In this resolution he persevered to the day of his death; but Mrs. Islesworth and her husband prudently suited their style of living to their income. usher into existence, only to pine and expire-and had all the young Swinburnes been now living, they could be but slenderly provided for. The expenditure of their parents far exceeded their remittances, but both had acquired a taste for high life. Money was borrowed, at usurious interest. I need not expatiate upon the consequences. Swinburne died suddenly; some aver his own hand terminated his unhappy career. The widow had securities on his plantations, and a quondam admirer, who drew out the settlements, took a friendly concern in winding up, for her behoof, the neglected business of the deceased Swinburne. He sold the land, the negroes, and moveables to great advantage, and embarked for England to claim his reward, but died on the passage. Mrs. Swinburne's annuity, and the reversion for her daughter, allows her to live some weeks in London with acquaintances, who make reprisals by passing months at her decorated cottage in summer or autumn. This is all I have to say, George; but it is quite enough to make a judicious young man very cautious. You are not the first that has been enchant- | going to see him when attacked by a putrid ed by such a girl as Louisa; but all who "Isleworth behaved to his father-in-law without servility, but with the complacency of an affectionate son; he lost his life by fever. The same distemper made Mrs. Islesworth an orphan and a widow in one week. She inherited her father's estates, and has had more than one tempting offer from admirers, who prized her for her own sake. If we had more such matrons, celibacy would be less frequent; and that you may not think me a surly bachelor, unjust in the most amiable portion of rationals, I will say, that if we had more such husbands as Islesworth, we should have few or no frivolous extravagant wives." "Fauitless! George; now I see you are angry at my blunt sincerity. All mortals, male and female, are faulty; but the kind and degree of failings, you will acknow-1 ledge, make an essential difference in their merit or demerit." "True, my dear Sir: will you, therefore, The reader will have anticipated that Mrs. Islesworth was my mother-in-law; and beg leave to add, that the best recommendation for marriageable fair ones will always proceed from the worth of their parents. FUGITIVE POETRY. The Arctic Expedition. By Miss Porden. 8vo. Murray. sen a very interesting subject; for the warm wishes of every Englishman are keenly exMISS PORDEN is well known to the cited, and their bosoms glow with every literary world, as the author of a Poem anxious wish for the success of their bold entitled The Veils; and she has now cho- || countrymen who have undertaken the FUGITIVE POETRY. perilous search for the discovery of a northwest passage. Miss Porden is the first who has treated this subject in a poetical way; a subject well calculated for the enthusiasm of poetry: she excels in description, and here a wide field is opened for that her peculiar forte. Nor has she seized the pencil at random ; it is not mere fancy that has guided her pictorial and poetical delineations; she has taken good care to inform herself minutely and correctly of those incidents which she has clothed in such charming colours. The following kind of invocation at the commencement of the Poem is very beautiful: "Sail, sail, adventurous barks! go fearless forth, sails." "And you, aspiring youths! heroic band! Who leave, by science led, your native land; Undaunted steer where none have mark'd the way, Whom danger damps not, nor whom toils dismay. Where none are near, to witness or to save." . TERRORS THAT AWAIT THE ADVENTURERS. "Fear not, while months of dreary darkness roll, To stand self-centred on the attractive pole; Fear not, the victims of magnetic force, } $5 WHEN, bursting forth to life and light, At once to full perfection grew. Her velvet textured wings unfold, With all the rainbow's colours bright, And dropt with spots of burnish'd gold. Trembling awhile with joy she stood, And felt the sun's enlivening ray, Drank from the skies the vital flood, And wondered at her plumage gay. And balanc'd oft her broidered wings, Thro' fields of air prepared to sail; Then on her ventrous journey springs, And floats along the rising gale. Go, child of pleasure, range the fieldsTaste all the joys that spring can givePartake what bounteous summer yields, And live while yet 'tis thine to live. To waste with cold, and grief, and famine, there : Go sip the rose's fragrant dew The lily's honied cup exploreFrom flower to flower the search renew, And rifle all the woodbine's store, E2 And let me trace thy vagrant flight, But hark! while I thus musing stand, They cease-but still a voice 1 hear, Shall the poor worm that shocks thy sight, Ah! where were once her golden eyes, And shalt thou, number'd with the dead, Go, mortal! in thy reptile state, ORIGINAL POETRY. SPRING, A PASTORAL POEM. STERN winter no longer prevails, 'Tis spring that now visits the plain, In the midst of the dance on the lawn. The shepherds their flocks now release And no evil their broodlings annoy. The rose, royal queen of perfume, In the sylvan secluded retreat; SANGRADO. |