Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine — Volume 53, No. 328, February, 1843. Various

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Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine — Volume 53, No. 328, February, 1843 - Various

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voice—and, round her neck entwining

      Young arms, vents all his soul in tears;—

      So, by harsh custom far estranged,

      Along the glad and guileless track,

      To childhood's happy home, unchanged,

      The swift song wafts the wanderer back—

      Snatch'd from the coldness of unloving Art

      To Nature's mother arms—to Nature's glowing heart!

      HONOUR TO WOMAN

      Honour to Woman! To her it is given

      To garden the earth with the roses of Heaven!

      All blessed, she linketh the Loves in their choir—

      In the veil of the Graces her beauty concealing,

      She tends on each altar that's hallow'd to Feeling,

      And keeps ever-living the fire!

      From the bounds of Truth careering,

      Man's strong spirit wildly sweeps,

      With each hasty impulse veering,

      Down to Passion's troubled deeps.

      And his heart, contented never,

      Greeds to grapple with the Far,

      Chasing his own dream for ever,

      On through many a distant Star!

      But Woman with looks that can charm and enchain,

      Lureth back at her beck the wild truant again,

      By the spell of her presence beguil'd—

      In the home of the Mother her modest abode,

      And modest the manners by Nature bestow'd

      On Nature's most exquisite child!

      Bruised and worn, but fiercely breasting,

      Foe to foe, the angry strife;

      Man the Wild One, never resting,

      Roams along the troubled life;

      What he planneth, still pursuing;

      Vainly as the Hydra bleeds,

      Crest the sever'd crest renewing—

      Wish to wither'd wish succeeds.

      But Woman at peace with all being, reposes,

      And seeks from the Moment to gather the roses—

      Whose sweets to her culture belong.

      Ah! richer than he, though his soul reigneth o'er

      The mighty dominion of Genius and Lore,

      And the infinite Circle of Song.

      Strong, and proud, and self-depending,

      Man's cold bosom beats alone;

      Heart with heart divinely blending,

      In the love that Gods have known,

      Souls' sweet interchange of feeling,

      Melting tears—he never knows,

      Each hard sense the hard one steeling,

      Arms against a world of foes.

      Alive, as the wind-harp, how lightly soever

      If woo'd by the Zephyr, to music will quiver,

      Is Woman to Hope and to Fear;

      Ah, tender one! still at the shadow of grieving,

      How quiver the chords—how thy bosom is heaving—

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      1

      "Taille and the Gabelle." Sully thus describes these fertile sources of crime and misery:—"Taille, source principale d'abus et de vexations de toute espèce, sans sa repartition et sa perception. Il est bien à souhaiter, mais pas à espérer, qu'on change un jour en entier le fond de cette partie des revenus. Je mets la Gabelle de niveau avec la Taille. Je n'ai jamais rien trouvé de si bizarrement tyrannique que de faire acheter à un particulier, plus de sel qu'il n'en veut et n'en peut consommer, et de lui défendre encore de revendre ce qu'il a de trop."

      2

      Ulysses.

      3

      Need we say to the general reader, that Oileus here alludes to

1

"Taille and the Gabelle." Sully thus describes these fertile sources of crime and misery:—"Taille, source principale d'abus et de vexations de toute espèce, sans sa repartition et sa perception. Il est bien à souhaiter, mais pas à espérer, qu'on change un jour en entier le fond de cette partie des revenus. Je mets la Gabelle de niveau avec la Taille. Je n'ai jamais rien trouvé de si bizarrement tyrannique que de faire acheter à un particulier, plus de sel qu'il n'en veut et n'en peut consommer, et de lui défendre encore de revendre ce qu'il a de trop."

2

Ulysses.

3

Need we say to the general reader, that Oileus here alludes to the strife between Ajax and Ulysses, which has furnished a subject to the Greek tragic poet, who has depicted, more strikingly than any historian, that intense emulation for glory, and that mortal agony in defeat, which made the main secret of the prodigious energy of the Greek character? The poet, in taking his hero from the Homeric age, endowed him with the feelings of the Athenian republicans he addressed.

4

Neoptolemus, the son of Achilles.

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