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EBENEZER ELLIOTT.

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compound of earnest perseverance, restless observation, and instinctive or habitual hatred of oppression. He protests against being considered a coarse and careless writer; and asserts that he has never printed a careless line.

EBENEZER ELLIOTT was born on the seventeenth His genius, according to his own view of it, is a of March, 1781, at Masbro, a village near the town of Sheffield; where he has since resided, and where he follows the calling of an Ironmonger. His birth, he informs his biographer, was registered only in the family Bible; his father being 'a dissenter, and a thorough hater of the Church as by law established." The boyhood of the Poet was neglected, in consequence of his supposed inability to learn any thing useful; and he was left, for the most part, to his own guidance during the years which generally form the character of the future man. His nature was dull and slow, but thoughtful and affectionate. Happily his "idle time" was not "idly spent;" his wanderings in the woods and fields laid the foundation of his afterfame; and Thompson's Seasons made him a benevolence." versifier:

"His books were rivers, woods, and skies, The meadow and the moor.'

When at the age which determines destiny; or, as he quaintly expresses it," while it was doubtful whether he would become a man or a malt-worm," a country curate bequeathed to his home a library of valuable theological works. To this new source of profit and enjoyment, tinctured though it was with gloom, and to the conversation and amateur-preaching of his father, "an old Cameronian and born rebel," whose religion was of the severest kind, and whose "dreadful declamations it was his misfortune to hear," may be traced the character, literary and political, of the future Corn-Law Rhymer. Blessed or cursed with a hatred of wasted labour, he was never known to read a bad book through; but he has read again and again, and deeply studied all the master-pieces of the mind, original and translated; and the master-pieces only: a circumstance to which he attributes his success. "There is not," he says, "a good thought in his works which has not been suggested by some object actually before his eyes, or by some real occurrence, or by the thoughts of other men,"-" but," he adds, “I can make other men's thoughts breed."

So far my notice is indebted to the Corn-Law Rhymer himself. For the rest, I learn that he is indefatigable in application to his unpoetic business; a most kind husband and father, a pleasant associate, and a faithful friend; energetic to an extreme in conversation; roughly but powerfully eloquent; and that his "countenance bespeaks deep thought, and an enthusiastic temperament; his overhanging brow is stern to a degree, while the lower part of his face indicates mildness and

It is impossible to avoid some comment on the harsh, ungenerous, and we must add, un-English, political principles, which so continually influence, so thoroughly saturate, and so essentially impair the poetry of the Rhymer. In his " Corn-Law Rhymes," and poems avowedly political, we look for and pardon his strong and ungentle opinions; but he can rarely ramble through a green lane, climb the mountain's brow, or revel amid the luxuries of nature, without giving them expression. He has wooed Liberty with an unchaste passion. His fancy is haunted by images of tyrant-kings, tax-fed aristocrats, and bigoted oppressors.

Still, with the highest and most enduring of British Poets, we must class Ebenezer Elliott. Among his poems there are many glorious and true transcripts of nature; full of pathos and beauty, vigorous and original in thought; and clear, eloquent, and impassioned in language. His feelings, though at times kindly and gentle, are more often dark, menacing, and stern; but they are never grovelling or low. He has keen and burning sympathies; but unhappily he forgets that the high-born and wealthy claim them and deserve them, as well as the poor, and those who are more directly "bread-taxed;"-that suffering is the common lot of humanity.

SONGS.

SONGS.

LET IDLERS DESPAIR.

LET idlers despair! there is hope for the wise,
Who rely on their own hearts and hands;
And we read in their souls, by the flash of their
eyes,

That our land is the noblest of lands.

et knaves fear for England, whose thoughts wear a mask,

While a war on our trenchers they wage: Free Trade, and no favour! is all that we ask; Fair play, and the world for a stage!

Secure in their baseness, the lofty and bold
Look down on their victims beneath;
Like snow on a skylight, exalted and cold,
They shine o'er the shadow of death;

In the warm sun of knowledge, that kindles our blood,

And fills our cheer'd spirits with day,

Their splendour, contemn'd by the brave and the good,

Like a palace of ice, melts away.

Our compass, which married the east and the

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And redeem'd from the bonds of the base.

The ark of our triumph, far, far as seas roll, Shall ride o'er the wealth-freighted waves; The chain'd of the drones be the chainless in soul, And tyrants made men by their slaves.

The Hall of our Fathers-with Heav'n for its dome,

And the steps of its portals the sea-
Of labour and comfort will then be the home,
And the temple where worship the free.

LIKE A ROOTLESS ROSE OR LILY.

LIKE a rootless rose or lily;

Like a sad and life-long sigh:
Like a bird pursu'd and weary,
Doom'd to flutter till it die;
Landless, restless, joyless, hopeless,
Gasping still for bread and breath,
To their graves by trouble hunted,
Albion's helots live for death.

Tardy day of hoarded ruin!
Wild Niagara of blood!
Coming sea of headlong millions,

Vainly seeking work and food!
Why is famine reap'd for harvest?
Planted curses always grow:
Where the plough makes want its symbol,
Fools will gather as they sow.

YE WINTRY FLOWERS.

YE wintry flowers, whose pensive dyes
Wake, where the summer's lily sleeps!
Ye are like orphans in whose eyes
Their low-laid mother's beauty weeps.
Oh, not like stars, that come at eve
Through dim clouds glimmering one by one,
And teach the failing heart to grieve
Because another day
gone!

But like the hopes that linger yet
Upon the grave of sorrow's love,
And dare Affection to forget
The form below, the soul above;
Or like the thoughts that bid despair
Repose in faith on mercy's breast-
Givers of wings! from toil and care
To fly away and be at rest.

THE DAY WAS DARK.

THE day was dark, save when the beam
Of noon through darkness broke,
In gloomy state as in a dream,
Beneath my orchard oak;

Lo, splendour, like a spirit came!
A shadow like a tree!

While there I sat, and named her name,
Who once sat there with me.

I started from the seat in fear;
I look'd around in awe;
But saw no beauteous spirit near,
Though all that was I saw ;
The seat, the tree, where oft in tears
She mourn'd her hopes o'erthrown,
Her joys cut off in early years,

Like gather'd flowers half-blown.

Again the bud and breeze were met,
But Mary did not come ;
And e'en the rose, which she had set,
Was fated ne'er to bloom!

The thrush proclaim'd in accents sweet
That winter's reign was o'er;
The bluebells throng'd around my feet,
But Mary came no more.

I think, I feel-but when will she
Awake to thought again?
No voice of comfort answers me;

But God does nought in vain :
He wastes no flower, nor bud, nor leaf,
Nor wind, nor cloud, nor wave;
And will he waste the hope which grief
Hath planted in the grave?

ARTISANS' OUT-DOOR HYMN.

WHEN Stuart reign'd, God's people fled,
Chased like the helpless hunted hare;
But, kneeling on the mountain's head,
There sought the Lord, and found him there.

Lord! we too suffer; we too pray

That thou wilt guide our steps aright; And bless this day-tir'd Labour's dayAnd fill our souls with heavenly light.

For failing bread, six days in seven

We till the black town's dust and gloom; But here we drink the breath of heaven,

And here to pray the poor have room.

The stately temple, built with hands,
Throws wide its doors to pomp and pride;
But in the porch their beadle stands,
And thrusts the child of toil aside.

Therefore we seek the daisied plain,

Or climb thy hills to touch thy feet; There, far from splendour's heartless fane, Thy weary sons and daughters meet.

Is it a crime to tell thee here,

That here the sorely-tried are met; To seek thy face, and find thee near; And on thy rock our feet to set ?

Where, wheeling wide, the plover flies; Where sings the woodlark on the tree; Beneath the silence of thy skies,

Is it a crime to worship thee?

We waited long, and sought thee, Lord,
Content to toil, but not to pine;
And with the weapons of thy Word
Alone assail'd our foes and thine.

Thy truth and thee we bade them fear;
They spurn thy truth, and mock our moan!
Thy counsels, Lord, they will not hear,
And thou hast left them to their own.*

* See Rebecca's Hymn in "Ivanhoe."

MISCELLANEOUS POEMS.

THE WONDERS OF THE LANE.

STRONG climber of the mountain's side,
Though thou the vale disdain,
Yet walk with me where hawthorns hide
The wonders of the lane.
High o'er the rushy springs of Don
The stormy gloom is roll'd;
The moorland hath not yet put on

His purple, green, and gold.
But here the titling spreads his wing,
Where dewy daisies gleam;
And here the sun-flower of the spring
Burns bright in morning's beam.
To mountain winds the famish'd fox
Complains that Sol is slow,
O'er headlong steeps and gushing rocks
His royal robe to throw.
But here the lizard seeks the sun,

Here coils in light the snake;
And here the fire-tuft hath begun

Its beauteous nest to make.
Oh, then, while hums the earliest bee
Where verdure fires the plain,
Walk thou with me, and stoop to see

The glories of the lane!

For, oh, I love these banks of rock,

This roof of sky and tree,

These tufts, where sleeps the gloaming clock And wakes the earliest bee!

As spirits from eternal day

Look down on earth secure ; Gaze thou, and wonder, and survey

A world in miniature;

A world not scorn'd by Him who made
Even weakness by his might;
But solemn in his depth of shade,
And splendid in his light.
Light! not alone on clouds afar

O'er storm-lov'd mountains spread,
Or widely teaching sun and star

Thy glorious thoughts are read;
Oh, no! thou art a wondrous book,
To sky, and sea, and land-
A page on which the angels look,
Which insects understand!
And here, oh, Light! minutely fair,
Divinely plain and clear,
Like splinters of a crystal hair,

Thy bright small hand is here.
Yon drop-fed lake, six inches wide,
Is Huron, girt with wood;
This driplet feeds Missouri's tide-
And that, Niagara's flood.
What tidings from the Andes brings
Yon line of liquid light,

That down from heav'n in madness flings
The blind foam of its might?

Do I not hear his thunder roll

The roar that ne'er is still?

'Tis mute as death!-but in my soul It roars, and ever will.

What forests tall of tiniest moss

Clothe every little stone!

What pigmy oaks their foliage toss

O'er pigmy valleys lone!

With shade o'er shade, from ledge to ledge,

Ambitious of the sky,

Thy feather o'er the steepest edge

Of mountains mushroom high. Oh, God of marvels! who can tell

What myriad living things

On these gray stones unseen may dwell!
What nations, with their kings!
I feel no shock, I hear no groan

While fate perchance o'erwhelms
Empires on this subverted stone-

A hundred ruin'd realms!
Lo, in that dot, some mite, like me,

Impell'd by woe or whim,
May crawl, some atoms' cliff to see-
A tiny world to him!

Lo, while he pauses, and admires

The works of nature's might, Spurn'd by my foot, his world expires, And all to him is night!

Oh, God of terrors! what are we ?

Poor insects, spark'd with thought!
Thy whisper, Lord, a word from thee,
Could smite us into nought!

But shouldst thou wreck our father-land,
And mix it with the deep,
Safe in the hollow of thy hand
Thy little ones would sleep.

THE DYING BOY TO THE SLOE
BLOSSOM.

BEFORE thy leaves thou com'st once more,
White blossom of the sloe!

Thy leaves will come as heretofore;
But this poor heart, its troubles o'er,
Will then lie low.

A month at least before thy time

Thou com'st, pale flower, to me;
For well thou know'st the frosty rime
Will blast me ere my vernal prime,
No more to be.

Why here in winter? No storm lours
O'er nature's silent shroud!

But blithe larks meet the sunny showers,
High o'er the doomed untimely flowers
In beauty bowed.

Sweet violets in the budding grove

Peep where the glad waves run;
The wren below, the thrush above,
Of bright to-morrow's joy and love,
Sing to the sun.

And where the rose-leaf, ever bold,

Hears bees chaunt hymns to God,

The breeze-bowed palm, mossed o'er with gold,
Smiles o'er the well in summer cold,
And daisied sod.

But thou, pale blossom, thou art come,
And flowers in winter blow,
To tell me that the worm makes room
For me, her brother, in the tomb,
And thinks me slow.

For as the rainbow of the dawn
Foretells an eve of tears,

A sunbeam on the saddened lawn
I smile and weep to be withdrawn
In early years.

Thy leaves will come! but songful spring
Will see no leaf of mine;

Her bells will ring, her bride's-maids sing,
When my young leaves are withering,
Where no suns shine.

Oh, might I breathe morn's dewy breath,
When June's sweet Sabbaths chime!
But, thine before my time, oh, death!
I go where no flow'r blossometh,
Before my time.

Even as the blushes of the morn
Vanish, and long ere noon
The dew-drop dieth on the thorn,
So fair I bloomed; and was I born
To die as soon?

To love my mother, and to die-
To perish in my bloom!

Is this my sad, brief history.-
A tear dropped from a mother's eye
Into the tomb.

He lived and loved-will sorrow say-
By early sorrow tried;
He smiled, he sighed, he past away:
His life was but an April day,-
He loved, and died!-

My mother smiles, then turns away,
But turns away to weep:
They whisper round me-what they say
I need not hear, for in the clay
I soon must sleep.

O, love is sorrow! sad it is

To be both tried and true;

I ever trembled in my bliss:
Now there are farewells in a kiss,-
They sigh adieu.

But woodbines flaunt when bluebells fade,
Where Don reflects the skies;
And many a youth in Shire-cliffs' shade
Will ramble where my boyhood played,
Though Alfred dies.

Then panting woods the breeze will feel,
And bowers, as heretofore,
Beneath their load of roses reel;
But I through woodbined lanes shall steal
No more, no more.

Well, lay me by my brother's side,

Where late we stood and wept;

For I was stricken when he died,—
I felt the arrow as he sighed
His last, and slept.

A POET'S EPITAPH.

STOP, Mortal! Here thy brother lies,
The Poet of the poor,

His books were rivers, woods, and skies,
The meadow, and the moor;

His teachers were the torn heart's wail,
The tyrant and the slave,

The street, the factory, the jail,

The palace and the grave!

Sin met thy brother every where!

And is thy brother blamed?
From passion, danger, doubt, and care,
He no exemption claim'd.

The meanest thing, earth's feeblest worm,
He fear'd to scorn or hate;
But, honouring in a peasant's form

The equal of the great,

He bless'd the steward, whose wealth makes
The poor man's little more;

Yet loath'd the haughty wretch that takes
From plunder'd labour's store.

A hand to do, a head to plan,

A heart to feel and dare

Tell man's worst foes, here lies the man
Who drew them as they are.

TO THE BRAMBLE FLOWER.

THY fruit full well the schoolboy knows,

Wild bramble of the brake!

So, put thou forth thy small white rose;
I love it for his sake.

Though woodbines flaunt, and roses glow
O'er all the fragrant bowers,
Thou need'st not be ashamed to show

Thy satin-threaded flowers;
For dull the eye, the heart is dull
That cannot feel how fair,
Amid all beauty beautiful,

Thy tender blossoms are! How delicate thy gauzy frill!

How rich thy branchy stem! How soft thy voice, when woods are still, And thou sing'st hymns to them! While silent showers are falling slow, And 'mid the general hush,

A sweet air lifts the little bough,

Lone whispering through the bush! The primrose to the grave is gone;

The hawthorn flower is dead;
The violet by the moss'd gray stone
Hath laid her wearied head;
But thou, wild bramble! back dost bring,
In all their beauteous power,
The fresh green days of life's fair spring,
And boyhood's blossomy hour.
Scorn'd bramble of the brake! once more
Thou bidd'st me be a boy,

To gad with thee the woodlands o'er,
In freedom and in joy.

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