It seems so like my own, because of the fasts I keep,— Oh, God! that bread should be so dear, and flesh and blood so cheap! * What exquisite delicacy and force characterize his Bridge of Sighs: Alas! for the rarity of Christian charity The bleak wind of March made her tremble and shiver; But not the dark arch, or the black flowing river: Anywhere, anywhere out of the world! In she plunged boldly, no matter how coldly The rough river ran; Over the brink of it,-picture it, think of it, Lave in it, drink of it, then, if you can! * Now two or three stanzas from the Lady's Dream : Of the hearts that daily break, of the tears that hourly fall, Of the many, many troubles of life that grieve this earthly bali— Disease, and hunger, and pain, and want; but now I dreamt of them all. For the blind and the cripple were there, and the babe that pined for bread, And the houseless man, and the widow poor, who begged-to bury the dead: The naked, also, that I might have clad, the famished I might have fed! The sorrow I might have soothed, and the unregarded tears; For many a thronging shape was there, from long-forgotten years, Ay, even the poor rejected Moor who raised my children's fears! The wounds I might have healed! the human sorrow and smart! And yet it never was in my soul to play so ill a part: But evil is wrought by want of thought, as well as want of heart! * An illustration of the effect of antithesis, and grotesqueness of fancy, we have in his Ode to his Son : Thou happy, happy elf! (But stop, first let me kiss away that tear-) Thou tiny image of myself! (My love, he's poking peas into his ear!) Thou merry, laughing sprite! With spirits feather-light, Untouched by sorrow, and unsoiled by sin,— Fit playfellow for fays, by moonlight pale, (That dog will bite him, if he pulls its tail ;) Fresh as the morn, and brilliant as its star- I cannot write, unless he's sent above). His Dame Eleanor Spearing, like his many other pieces, including Young Ben, Nelly Gray, and Ben Battle, exhibit his irresistible fond ness for playing upon words. Here is a passage from the firstnamed: She was deaf as a nail—that you cannot hammer Was all a sealed book to Dame Eleanor Spearing; Supposing a little scandal at play 'Twixt Mrs. O'Fie and Mrs. Au Fait That she couldn't audit the Gossips' accounts. The Dream of Eugene Aram has been regarded as one of Hood's finest productions; but a high critical authority thinks his Haunted House bears the palm, it is so wonderfully full of creative power. "It required the finest mental apprehension, the white heat of imagination, the most sensitive perception, to take such a picture as this, wherein the indefinite is caught and fixed so definitely: a living, lonely human being is thus isolated and suspended betwixt the spirit-world of the air overhead and the reptile-world of crumbling ruin at the feet :"1. The centipede along the threshold crept, The keyhole lodged the earwig and her brood, In undisturbed procession. Such omens in the place there seemed to be, The straining eye-ball was prepared to see Some apparition standing! The dreary stairs, where with the sounding stress Of every step so many echoes blended, The mind, with dark misgivings, feared to guess How many feet ascended. Even the ancestral portraits on the walls are filled with no mere simulated life, Their souls were looking through their painted eyes With awful speculation. At the sound of the door creaking on its rusty hinges, it seems as though the murder would out at last. The screech-owl appears to "mock the cry that she had heard some dying victim utter:" 1 Quarterly Review. |