Cibber does to Pope. But he has found strong and acute friends in Lamb, Hazlitt, and Hunt, and his rare merits as a poet have been felicitously presented. He is, in fact, one of the most fascinating dramatists of his generation, and, with much vulgarity and trash, has passages worthy of the greatest. He is light, airy, sportive, humane, forgetive, and possesses both animal and intellectual spirits to perfection. He seerns flushed and heated with the very wine of life; throws off the sunniest morsels of wit and wisdom with a beautiful heedlessness and unstudied ease; and in his intense enjoyment of life and motion appears continually to exclaim, with his own Matheo, "Do we not fly high?" Though he experienced more than the common miseries and vexations of his class, still, like old Fortunatus, he seems to be "all felicity up to the brims;" to have "revelled with kings, danced with queens, dallied with ladies, worn strange attires, seen fantasticoes, conversed with humorists, been ravished with divine raptures of Doric, Lydian, and Phrygian harmonies." Everything in him is swift, keen, sparkling, full of quicksilver briskness and heartiness. His sentiment and his fancies run out of him in the overflowing exuberance of a happy disposition. There is something delightfully simple in his cheerfulness and humanity. His genial imagination plays with divinities. His quiver is full of those winged arrows which strike the mark in the white, though seemingly sent with a careless aim. His sympathies with nature and his kind are wide, deep, and instinctive. His mind speeds freely out among external things, with nothing to check its widewandering flights. His Muse Leaps, laughs, and sings, of its own sweet will. Even when he condescends to what Hunt calls an "astounding coarseness," in repre senting the bloods and men of wit and pleasure about town, which inhabit most of the comedies of the time, there is still a sharpness and quickness of movement which carries the mind swiftly through the mud into better region. Decker has, strictly speaking, no morality; for nothing in his works seems to depend on will or principle, but to spring from instinctive sentiments; and when these are delicate or noble he is among the purest of writers. His sweetness and humanity are exquisitely fine. Thus, one passage in his celebrated lines on Patience has become almost world-renowned. "Patience, my lord, why, 't is the soul of peace; In the same spirit is his dialogue between the Christian lady and the angel, in The Virgin Martyr, a tragedy written in connection with Massinger. The refinement of the feeling is almost unmatched by any dramatist under Shakspeare. Dorothea is attended by an angel, disguised as a page, -a "smooth-faced, glorious thing," a thousand blessings "dancing upon his eyes." "ANGELO. DOROTHEA. The time, midnight. "Dor. My book and taper. 'Ang. Here, most holy mistress. "Dor. Thy voice sends forth such music, that I never Was ravished with a more celestial sound. Were every servant in the world like thee, So full of goodness, angels would come down "Ang. No, my dear lady. I could weary stars, And force the wakeful moon to 'ose her eyes, By my late watching, but to wait on you. Therefore, my most loved mistress, do not bid "Dor. Be nigh me still, then. In golden letters down I'll set that day Ang. Proud am I that my lady's modest eye So likes so poor a servant. "Dor. I have offered Handfuls of gold but to behold thy parents. " Ang. I am not : I did never Know who my mother was; but, by yon palace Filled with bright heavenly courtiers, I dare assure you, "Dor. A blessed day!" Decker's brain was fertile in fine imaginations and choice bits of wisdom, expressed with great directness and point. We give a few specimens. "See, from the windows Of every eye Derision thrusts out cheeks "The frosty hand of age now nips your blood, And strews her snowy flowers upon your head, "Beauty is as a painting; and long life Is a long journey in December gone, Tedious, and full of tribulation." 'Though mine arm should conquer twenty worlds, There's a lean fellow beats all conquerors." "An oath! why 't is the traffic of the soul, The Duchess of Malfy, and The White Devil, by JOHN WEBSTER, are among the grandest tragic productions of Shakspeare's contemporaries. They are full of 'deep groans and terrible ghastly looks." "To move a horror skilfully," says Lamb, "to touch a soul to the quick, to lay upon fear as much as it can bear, to wean and weary a life till it is ready to drop, and then step in with mortal instruments to take its last forfeit, — this onlv a Webster can do." Few dramatists, indeed, equa him in the steadiness with which he gazes into the awful depths of passion, and the stern nerve with which he portrays the dusky and terrible shapes which flit vaguely in its dark abysses. Souls black with guilt, or burdened with misery, or ghastly with fear, he probes to their innermost recesses, and both dissects and represents. His mind had the sense of the supernatural in large measure, and it gives to many of his scenes a dim and fearful grandeur, which affects the soul like a shadow cast from another world. He forces the most conventional of his characters into situations which lay open the very constitution of their natures, and thus compels them to act from the primitive springs of feeling and passion. He begins with duke and duchess; he ends with man and woman. The idea of death asserts itself more strongly in his writings than in those of his contemporaries. In The White Devil, the poisoned Brachiano exclaims, "On pain of death, let no man name death to me : It is a word most infinitely terrible." No person Icould have written the last line without hav ing brooded deeply over the mystery of the grave. It belongs to that "wild, solemn, preternatural cast of grief which bewilders us" in Webster. He fully realized, in relation to tragic effect, that present fears are less than "horrible imaginings." With this sombre and unearthly hue tinging his mind, he is still not deficient in touches of simple nature, wrought out with exquisite art and knowledge, and producing effects the most pathetic or sublime. The death-scene of the Duchess of Maly is a grand example. This proud, high-hearted woman is persecuted by her two brothers with a strange accumu lation of horrors, designed, with a devilish ingenuity |