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the ground, mournfully exclaiming, "Finis Poloniæ !"

and in this country, he lived for many years in retirement in the neighborhood of Paris. He saw through the selfish ambition of Na

His words were too true. Within a few days after his defeat and capture, the Rus-poleon, and honorably refused either to serve sians drove the remnants of the Polish armies before them into Warsaw. On the 4th of November, Suwarrow stormed Praga, the fortified suburb of that city. Warsaw itself capitulated on the 6th, and the final treaty of partition ensued, by which Austria, Russia, and Prussia divided the last remains of Poland among them, and one of the most ancient, and at one time of the most splendid and powerful states of Christendom, ceased to exist.

Kosciusko himself was recognized and respected by the Russian soldiery on the fatal field of Maciovice. His wounds were cured, and though the Empress Catherine caused him to be imprisoned at St. Petersburg, her successor Paul released him in 1796. He declined rank in the Russian service; and, after passing some time in the United States |

under him himself, or to try to persuade his countrymen to become soldiers of fortune under the French eagles. When solicited to do so, he replied, "What, despotism for despotism? The Poles have enough of it at home, without going so far to purchase it at the price of their blood." In 1814, he wrote to the Emperor Alexander in favor of the Poles, asking for an amnesty for all exiles, for a free constitution, like that of England, to be given to Poland, and that schools might be founded for the education of the serfs. Disappointed in the hopes that he had formed respecting Alexander's treatment of his country, Kosciusko retired to Soleure, in Switzerland, where he closed his blameless and honorable existence in 1817.

dinner-having wandered far and wide, taking life as it came-now dining with a king, anon sleeping with a brigand-one day killing lions in the Sahara, and the next (according to his own account) being devoured by a bear in the Pyrenees-having edited a daily newspaper and managed a theatre, and failed in both-having built a magnificent chateau, and had it sold by auction-having commanded in the National Guard, and done fierce battle with bailiffs and duns-having been decorated by almost every potentate in Europe, so that the breast of his coat is more variegated with ribbons than the rainbow with colors-having published more than any man living, and perhaps as much as any man dead-having fought duels innumerable

MEMOIRS OF ALEXANDER DUMAS.-This | popular and copious romancer is about to publish his own "memoir." The Paris correspondent of the Literary Gazette thinks the chances are that the work will be one of the most brilliant of the kind that has yet been published; and that is saying a great deal, when we call to mind the immense host of memoir writers which France possesses. Only a few of Alexander's feats make a sufficiently imposing sentence. "Having mixed familiarly with all descriptions of society, from that of crowned heads and princes of the blood, down to strolling players-having been behind the scenes of the political, the literary, the theatrical, the artistic, the financial, and the trading worlds-having risen unaided from the humble position of subordi--and having been more quizzed, caricatured, nate clerk in the office of Louis Philippe's accountant, to that of the most popular of living romancers in all Europe having found an immense fortune in his inkstand, and squandered it like a genius (or a fool) having rioted in more than princely luxury, and been reduced to the sore strait of wondering where he could get credit for his

and lampooned, and satirized, and abused, and slandered, and admired, and envied, than any human being now existing-Dumas must have an immensity to tell, and none of his contemporaries, we may be sure, could tell it better-few so well. Only we may fear that it will be mixed up with a vast deal of— imagination. But n'importe !"

From Blackwood's Magazine.

THE DRAMAS OF HENRY TAYLOR.*

THERE is no living writer whose rank in literature appears to be more accurately determined, or more permanently secured to him, than the author of Philip Van Artevelde. Not gifted with the ardent temperament, the very vivid imagination, or the warmth of passion which are supposed necessary to carry a poet to the highest eminences of his art, he has, nevertheless, that intense reflection, that large insight into human life, that severe taste, binding him always to a most select, accurate, and admirable style, which must secure him a lofty and impregnable position amongst the class of writers who come next in order to the very highest. There have been greater poems, but in modern times we do not think there has appeared any dramatic composition which can be pronounced superior to the masterpiece of Henry Taylor. Neither of the Sardanapalus of Lord Byron, nor the Remorse of Coleridge, nor the Cenci of Shelley, could this be said. We are far from asserting that Taylor is a greater poet than Byron, or Coleridge, or Shelley; but we say that no dramatic composition of these poets surpasses, as a whole, Philip Van Artevelde. These writers have displayed, on various occasions, more passion and more pathos, and a command of more beautiful imagery, but they have none of them produced a more complete dramatic work; nor do any of them manifest a profounder insight, or a wider view of human nature, or more frequently enunciate that pathetic wisdom, that mixture of feeling and sagacity, which we look upon as holding the highest place in eloquence of every description, whether prose or verse. The last act of Shelley's drama of the Cenci has left a more vivid impression upon our mind than any single portion of the modern drama; but one act does not constitute a play, and this drama of the Cenci is so odious from its plot, and the chief character por

Philip Van Artevelde: A Dramatic Romance. -Edwin the Fair: An Historical Drama; and Isaac Comnenus: A Play.-The Eve of the Conquest, and other Poems. By HENRY TAYLOR.

trayed in it is, in every sense of the word, so utterly monstrous, (for Shelley has combined, for purposes of his own, a spirit of piety with the other ingredients of that diabolical character, which could not have coexisted with them,) that, notwithstanding all its beauty, we would willingly efface this poem from English literature. If one of those creatures, half beautiful woman and half scaly fish, which artists seem, with a traditional depravity of taste, to delight in, were really to be alive, and to present itself before us, it would hardly excite greater disgust than this beautifully foul drama of the Cenci.

The very fact of our author having won so distinct and undisputed a place in public estimation, must be accepted as an excuse for our prolonged delay in noticing his writings. The public very rapidly passed its verdict upon them: it was a sound one. The voice of encouragement was not needed to the author; nor did the reading world require to be informed of the fresh accession made to its stores. If we now propose to ourselves some critical observations on the dramas of Mr. Taylor, we enter upon the task in exactly the same spirit that we should bring to the examination of any old writer, any veritable ancient, of established celebrity. We are too late to assist in creating a reputa tion for these dramas, but we may possibly throw out some critical suggestions which may contribute to their more accurate appreciation.

In Philip Van Artevelde, the great object of the author appears to have been to exhibit, in perfect union, the man of thought and the man of action. The hero is meditative as

Hamlet, and as swift to act as Coriolanus. He is pensive as the Dane, and with something of the like cause for his melancholy; but so far from wasting all his energies in moody reflection, he has an equal share for a most enterprising career of real life. He throws his glance as freely and as widely over all this perplexing world, but every footstep of his own is planted with a sure

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It is often remarked that the hero is the reflection of the writer. This could not be very correctly said in instances like the present. A writer still lives only in his writings, lives only in his thoughts, whatever martial feats or bold enterprises he may depict. We could not prophesy how the poet himself would act if he had been the citizen of Ghent. It is more accurate to content ourselves with saying that the delineation of his hero has given full scope to the intellectual character of the author, and to his own peculiar habits of thought. For if the great citizen of Ghent combines in an extraordinary degree the reflective and the energetic character, our author unites, in a manner almost as peculiar, two modes of thinking which at first appear to be opposed he unites that practical sagacity which gives grave, and serious, and useful counsels upon human conduct, with that sad and profound irony-that reasoned despondency-which so generally besets the speculative mind. All life is-vanity. Yet it will not do to resign ourselves to this general conclusion, from which so little, it is plain, can be extracted. From nothing, nothing comes. We must go back, and estimate by comparison each form and department of this human life-which, as a whole, is so nugatory. Thus practical sagacity is reinstated in full vigor, and has its fair scope of action, though ever and anon a philosophic despondency will throw its shadow over the scene.

As it is a complete man, so it is a whole life that we have portrayed in the drama of Philip Van Artevelde. The second part is not what is understood by a "continuation of the first, but an essential portion of the work. In the one we watch the hero rise to his culminating point; in the other we see him sink-not in crime, and not in glory, but in a sort of dim and disastrous twilight. We take up the hero from his student days; we take him from his philosophy and his fishing line, and that obstinate pondering on unsolvable problems, which is as much a characteristic of youth as the ardent passions with which it is more generally accredited; we take him from the quiet stream which he torments, far more by the thoughts he throws upon it, than by his rod and line.

"He is a man of singular address In catching river-fish,"

says a sarcastic enemy, who knew nothing of the trains of thought for which that angling was often a convenient disguise. A hint given in the drama will go far to explain what their hue and complexion must have been. The father of Philip had headed the patriotic cause of the citizens of Ghent; it had triumphed in his person; the same citizens of Ghent had murdered him on the threshold of his door. When he was a boy, the stains of his father's blood were still visible on that threshold the widowed mother would not suffer them to be removed, and, nursing her revenge, loved to show them to the child.

There was something here to color the thoughts of the young fisherman. But passion and the world are now knocking at the heart of the meditative student. Love and ambition are there, and, moreover, the turbulent condition of the city of Ghent seems to forbid the continuance of this life of quietude. The passions of the world crave admittance. Shall he admit them? The great theatre of life claims its new actor. Shall he go? Shall he commit himself once and for ever to the turmoil and delusions of that scene-delusions that will not delude, but which will exercise as great a tyranny over him as if they did? Yes; he will go. As well do battle with the world without, as eternally with his own thoughts; for this is the only alternative youth presents to us. Yes, he will go; but deliberately: he will not be borne along, he will govern his own footsteps, and, come what may, will be always master of himself.

Launoy, one of Ghent's bravest patriots, has been killed. The first reflection we hear from the lips of Artevelde is called forth by this intelligence. It does not surprise him.

"I never looked that he should live so long.
He was a man of that unsleeping spirit,
He seemed to live by miracle: his food
Was glory, which was poison to his mind
Of many thousand such that die betimes,
And peril to his body. He was one
Whose story is a fragment, known to few.
Then comes the man who has the luck to live,
And he's a prodigy. Compute the chances,
And deem there's ne'er a one in dangerous times
Who wins the race of glory, but than him
A thousand men more gloriously endowed
Have fallen upon the course; a thousand others
Have had their fortunes foundered by a chance,
Whilst lighter barks pushed past them; to whom
add

A smaller tally, of the singular few

Who, gifted with predominating powers,
Bear yet a temperate will, and keep the peace.
The world knows nothing of its greatest men."

If ambition wears this ambiguous aspect to his mind, it is not because he is disposed to regard the love of woman too enthusiastically.

"It may be I have deemed or dreamed of such.
But what know I? We figure to ourselves
The thing we like, and then we build it up
As chance will have it, on the rock or sand:
For thought is tired of wandering o'er the world,
And home-bound fancy runs her bark ashore."

Yet, Artevelde is at this time on his way to Adriana to make that declaration which the Lady Adriana is so solicitous to hear. This a lover! Yes; only one of that order who hang over and count the beatings of their own heart.

Launoy being destroyed, and the people of Ghent having lost others of their leaders, and growing discontented with the stern rule of Van Den Bosch, some new captain or ruler of the town is looked for. The eyes of men are turned to Philip Van Artevelde. He shall be captain of the Whitehoods, and come to the rescue of the falling cause; for, of late, the Earl of Flanders has been everywhere victorious. Van Den Bosch himself

makes the proposal. It is evident, from hints that follow, that Artevelde had already made his choice; he saw that the time was come when, even if he desired it, there was no maintaining a peaceful neutrality. But Van Den Bosch meets with no eager spirit ready to snatch at the perilous prize held out to him. He is no dupe to the nature of the offer, nor very willing that others should fancy him to be one.

"Not so fast.

reflects, render back the life they have destroyed:

"Life for life, vile bankrupts as they are, Their worthless lives for his of countless price, Is their whole wherewithal to pay the debt. Yet retribution is a goodly thing,

And it were well to wring the payment from them,

Even to the utmost drop of their heart's blood."

Still less does the patriotic harangue of Van Den Bosch find an enthusiastic response He was already too much a statesman to be a demagogue; not to mention that his father's career had taught him a better estimate of popularity, and of all tumultuary enthusiasm:

" Van Den Bosch. Times are sore changed, I That answers to the name of Artevelde. see. There's none in Ghent Thy father did not carp or question thus When Ghent invoked his aid. The days have been

When not a citizen drew breath in Ghent

But freely would have died in Freedom's cause. Artevelde. With a good name thou christenest True, to make choice of despots is some freedom,

the cause.

The only freedom for this turbulent town,
Rule her who may. And in my father's time
We still were independent, if not free;
And wealth from independence, and from wealth
The cause, I grant thee, Van Den Bosch, is good;
Enfranchisement will partially proceed.

And were I linked to earth no otherwise
But that my whole heart centred in myself,
I could have tossed you this poor life to play
with,

Taking no second thought. But as things are,
I will resolve the matter warily,
And send thee word betimes of my conclusion.

Van Den Bosch. Betimes it must be; for some two hours hence

I meet the Danes, and ere we separate
Our course must be determined.
Artevelde.

In two hours,

Your vessel, Van Den Bosch, hath felt the If I be for you, I will send this ring

storm;

She rolls dismasted in an ugly swell,

And you would make a jury-mast of me, Whereon to spread the tatters of your canvas."

It is worth noticing how the passion of revenge, like the others, is admitted to its post; admitted, yet coldly looked upon. He will revenge his father. Two knights, Sir Guisebert Grutt and Simon Bette, (we wish they had better names,) were mainly instrumental in his murder. These men have been playing false, by making treacherous overtures to the Earl of Flanders; they will be in his power. But they cannot, he

In token I have so resolved."

He had already resolved. Such a man would not have suffered himself to be hemmed in within the space of two hours to make so great a decision; but he would not rush precipitately forward; he would feel his own will at each step. He had already resolved; but his love to Adriana troubles him at heart: he must first make all plain and intelligible there, before he becomes captain of the Whitehoods. From this interview he goes to Adriana; and then follows a

dialogue, every sentence of which, if we were looking out for admirable passages for

quotation, would offer itself as a candidate. I brings him news that the people are ready We quote only, from a drama so well known, to elect him for their captain or ruler. for the purpose of illustrating the analytic view we would present of its chief hero; but the passages selected for this purpose can hardly fail of being also amongst the most beautiful in themselves. Artevelde is alone, waiting for the appearance of Adriana :—

"There is but one thing that still harks me back.
To bring a cloud upon the summer day
Of one so happy and so beautiful,--
It is a hard condition. For myself,

I know not that the circumstance of life
In all its changes can so far afflict me
As makes anticipation much worth while.
Oh, she is fair!

As fair as Heaven to look upon! as fair
As ever vision of the Virgin blest
That weary pilgrim, resting by the fount
Beneath the palm and dreaming to the tune
Of flowing waters, duped his soul withal.
It was permitted in my pilgrimage
To rest beside the fount, beneath the tree,
Beholding there no vision, but a maid
Whose form was light and graceful as the palm,
Whose heart was pure and jocund as the fount,
And spread a freshness and a verdure round."

Adriana appears, and in the course of the dialogue he addresses her thus :--

"Be calm;

And let me warn thee, ere thy choice be fixed,
What fate thou may'st be wedded to with me.
Thou hast beheld me living heretofore
As one retired in staid tranquillity:

The dweller in the mountains, on whose ear
The accustomed cataract thunders unobserved;
The seaman who sleeps sound upon the deck,
Nor hears the loud lamenting of the blast,
Nor heeds the weltering of the plangent wave,--
These have not lived more undisturbed than I.
But build not upon this; the swollen stream
May shake the cottage of the mountaineer,
And drive him forth; the seaman,
length,
Leaps from his slumber on the wave-washed

deck;

roused at

And now the time comes fast when here, in

Ghent,

He who would live exempt from injuries
Of armed men, must be himself in arms.
This time is near for all,--nearer for me:
I will not wait upon necessity,

"Artev. Good! when they come I'll speak to
them.
"Twere well.

Van Den B.

Canst learn to bear thee high amongst the com

mons?

Canst thou be cruel? To be esteemed of them,
Thou must not set more store by lives of men
Than lives of larks in season.
Be it so.

Artev.

I can do what is needful."

The time of action is at hand. We now see Van Artevelde in a suit of armor; he is reclining on a window-seat in his own house, looking out upon the street. There is treason in the town; of those who flock to the market-place, some have already deserted his

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That cry again!

Sir knights, ye drive me close upon the rocks,
And of my cargo you're the vilest bales,
So overboard with you! What, men of blood!
Can the son better auspicate his arms

Than by the slaying of who slew the father?
Some blood may flow because that it needs must,
But yours by choice--I'll slay you, and thank
God.

(Enter Van Den Bosch.)

Van Den B. The common bell has rung! the
knights are there;

Thou must come instantly.
Artev.
I come, I come.
Van Den B. Now, Master Philip, if thou miss

thy way

Through this affair, we're lost. For Jesus' sake
Be counselled now by me; have thou in mind-
Artev. Go to, I need not counsel; I'm resolved.

And leave myself no choice of vantage-ground, Take thou thy stand beside Sir Simon Bette,

But rather meet the times where best I may,
And mould and fashion them as best I can.
Reflect then that I soon may be embarked
In all the hazards of these troublesome times,
And in your own free choice take or resign me.
Adri. O Artevelde, my choice is free no more.

And now he is open to hear Van Den Bosch. That veteran in war and insurrection

As I by Grutt: take note of all I do,
And do thyself accordingly. Come on."

They join the assembly; they take their stand each by one of the traitor knights; the debate on the proposal of the Earl proceeds; three hundred citizens are to be given up to him, and on this, and other conditions,

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