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NEW BOOKS. NOTICED BRIEFLY, BUT AFTER THOROUGH PERUSAL.
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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the whole work to the lovers of old books ; and must not forget to notice the pleasant surprise w exjptessed by Wartqn at the supposed difference
of fortune between its author who lost a bishopric by writing it , and Amyot , the Frenchman , who was rewarded with an abbacy for translating it . Amyot himself afterwards became a bishop . We may add ,
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Chapters on Early English Literature . By J . H . Hippisley Esq ., M * A , j > 8 vo , pp . 344 Moxon . We congratulate Mr Moxon on continuing to send forth publications worthy of the " bookseller
of the poets , v—" himself a muse . THfe-irolume before us is the production of a man more than ordinarily ^ ersed in his subject , and ¦^ i ^^ m&w , though not a profound observer . He has made
several acute and original remarks i on our early poets , the light in which they have been regarded at different periods , the impossibility of ^ modernizing them to advantage , ; and other interesting points in what lmay be called the middle depths < of literature ; and his warmth of
ifeelmgis probably greater than it sseems , owing apparently to a somevtvhat ^ formalized or over-serious fcbrfeedW . He thinks that " reli-Bgpi *; Wery / " charity , " as Lord BBacon says ) " can never be carried tto excess I ! " though he thinks Dotherwise , when He speaks of the Uriah mid " Papists . " His wonder
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/ as a curious coincidence , that it was one of Aiiiydt ' s pupils and benefactors , —Heiiry the Second , —who gave a French bishopric to the lively Italian novelist , Bandello . Books
were books in those days ; not batches , by the baker ' s dozen , turned out every morning ; and the gayest of writers were held in serious valtie accordingly .
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( p . 223 ) why the writings of Chaucer ' s inferiors " maintained an equal popularity with those of the great poet , " is easily explained by the sympathies of common-place ; and at p . 290 he begs the question ,
with an aristocratic tone not pleasant in a man of letters , against what he calls a " vice very common among memafo , —that of ridiculing those who protect and maintain them . " Now masters no
more protect and maintain servants , than servants protect and maintain the pretensions of their masters * It is a mutual bargain ; with a proud advantage on one side , too often abused by indifference or petulance , and the denial of a counter-right to complain , and the
servant endeavours to balance it by pulling down the parlour in the kitchen * In comment upon a remark at p . 284 , it maybe observed , that Shakspeare is only more comic than tragic , because Nature is @o ; that is to say , she is happier than unhappy ; easier and more diverted , than diseased and thoughtful . Why does Mr H . always
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20 $ New Books .
New Books. Noticed Briefly, But After Thorough Perusal.
NEW BOOKS . NOTICED BRIEFLY , BUT AFTER THOROUGH PERUSAL .
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Oct. 1, 1837, page 290, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1836/page/65/
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