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ill be somewhat amazed to hear his learned brother called _Thamis_-- Where Thamis urges his majestic way, And the Muse loves at twilight hour to stray, I think how in thy theme ALL _seasons_ BLOOM;-- What, all four?--_autumn_, nay, _winter_--blooming? What _heart_ so cold that of thy fame has _heard_, And _pauses_ not to _gaze_ upon each scene. We are inclined to be very indulgent to what is called a confusion of metaphors, when it arises from a rush of ideas--but when it is produced by an author's having no idea at all, we can hardly forgive him for equipping the _Heart_ with eyes, ears, and legs:--he might just as well have said that on entering Twickenham church to visit the tomb, every _Heart_ would take off _its hat_, and on going out again would put _its hand_ in _its pockets_ to fee the sexton. And pauses not to gaze upon each scene That was familiar to thy raptured view, Those walks beloved by thee while I pursue, Musing upon the years that intervene-- Why this line _intervenes_ or what it means we do not see--it seems inserted just to make up the number-- Methinks, as eve descends, a hymn of praise To thee, their bard, the _sister Seasons_ raise! That is, as we understand it, ALL the _Seasons meet together_ on one or more evenings of the year, to sing a hymn to the memory of Thompson. This _simultaneous entree_ of the Four Seasons would be a much more appropriate fancy for the opera stage than for Twickenham meadows. Such are the tame extravagances--the vapid affectations--the unmeaning mosaic which Mr. Moxon has laboriously tesselated into fifty and four sonnets. If he had been--as all this childishness at first led us to believe--a very young man--we should have discussed the matter with him in a more conciliatory and persuasive tone; but we find that he is, what we must call, an old offender. We have before us two little volumes of what he entitles poetry--one dated 1826, and the other 1829--which, though more laughable, are not in substance more absurd than his new production. From the first of these we shall extract two or three stanzas of the introductory poem, not only on account of their intrinsic merit, but because they state, pretty roundly, Mr. Moxon's principles of poetry. He modestly disclaims all rivalry with Pope, Byron, Moore, Campbell, Scott, Rogers, Goldsmith, Dryden, Gray, Spenser, Milton, and Shakespeare; but he, at the same time, intimate
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