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rounded with small bells. It is attended by morris-dancers, dressed in strange style,--men in women's clothes, &c. One big man in woman's clothes, with his face blacked, has a belt round his waist, to which is attached a large bell, and carries a ladle, in which he collects money from the spectators. The company stop and dance at the principal public-houses in their route, and then proceed to the parish church(!), where the rushes are deposited, and the garlands hung up very conspicuously, to remain till the next year. I believe a custom somewhat similar exists in the adjoining parish of Warburton, but not carried out in such grand style. It would be very interesting if your correspondents in different parts of the country would send accounts of these relics of the barbarous ages. JULIUS. Runcorn, Feb. 13. 1850. * * * * * ON AUTHORS AND BOOKS, NO. 5. As a writer of dedications, Samuel Johnson was the giant of his time. He once said to Boswell, the subject arising at a dinner-party, "Why, I have dedicated to the royal family all round,"--and the _honest chronicler_ proves that he spoke advisedly. Compositions of this nature admit much variety of character. A dedication may be the pure homage which we owe to merit, or the expression of gratitude for favours received, or a memorial of cherished friendship; and such dedications, in point of motive, are beyond the reach of censure--I may fairly assert, are very commendable. Nevertheless, Johnson left no compositions of either class: "the _loftiness_ of his mind," as Boswell gravely states, "prevented him from ever dedicating in his own person." A more equivocal sort of dedication also prevailed. A book was supposed to require the prefix of some eminent name as its patron, in order to ensure its success. Now the author, though very capable of writing with propriety on his chosen theme, might be unequal to the courtly style which dedicators were wont to display, and as the _complement_ was to be returned _substantially_, he might be tempted to employ a superior artist on the occasion. It was chiefly under such circumstances that the powers of Johnson were called into action. By what arguments the stern moralist would have endeavoured to justify the deception, for it deserves no better name, is more than I can undertake to decide, and I submit the query to his enthusiastic admirers. To the dedications enumerated by the faith
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