former convey to the mind, I know not how, an idea of beauty and life-they are painted by the hand of God! the latter dyed by the ingenuity of man, -one is a living colour, the other a dead one. But to proceed : The "It is sympathy with the present or the past, or the imaginary inhabitants of such a region, that alone gives it either interest or beauty; and the delight of those who behold it will always be found to be in exact proportion to the force of their imaginations and the warmth of their social affections. leading impressions here are those of romantic seclusion and primeval simplicity-lovers sequestered in these blissful solitudes, from towns and toils remote,'-and rustic poets, and philosophers communing with Nature, at a distance from the low pursuits and selfish malignity of ordinary mortals: then there is the sublime impression of the Mighty Power which piled the massive cliffs upon each other, and rent the mountains asunder, and scattered their giant fragments at their base; and all the images connected with the monuments of ancient magnificence and extinguished hostility-the feuds, and the combats, and the triumphs of its wild and primitive inhabitants, contrasted with the stillness and desolation of the scenes where they lie interred, and the romantic ideas attached to their ancient traditions, and the peculiarities of their present life—their wild and enthusiastic poetry-their gloomy superstitions-their attachment to their chiefs-the dangers, and the hardships, and enjoyments of their lonely huntings and fishings-their pastoral shielings on the mountains in summer, and the tales and the sports that amuse the little groups that are frozen into their vast and trackless valleys in the winter. Add to this, the traces of vast and obscure antiquity that are impressed on the language and habits of the people, and on the cliffs, and caves, and gulfy torrents of the land, and the solemn and touching reflection perpetually recurring, of the weakness and insignificance of perishable man, whose generations thus pass away into oblivion, with all their toils and ambition, while Nature holds on her unvarying course, and renews her forests with undecaying activity, regardless of the fate of her proud and perishable sovereign. 66 According to our experience, as well as according to the theory we espouse, this is by no means an exact transcript of the images and feelings which such scenery must excite in all beholders; but it is a specimen of the manner in which it operates on the heart and imagination, and of the nature of that connexion which is established between our natural sympathies and the visible peculiarities of our mountain landscapes. There is an endless variety in the trains of thought to which this kind of scenery is calculated to give rise; and, in this respect, it differs essentially from the scenery of a more cultivated region, where there is scarcely any very decided expression but that of comfort and tranquillity. To make amends, however, it must be admitted, that this last expression is much more clear and obvious to beholders of every degree and description. There is scarcely any one who does not feel and understand the beauty of smiling fields and comfortable cottages; but the beauty of lakes and mountains is not so universally distinguishable. It requires some knowledge of our speciessome habits of reflection—some play of fancy-some exercise of affection, to interpret the lofty characters in which Nature here speaks to the heart and the imagination, and reflects, from the broken aspect of the desert, the most powerful images of the feelings and the fortunes of man.” I have taken up another feature of this powerfully-written essay in my work: it may be looked upon as a key which unlocks all that is beautiful in the storehouse of Nature, and will be no bad guide to lead my readers through whatever I have written or extracted in this volume. "Now the last day of many days, All beautiful and bright as thou, And do thy wonted work, and trace We wandered to the pine forest The whispering waves were half asleep, It seem'd as if the day were one We paused amid the pines that stood Tortured by storms to shapes as rude, With stems like serpents interlaced. How calm it was!-the silence there The inviolable quietness; The breath of peace we drew, It seem'd that from the remotest seat A spirit interfused around A thinking, silent life, For still it seem'd the centre of The magic circle there, Was one whose being fill'd with love Were not the crocuses that grew Under that ilex tree As beautiful in scent and hue We stood beside the pools that lie A purple firmament of light, In which the massy forests grew, As in the upper air, More perfect, both in shape and hue, Than any waving there. Like one beloved, the scene had lent To the dark water's breast Its every leaf and lineament With that clear truth express'd. There lay far glades and neighbouring lawn, The white sun twinkling like the dawn Sweet views, that in our world above Can never well be seen, Were imaged by the water's love Of that fair forest green. And all was interfused beneath An atmosphere without a breath, |