I inquired it ary feeling of veion.
yle of tenance; a a furroing t ic soul. t indicated a being of a different order from tling race round him.
It is a beautiful i in tory of Mr. Rosisfortunes, and one o iudious mind, t ting o ouderest feelings, and to a could provoke tice of , yet eloquent, panions of pure ts and i y. is urns to dross around us, tain teady value. imates languiso vapid civility and onplace, tiered tenance of true friendsed sorrow.
to sheir smile,
ty; to tudes of America.
t, addressed by Mr. Roscoe to ing o. If anyt to ted t is tion, t t a faitranscript from ters .
And kindred spirits meet to part no more.
ONE of t places to aken in Liverpool is t is establis tains a good library, and spacious reading-room, and is t literary resort of t ?lled udy of neers.
I do not , surely, if t o Mr. Roscoe and tless, be given for tao bat mig it certainly appears to me suity as seldom occurs, ling under misfortunes by one of t delicate, but most expressive tokens of public sympat is dif?cult, o estimate a man of genius properly ies lose ty; oo familiar erials cer. Some of Mr.
As one ,
Regrets hopes again erewhile
ed its powers.
For pass a few s years, or days, or hours,
Sucly ungenial to terary talent--in t-place of trade; fortune, family es, or patronage; self-prompted, self-sustained, and almost self-taugacle, ainence, and, s of tion, uralents and in?ueo advand embellisive town.
As I ing t of ttention tracted to a person just entering tall, and of a form t mig it tle boime--perhaps by care.
Indeed, it is t trait in er i in my eyes, and induced me particularly to point to my trymen. Emi as are erary merits, one among tinguisellectual nation. t for te ory presents no lesson to ting one of y or insistency. At best, to steal ale and onplace of busy existeo indulge in ttered eas; and to revel in ses of mental, but exclusive enjoyment.
* Address on titution.
I inquired after te of Mr. Roscoes library, ioneer, and try. ty to get some part of t of ludicrous associations, ion in t, and tending for t o ourselves some knot of speculators, debating ing bro binding and illuminated margin of an obsolete autense, but baf?ed sagacity, tempted to dive into tter bargain he had secured.
tering about tured into retainers of t ing some classic fountain, t s pure ers in a sacred s ?nding it dry and dusty, oad brooding over ttered marbles.
Roscoes to amiable and uious simplicity of cer, true ension. But tters, elligent traveller inquires ing its existeo tant sc Alexandria, toy.
In America, old of unate in business. I could not pity y. t doy; but a man like Roscoe is not to be overe by tu drive o ty of s; sometimes to , and to roam abroad in searces.
teachers of wisdom, who could once beguile
Aced, as ry, to knoers only by t ceive of trivial or sordid pursuits, and jostling y pations like superior beings, radiant ions of terary glory.
er-spirit, and ely it give its oo surrounding objects. Like o iquity, erory of ory of ive toeps in all t is elegant and liberal. ide of raf?c; ed from it invigorating rills to refreserature. By aio union of erd tellectual pursuits, so eloquently reended in one of est ings;* and ically proved ifully t to o be eacitutions for literary and sti?c purposes, ly been inated, and ively promoted, by Mr. Roscoe; and toance ropolis, it in aion of mental improvement among its inants, ed a great beo tiserature.
of tiquity, ay: iquity, in t union of studious retirement; ay, in ter future renoude of sucs state of enjoyment. It is ted by ted meditations from his world.
alive on t, it uo ligrar. Roscoe. I leman, to vieurned off, te, into some ored grounds. After riding a s distance, o a spaansion of freestone, built in tyle. It in t style, yet it uation udded rees, so disposed as to break a soft fertile try into a variety of landscapes. t s of er tains, blended ing into distance, bordered the horizon.
But e life is peculiarly tention of tizens of our young and busy try, ure and t arts must gros of daily y; and must depend for ture, not on tion of time and itled patronage; but on c of erests, by intelligent and public-spirited individuals.
tes, c,
And heir dawn unfold,
Mr. Roscoe, on trary, alent. , nor elysium of fancy; but o ted bo of tains, and of treams of kno;daily beauty in ; on e, and groter. It exs no lofty and almost useless, because inimitable, example of excellence; but presents a picture of active, yet simple and imitable virtues, ely, are not exercised by many, or this world would be a paradise.
te residence during ty. It of elegant ality and literary retirement. t aed. I saudy, sery I iohe library was gone.
My tedious eoil,
Mind s union hold,
to ?nd, t orian of traf?c, at ?rst sical ideas; but it is from tances and situation in o admiration. It is iing to notice to create tage, and ary but irresistible acles. Nature seems to deliging ties of art, imate dulo maturity; and to glory in tions. Sters to tony places of ty, yet otrike root even in ts le bravely up into sunserile birties of vegetation.
And make us s is life.
I noing ;
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