< Page:Blackwood's Magazine volume 003.djvu
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On the Cockney School of Poetry.

-3 head bishop, and Gierthmwl Wit-dig the head elder, . Three privileged harbours in the island of Britain : The harbour of Perth Ysgewin in Gwent, and the har- bour of Gwygyt in Mona, and the har- bour of Perth Gwyddne in Cardigan- shire. . Three presenters of benefits, i. e. benefactors to the nation of the Cumry : The first, Hugadarn, who first shewed the way to the nation of the Cumry to plow the land, when they were in the summer country, be- fore they came hither : The second, Coll ap Coll Frewi, who first intro- duced wheat and barley to this island of Britain, where till then there were only oats and rye : The third was Ell- tud the knight, a saint from the cathe- dral of Theodosius in Glamorganshire, who improved the mode of plowing the land, and who gave them a better method and art of managing their land than they knew before ; that is the same that now prevails ; whereas for- merly the land was not cultivated but with a mattock and a plough under foot, in the same way as the Irish.

THE COCKNEY SCHOOL OP POETRY. No III.

OUR hatred and contempt of Leigh Hunt as a writer, is not so much ow- ing to his shameless irreverence to his aged and afflicted king to his profli- gate attacks on the character of the king's sons to his low-born insolence to that aristocracy with whom he would in vain claim the alliance of one illustrious friendship to his paid panderism to the vilest passions of that mob of which he is himself a firebrand to the leprous crust of self- conceit with which his whole moral being is indurated to that loathsome vulgarity which constantly clings round him like a vermined garment from St Giles' to that irritable tem- per which keeps the unhappy man, in spite even of his vanity, in a per- petual fret with himself and all the world beside, and that shews itself equally in his deadly enmities and capricious friendships, our hatred and contempt of Leigh Hunt, we say, is not so much owing to these and other auses, as to the odious and unnatural harlotry of his polluted muse. We were the first to brand with c burn ^ng iron the false face of this kept-nus- trtss of a demoralizing incendiary. We tore off" her gaudy veil and tran- sparent drapery, and exhibited the painted cheeks and writhing limbs of the prostitute. We denounced to the execration of the people of England, the man who had dared to write in the solitude of a cell, whose walls ought to have heard only the sighs of contrition and repentance, a lewd tale of incest, adultery, and murder, in which the violation of Nature herself was wept over, palliated, justified, and held up to imitation, and the violators themselves worshipped as holy mar- f rs. The story of Rimini had begun to have its admirers ; but their delud- ed minds were startled at our charges, and on reflecting upon the charac- ter of the poem, which they had read with a dangerous sympathy, not on account of its poetical merit, which is small indeed, but on account of those voluptuous scenes, so dangerous even to a pure imagination, when insidi- ously painted with the seeming col- ours of virtue, they were astounded at their own folly and their own dan- ger, and consigned the wretched vol- ume to that ignominious oblivion, which, in a land of religion and mo- rality, must soon be the doom of all obscene and licentious productions.

The story of Rimini is heard of no more. But Leigh Hunt will not be quiet. His hebdomadal hand is held up, even on the Sabbath, against every man of virtue and genius in the land but the great defamer claims to him- self an immunity from that disgrace which he knows his own wicked- ness has incurred, the Cockney cal- umniator would fain hold his own dis- graced head sacred from the iron fin- gers of retribution. But that head shall be brought low aye low " as heaped up justice" ever sunk that of an offending scribbler against the laws of Nature and of God.

Leigh Hunt dared not, Hazlitt dared not, to defend the character of the " Story of Rimini." A man may venture to say that in verse which it is perilous to utter in plain prose. Even they dared not to affirm to the people of England, that a wife who had committed incest with her hus- band's brother, ought on her death t be buried in the same tomb with her

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