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And though between us oceans roll,
And rocks divide us, still my soul
Can feel no jealous fears,
Confiding in a heart like thine,
Love's uncontaminated shrine !

To me, though bathed in sorrow's dew,
The dearer far art thou:

I lov'd thee when thy woes were few,
And can I alter now?

That face, in joy's bright hour, was fair,
More beautiful since grief is there,

Though somewhat pale thy brow; And be it mine to soothe the pain Thus pressing on thy heart and brain.

Yes, love! my breast, at sorrow's call,

Shall tremble like thine own:
If from those eyes the tear-drops fall,
They shall not fall alone.
Our souls, like heaven's aerial bow,
Blend every light within their glow,
Of joy or sorrow known:
And grief, divided with thy heart,
Were sweeter far than joy apart.

We shall quote the opening stanzas of another piece. The imitation of Byron's affecting verses, "There's not a joy that time can give like that it takes away," is perhaps a little too visible, the resemblance in some cases extending to the adoption of particular images, but they display, we think, very considerable powers of language and versification."

Think not because the eye is bright, and smiles are laughing there,

The heart that beats within is light, and free from pain and care;

A blush may tinge the darkest cloud, ere Sol's last rays depart,

And underneath the sunniest smile may lurk the saddest heart.

Mirth's sudden gleam may light the cheek though joy be far away,

As blossoms oft adorn the tree that's hast'ning to decay:

It is but as the varying hue of April's wayward hours

A su-nbeam bursting brightly through, when all behind is showers.

For there are pangs the sorrowing heart will oft in darkness shroud, That lurk within its lonely depths like lightning in the cloud :

As falls our shadow on the path when

bright the sunbeams glare, Whichever way our thoughts are turn'd, that darksome shape is there!

Though brightly o'er the hollow cheek, the smile the laugh may break,

Like bubbles bursting on the breast of Acheron's dark lake;

They are but outward signs to hide the deadly pangs we feel,

As o'er the lone and mould'ring tower the rose is taught to steal.

Mr Smith succeeds very well in that which the Italians call the test of a poet, and which the indifferent success of most of our English writers shews at least to be a matter of very considerable difficulty-the composition of the SONNET. He seems to be well acquainted with Italian and Spanish literature, and is aware how much the effect of these little pieces depends on the exact observance of those recurrences of rhyme, which Petrarch, who borrowed them from the Sicilians, has now inseparably associated with the idea of a good sonnet. This one we think is very pleasing and classical. It is addressed" TO A STREAM NEAR VALLS, IN CATALONIA.

Whoe'er thou art, that o'er this stream presides,

Winding its course soft murmuring

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A DEFENCE OF THE LETTER TO THE EDITOR OF THE EDINBURGH REVIEW, ON MIRACLES.

SIR,

(Continued.)

To the Editor of the Edinburgh Magazine.

HAVING in my last letter refuted the reviewer's charges against the Catholic Church, of subtracting from and adding to Scripture, I shall now proceed, in continuation of my plan, to discuss the remaining topics handled by him; and if, in doing this, I should inadvertently overlook (which I do not anticipate) any of his arguments, I beg you will impute the omission, not to any desire on my part to evade them, as I feel a strong inclination (and I think I shall be successful) to strip the reviewer's reasoning of the flimsy sophistry which covers it.

The first point which occurs to be noticed is the reviewer's assertion, that some of the doctrines and practices enumerated by him "lead to immoral consequences." He thinks it" unnecessary to run over them all, to shew this," but, as a sample, he says he "shall only take the doctrines contained in the mass," which the devil, be it always remembered, with a logic more plausible than that of the reviewer, argued against, in order to induce the Father of the Reformation to abrogate, and to whose arguments Luther yielded, as related in the famous conference published by Luther himself, referred to in my late letter! But does the reviewer substantiate his charge? Substantiate, did I say? Why, he does not even attempt to draw a single immoral consequence from these doctrines, though viewed by him, as many of them are, through the optics of a fallacious vision. How disappointed must moralists feel at this failure of the reviewer to redeem his pledge, and enlarge their ethical knowledge! That church history which the reviewer boasts of having made "a favourite study," however, falsifies his assertion, by affording a practical demonstration to the contrary, in the holy lives of many of those who figure in its pages, and who gloried in the profession of those doctrines which the worldly wisdom of modern innovators has reprobated. This is not the language of religious egotism—the enemies of the church have acknowledged its truth.

The unwarrantable and hasty assertion of the reviewer naturally suggests the inquiry whether any improvement took place in the morals of those who rejected the doctrines alluded to by him. To obtain a satisfactory answer, we must go back to the period of the Reformation, or shortly after it had obtained a footing, and contrast in the persons of the reformers themselves, and their disciples, the state of morality prior and subsequent to that extraordinary era; for if any real improvement was to be expected by a change of doctrines and practices, we must look to those who adopted the change, to ascertain the state of the fact. The result of such an investigation will, I aver, prove the lamentable fact, that, instead of any such expected improvement, a general dissoluteness of morals ensued among the professors of the new religion; and as the salutary restraint of church authority, in matters of faith, had been disregarded, error, which has no limits, succeeded, and religion was disregarded, and the Scriptures were made a play-thing for the fancy of every fool who conceived himself wiser and more enlightened than the whole church! Truly it is not to be wondered at that Deism and Atheism (which, before the Reformation, had scarcely been known among Christians) should have followed from such Gospel liberty. But lest the reviewer, who seems familiar with " pious frauds," should imagine that I am at the same dirty work," as he elegantly expresses himself, I shall now produce a few unexceptionable authorities to corroborate what I have just stated. To begin with the highest, that of Luther. "The world," says he, grows every day worse and worse. It is plain that men are much more covetous, malicious, and resentful-much more un

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ruly, shameless, and full of vice, than they were in the time of Popery 1." Formerly, when we were "seduced by the Pope, men willingly followed good works; but now all their study is to get every thing to themselves, by exactions, pillage, theft, lying, and usury 2." He again observes, "It is a wonderful thing, and full of scandal, that, from the time when the pure doctrine was first called to light, the world should daily grow worse and worse 3." Yet this man had himself signalized his revolt, by the commission of a manifest perjury, and afterwards, in conjunction with Melancthon, Bucer, and five other divines, granted a written licence to the Landgrave of Hesse, allowing him two wives at once! The next testimony I adduce is that of Calvin. "Of so many thousands seemingly eager in embracing the Gospel, how few have since amended their lives! Nay, to what else do the greater part pretend, except by shaking off the yoke of superstition, to launch out more freely into ever kind of lasciviousness 4." The greater

part of the people," says Bucer," seem only to have embraced the Gospel, in order to shake off the yoke of discipline, and the obligation of fasting and penance, which lay upon them in the time of Popery, and to live at their pleasure, enjoying their lusts and lawless appetites without controul. They therefore lent a willing ear to the doctrine, that we are justified by faith alone, and not by good works, having no relish for them 5." Capito, a Calvinistic Minister of Strasburgh, says, 66 All goes to ruin; there is not one Church among us, not so much as one, where there is any discipline. Almighty God gives me light to know what it is to be a pastor, and the wrong we have done to the Church, by our injudicious rashness and indiscreet vehemence, in rejecting the Pope. For our people, now accustomed, and, as it were, brought up in licentiousness, have thrown off all subordination, as if, by overturning the authority of the Popish pastors, we had also destroyed the virtue of the sacraments, and the vigour of the ministry. They cry out to us, ' I know enough of the Gospel; what occasion have I for your help to find out Christ? Go and preach to those who are disposed to hear you." The attestation of the learned Erasmus is not less pertinent: "What an evangelical generation is this! Nothing was ever seen more licentious and more seditious. Nothing is less evangelical than those pretended evangelics 7." On another occasion he says, "Take notice of this evangelical people, and shew me an individual among them all, who, from being a drunkard, has become sober; from being a libertine, has become chaste. I, on the other hand, can shew you many who have become worse by the change 8." Again, "Those whom I once knew to have been chaste, sincere, and without fraud, I found, after they had embraced this sect, to be licentious in their conversation, gamblers, neglectful of prayer, passionate, vain, as spiteful as serpents, and lost to the feelings of human nature. I speak from experience 9." What a melancholy picture of the state of religion and morality, after "the pure doctrine was first called to light," is here exhibited! But perhaps the licentiousness and irreligion thus noticed was confined to Germany and Switzerland. Alas! it was not so, for the records of every kingdom where the new opinions prevailed testify the contrary.

Aware of the strength of the evidence he is about to combat, and being, it would appear, rather apprehensive of his success, the reviewer, with excellent foresight, but certainly with little judgment or skill, provides a position for retreat, in the extraordinary anti-historical assumption, that all the miraculous events recorded since the Apostolic age are mere delusions or impositions! The utter absurdity of such an assumption is strikingly apparent, by considering the singular consequences to which it would lead. To say nothing of the direct denial which it gives to the promise, unlimited as to time, of our Saviour, that miraculous signs were to follow those who

1 Serm. in Post. Evang., 1 Adv.

2 Serm. Dom. 26, post. Trin.
5 De Regno Christi., L. 1. c. 4.
7 Ep. L. vi. 4.

3 In Serm. Conviv. 4 L. iv. de Scand.
6 Ep. ad Farell, among Calvin's Letters.
8 Spong. advers. Hutton.

9 Ad. Frat. Infer. Germ.

believed, (of which the gift of healing was one,) it not only leads to the preposterous inference that the whole fathers of the Christian Church were either dupes or impostors, (as the Edinburgh reviewer" philosophically considers them,) but turns the truth of all history, whether sacred or profane, into a fable!!! True it is, that false Christs and false prophets were to arise, and shew great signs and wonders, and that false teachers were also to appear, (a prediction which has been repeatedly fulfilled ;) but the antiChristian objects of these lying wonders on the one hand, and the "fruits" by which false teachers are to be known on the other, are sufficient securities against deception; and it can no more be concluded that there have been no true miracles, because there have been false ones, than that there can be no true, because there have been false teachers. Indeed the reverse of the conclusion is implied by the contrast.

The reviewer even more than insinuates that the false teathers, mentioned in the Gospel, are the pastors of the Catholic Church,-those pastors who have received their mission, by a long and uninterrupted line of succession, flowing from the divine commission of Christ himself, and who have inherited their doctrine from him and his Apostles! Vain idea! which can only excite a smile at its folly, and the sigh of pity at its impiety. The characters, Sir, of false teachers, are sketched too palpably to occasion any mistake as to their identity on the part of those who candidly seek to discover them. Let us then see what those marks are by which false teachers are to be discriminated. In the first place, they were to "come in the clothing of sheep2;" that is, they were to assume the characters of true pastors, and, under the cloak of Scripture, pretend that errors had crept into the Church, and seek to reform it. Under this mask, they endeavoured to destroy the ancient faith, and every external mark by which it could be recognised; and as a reform in faith (which needed no reform) began in error, so reform upon reform has followed, and endless divisions have succeeded

"As if religion was intended

For nothing else but to be mended."

These are some of the "fruits" by which false teachers were to be known. But, in the second place, one of the indelible marks by which they were to be recognised is their separation from the trunk or root of unity, the Church. "These are they who separate themselves, sensual men, not having the spirit 3." "These are murmurers, full of complaints, walking according to their own desires." The beloved Apostle, alluding to these men, says, "They went out from us, (that is, from the communion of the Church,) but they were not of us. For if they had been of us, they could no doubt have remained with us: but that they may be manifest that they are not all of us." Lastly, false teachers were to be known, not only by their resisting the truth, and separating themselves from the Church, but also, like Core, they were to deny its lawful authority, and to assume to themselves the same authority in explaining doctrines, and ordaining, without having the power, a new race of pastors, unknown to the Church. This has been the uniform practice of every innovator, who thereby condemns himself by his own judgment; and "because, by his very appearance as a leader, as the first man of his sect, without being able to name his predecessor, while he thus starts up, he, in reality, pronounces sentence against himself as a manifest innovator, and carries his condemnation upon his forehead 7.”

Now all these characteristics are clearly applicable to the pretended reformers of the sixteenth century. They came in sheep's clothing, but they

1 Is it anti-Christian to prove the divinity of Christ one of the objects of Prince Hohenlohe's miracles, as stated by the reviewer himself? Our modern ProtestantArians would at once answer affirmatively, and say, with the reviewer, that miracles were no longer necessary to prove his humanity. 2 St. Matth. vii. 15. 3 St. Jude 19.

6 Titus iii. 2.

4 St. Jude 16. 5 1 St. John. ii. 19.

7 Bossuet's Pastoral Instruction.

soon shewed the dispositions of ravenous wolves. Look at the rebellions which they excited, at the bloodshed which they occasioned, and the robberies, sacrileges, and cruelties which they exercised,—at the barbarous laws which they enacted and put in execution against the professors of the ancient faith;-the property of the Church confiscated, and given to heartless and irreligious ruffians,-estates forfeited from their owners, and heavy pecuniary fines imposed and exacted for not conforming to the new-fangled doctrines, these proprietors again forced from the abodes of their fathers, and from every thing they held most sacred and dear, and obliged to 66 beg bitter bread" in foreign climes ;-churches, which piety had raised to the worship of the true God, on the ruins of Paganism, destroyed or defaced, whose mutilated and crumbling remains still point out their former magnificence and glory,—their sacred ornaments and utensils, the accumulations of ages, and even venerable for their antiquity, either destroyed or made subservient to voluptuousness;—monasteries, the abodes of virtue, of learning, and of happiness, the asylums of the care-worn and oppressed,the refuges of the wearied and faint-hearted traveller,-the store-houses of the poor 1, pillaged and reduced to ashes, their pious inmates turned adrift on the world, and made the sport of impiety, and their precious literary treasures given to the winds;-these were only some of the practical fruits of that pretended reformation so highly extolled by selfish historians, who

"Call fire, and sword, and desolation,

A thorough, godly reformation."

Such were the means adopted by the modern Apostles to advance, as they impiously pretended, the glory of God, and to plant afresh the religion of the meek and lowly Jesus! We have already seen the immoral effects of the change, from the mouths of the reformers themselves, and we see the jarring doctrinal systems which still prevail among their successors, some occasionally disappearing, then reviving,-fresh ones springing up, all at variance with each other, and sometimes inconsistent, by their variations with themselves. But it is vain to expect grapes from thorns, or figs from thistles. Let me not, however, be here understood as insinuating any thing uncharitable or reproachful against those men who have derived their mission from the illegitimate source alluded to, or as meaning that no distinction whatever is to be made between them and the authors of their errors. Educated in mistaken notions of the one Catholic Apostolic faith, their succession must be regarded as a misfortune, and not as a fault; but that misfortune can only be excusable when allied to sincerity, and to a firm conviction (however mistaken) of truth. There have been, and there are, I have no doubt, (nay I know it to be so,) many among them eminent for their private worth, and (setting their prejudices against the religion of their ancestors apart, and who can say he is without prejudice?) of a piety and zeal which would do honour to the better cause; but placed, as some of them are, in affluence, respected for their acquirements, and dazzled by the false lustre of fixed establishments, they can hardly be expected to bestow that calm deliberation so essentially necessary to form a correct judgment of, or to arrive at a just conclusion upon, the most momentous occurrence which ever engaged the attention of mankind; and they are too apt to suppose, that a possession of 300 years standing can, like prescription in law, complete a title originally de

1 Of all the charges which ignorance or malice have invented against our Catholic ancestors, none have been dwelt upon with a greater degree of gloating delight than that of the alleged voluptuousness of the inhabitants of monastic institutions. Some writers have even given lists (whether correct or not I inquire not) of their provisions, and other articles of good cheer, for the edification of the nation. Poor souls! perhaps they did not know that one of the fundamental rules of all these institutions was abstemiousness, and that the necessaries of life which they contained belonged chiefly to the poor, for whose use they were gathered and applied. The destruction of the English Monasteries, by the lawless Harry and his myrmidons, paved the way for the introduction of the poor-laws of England, and we now behold the appalling result!

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