ABSTRACT

I was sorry to find the other day, on coming to Vevey,2 and looking into some English books at a library there, that Mr Moore had taken an opportunity, in his 'Rhymes on the Road,' of abusing Madame Warens, Rousseau, and men of genius in general.3 It's an ill bird, as the proverb says.4 This appears to me, I confess, to be pick-thank work, as needless as it is ill-timed, and, considering from whom it comes, particularly unpleasant. In conclusion, he thanks God with the Levite, that 'he is not one of those,'5 and would rather be any thing, a worm, the meanest thing that crawls, than numbered among those who give light and law to the world by an excess of fancy and intellect*. Perhaps / Posterity may take him at his word, and no more trace be found of his 'Rhymes' upon the onward tide of time than of the snow-falls in the river,A moment white, then melts for ever!6 It might be some increasing consciousness of the frail tenure by which he holds his rank among the great heirs of Fame, that urged our Bard to pawn his reversion of immortality for an indulgent smile of patrician approbation, as he raised his puny arm against 'the mighty dead,'7 to lower by a flourish of his pen the aristocracy of letters nearer to the level of the aristocracy of rank — two ideas that keep up a perpetual see-saw in Mr Moore's mind like buckets in a well, and to which he is always ready to lend a helping hand, according as he is likely to be hoisted up, or * Out on the craft — I'd rather beOne of those hinds that round me tread,With just enough of sense to seeThe noon-day sun thats o'er my head, /Than thus with high-built genius curs'd.That hath no heart for its foundation,Be all at once thats brightest - worst -Sublimest — meanest in creation.Rhymes on the Road.8 / 340in danger of being let down with either of them. The mode in which our author proposes to correct the extravagance of public opinion, and qualify the interest taken in such persons as Rousseau and Madame de Warens, is singular enough, and savours of the late unlucky / bias of his mind: - it is by referring us to what the well-bred people in the neighbourhood thought of Rousseau and his pretensions a hundred years ago or thereabouts. 'So shall their anticipation prevent our discovery!'.9