The International Monthly, Volume 4, No. 3, October, 1851
Transcriber's Note: Minor typos have been corrected and footnotes moved to the end of the article. Table of contents has been created for the HTML version.
Every catalogue of English poets embraces the name of Butler, though he was but the most unpoetical of satirists. If Hudibras is poetry there can be no difficulty in admitting to this distinction Trumbull's Progress of Dulness and McFingal, Snelling's Truth, a Gift for Scribblers, Halleck's Fanny, Osborn's Vision of Rubeta, Lowell's Fable for Critics, and some dozen other attempts in in this line, by Americans. The disease of the satiric muse in this country has been the spleen, and the reason why we have had so little of the healthful humorous rage, ideal and lyrical, of which the old masters gave us immortal examples, is, that those among us who have attempted this kind of composition have generally had far more to do with persons than with manners, have been influenced more by envy and malice than by a generous scorn of what is ludicrous and mean and criminal. The author of Progress has fallen into none of the prevailing sins; he is of the school of Horace, and has as little as he may to do with fools, while he holds up, unfolds, and whips, the follies of the day.
John G. Saxe was born in Highgate, Franklin county, Vermont, on the second day of June, 1816, His youth was passed in rural occupations until he was seventeen years of age, when he determined to study one of the liberal professions, and with this view entered the grammar school at St. Albans, and, after the usual preliminary course, the college at Middlebury, where he graduated bachelor of arts in the summer of 1839. He subsequently read law at Lockport in New-York and at St. Albans, and was admitted to the bar at the latter place in September, 1843, since which time he has been practising in the courts with more than the average success of young attorneys, and he is now a leading politician of the democratic party, the conductor of its local organ, the Burlington Sentinel, and District Attorney, by the grace of personal popularity—all other candidates on the same ticket having been defeated.
Various
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THE INTERNATIONAL MAGAZINE
Of Literature, Art, and Science.
Vol. IV. NEW-YORK, OCTOBER 1, 1851. No. III.
Contents
FOOTNOTES:
FOOTNOTES:
FLORENCE VANE.
WRITTEN FOR THE INTERNATIONAL MAGAZINE
TO THE AUTHOR OF EOTHEN.
ARIADNE.
FOOTNOTES:
WRITTEN FOR THE INTERNATIONAL MONTHLY MAGAZINE
CHAPTER XLII.
CHAPTER XLIII.
CHAPTER XLIV.
CHAPTER XLV.
FOOTNOTES:
WRITTEN FOR THE INTERNATIONAL MONTHLY MAGAZINE
FOOTNOTES:
From Fraser's Magazine.
From Chambers's Edinburgh Journal.
From the National Era.
From Household Words.
FOOTNOTES:
FOOTNOTES:
FOOTNOTES:
From the London Art-Journal.
From Fraser's Magazine.
FOOTNOTES:
From Ainsworth's Magazine.
From the Paris Journal des Debats.