[200] “In dreams I have seen thy soul; I have seen the night in which she hides her woe; I have seen remorse to thy footsteps chained, and thy springtime doomed to tears.”

[201] “Weep not, my Muse; oh! weep no more. God stays with him who loses all beside—God on high, and hope below!”

[202] We hope that in a former notice we have shown that there is an artistic connection between them. (See The Catholic World for February, 1877.)

[203] Quarante Mélodies de Beethoven, Mozart, et Haydn, chez Flaxland.

[204] We say melodist, and not melodic. One may be a musician of the first order without being a great melodist. Thus Meyerbeer, so great in other respects, is a poor melodist; but will any one say that he is not melodic?


NEW PUBLICATIONS.

The Brown House at Duffield; or, Life within and without the Fold. By Minnie Mary Lee. Baltimore: Kelly, Piet & Co. 1876.

A good Catholic novel is still, we fear,