backs on a setting sun. By his very considerable talents, his management, and his address, he soon rose in the world. He was appointed under-secretary to the Prince of Wales, with a salary of £200 a-year. In conjunction with Thomson, to whom he was really kind, he wrote in 1740, 'The Masque of Alfred,' in honour of the birthday of the Princess Augusta. His first wife, of whom nothing is recorded, having died, he married the daughter of Lord Carlisle's steward, who brought him a fortune of £10,000. Both she and Mallett himself gave themselves out as Deists. This was partly owing to his intimacy with Bolingbroke, to gratify whom, he heaped abuse upon Pope in a preface to 'The Patriot-King,' and was rewarded by Bolingbroke leaving him the whole of his works and MSS. These he afterwards published, and exposed himself to the vengeful sarcasm of Johnson, who said that Bolingbroke was a scoundrel and a coward;-a scoundrel, to charge a blunderbuss against Christianity; and a coward, because he durst not fire it himself, but left a shilling to a beggarly Scotsman to draw the trigger after his death. Mallett ranked himself among the calumniators and, as it proved, murderers of Admiral Byng. He wrote a Life of Lord Bacon, in which, it was said, he forgot that Bacon was a philosopher, and would probably, when he came to write the Life of Marlborough, forget that he was a general. This Life of Bacon is now utterly forgotten. We happened to read it in our early days, and thought it a very contemptible performance. The Duchess of Marlborough left £1000 in her will between Glover and Mallett to write a Life of her husband. Glover threw up his share of the work, and Mallett engaged to perform the whole, to which, besides, he was stimulated by a pension from the second Duke of Marlborough. He got the money, but when he died it was found that he had not written a line of the work. In his latter days he held the lucrative office of Keeper of the Book of Entries for the port of London. He died on the 21st April 1765. Mallett is, on the whole, no credit to Scotland. He was a bad, mean, insincere, and unprincipled man, whose success was procured by despicable and dastardly arts. He had doubtless some genius, and his 'Birks of Invermay,' and 'William and Margaret,' shall preserve his name after his clumsy imitation of Thomson, called 'The Excursion,' and his long, rambling 'Amyntor and Theodora,' have been forgotten. WILLIAM AND MARGARET. 1 'Twas at the silent, solemn hour 2 Her face was like an April-morn, And clay-cold was her lily hand, 3 So shall the fairest face appear, When youth and years are flown: 4 Her bloom was like the springing flower, The rose was budded in her cheek, 5 But love had, like the canker-worm, The rose grew pale, and left her cheek; 6 'Awake!' she cried, 'thy true love calls, Now let thy pity hear the maid, 7 This is the dumb and dreary hour, 8 Bethink thee, William, of thy fault, 9 Why did you promise love to me, Why did you swear my eyes were bright, 10 How could you say my face was fair, How could you win my virgin-heart, 11 'Why did you say my lip was sweet, And why did I, young witless maid! 12 That face, alas! no more is fair, Those lips no longer red: Dark are my eyes, now closed in death, 13 The hungry worm my sister is; This winding-sheet I wear: And cold and weary lasts our night, Till that last morn appear. 14 But, hark! the cock has warned me hence; A long and late adieu! Come, see, false man, how low she lies, Who died for love of you.' 15 The lark sung loud; the morning smiled, With beams of rosy red: Pale William quaked in every limb, 16 He hied him to the fatal place And stretched him on the green-grass turf, 17 And thrice he called on Margaret's name, And thrice he wept full sore; Then laid his cheek to her cold grave, THE BIRKS OF INVERMAY. The smiling morn, the breathing spring, And, while they warble from the spray, Let us, Amanda, timely wise, Like them, improve the hour that flies; For soon the winter of the year, Our taste of pleasure then is o'er, JAMES MERRICK. MERRICK was a clergyman, as well as a writer of verse. He was born in 1720, and became a Fellow of Trinity College, Oxford, where Lord North was one of his pupils. He took orders, but owing to incessant pains in the head, could not perform duty. He died in 1769. His works are a translation of Tryphiodorus, done at twenty, a version of the Psalms, a collection of Hymns, and a few miscellaneous pieces, one good specimen of which we subjoin. THE CHAMELEON. Oft has it been my lot to mark Two travellers of such a cast, |