192 MONTHLY REVIEW OF UTERATURE. 



THERESE. 



Live, my Anionic, live ! 

 Another and a better clay may dawn, — 

 My own betrothed, we yet may meet again ! 



FOSCARANI. 



Beyond the grave ? 



THERESE. 



Time yet may wear away 

 Our sorrows, and each obstacle — You smile ? 

 True ! when 1 am old, and these dark tresses wave, 

 Tlie snowy tell-tales of decay and years. 

 Thou wilt foigel ? — Yes, yes, I know thou wilt. 

 Not such is woman's love." 



We hope the author will believe that we are interested in the success of his 

 drama. 



Study of English Poetry, or a choice Selection of the finest Pieces of the 

 Poets of Great Britain, arranged in Chronogical order from the r2th 

 Century to the present day ; preceded by a Treatise on English Ver- 

 sification. By A. Spiers, Professor at the Royal School at Ponts- 

 et-Chaussees, of the Royal College of Bourbon, &c. &c. Simpkin, 

 Marshall, and Co. pp. (with a copious Index included) 556. 12mo. 

 boards. 



Poetry, whicli has been the study and delight of mankind in all the by-gone 

 ages of the world, and has ever been deemed one of the most delightful pro- 

 diiciions of the human intellect, is, as ;in ingenuous critic — Mr. Hazlitt — was wont 

 to express it — (in his Lectures on the English Poets) — " the language of the ima- 

 gination to the passions. It relates to what ever gives immediate pleasure to the 

 mind,'" and so on. 



This is a work admirably calculated for the use of Jinishing-schools, for both 

 young ladies and young gentlemen. 



Rome and its surrounding Scenery. Nos. 1 , 2, and 3, in 4to. By Cooke. 



A VERY inexpensive and interesting work. The object of the publisher is to 

 illustrate the ruinous desolation — the remains of those magnificent fabrics which 

 aforetime lifted their gothic summits heavenward: — together with the most pic- 

 turesque scenery within a circumference of twenty miles of Rome. Each number 

 contains three well-executed engravings, by some of the most talented artists. 



Address to the People of Great Britain, explanatory of our Commercial 

 Relations with the Empire of China, and of the Course of Policy by 

 which it may be rendered an almost unbounded Field for British 

 Commerce. By a Visitor of China. Smith, Elder, & Co., Cornhill, 

 Booksellers to their Majesties. 



We deem it proper to state that this attempt (a very well-written "paper," or 

 address, by the vvay) to throw lii>ht on a subject which has been much misre- 

 presented, and is but little understood by the public at large, is from the pen of a 

 gentleman who visited China for purposes entirely unconnected with commerce, 

 and who, with the advantage of personal observation, may reasonably be supposed 

 to have formed a more impartial and dispassionate judgment, than could have been 

 arrived at by one writing under the smart of the injuries which he so ably describes 

 This address ought to be read generally by commercial men at home and abroad. 



