pronounced[1] as nearly the same as the two 
languages will admit of, and which gives at all events one sense, if not, 
as I think, the primary one, is scarcely so eccentric as that which finds 
the origin of a word signifying a loud sound, and fame, or rumor, in
"nisus"; not even _struggle_, in the sense of _contention_, an 
endeavour an effort, a strain. 
SAMUEL HICKSON. 
St. John's Wood, June 15, 1850. 
[Footnote 1: I do not think it necessary, here, to defend my 
pronunciation of German; the expressions I now use being sufficient 
for the purpose of my argument. I passed over CH.'s observation on this 
subject, because it did not appear to me to touch the question.] 
* * * * * 
MORE BORROWED THOUGHTS. 
O many are the poets that are sown By nature men endowed with 
highest gifts, The vision and the facility divine, Yet wanting the 
accomplishment of verse, Nor having e'er, as life advanced, been led by 
circumstance to take the height, The measure of themselves, &c. 
Wordsworth's _Excursion_, B. i. 
This admired passage has its prototype in the following from the 
_Lettere di Battista Guarini_, who points to a thought of similar kind in 
Dante:-- 
"O quante nolili ingegni si perdono che riuscerebbe mirabili [in poesia] 
se dal seguir le inchinazione loro non fossero, ò dà loro appetiti ò da i 
Padri loro sviati." 
Coleridge, in his _Bibliographia Literaria_, 1st ed., vol. i. p. 28., relates 
a story of some one who desired {83} to be introduced to him, but 
hesitated because he asserted that he had written an epigram on "The 
Ancient Mariner," which Coleridge had himself written and inserted in 
_The Morning Post_, to this effect:-- 
"Your poem must eternal be Dear Sir! it cannot fail; For 'tis 
incomprehensible, And without head or tail."
This was, however, only a Gadshill robbery,--stealing stolen goods. 
The following epigram is said to be by Mr. Hole, in a MS. collection 
made by Spence (penes me), and it appeared first in print in _Terræ 
Filius_, from whence Dr. Salter copied it in his _Confusion worse 
Confounded_, p. 88:-- 
"Thy verses are eternal, O my friend! For he who reads them, reads 
them to no end." 
In _The Crypt_, a periodical published by the late Rev. P. Hall, vol. i. p. 
30., I find the following attributed to Coleridge, but I know not on what 
authority, as it does not appear among his collected poems:-- 
JOB'S LUCK, BY S. T. COLERIDGE, ESQ. 
"Sly Beelzebub took all occasions To try Job's constancy and patience; 
He took his honours, took his health, He took his children, took his 
wealth, His camels, horses, asses, cows,-- Still the sly devil did not take 
his spouse. "But heav'n, that brings out good from evil, And likes to 
disappoint the devil, Had predetermined to restore Two-fold of all Job 
had before, His children, camels, asses, cows,-- Short-sighted devil, not 
to take his spouse." 
This is merely an amplified version of the 199th epigram of the 3d 
Book of Owen: 
"Divitias Jobo, sobolemque, ipsamque salutem Abstulit (hoc Domino 
non prohibens) Satan. Omnibus ablatis, miserò, tamen una superstes, 
Quae magis afflictum redderet, uxor erat." 
Of this there are several imitations in French, three of which are given 
in the _Epigrammes Choisies d'Owen_, par M. de Kerivalant, published 
by Labouisse at Lyons in 1819. 
S.W. SINGER. 
Mickleham, 1850.
* * * * * 
STRANGERS IN THE HOUSE OF COMMONS. 
(Vol. ii., p. 17.) 
As far as my observation extends, i.e. the last thirty-one years, no 
alteration has taken place in the practice of the House of Commons 
with respect to the admission of strangers. In 1844 the House adopted 
the usual sessional order regarding strangers, which I transcribe, 
inserting within brackets the only material words added by Mr. Christie 
in 1845:-- 
"That the Serjeant-at-Arms attending this house do, from time to time, 
take into his custody any stranger or strangers that he shall see or be 
informed of to be in the house or gallery [appropriated to the members 
of this house, and also any stranger who, having been admitted into any 
other part of the house or gallery, shall misconduct himself, or shall not 
withdraw when strangers are directed to withdraw] while the House or 
any committee of the whole House is sitting, and that no person so 
taken into custody be discharged out of custody without the special 
order of the House. 
"That no member of the House do presume to bring any stranger or 
strangers into the house, or the gallery thereof, while the House is 
sitting." 
This order appears to have been framed at a time when there was no 
separate gallery exclusively appropriated to strangers, and when they 
were introduced by members into the gallery of what is called the 
"body of    
    
		
	
	
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