the
metropolitan church of St. Roche, and scarcely more than a bow-shot
from the Tuilleries, as if the poet of Cinna and Polyeucte could not
render up his breath in peace except in the neighborhood of those high
dignitaries, into whose lips he had breathed while living so much of his
own grandeur and elevation; but who reminds you of the hills of his
native Normandy, or points you to the humble chamber or the peaceful
valley where 'gorgeous Tragedy in sceptred pall' first swept before the
eyes of his dawning fancy? No; if you would recall the memory of
Corneille through the medium of places familiar with his presence
when living, you must repair to the Hotel de Rambouillet, in one of the
most noisy and unpoetic quarters of Paris.
Now with respect to England, all this is as nearly as possible reversed.
The political influences spoken of before, operating no doubt with
others of which it is unnecessary to speak, have acted dispersively on
the sum of national reputations, and equitably allotted to almost every
part of the fair island some parcenary share of fame, some hallowing
memory, like a household genius, to preside over and endear its
localities. London has not, like Paris, proved itself in this the insatiate
Saturn of the national offspring. If you inquire, for instance, for
memorials of the life and presence of Shakspeare, it is not probable, as
in the case of Corneille, that you will be referred to the crowded streets
and squares of the metropolis, though his active life was passed and his
unrivalled fame achieved there; but far away to the west, where Nature
received him on her flowery lap, beside his own Avon; in the shades
where his genius first grew familiar with the shapes of beauty,
sublimity, and terror, and whither he retired at last 'to husband out life's
taper' amid the common charities of home; to this spot it is that you
must repair, if you would drink freshly of that well-spring of
associations which hallows the footsteps of England's immortal
dramatist. In like manner, one might say, that it is not in the sumptuous
galleries of Holland House, neighbored by the crowds and tumult of the
parks, that the admirer of Addison would find it most easy to call up
the image of the sage; but in that quiet meadow which he used to
frequent on the banks of the Cheswell, when evening is gathering on
the tops of the lofty elms and around the gray towers of Magdalen, how
pleasing and unforced the effort which recalls him to our imaginations!
And so too of others. Gray has not made the country church-yard
immortal in song alone, but has laid himself to rest with all the
memories of that imperishable strain around him, beneath as green a
sod as wraps the head of the humblest peasant for whom his muse
implored 'the passing tribute of a sigh.' The pensive shade of Cowper
beckons to the groves of Olney; and the melancholy ghost of
Chatterton, (kindred to Cowper only in his woes and his genius,) has
fled from the crowded thoroughfares of London, where he sank
oppressed in the turmoil of life, to haunt forever, in the eyes of the
dreaming enthusiast, those dim aisles of St. Mary Redcliffe in Bristol,
whence he drew the spells which immortalized but could not preserve
him. And thus will it be when the lights of to-day, the bards of living
renown, shall have passed away, but not to be forgotten. No one will
then think of tracing Wordsworth, or Moore, or Southey, amid the
dusky lanes and glittering saloons of the metropolis, but the lakes of
Cumberland and the bowers of Wiltshire will still rejoice in the
ever-brightening honors of associated genius. Even the hardier spirits
of the isle, whose destiny has called them to the rougher paths of life, to
the battle-field or the senate, away from the haunts of nature and the
Muse; even these have seldom failed, in the intervals of busier life, to
remember the charms of the rural life of England, and in giving their
more familiar hours to its enjoyments, have bequeathed to many a fair
spot a heritage of memories more precious than wealth, and which the
pilgrims of after ages will not willingly let perish.
It is to one of these provincial retreats, (if such they may be called,
when the migratory habits of society are rendering them daily more
known and frequented) that the foregoing remarks are designed to lead
the attention of the indulgent reader.
'The southern district of Kent,' says Gibbon, 'which borders on Sussex
and the sea, was formerly overspread with the great forest Anderida;
and even now retains the denomination of the Weald, or Woodland.' On
the verge
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