There is an edition of Green's poems by Dr. Aikin, which deserves to be the companion of all who suffer as the author did, and who have sense enough to wish to relieve their sufferings by the like exercise of their reason. In printing the following extracts I have not adopted the asterisks commonly employed for the purpose of implying omission. I always use them unwillingly, on account of the fragmentary air they give to the passages; and the paragraphs closed up so well together in the present instance, that I was tempted to waive them. But the circumstance is mentioned in order to prevent a false conclusion. REMEDIES FOR THE SPLEEN.1 To cure the mind's wrong bias, spleen, Some hilly walks: all, exercise; Laugh and be well. Monkeys have been Have harlequin'd away the fit. If spleen fogs rise at close of day, I clear my evening with a play, In rainy days keep double guard, To enterprise a work of wit, I dress my face with studious looks, And on the drowning world remark; Then seek good-humour'd tavern chums, Or with the merry fellows quaff, And laugh aloud with them that laugh; Or drink a joco-serious cup With souls who've took their freedom up ; And let my mind, beguil'd by talk, In Epicurus' garden walk, Who thought it heav'n to be serene ; Pain, hell; and purgatory, spleen. Sometimes I dress, with women sit, And chat away the gloomy fit; Permit, ye fair, your idol-form, Which e'en the coldest heart can warm, May with its beauties grace my line, Which fiend-like, flies the magic ring Your touch, which gives to feeling bliss, We gaze, and see the smiling loves, And raptur'd fix in such a face Love's mercy-seat and throne of grace. True miracle, and fairly done By heads which are ador'd while on.2 Such thoughts as love the gloom of night, I close examine by the light; For who, though brib'd by gain to lie, That superstition mayn't create, And club its ills with those of fate, I many a notion take to task, Made dreadful by its visor mask. Thus scruple, spasm of the mind, Is cur'd, and certainty I find; Since optic reason shows me plain, I dreaded spectres of the brain; And legendary fears are gone, Though in tenacious childhood sown. Thus in opinions I commence Freeholder in the proper sense, And neither suit nor service do, Nor homage to pretenders show, Who boast themselves, by spurious roll, Lords of the manor of the soul; Preferring sense, from chin that's bare, To nonsense thron'd in whisker'd hair. Thus, then, I steer my bark, and sail My crew of passions all submit. Though pleas'd to see the dolphins play, Life's voyage to the world unknown. 1 The disorder here called the Spleen, was of old called Melancholy, or Hypochondria ; then it became Vapours or the Hyp, then the Spleen, then the Nerves or Low Spirits. The designation now varies between Nerves and Biliousness. Melancholy signifies Black Bile, as Hypochondria does a region of the stomach; and there is no doubt that all the disorders, great and small, connected with low spirits, are traceable to the stomach and state of digestion, sometimes in consequence of anxiety or too much thought, oftener from excess, and want of exercise. Too much eating (sometimes wrongly exchanged for too little) is the unromantic cause of nine-tenths of the romantic melancholies in existence. Your piecrust is a greater caster of shadows over this life, than all the platonical "prison houses" the poets talk of. 2" By heads which are ador'd while on."-A felicitous allusion to the imposture of St. Januarius, a cheat still practised at Naples. Clotted blood is brought |