been more, skilfully handled, nor compliments more gracefully paid, nor fidelity more persuasively preached to a monarch than in this poem, which has under its southern dress a strong northern body. This remark applies to the author's work in general, and more especially to those compositions in which he mingles allegory with satire. His masterpiece, The Dance of the Deadly Sins, may have been suggested by passages in Piers Plowman, as it in turn transmitted its influence through Sackville to The Faery Queen : but the horrid crew of vices, summoned from their dens by lines each vigorous as the crack of a whip, are real, and Scotch, and contemporary, drawn from a knowledge of the world, not from books: these supplied Dunbar with his terminology, that with his thought. His most elaborate composition, and that which ranks next in originality to The Dance, The Two Married Women and the Widow, has a tincture of Boccaccio and The Wife of Bath, but the scene is again a northern summer eve, and the gossips are contemporaries of Queen Margaret. The poet's satire, which is here subtle, is often furious. Half his minor poems are vollies of abuse, unprecedented in English literature, unless by some of the almost contemporaneous outbursts of Skelton, mainly directed against those who had, by fair means or foul, been promoted over him; the other half are religious and moral reveries, those of a good Catholic who lived when the first mutters of the Reformation. were in the air, and are the finest devotional fragments of their age. The special characteristics of Dunbar's genius are variety and force. His volume is a medley in which tenderness and vindictiveness, blistering satire and exuberant fancy meet. His writings are only in a minor degree bound up with the politics of his age, and though they reflect its fashions, they for the most part appeal to wider human sympathies. He has not wearied us with any very long poem. His inspiration and his personal animus find vent within moderate bounds, but they are constantly springing up at different points and assuming various attitudes. At one time he is a quiet moralist praising the golden mean, at another he is as fierce as Juvenal. Devoid of the subtlety and the dramatic power of Chaucer, his attacks, often coarse, are always direct and sincere. His drawing, like that of the Ballads, is in the fore-ground: there is no chiaroscuro in his pages, no more than in those of his countrymen from Barbour to Burns. The story of the battle between The Tailor and Souter might have been written by Rabelais: The Devil's Inquest is the original of The Devil's Drive: the meditation on A Winter's Walk is not unworthy of Cowper, nor the best stanzas in The Merle and the Nightingale of Wordsworth. Like Erasmus, Dunbar railed against the friars and their indulgences 'quorum pars fuit :' but there is no reason to suspect that he was more or less than a large-hearted Roman Catholic in his creed. He had none of the protagonist spirit which is required to assail the traditions of a thousand years. Of a generally buoyant temper he appears, like most satirists, to have taken at times a view of the world, in which the Epicurean gloom dominates the Epicurean gaiety. 'All earthly joy returns in pain' is the refrain of one of his poems; 'Timor mortis conturbat me' of another. The shadow of the 'atra dies' falls aslant his most luxuriant moods. In the sonnet beginning : What is this life but ane straucht way to deid, there is something of the satiety of a disappointed worldling; but in others 'Be merry, man, and tak not sare in mind The wavering of this wretched warld of sorrow,'— we have the manlier temper : on the one side Vanitas vanitatum, et omnia vanitas, on the other the Philosophie Douce. J. NICHOL. Note. In the following extracts, the text of Mr. David Laing, Ed. 1834, has been generally adhered to. Where there are different readings, that has been adopted which gives the best metre. FROM THE THRISSILL AND THE ROIS.' Quhen Merche wes with variand windis past In bed at morrow, sleiping as I lay, And halsit me, with visage paill and grene; Sé hou the lusty morrow dois up spring. Me thocht fresche May befoir my bed up stude, Hevinly of color, quhyt, reid, broun and blew, Than callit scho all flouris that grew on feild And saw him kepit with a busche of speiris ; . A radius croun of rubeis scho him gaif, And sen thou art a King, thou be discreit ; And lat no nettill vyle, and full of vyce, 2 Hir fallow to the gudly flour-de-lyce; Nor latt no wyld weid, full of churlicheness, Nor hald non udir flour in sic denty3 As the fresche Rois, of cullour reid and quhyt: For gife thow dois, hurt is thyne honesty ; Considring that no flour is so perfyt, So full of vertew, plesans, and delyt, So full of blisful angeilik bewty, Imperiall birth, honour and dignité. 6 Bryght as the stern of day begouth to schyne I raise, and by a rosere did me rest : Glading the mery foulis in thair nest; Full angellike thir birdis sang thair houris Anamalit was the felde with all colouris, The perly droppis schuke in silvir schouris; Quhill all in balme did branch and levis flete1, Quhilk he for lufe all drank up with his hete. 3 With curiouse notis, as Venus chapell clerkis; Throu bemes rede, birnyng as ruby sperkis ; THE DANCE OF THE SEVIN DEIDLY SYNNIS. Off Februar the fyiftene nycht, Full lang befoir the dayis lycht, I lay in till a trance; And than I saw baith Hevin and Hell: Off Schrewis that were nevir schrevin, To mak thair observance ; 6 He bad gallandis ga graith a gyiss 9 Quhill preistis come in with bair schevin nekkis, |