offering novelty and exciting wonder. As Thomson has fo forcibly deepened the horrors of his Winter from the Pole, fo he has not been lefs fuccessful in heightening the brilliancy of his Summer from the Line. What a rich garden of Exotics does he fpread before us in the following lines? £ Bear me, Pomona! to thy citron groves ; J. M O ftretch'd Oftretch'd amid thefe orchards of the fun, ov drain the cocoa's milky bowl, i Give me to drain the And from the palm to draw its freshening wine! HESE are the beauties of the vegeta THESE 0% ble race: but if dignity and grandeur are the characters we defire, what can be a more majestic object than the Palma Maxima, which grows, perfectly straight and regular, to the amazing height of one hundred and twenty feet? What a more astonishing spectacle than the prodigious mafs of wood reared up in the Calabash tree, which finks our nobleft oaks into fhrubs ? Mr. Adanfon meafured two of these, the trunks of which were, one, seventy four, the other, feventy feven feet in * WRETCHEDLY degraded by its vulgar name of the Cabbage tree! circumference; or above twenty five in diameter. Single branches of thefe, he fays, would have made fome of the largest trees in Europe; and the whole feemed to form a forest of itself. ALL the feveral parts of Nature correfpond with each other. Under the fhade of these mighty vegetables walk the elephant and rhinoceros. The vast rivers of the fouthern continents are inhabited by the crocodile and hippopotamus. The unrelenting heat of the tropical fun is, as it were, reflected in the untameable fiercenefs of the beasts of prey which spread defolation far and wide through the defarts of these regions; and in the exalted rage and venom of the numerous ferpents with which they are infested. What infinite fcope for for new and striking defcription would the animal history of these countries afford to the poet who fhould be able to draw it from original fources! Even the sketches of Thomson on this subject are finer pictures than almost any others in descriptive poetry. What magnifi'cence in the scenery of the following lines! Along thefe lonely regions, where retir'd, But the wild herds that own no master's ftall, Peaceful, beneath primeval trees that caft Their ample shade o'er Niger's yellow ftream, L 3 And And where the Ganges rolls his facred wave; Or mid the central depth of blackening woods, High rais'd in folemn theatre around,~ W Leans the huge elephant. to asla mont " HORROR, Wrought up to its highest pitch, gives wonderful fublimity to the paffage reprefenting the nightly roam ings of the beafts of preyal uw 190 shot ad astofub vlnobi Thefe, rushing from th' inhofpitable woods I Of Mauritania, or the tufted ifles, \ \{ That verdant rife amid the Lybian wild, Demand their fated food. The fearful flocks |