Page images
PDF
EPUB
[blocks in formation]

1.... G. BARRET.

2.... COPLEY FIELDING.

3.... J. CONSTABLE, R. A.
4.... G. CATTERMOLE.
5.... J. CONSTABLE, R. A.
6.... T. STOTHARD, R. A.
7.... P. DEWINT.

8.... W. BOXALL.

9.... S. A. HART, A. R. A. 10. G. CATTERMOLE. 11.... J. CONSTABLE, R. A. 12.... THOMAS LANDSEER. 13.... FRANK HOWARD. 14.... W. WESTALL, A. R. A. 15. ... A. W. CALLCOTT, R. A. 16. ... J. H. ΝΙΧΟΝ.

17.... A. COOPER, R. A. 18. W. MULREADY, R. A. 19.... J. W. WRIGHT. 20.... CHARLES LANDSEER. 21. J. J. CHALON, A. R. A. 22.... H. HOWARD, R. A. 23. R. WESTALL, R. A. 24.... J. W. WRIGHT. 25.... COPLEY FIELDING. 26. G. BARRET. 27.... THALES FIELDING. 28. .. C. R. STANLEY. 29.... W. COLLINS, R. A. 30.... FRANK HOWARD. 31.... H. HoWARD, R. A. 32.... S. A. HART, A. R. A.

The vignette on the title-page is a view of Stoke-Poges church, Buckinghamshire, the church-yard of which is the scene of this celebrated poem, and near which is a monument erected to the memory of Gray by the late John Penn, Esq., of Stoke Park. The drawing, by John Constable, Esq., R. A., has been kindly offered to the editor since the publication of the former edition, and is in the possession of Samuel Rogers, Esq.

The tomb of the Poet is at the south-east corner of the chancel, near that of his aunt, Mrs. Mary Antrobus.

THE great improvement that has taken place, within

a few years, in the art of Engraving on Wood, as well as its general adoption, in some measure superseding the use of Copper and Steel, led to the present attempt to apply this mode of embellishment to a Poem of such general and deserved celebrity, and which appeared to afford the greatest scope for the talents of the artist.

The ELEGY itself has long been universally acknowledged as one of the most elegant compositions which the English language ever produced.

The following testimony to its great merit is not, perhaps, generally known, and will not here be inappropriately introduced.

General Wolfe received a copy on the eve of the assault on Quebec; he was so struck with its beauty, that he is said to have exclaimed, that he would have preferred being its author, to that of being the victor in the projected attack in which he so gloriously lost his life.

[graphic][subsumed][merged small]

THE Curfew tolls the knell of parting day;

The lowing herd winds slowly o'er the lea; The ploughman homeward plods his weary way,

And leaves the world to darkness and to me.

« PreviousContinue »