Page:Hemans Miscellaneous Poetry 2.pdf/3



[Amongst the very few specimens that have been preserved of Mrs Hemans's livelier effusions, which she never wrote with any other view than the momentary amusement of her own immediate circle, is a letter addressed about this time to her sister who was then travelling in Italy. The following extracts from this familiar epistle may serve to show her facility in a style of composition which she latterly entirely discontinued. The first part alludes to a strange fancy produced by an attack of fever, the description of which had given rise to many pleasantries—being an imaginary voyage to China, performed in a cocoa-nut shell with that eminent old English worthy, John Evelyn.]

of your illness, pray give, if you please, Some account of the converse you held on high seas With Evelyn, the excellent author of "Sylva," A work that is very much prized at Bronwylfa. I think that old Neptune was visited ne'er In so well-rigg'd a ship, by so well-matched a pair. There could not have fallen, dear H., to your lot any Companion more pleasant, since you're fond of botany, And his horticultural talents are known, Just as well as Canova's for fashioning stone.