Page:Scotish Descriptive Poems - Leyden (1803).djvu/264

 semblage of Poetic Graces, did our space allow us the gratification; but we must restrict ourselves to the scanty limits of a sonnet-extract, amid many more extended attractions. Yet we ought not to close this brief report, without expressing our cordial conviction, that if suavity of sentiment, or elegance of expression, should allure any reader to peruse these polished strains with the attention which they merit, such reader must be highly profited, as well as pleased by the employ."—Monthly Mirror for June 1802.

"The Verses display in general a mind of elegant turn, long habituated to the association of poetical images, and sufficiently exercised in the construction of harmonious measure. There are few Poems which we might not produce as specimens, without any injustice to the Author."—British Critic for August 1802.

7. EPISTLE FROM LADY GRANGE TO EDWARD D, Esq. written during her confinement in the Island of St. Kilda, 4to.—Price 2s. sewed.

8. MARY STEWART, QUEEN OF SCOTS, an Historical Drama, 8vo.—Price 4s. sewed.

"The life and death of Mary Queen of Scots has been render-