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 upon the same grounds as those adduced by Mr. Leicester Warren.

The "Lines on hearing a description of the Scenery of Southern America" remind us of the poem "To E. L. on his Travels in Greece;" and the verses "On the Moonlight shining upon a Friend's Grave" recal inevitably the sixty-seventh section of "In Memoriam."

The poem of "Switzerland" contains the following stanza:

"O when shall Time Avenge the crime, And to our rights restore us; And bid the Seine Be choked with slain And Paris quake before us?"

Turning to the hundred and twenty-seventh section of "In Memoriam" we find the same image about the Seine reproduced:

"Even tho' thrice again The red fool-fury of the Seine Should pile her barricades with dead."