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Life of George  
Romney 
   
Review of New Publications 
  
155. The Life of George Romney, Esq. By  
William Hayley, Esq. 4to. pp.416. 1809. Payne. 
  
THE thousands who have been delighted and interested in Mr.  
Hayley's Life of Cowper will know what to expect from this  
second specimen of his talents as a Biographer; and if, in  
the present instance, the subject does not afford matter of  
such general importance as in the former, we can venture to  
assert that Mr. Hayley's ingenuity more directly appears in  
rendering that a most elegant and engaging narrative, which  
others, with no more copious materials, would have left  
"stale, flat, and unprofitable." 
  
Mr. Hayley possesses, indeed, a particular felicity in  
commemorating the virtues of a departed friend: and if the  
remarks he has advanced in the early part of this work be  
attended to, the volume will be perused with those tender  
and indulgent feelings that are seldom excited in the  
writings of this kind. In the Preface he observes that its  
principal defect is, "that it says too much of himself, in  
proportion to what it says of others; so that parts of it  
might rather be intituled ANNALS OF FRIENDSHIP than the Life 
of an Artist." And this is, in truth, its proper title, and  
a title which cannot fail to recommend it to all who have  
known what it is to possess and to lose a friend of  
distinguished worth. In another observation, connected with  
this, we cordially join: "In advanced life there is no  
occupation more attractive than such affectionate study as  
enables a man to recall and delineate, in the truest point  
of view, the various endowments of persons worthy of  
everlasting remembrance, whom it has been his lot to know  
perfectly, to love, and to lose." 
  
As Biography has long formed an important branch of our  
Miscellany, we shall avail ourselves of this opportunity to  
enrich it with an abridged sketch of Mr. Hayley's more  
expanded, minute, and elegant labours. 
  
George, the third child of John and Anne Romney, was born  
Dec. 26, 1734, at Dalton in Furness, Lancashire, and was  
educated partly at a school in the village of Dendron, but  
chiefly at home. His father was a builder, merchant, and  
farmer; and George, at the age of twelve, discovered a  
passion for mechanicks and 
  
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