10 MARCH 1849, Page 19

In the tale of Use and Abuse, the author wishes

to exhibit infidelity and religion opposed .to one another, with the final defeat of infidelity and the triumph of faith. Such a task is difficult; but with every allowance for the difficulty, Use and Abuse cannot be pronounced other than a failure. Too much is attempted ; too little is done. The author carries the reader to Arabia Turkey in Asia, gonstantinople, England, Italy, and Greece ; be embodies the spirit of unbelief in a Byronic sort of per- sonage called Arabyn; of faith in a hermit-like individual hight Raymond, with powers still greater than those of Arabyn. After all this machinery is procured and set in motion, the only aim of Arabyn is to convert a Mr. Stanley to infidelity and get him cheated at cards ; and to marry "a fortune," with the view of procuring supplies, and making a sceptic of his wife. In all these projects Arabyn is baffled by Raymond ; and the infidel, after being an indirect cause of his sister's poisoning herself, becomes deranged, and dies in a Grecian madhouse. The style is like the matter—very much in "King Cambyses' vein."