This page needs to be proofread.
MAGYAR BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES.
lxiii

ways happy in his experiments, but he has, at all events, added something to the riches of his native tongue.

Szemere's Sonnets are the best existing in the Hungarian.[1] He, too, has been a translator from other idioms, and has published a version of Körner's Zrinyi, a drama recommended to the Magyars by its connexion with their history. Szemere was of an ancient and noble family; his studies were pursued through many schools and colleges; in his twenty-third year he became an advocate, and about ten years after was made Vice Fiscal of Pest. He has written many philological papers, and taken an active part in the strife as to the improvements of the Magyar tongue. He published a collection of songs in 1812,[2] and has been actively engaged with Kölcsey in the editorship of Life and Literature, Élet és Litteratúra. His place of abode is usually either Péczel or Pest.

In 1782, Szasz was born in Dedrád-Széplak, and educated in the College of Maros-Vásárhely.

Patronized by Count Teleki, he visited Vienna

  1. Töltényi has written, too, a great number of sonnets, but they are not very happily constructed. The sonnets of Bártfay are melodious.
  2. Dalok azoknak, a' kik szeretnek.