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The face of Nature we no more furvey,

All glares alike, without distinction

gay:

But true Expreffion, like th' unchanging Sun, 315
Clears and improves whate'er it fhines upon,
It gilds all objects, but it alters none.
Expreffion is the drefs of thought, and still
Appears more decent, as more fuitable;
A vile conceit in pompous words express'd
Is like a clown in regal purple drefs'd;
For diff'rent styles with diff'rent subjects fort,
As fev'ral garbs with country, town, and court.
Some by old words to fame have made pretence,
Ancients in phrase, meer moderns in their sense;

NOTES.

320

Such

an army, fays Algarotti, confifts in well-disciplined men, not in a number of camels, elephants, fcythed chariots, and Afiatic encumbrances. Among many excellencies, this is the chief blemish of the Rambler; every object, every subject, is treated with an equal degree of dignity; he never softens and fubdues his tints, but paints and adorns every image which he touches, with perpetual pomp, and unremitted fplendor.

VER. 324. Some by old words, &c.] "Abolita et abrogata retinere, infolentiae cujufdam eft, et frivolae in parvis jactantiae." Quint. lib. i. c. 6.

P.

"Opus eft, ut verba à vetuftate repetita neque crebra fint, neque manifesta, quia nil eft odiofius affectatione, nec utique ab ultimis repetita temporibus. Oratio cujus fumma virtus eft perfpicuitas quam fit vitiofa, fi egeat interprete? Ergo ut novorum optima erunt maxime vetera, ita veterum maxime nova." Idem. P.

Quintilian's advice on this fubject is as follows: "Cum fint autem verba propria, ficta, tranflata; propriis dignitatem dat antiquitas. Namque et fan&tiorem, et magis admirabilem reddunt orationem, quibus non quilibet fuit ufurus: eoque ornamento acerrimi judicii Virgilius unice eft ufus. Olli enim, et quianam, et mis, et pone, pellucent, et afpergunt illam, quae etiam in picturis

Such labour'd nothings, in fo ftrange a style,

326

Amaze th' unlearn'd, and make the learned smile. Unlucky, as Fungofo in the Play,

These sparks with aukward vanity display

What the fine gentleman wore yesterday;

NOTES.

330

picturis eft gratiffima, vetuftatis inimitabilem arti auctoritatem. Sed utendum modo, nec ex ultimis tenebris repetenda.”

"The language of the age (fays Mr. Gray, admirably well,) is never the language of poetry; except among the French, whose verfe, where the thought or image does not fupport it, differs in nothing from profe. Our poetry, on the contrary, has a language peculiar to itself; to which almost every one that has written, has added fomething by enriching it with foreign idioms and derivatives: nay, fometimes words of their own compofitions or invention. Shakespeare and Milton have been great creators this way; and no one more licentious than Pope or Dryden, who perpetually borrow expreffions from the former. Let me give you fome inftances from Dryden, whom every body reckons a great master of our poetical tongue. Full of museful mopings,—unlike the trim of love, a pleasant beverage,-a roundelay of love,-stood filent in his mood,-with knots and knaves deformed, his ireful mood,— in proud array,his boon was granted, and difarray and fhameful rout,-wayward but wife,-furbished for the field, the foiled dodderd oaks, difherited,-smouldring flames,-retchlefs of laws, crones old and ugly,-the beldam at his fide,—the grandam hag,villanize his father's fame.-But they are infinite; and our language not being a settled thing, (like the French), has an undoubted right to words of an hundred years old, provided antiquity have not rendered them unintelligible. In truth, Shakespeare's language is one of his principal beauties; and he has no less advantage over your Addisons and Rowes in this, than in thofe great excellencies you mention. Every word in him is a picture. Pray put me in the following lines, into the tongue of our modern dramatics.'

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VER. 328. Unlucky, as Fungofo, &c.] See Ben. Jonfon's Every Man out of his Humour.

P.

And

And but fo mimic ancient wits at best,

As apes our grandfires, in their doublets dreft,
In words, as fashions, the fame rule will hold;
Alike fantastic, if too new, or old:

Be not the first by whom the new are try'd 335 Nor yet the last to lay the old aside.

But moft by Numbers judge a Poet's fong,

And smooth or rough, with them, is right or wrong: In the bright Mufe, tho' thoufand charms confpire, Her voice is all these tuneful fools admire;

Who haunt Parnaffus but to please their ear,

340

Not mend their minds; as fome to church repair, Not for the doctrine, but the music there.

Thefe equal fyllables alone require,

Tho' oft the ear the open vowels tire;

While expletives their feeble aid do join;

And ten low words oft creep in one dull line:

345

NOTES.

VER. 337. But moft by Numbers, &c.]

66

Quis populi fermo eft? quis enim? nifi carmine molli
Nunc demum numero fluere, ut per laeve feveros
Effundat junctura ungues: fcit tendere verfum
Non fecus ac fi oculo rubricam dirigat uno."

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VER. 345. Tho' oft the ear, &c.] "Fugiemus crebras vocalium concurfiones, quae vaftam atque hiantem orationem reddunt." Cic ad Heren. lib. iv. Vide etiam Quintil. lib. ix. c. 4.

P.

"Non tamen (fays the fenfible Quintilian) id ut crimen ingens expavefcendum eft; ac nefcio negligentia in hoc, an folicitudo fit major; nimiofque non immeritò in hâc curâ putant omnes Ifocratem fecutos, præcipuèque Theopompum. At Demofthenes & Cicero modicè refpexerunt ad hanc partem." Quintil. lib. ix.

c. 9.

349

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While they ring round the fame unvary'd chimes,
With fure returns of ftill expected rhymes;
Where-e'er you find "the cooling western breeze,"
In the next line, it" whispers through the trees :"
If crystal streams "with pleasing murmurs creep,'
The reader's threaten'd (not in vain) with "fleep :"
Then, at the laft and only couplet fraught
With fome unmeaning thing they call a thought,
A needlefs Alexandrine ends the fong,

356

That, like a wounded snake, drags its flow length

along.

Leave fuch to tune their own dull rhymes, and know What's roundly smooth, or languishingly flow;

And praise the easy vigour of a line,

360 Where Denham's ftrength, and Waller's sweetness join.

NOTES.

VER. 347. Ten low words] Our language is thought to be overloaded with monofyllables; Shaftesbury, we are told, limited their number to nine in any fentence; Quintilian condemns too great a concourse of them; etiam monofyllaba, fi plura funt, malè continuabuntur; quia neceffe eft compofitio, multis claufulis concifa, fubfultet. Inft. lib. ix. c. 4.

VER. 360. And praife the eafy vigour] Fenton, in his entertaining obfervations on Waller, has given us a curious anecdote concerning

IMITATIONS.

VER. 346. Where expletives their feeble aid do join,

And ten low words oft creep in one dull line :]

the

From Dryden." He creeps along with ten little words in every line, and helps out his numbers with [for] [to] and [unto] and all the pretty expletives he can find, while the fenfe is left half. tired behind it." Effay on Dram. Poetry.

But there are many lines of monofyllables that have much force and energy; in our author himself, as well as Dryden.

True

True ease in writing comes from art, not chance,
As thofe move easiest who have learn'd to dance.

NOTES.

the great industry and exactnefs with which Waller polifhed even his smallest compofitions. "When the court was at Windfor, these verses were writ in the Taffo of her Royal Highness, at Mr. Waller's requeft, by the late Duke of Buckinghamshire; and I very well remember to have heard his Grace fay, that the author employed the greatest part of a fummer in compofing and correcting them." So that, however he is generally reputed the parent of those fwarms of infect wits, who affect to be thought eafy writers, it is evident that he bestowed much time and care on his poems, before he ventured them out of his hands.

·VER. 361. Denham's ftrength,] Sufficient juftice is not done to Sandys, who did more to polish and tune the English verfification, by his Pfalms and his Job, than those two writers, who are ufually applauded on this fubject.

VER. 362. True eafe] Writers who feem to have compofed with the greatest ease, have exerted much labour in attaining this facility. Virgil took more pains than Lucan, though the style of the former appears fo natural; and Guarini and Ariosto spent much time in making their poems fo feemingly natural and eafy. Even Voiture wrote with extreme difficulty, though apparently without any effort; what Taffo fays of one of his heroines may be applied to fuch writers;

"Non fo ben dire s'adorna, o se negletta,

Se cafo, od arte, il bel volto compose,
Di natura, d'amor, del cielo amici

Le negligenze fue fono artifici."

It is well known, that the writings of Voiture, of Saraffin, and La Fontaine, were laboured into that facility for which they are fo famous, with repeated alterations and many rafures. Moliere is reported to have past whole days, in fixing upon a proper epithet or rhyme, although his verfes have all the flow and freedom of conversation. “This happy facility (faid a man of wit) may be compared to garden-terraces, the expence of which does not appear; and which, after the cost of several millions, yet feem to be a mere work of chance and nature." I have been informed, that Addifon was fo extremely nice in polifhing his profe compofitions, that when almost a whole impreffion of a fpectator was worked off, he would flop the prefs, to infert a new prepofition or conjunction.

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