[]

AN ESSAY ON THE Genius and Writings OF SHAKESPEAR: WITH Some Letters of Criticiſm to the SPECTATOR.

By Mr. DENNIS.

—Me Lectori credere malim
Quam Spectatoris faſtidia ferre ſuperbi.
Horace.

LONDON: Printed for BERNARD LINTOTT at the Croſs-Keys between the Two Temple-Gates in Fleetſtreet. 1712. Price 1 s.

To the Right Honourable GEORGE GRANVILLE, Eſq Secretary at War.

[]
SIR,

AN Addreſs of this Nature made upon your Advancement to one of the principal Employments of the State, and made by one who has had the Honour to be known to you ſo many Years, might be pretended by malicious People to be a Homage rather to your Fortune and Power, than a due Reſpect to your Merit and Vertue; if it were not publickly known, that I formerly applied my ſelf to you in the ſame manner, when you were [] much more diſtingniſhed by Merit and Vertue, than by Fortune and Power.

But if any one farther maliciouſly urges, that, even when I formerly applied my ſelf to you, by the diſtinguiſhing Qualities of your Mind and Perſon, I foreſaw your Fortune and Power; to him I anſwer, in order to vindicate the Reputation of my Sincerity and my Diſintereſtedneſs, that tho' I ſaw very well that thoſe great Qualities fitted Mr. Granville for the moſt Illuſtrious Employments; yet who could have ever imagin'd that any Man living had Merit enough to raiſe him in ſpight of ſo many unfortunate Vertues with which that Merit was attended, in ſpight of not only a true Poetical Genius, but a Frankneſs, a Probity, a matchleſs Integrity, a Sincerity worthy of Heroick Times, and a moſt untainted Honour.

But tho' your Character were leſs conſpicuous, and what I had formerly done were intirely forgot, the numerous and [] powerful Obligations I have to you, would more than juſtifie this Addreſs; and the omitting the firſt Opportunity of making you a publick Acknowledgment would look like black Ingratitude. You have taken ſuch Care of my Intereſt with others at a moſt ſeaſonable Conjuncture, and have your ſelf made me a Preſent ſo noble, and ſo extraordinary at a time when I ſtood moſt in need of it, that how few alive have Spirit and Magnanimity to do any thing like it? At leaſt I defie any one to name that living Man, who in a private Capacity has done any thing like it.

I know very well indeed that you are very far from deſiring ſuch a publick Acknowledgment, that you aim at nothing by doing daily good, but the Godlike Pleaſure which reſults from your Actions; and that others perhaps may cenſure me for ſacrificing your Modeſty to my own Vanity. For to publiſh to the World that I have been oblig'd in [] an extraordinary [...] by a Perſon ſo univerſally eſteem'd and [...]ſtinguiſh'd, that one of the very few Things in which the moſt violent of both Parties agree, is the Character of Mr. Granville, will be thought to be the Reſult of uncommon Vanity, by thoſe who have not Goodneſs enough to believe it to be the Effect of a lively Gratitude.

But tho', Sir, I had no Obligation to you, and you had no other Merit but that of perfectly underſtanding an Art which you have perfectly practis'd, viz. the Art which is the Subject of the following Treatiſe, that Treatiſe would be by Right of Nature yours. For to whom can an Eſſay upon the Genius and Writings of Shakeſpear be ſo properly addreſs'd, as to him who beſt underſtands Shakeſpear, and who has moſt improv'd him. I would not give this juſt Encomium to the Jew of Venice, if I were not convinc'd from a long Experience of the Penetration and Force of [] your Judgment, [...] no Exaltation can make you a [...]m'd of your former noble Art; that you know it to be a Weakneſs barely to imagine, that the moſt noble and moſt exalted of all Arts, and the moſt difficult to excel in, can render a Man leſs qualified for publick Buſineſs, or for the firſt Employments of the State; that all the great Stateſmen who have beſt ſucceeded in Affairs of Government, have either writ Poems or Treatiſes concerning Poetry. The moſt ancient of Hiſtorians and Legiſlators, Moſes, at leaſt of thoſe whoſe Laws and Hiſtories remain, has given us a pathetick and a lofty Poem upon the Paſſage of the Red Sea.

The Athenian Legiſlator Solon thought it not in the leaſt below his Dignity to render Moral Vertue lovely by the Charms of Verſe. And Lacedemonian Licurgus, even the rigid and the auſtere Lycurgus, thought it an Employment worthy of his Wiſdom and Vertue, to reſtore [] and publiſh the Immortal Works of Homer: Having the ſame Opinion of that Prince of Poets that Horace afterwards had; that his Poems would better inſtruct Mankind in Vertue than they could be poſſibly taught by Proſe. The moſt Illuſtrious Writers of Politicks among the Grecians, Plato and Ariſtotle; one of them had a figurative, a lofty and a Poetick Proſe; and the other, who may be call'd the Legiſlator of Parnaſſus, wrote the Laws of Tragedy ſo exactly and ſo truly in Reaſon and Nature, that ſucceeding Criticks have writ juſtly and reaſonably upon that Art no farther than they have adhered to their great Maſter's Notions. Tacitus the very Oracle of Modern Stateſmen has a Stile that is warm and daring, and figurative, that is to ſay Poetick. Machiavel the Prince of Modern Politicians, if we except but one of our own Countrymen, wrote more than one Comedy, and more than one Poem has been attempted by [] our Britiſh Politician Harrington. The two Princes of Poets may eaſily be proved to've been great Stateſmen; Homer particularly made choice of a Moral, which in his Time, when Greece with the Iſlands of the Aegaean was divided into petty Sovereignties, was the fundamental Maxim of their Politicks and their true Intereſt; which Moral was, as Salluſt afterwards expreſs'd it, Concordiâ res parvae creſcunt, Diſcordiâ maxima dilabuntur; from whoſe nobleſt Poem you formerly gave us a Tragedy, in which in Imitation of Homer, you are daring yet juſt, fiery yet regular, ſublime yet natural and perſpicuous, chaſt yet alluring, and eaſie yet ſtrong and powerful.

But to come to the more active part of Government, the greateſt Monarchs and Captains, and Miniſters of State that ever were known in the World, either were or would have been great Poets. When Athens flouriſh'd in all her Glory, their Poets and their famous Writers [] were they who directed their Counſels, and led their Armies to Battel. Alexander read nothing but the Works of Homer while he conquer'd the Orient. In Rome the greateſt Captain that flouriſh'd in the Time of the Commonwealth vouchſafed his Aſſiſtance to a Comick Poet: And the two firſt Caeſars were proud to write Tragedies with thoſe fatal Hands that were victorious over the Univerſe. Mecaenas, at the Time that he was firſt Miniſter to the Emperor of the World, was not only the greateſt Patron of the Muſes that ever was, but endeavour'd to be himſelf a Poet. If we deſcend to Modern Times, Richlieu, who laid the Foundation of the French Greatneſs, wrote more than one Dramatick Poem, with that very right Hand which dictated to the Cabinets of ſo many Sovereign Princes, and directed the ſucceſsful Motions of ſo many conquering Commanders. And that Greatneſs, which upon a French Poetick Foundation was in the Space of leſs [] than one Century rais'd to an inſupportable Height, was in leſs than twenty Years ſapp'd and undermin'd, and overturn'd by a Britiſh Poetick Miniſtry: It being undeniable, that ſeveral of the Perſons who made the chief Figures in both the old and the new Miniſtry were Poets. I make no doubt, Sir, but the Time will come when you will be diſtinguiſh'd by the Wiſdom and Reach of your Counſels, as much as you were formerly by the Spirit and Juſtneſs of your Writings. For the very Vertues which we once were afraid would hinder your Advancement even in the moſt vertuous Court, are now like to preſerve and ſupport your Intereſt ſince you have had an Opportunity of publickly practiſing them ſo long. 'Tis impoſſible to behold that Ardor, that Sincerity and that Alacrity, with which you every Day endeavour to do good to your Fellow-Creatures, without loving you, and without wiſhing, as well as hoping, that you may be the peculiar Care of Providence, [] which by advancing you to one of the moſt eminent Stations would provide for Thouſands. But when we behold that Ardor and that Alacrity, attended with ſuch an attractive Sweetneſs and ſuch a manly Grace, and with a Nobility which God and Nature ſeem to have imprinted both on your Mind and Perſon, we have no longer Power over our ſelves, but give up all our Affections to you; and not only wiſh, but firmly believe that ſince God and Nature have given you thoſe ſeveral Excellencies which were the undoubted Original of all Political Nobility, they have determin'd you to ſucceed to the moſt extenſive Fortunes and Titles of your Noble Anceſtors; which is warmly deſir'd and earneſtly expected by all who have the Honour to know you, but more eſpecially by

SIR,
Your moſt oblig'd, moſt humble, and moſt faithful Servant, JOHN DENNIS.
[1]

LETTER. I.
On the Genius and Writings of Shakeſpear.
To Mr. [...]

SIR,

I Here ſend you the Tragedy of Coriolanus, which I have alter'd from the Original of Shakeſpear, and with it a ſhort Account of the Genius and Writings of that Author, both which you deſired me to ſend to you the laſt time I had the good Fortune to ſee you. But I ſend them both upon this condition, that you will with your uſual Sincerity tell me your Sentiments both of the Poem and of the Criticiſm.

Shakeſpear was one of the greateſt Genius's that the World e'er ſaw for the Tragick Stage. Tho'he lay under greater Diſadvantages [2] than any of his Succeſſors, yet had he greater and more genuine Beauties than the beſt and greateſt of them. And what makes the brighteſt Glory of his Character, thoſe Beauties were entirely his own, and owing to the Force of his own Nature; whereas his Faults were owing to his Education, and to the Age that he liv'd in. One may ſay of him as they did of Homer, that he had none to imitate, and is himſelf inimitable. His Imaginations were often as juſt, as they were bold and ſtrong. He had a natural Diſcretion which never cou'd have been taught him, and his Judgment was ſtrong and penetrating. He ſeems to have wanted nothing but Time and Leiſure for Thought, to have found out thoſe Rules of which he appears ſo ignorant. His Characters are always drawn juſtly, exactly, graphically, except where he fail'd by not knowing Hiſtory or the Poetical Art. He has for the moſt part more fairly diſtinguiſh'd them than any of his Succeſſors have done, who have falſified them, or confounded them, by making Love the predominant Quality in all. He had ſo fine a Talent for touching the Paſſions, and they are ſo lively in him, and ſo truly in Nature, that they often touch us more without their due Preparations, than thoſe of other Tragick Poets, who have all the Beauty of Deſign and all the Advantage of [3] Incidents. His Maſter-Paſſion was Terror, which he has often mov'd ſo powerfully and ſo wonderfully, that we may juſtly conclude, that if he had had the Advantage of Art and Learning, he wou'd have ſurpaſs'd the very beſt and ſtrongeſt of the Ancients. His Paintings are often ſo beautiful and ſo lively, ſo graceful and ſo powerful, eſpecially where he uſes them in order to move Terror; that there is nothing perhaps more accompliſh'd in our Engliſh Poetry. His Sentiments for the moſt part in his beſt Tragedies, are noble, generous, eaſie and natural, and adapted to the Perſons who uſe them. His Expreſſion is in many Places good and pure after a hundred Years; ſimple tho' elevated, graceful tho' bold, and eaſy tho' ſtrong. He ſeems to have been the very Original of our Engliſh Tragical Harmony; that is the Harmony of Blank Verſe, diverſifyed often by Diſſyllable and Triſſyllable Terminations. For that Diverſity diſtinguiſhes it from Heroick Harmony, and bringing it nearer to common Uſe, makes it more proper to gain Attention, and more fit for Action and Dialogue. Such Verſe we make when we are writing Proſe; we make ſuch Verſe in common Converſation.

If Shakeſpear had theſe great Qualities by Nature, what would he not have been, if he had join'd to ſo happy a Genius Learning [4] and the Poetical Art. For want of the latter our Author has ſometimes made groſs Miſtakes in the Characters which he has drawn from Hiſtory, againſt the Equality and Conveniency of Manners of his Dramatical Perſons. Witneſs Menenius in the following Tragedy, whom he has made an errant Buffoon, which is a great Abſurdity. For he might as well have imagin'd a grave majeſtick Jack-Pudding, as a Buffoon in a Roman Senator. Aufidius the General of the Volſcians is ſhewn a baſe and a profligate Villain. He has offended againſt the Equality of the Manners even in his Hero himſelf. For Coriolanus who in the firſt part of the Tragedy is ſhewn ſo open, ſo frank, ſo violent, and ſo magnanimous, is repreſented in the latter part by Aufidius which is contradicted by no one, a flattering, fawning, cringing, inſinuating Traytor.

For want of this Poetical Art, Shakeſpear has introduced things into his Tragedies, which are againſt the Dignity of that noble Poem, as the Rabble in Julius Caeſar, and that in Coriolanus; tho' that in Coriolanus offends not only againſt the Dignity of Tragedy, but againſt the Truth of Hiſtory likewiſe, and the Cuſtoms of Ancient Rome, and the Majeſty of the Roman People, as we ſhall have occaſion to ſhew anon.

[5] For want of this Art, he has made his Incidents leſs moving, leſs ſurprizing, and leſs wonderful. He has been ſo far from ſeeking thoſe fine Occaſions to move with which an Action furniſh'd according to Art would have furniſh'd him; that he ſeems rather to have induſtriouſly avoided them. He makes Coriolanus upon his Sentence of Baniſhment, take his leave of his Wife and his Mother out of ſight of the Audience, and ſo has purpoſely as it were avoided a great occaſion to move.

If we are willing to allow, that Shakeſpear by ſticking to the bare Events of Hiſtory, has mov'd more than any of his Succeſſors, yet his juſt Admirers muſt confeſs, that if he had had the Poetical Art, he would have mov'd ten times more. For 'tis impoſſible that by a bare Hiſtorical Play he could move ſo much as he would have done by a Fable.

We find that a Romance entertains the generality of Mankind with more Satisfaction than Hiſtory, if they read only to be entertertain'd; but if they read Hiſtory thro' Pride or Ambition, they bring their Paſſions along with them, and that alters the caſe. Nothing is more plain than that even in an Hiſtorical Relation ſome Parts of it, and ſome Events, pleaſe more than others. And therefore a Man of Judgment, who ſees why they [6] do ſo, may in forming a Fable, and diſpoſing an Action, pleaſe more than an Hiſtorian can do. For the juſt Fiction of a Fable moves us more than an Hiſtorical Relation can do for the two following Reaſons: Firſt by reaſon of the Communication and mutual Dependence of its Parts. For if Paſſion ſprings from Motion, then the Obſtruction of that Motion or a counter Motion muſt obſtruct and check the Paſſion: And therefore an Hiſtorian and a Writer of Hiſtorical Plays paſſing from Events of one nature to Events of another nature without a due Preparation, muſt of neceſſity ſtifle and confound one Paſſion by another. The ſecond Reaſon why the Fiction of a Fable pleaſes us more, than an Hiſtorical Relation can do, is, becauſe in an Hiſtorical Relation we ſeldom are acquainted with the true Cauſes of Events, whereas in a feign'd Action which is duly conſtituted, that is, which has a juſt beginning, thoſe Cauſes always appear. For 'tis obſervable, that both in a Poetical Fiction and an Hiſtorical Relation, thoſe Events are the moſt entertaining, the moſt ſurprizing, and the moſt wonderful, in which Providence moſt plainly appears. And 'tis for this Reaſon that the Author of a juſt Fable, muſt pleaſe more than the Writer of an Hiſtorical Relation. The Good muſt never fail to proſper, and the Bad muſt be always [7] puniſh'd: Otherwiſe the Incidents, and particularly the Cataſtrophe which is the grand Incident, are liable to be imputed rather to Chance, than to Almighty Conduct and to Sovereign Juſtice. The want of this impartial Diſtribution of Juſtice makes the Coriolanus of Shakeſpear to be without Moral. 'Tis true indeed Coriolanus is kill'd by thoſe Foreign Enemies with whom he had openly ſided againſt his Country, which ſeems to be an Event worthy of Providence, and would look as if it were contriv'd by infinite Wiſdom, and executed by ſupreme Juſtice, to make Coriolanus a dreadful Example to all, who lead on Foreign Enemies to the Invaſion of their native Country; if there were not ſomething in the Fate of the other Characters, which gives occaſion to doubt of it, and which ſuggeſts to the Sceptical Reader that this might happen by accident. For Aufidius the principal Murderer of Coriolanus, who in cold Blood gets him aſſaſſinated by Ruffians, inſtead of leaving him to the Law of the Country, and the Juſtice of the Volſcian Senate, and who commits ſo black a Crime, not by any erroneous Zeal, or a miſtaken Publick Spirit, but thro' Jealouſy, Envy, and inveterate Malice; this Aſſaſſinator not only ſurvives, and ſurvives unpuniſh'd, but ſeems to be rewarded for ſo deteſtable an Action; by engroſſing all thoſe [8] Honours to himſelf which Coriolanus before had ſhar'd with him. But not only Aufidius, but the Roman Tribunes, Sicinius and Brutus, appear to me to cry aloud for Poetick Vengeance. For they are guilty of two Faults, neither of which ought to go unpuniſh'd: The firſt in procuring the Baniſhment of Coriolanus. If they were really jealous, that Coriolanus had a Deſign on their Liberties, when he ſtood for the Conſulſhip, it was but juſt that they ſhould give him a Repulſe; but to get the Champion and Defender of their Country baniſh'd upon a pretended Jealouſy was a great deal too much, and could proceed from nothing but that Hatred and Malice which they had conceiv'd againſt him, for oppoſing their Inſtitution. Their ſecond Fault lay in procuring this Sentence by indirect Methods, by exaſperating and inflaming the People by Artifices and Inſinuations, by taking a baſe Advantage of the Open-heartedneſs and Violence of Coriolanus, and by oppreſſing him with a Sophiſtical Argument, that he aim'd at Sovereignty, becauſe he had not deliver'd into the Publick Treaſury the Spoils which he had taken from the Antiates. As if a Deſign of Sovereignty could be reaſonably concluded from any one Act; or any one could think of bringing to paſs ſuch a Deſign, by eternally favouring the Patricians, and diſobliging [9] the Populace. For we need make no doubt, but that it was among the young Patricians, that Coriolanus diſtributed the Spoils which were taken from the Antiates; whereas nothing but careſſing the Populace could enſlave the Roman People, as Caeſar afterwards very well ſaw and experienc'd. So that this Injuſtice of the Tribunes was the original Cauſe of the Calamity which afterwards befel their Country, by the Invaſion of the Volſcians, under the Conduct of Coriolanus. And yet theſe Tribunes at the end of the Play like Aufidius remain unpuniſh'd. But indeed Shakeſpear has been wanting in the exact Diſtribution of Poetical Juſtice not only in his Coriolanus, but in moſt of his beſt Tragedies, in which the Guilty and the Innocent periſh promiſcuouſly; as Duncan and Banquo in Mackbeth, as likewiſe Lady Macduffe and her Children; Deſdemona in Othello; Cordelia, Kent, and King Lear, in the Tragedy that bears his Name; Brutus and Porcia in Julius Caeſar, and young Hamlet in the Tragedy of Hamlet. For tho' it may be ſaid in Defence of the laſt, that Hamlet had a Deſign to kill his Uncle who then reign'd; yet this is juſtify'd by no leſs than a Call from Heaven, and raiſing up one from the Dead to urge him to it. The Good and the Bad then periſhing promiſcuouſly in the beſt of Shakeſpear's Tragedies, there can be either [10] none or very weak Inſtruction in them: For ſuch promiſcuous Events call the Government of Providence into Queſtion, and by Scepticks and Libertines are reſolv'd into Chance. I humbly conceive therefore that this want of Dramatical Juſtice in the Tragedy of Coriolanus, gave occaſion for a juſt Alteration, and that I was oblig'd to ſacrifice to that Juſtice Aufidius and the Tribunes, as well as Coriolanus.

Thus have we endeavour'd to ſhew, that for want of the Poetical Art, Shakeſpear lay under very great Diſadvantages. At the ſame time we muſt own to his Honour, that he has often perform'd Wonders without it, in ſpight of the Judgment of ſo great a Man as Horace.

Naturâ fieret Laudabile carmen an arte
Quaeſitum eſt; ego nec ſtudium ſine Divite vena?
Nec rude quid profit video Ingenium, alterius ſic
Altera poſcit opem res, & conjurat amicè.

But from this very Judgment of Horace we may juſtly conclude, that Shakeſpear would have wonderfully ſurpaſs'd himſelf, if Art had been join'd to Nature. There never was a greater Genius in the World than Virgil: He was one who ſeems to have been born for this glorious End, that the Roman Muſe might exert in him the utmoſt Force of her [11] Poetry: And his admirable and divine Beauties are manifeſtly owing to the happy Confederacy of Art and Nature. It was Art that contriv'd that incomparable Deſign of the Aeneis, and it was Nature that executed it. Could the greateſt Genius that ever was infus'd into Earthly Mold by Heaven, if it had been unguided and unaſſiſted by Art, have taught him to make that noble and wonderful Uſe of the Pythagorean Tranſmigration, which he makes in the Sixth Book of his Poem? Had Virgil been a circular Poet, and cloſely adher'd to Hiſtory, how could the Romans have been tranſported with that inimitable Epiſode of Dido, which brought a-freſh into their Minds the Carthaginian War, and the dreadful Hannibal? When 'tis evident that that admirable Epiſode is ſo little owing to a faithful obſervance of Hiſtory, and the exact order of Time, that 'tis deriv'd from a very bold but judicious Violation of theſe; it being undeniable that Dido liv'd almoſt 300 Years after Aeneas. Yet is it that charming Epiſode that makes the chief Beauties of a third Part of the Poem. For the Deſtruction of Troy it ſelf which is ſo divinely related, is ſtill more admirable by the Effect it produces, which is the Paſſion of Dido.

I ſhould now proceed to ſhew under what Diſadvantages Shakeſpear lay for want of [12] being converſant with the Ancients. But I have already writ a long Letter, and am deſirous to know how you reliſh what has been already ſaid before I go any farther: For I am unwilling to take more Pains before I am ſure of giving you ſome Pleaſure. I am,

SIR,
Your moſt Humble, Faithful Servant.

LETTER II.
On the Genius and Writings of Shakeſpear.
To Mr. [...]

[13]
SIR,

UPON the Encouragement I have receiv'd from you, I ſhall proceed to ſhew under what Diſadvantages Shakeſpear lay for want of being converſant with the Ancients. But becauſe I have lately been in ſome Converſation, where they would not allow, but that he was acquainted with the Ancients, I ſhall endeavour to make it appear that he was not; and the ſhewing that in the Method in which I pretend to convince the Reader of it, will ſufficiently prove, what Inconveniences he lay under, and what Errors he committed for want of being converſant with them. But here we muſt diſtinguiſh between the ſeveral kinds of Acquaintance: A Man may be ſaid to be acquainted with another who never was but twice in his Company; but that is at the beſt a ſuperficial Acquaintance, from which neither very great Pleaſure nor Profit can be deriv'd. Our buſineſs is here to [14] ſhew, that Shakeſpear had no familiar Acquaintance with the Graecian and Roman Authors. For if he was familiarly converſant with them, how comes it to paſs that he wants Art? Is it that he ſtudied to know them in other things; and neglected that only in them, which chiefly tends to the Advancement of the Art of the Stage? Or is it that he wanted Diſcernment, to ſee the Juſtneſs and the Greatneſs, and the Harmony of their Deſigns, and the Reaſonableneſs of thoſe Rules upon which thoſe Deſigns are founded? Or how come his Succeſſors to have that Diſcernment which he wanted, when they fall ſo much below him in other things? How comes he to have been guilty of the groſſeſt faults in Chronology, and how come we to find out thoſe faults? In his Tragedy of Troylus and Creſſida, he introduces Hector ſpeaking of Ariſtotle, who was born a thouſand Years after the Death of Hector. In the ſame Play mention is made of Milo, which is another very great fault in Chronology. Alexander is mention'd in Coriolanus, tho' that Conqueror of the Orient liv'd above Two hundred Years after him. In this laſt Tragedy he has miſtaken the very Names of his Dramatick Perſons, if we give Credit to Livy. For the Mother of Coriolanus in the Roman Hiſtorian is Vetturia, and the Wife is Volumnia. Whereas in [15] Shakeſpear the Wife is Virgilia, and the Mother Volumnia. And the Volſcian General in Shakeſpear is Tullus Aufidius, and Tullus Attius in Livy. How comes it that he takes Plutarch's Word, who was by Birth a Graecian for the Affairs of Rome, rather than that of the Roman Hiſtorian, if ſo be that he had read the Latter? Or what Reaſon can be given for his not reading him, when he wrote upon a Roman Story, but that in Shakeſpear's Time there was a Tranſlation of Plutarch, and there was none of Livy? If Shakeſpear was familiarly converſant with the Roman Authors, how came he to introduce a Rabble into Coriolanus, in which he offended not only againſt the Dignity of Tragedy, but the Truth of Fact, the Authority of all the Roman Writers, the Cuſtoms of Ancient Rome, and the Majeſty of the Roman People? By introducing a Rabble into Julius Caeſar, he only offended againſt the Dignity of Tragedy. For that part of the People who ran about the Streets upon great Feſtivals, or publick Calamities, or publick Rejoicings, or Revolutions in Government, are certainly the Scum of the Populace. But the Perſons who in the Time of Coriolanus, roſe in Vindication of their juſt Rights, and extorted from the Patricians the Inſtitution of the Tribunes of the People, and the Perſons by whom afterwards Coriolanus was [16] tried, were the whole Body of the Roman People to the Reſerve of the Patricians, which Body included the Roman Knights, and the wealthy ſubſtantial Citizens, who were as different from the Rabble as the Patricians themſelves, as qualify'd as the latter to form a right Judgment of Things, and to contemn the vain Opinions of the Rabble. So at leaſt Horace eſteems them, who very well knew his Countrymen.

Offenduntur enim, quibus eſt equus, aut pater, aut res,
Nec ſiquid fricti ciceris probat aut nucis emptor,
Aequis accipiant animis donantve Corona?

Where we ſee the Knights and the ſubſtantial Citizens, are rank'd in an equal Degree of Capacity with the Roman Senators, and are equally diſtinguiſh'd from the Rabble.

If Shakeſpear was ſo converſant with the Ancients, how comes he to have introduc'd ſome Characters into his Plays, ſo unlike what they are to be found in Hiſtory? In the Character of Menenius in the following Tragedy, he has doubly offended againſt that Hiſtorical Reſemblance. For firſt whereas Menenius was an eloquent Perſon, Shakeſpear has made him a downright Buffoon. And how is it poſſible for any Man to conceive a Ciceronian Jack-pudding? Never was [17] any Buffoon eloquent, or wiſe, or witty, or vertuous. All the good and ill Qualities of a Buffoon are ſumm'd up in one word, and that is a Buffoon. And ſecondly, whereas Shakeſpear has made him a Hater and Contemner, and Vilifyer of the People, we are aſſur'd by the Roman Hiſtorian that Menenius was extremely popular. He was ſo very far from oppoſing the Inſtitution of the Tribunes, as he is repreſented in Shakeſpear, that he was chiefly inſtrumental in it. After the People had deſerted the City, and ſat down upon the ſacred Mountain, he was the chief of the Delegates whom the Senate deputed to them, as being look'd upon to be the Perſon who would be moſt agreable to them. In ſhort this very Menenius both liv'd and dy'd ſo very much their Favourite, that dying poor he had pompous Funerals at the Expence of the Roman People.

Had Shakeſpear read either Saluſt or Cicero, how could he have made ſo very little of the firſt and greateſt of Men, as that Caeſar ſhould be but a Fourth-rate Actor in his own Tragedy? How could it have been that ſeeing Caeſar, we ſhould aſk for Caeſar? That we ſhould aſk, where is his unequall'd Greatneſs of Mind, his unbounded Thirſt of Glory, and that victorious Eloquence, with which he triumph'd over the Souls [18] of both Friends and Enemies, and with which he rivall'd Cicero in Genius as he did Pompey in Power? How fair an Occaſion was there to open the Character of Caeſar in the firſt Scene between Brutus and Caſſius? For when Caſſius tells Brutus that Caeſar was but a Man like them, and had the ſame natural Imperfections which they had, how natural had it been for Brutus to reply, that Caeſar indeed had their Imperfections of Nature, but neither he nor Caſſius had by any means the great Qualities of Caeſar: Neither his Military Vertue nor Science, nor his matchleſs Renown, nor his unparallell'd Victories, his unwearied Bounty to his Friends, nor his Godlike Clemency to his Foes, his Beneficence, his Munificence, his Eaſineſs of Acceſs to the meaneſt Roman, his indefatigable Labours, his incredible Celerity, the Plauſibleneſs if not Juſtneſs of his Ambition, that knowing himſelf to be the greateſt of Men, he only ſought occaſion to make the World confeſs him ſuch. In ſhort, if Brutus, after enumerating all the wonderful Qualities of Caeſar, had reſolv'd in ſpight of them all to ſacrifice him to publick Liberty, how had ſuch a Proceeding heighten'd the Vertue and the Character of Brutus? But then indeed it would have been requiſite that Caeſar upon his appearance ſhould have made [19] all this good. And as we know no Principle of human Action but human Sentiment only, Caeſar who did greater Things, and had greater Deſigns than the reſt of the Romans, ought certainly to have outſhin'd by many Degrees all the other Characters of his Tragedy. Caeſar ought particularly to have juſtified his Actions, and to have heighten'd his Character, by ſhewing that what he had done, he had done by Neceſſity; that the Romans had loſt their Agrarian, loſt their Rotation of Magiſtracy, and that conſequently nothing but an empty Shadow of publick Liberty remain'd. That the Gracchi had made the laſt noble but unſucceſsful Efforts, for the reſtoring the Commonwealth, that they had fail'd for want of arbitrary irreſiſtible Power, the Reſtoration of the Agrarian requiring too vaſt a Retroſpect to be done without it; that the Government, when Caeſar came to publick Affairs, was got into the Hands of a few, and that thoſe few were factious, and were contending among themſelves, and if you will pardon ſo mean an Expreſſion, ſcrambling as it were for Power: That Caeſar was reduc'd to the Neceſſity of ruling or himſelf obeying a Maſter; and that apprehending that another would exerciſe the ſupreme Command, without that Clemency and Moderation which he did, he had rather choſen [20] to rule than to obey. So that Caeſar was faulty not ſo much in ſeizing upon the Sovereignty, which was become in a manner neceſſary, as in not re-eſtabliſhing the Commonwealth, by reſtoring the Agrarian and the Rotation of Magiſtracies, after he had got abſolute and uncontroulable Power. And if Caeſar had ſeiz'd upon the Sovereignty only with a View of re-eſtabliſhing Liberty, he had ſurpaſs'd all Mortals in Godlike Goodneſs as much as he did in the reſt of his aſtoniſhing Qualities. I muſt confeſs, I do not remember that we have any Authority from the Roman Hiſtorians which may induce us to believe, that Caeſar had any ſuch Deſign. Nor if he had had any ſuch View, could he, who was the moſt ſecret, the moſt prudent, and the moſt diſcerning of Men, have diſcover'd it, before his Parthian Expedition was over, for fear of utterly diſobliging his Veterans. And Caeſar believ'd that Expedition neceſſary for the Honour and Intereſt of the State, and for his own Glory.

But of this we may be ſure that two of the moſt diſcerning of all the Romans, and who had the deepeſt Inſight into the Soul of Caeſar, Saluſt and Cicero, were not without Hopes that Caeſar would really re-eſtabliſh Liberty, or elſe they would not have attack'd him upon it; the one in his Oration [21] for Marcus Marcellus, the other in the Second Part of that little Treatiſe De Republicâ ordinandâ, which is addreſs'd to Caeſar. Haec igitur tibi reliqua pars, ſays Cicero, Hic reſtat Actus, in hoc elaborandum eſt, ut Rempublicam conſtituas, eâ (que) tu in primis compoſitâ, ſumma Tranquillitate & otio perfruare. Cicero therefore was not without Hope that Caeſar would re-eſtabliſh the Commonwealth; and any one who attentively peruſes that Oration of Cicero, will find that that Hope was reaſonably grounded, upon his knowledge of the great Qualities of Caeſar, his Clemency, his Beneficence, his admirable Diſcernment; and that avoidleſs Ruine in which the whole Empire would be ſoon involv'd, if Caeſar did not effect this. Saluſt urges it ſtill more home to him and with greater vehemence; he has recourſe to every Motive that may be thought to be powerful over ſo great a Soul. He exhorts him by the Memory of his matchleſs Conqueſts, not to ſuffer the invincible Empire of the Roman People to be devour'd by Time, or to be torn in pieces by Diſcord; one of which would ſoon and infallibly happen, if Liberty was not reſtor'd.

He introduces his Country and his Progenitors urging him in a noble Proſopopeia, by all the mighty Benefits which they had [22] conferr'd upon him, with ſo little Pains of his own, not to deny them that juſt and eaſy Requeſt of the Reſtoration of Liberty. He adjures him by thoſe Furies which will eternally haunt his Soul upon his impious Refuſal: He implores him by the foreſight of thoſe diſmal Calamities, that horrible Slaughter, thoſe endleſs Wars, and that unbounded Devaſtation, which will certainly fall upon Mankind, if the Reſtoration of Liberty is prevented by his Death, or his incurable Sickneſs: And laſtly, he entreats him by his Thirſt of immortal Glory, that Glory in which he now has Rivals, if he has not Equals; but which, if he re-eſtabliſhes Liberty, will be acknowledg'd by conſenting Nations to have neither Equal nor Second.

I am apt to believe that if Shakeſpear had been acquainted with all this, we had had from him quite another Character of Caeſar than that which we now find in him. He might then have given us a Scene ſomething like that which Corneille has ſo happily us'd in his Cinna; ſomething like that which really happen'd between Auguſtus, Mecaenas and Agrippa. He might then have introduc'd Caeſar, conſulting Cicero on the one ſide, and on the other Anthony, whether he ſhould retain that abſolute Sovereignty, which he had acquir'd by his Victory, or [23] whether he ſhould re-eſtabliſh and immortalize Liberty. That would have been a Scene, which might have employ'd the fineſt Art and the utmoſt force of a Writer. That had been a Scene in which all the great Qualities of Caeſar might have been diſplay'd. I will not pretend to determine here how that Scene might have been turn'd, and what I have already ſaid on this Subject, has been ſpoke with the utmoſt Caution and Diffidence. But this I will venture to ſay, that if that Scene had been manag'd ſo, as, by the powerful Motives employ'd in it, to have ſhaken the Soul of Caeſar, and to have left room for the leaſt Hope, for the leaſt Doubt, that Caeſar would have re-eſtabliſh'd Liberty, after his Parthian Expedition; and if this Converſation had been kept ſecret till the Death of Caeſar, and then had been diſcover'd by Anthony, then had Caeſar fall'n, ſo belov'd and lamented by the Roman People, ſo pitied and ſo bewail'd even by the Conſpirators themſelves, as never Man fell. Then there would have been a Cataſtrophe the moſt dreadful and the moſt deplorable that ever was beheld upon the Tragick Stage. Then had we ſeen the nobleſt of the Conſpirators curſing their temerarious Act, and the moſt apprehenſive of them, in dreadful expectation of thoſe horrible Calamities, which fell upon [24] the Romans after the Death of Caeſar. But, Sir, when I write this to you, I write it with the utmoſt Deference to the extraordinary Judgment of that great Man, who ſome Years ago, I hear, alter'd the Julius Caeſar. And I make no doubt but that his fine Diſcernment, and the reſt of his great Qualities have amply ſupply'd the Defects which are found in the Character of Shakeſpear's Caeſar.

I ſhould here anſwer an Argument, by which ſome People pretend to prove, and eſpecially thoſe with whom I lately convers'd, that Shakeſpear was converſant with the Ancients. But beſides that the Poſt is about to be gone, I am heartily tir'd with what I have already writ, and ſo doubtleſs are you; I ſhall therefore defer the reſt to the next opportunity, and remain

Your, &c.

LETTER III.
On the Writings and Genius of Shakeſpear.
To Mr. [...]

[25]
SIR,

I Come now to the main Argument, which ſome People urge to prove that Shakeſpear was converſant with the Ancients. For there is, ſay they, among Shakeſpear's Plays, one call'd The Comedy of Errors, which is undeniably an Imitation of the Menechmi of Plautus. Now Shakeſpear, ſay they, being converſant with Plautus, it undeniably follows that he was acquainted with the Ancients; becauſe no Roman Author could be hard to him who had conquer'd Plautus. To which I anſwer, that the Errors which we have mention'd above are to be accounted for no other way, but by the want of knowing the Ancients, or by downright want of Capacity. But nothing can be more abſurd or more unjuſt than to impute it to want of Capacity. For the very Sentiments of Shakeſpear alone are ſufficient to ſhew, that he had a great Underſtanding: And therefore we muſt account ſome other way [26] for his Imitation of the Menechmi. I remember to have ſeen among the Tranſlations of Ovid's Epiſtles printed by Mr. Tonſon, an Imitation of that from Oenone to Paris, which Mr. Dryden tells us in his Preface to thoſe Epiſtles was imitated by one of the Fair Sex who underſtood no Latin, but that ſhe had done enough to make thoſe bluſh who underſtood it the beſt. There are at this day ſeveral Tranſlators, who as Hudibraſs has it,

Tranſlate from Languages of which
They underſtand no part of Speech.

I will not affirm that of Shakeſpear; I believe he was able to do what Pedants call conſtrue, but that he was able to read Plautus without Pain and Difficulty I can never believe. Now I appeal to you, Sir, what time he had between his Writing and his Acting, to read any thing that could not be read with Eaſe and Pleaſure. We ſee that our Adverſaries themſelves acknowledge, that if Shakeſpear was able to read Plautus with Eaſe, nothing in Latinity could be hard to him. How comes it to paſs then, that he has given us no Proofs of his familiar Acquaintance with the Ancients, but this Imitation of the Menechmi, and a Verſion of two Epiſtles of Ovid? How comes [27] it that he had never read Horace of a ſuperiour Merit to either, and particularly his Epiſtle to the Piſo's, which ſo much concern'd his Art? Or if he had read that Epiſtle, how comes it that in his Troylus and Creſſida [we muſt obſerve by the way, that when Shakeſpear wrote that Play, Ben Johnſon had not as yet tranſlated that Epiſtle] he runs counter to the Inſtructions which Horace has given for the forming the Character of Achilles?

Scriptor: Honoratum ſi forte reponis Achillem,
Impiger, Iracundus, Inexorablis, Acer,
Jura neget ſibi nata.

Where is the Impiger, the Iracundus, or the Acer, in the Character of Shakeſpear's Achilles? Who is nothing but a drolling, lazy, conceited, overlooking Coxcomb; ſo far from being the honour'd Achilles, the Epithet that Homer, and Horace after him give him, that he is deſervedly the Scorn and the Jeſt of the reſt of the Characters, even to that Buffoon Therſites.

Tho' Shakeſpear ſucceeded very well in Comedy, yet his principal Talent and his chief Delight was Tragedy. If then Shakeſpear was qualify'd to read Plautus with Eaſe, he could read with a great deal more Eaſe the Tranſlations of Sophocles and Euripides. [28] And tho' by theſe Tranſlations he would not have been able to have ſeen the charming colouring of thoſe great Maſters, yet would he have ſeen all the Harmony and the Beauty of their great and their juſt Deſigns. He would have ſeen enough to have ſtirr'd up a noble Emulation in ſo exalted a Soul as his. How comes it then that we hear nothing from him, of the Oedipus, the Electra, the Antigone of Sophocles, of the Iphigenia's, the Oreſtes, the Medea, the Hecuba of Euripides? How comes it that we ſee nothing in the Conduct of his Pieces, that ſhews us that he had the leaſt Acquaintance with any of theſe great Maſter-pieces? Did Shakeſpear appear to be ſo nearly touch'd with the Affliction of Hecuba for the Death of Priam, which was but daub'd and bungled by one of his Countrymen, that he could not forbear introducing it as it were by Violence into his own Hamlet, and would he make no Imitation, no Commendation, not the leaſt mention of the unparallell'd and inimitable Grief of the Hecuba of Euripides? How comes it, that we find no Imitation of any ancient Play in this but the Menechmi of Plautus? How came he to chuſe a Comick preferably to the Tragick Poets? Or how comes he to chuſe Plautus preferably to Terence, who is ſo much more juſt, more graceful, more [29] regular, and more natural? Or how comes he to chuſe the Menechmi of Plautus, which is by no means his Maſter-piece before all his other Comedies? I vehemently ſuſpect that this Imitation of the Menechmi, was either from a printed Tranſlation of that Comedy which is loſt, or ſome Verſion in Manuſcript brought him by a Friend, or ſent him perhaps by a Stranger, or from the original Play it ſelf recommended to him, and read to him by ſome learned Friend. In ſhort, I had rather account for this, by what is not abſurd than by what is, or by a leſs Abſurdity than by a greater. For nothing can be more wrong than to conclude from this that Shakeſpear was converſant with the Ancients; which contradicts the Teſtimony of his Contemporary, and his familiar Acquaintance Ben Johnſon, and of his Succeſſor Milton;

Lo Shakeſpear, Fancy's ſweeteſt Child,
Warbles his native Wood-notes wild.

And of Mr. Dryden after them both; and which deſtroys the moſt glorious Part of Shakeſpear's Merit immediately. For how can he be eſteem'd equal by Nature, or ſuperior to the Ancients, when he falls ſo far ſhort of them in Art, tho' he had the Advantage of knowing all that they did before [30] him? Nay it debaſes him below thoſe of common Capacity, by reaſon of the Errors which we mention'd above. Therefore he who allows that Shakeſpear had Learning and a familiar Acquaintance with the Ancients, ought to be look'd upon as a Detractor from his extraordinary Merit, and from the Glory of Great Britain. For whether is it more honourable for this Iſland to have produc'd a Man, who without having any Acquaintance with the Ancients, or any but a ſlender and a ſuperficial one, appears to be their Equal or their Superior by the Force of Genius and Nature, or to have bred one who knowing the Ancients, falls infinitely ſhort of them in Art, and conſequently in Nature it ſelf? Great Britain has but little Reaſon to boaſt of its Natives Education, ſince the ſame that they had here, they might have had in another place. But it may juſtly claim a very great ſhare in their Nature and Genius; ſince theſe depend in a great meaſure on the Climate; and therefore Horace in the Inſtruction which he gives for the forming the Characters, adviſes the noble Romans for whoſe Inſtruction he chiefly writes to conſider whether the Dramatick Perſon whom they introduce is

[31]Colchus an Aſſyrius, Thebis nutritus an Argis.

Thus, Sir, I have endeavour'd to ſhew under what great Diſadvantages Shakeſpear lay, for want of the Poetical Art, and for want of being converſant with the Ancients.

But beſides this, he lay under other very great Inconveniencies. For he was neither Maſter of Time enough to conſider, correct, and poliſh what he wrote, to alter it, to add to it, and to retrench from it, nor had he Friends to conſult upon whoſe Capacity and Integrity he could depend. And tho' a Perſon of very good Judgment, may ſucceed very well without conſulting his Friends, if he takes time enough to correct what he writes; yet even the greateſt Man that Nature and Art can conſpire to accompliſh, can never attain to Perfection, without either employing a great deal of time, or taking the Advice of judicious Friends. Nay, 'tis the Opinion of Horace, that he ought to do both.

Siquid tamen olim
Scripſeris, in Metii deſcendat Judicis aures,
Et Patris, & noſtras; nonum (que) prematur in Annum.

Now we know very well that Shakeſpear was an Actor, at a Time, when there were [32] ſeven or eight Companies of Players in the Town together, who each of them did their utmoſt Endeavours to get the Audiences from the reſt, and conſequently that our Author was perpetually call'd upon, by thoſe who had the Direction and Management of the Company to which he belong'd, for new Pieces which might be able to ſupport them, and give them ſome Advantage over the reſt. And 'tis eaſy to judge what time he was Maſter of, between his laborious Employment of Acting, and his continual Hurry of Writing. As for Friends, they whom in all likelihood Shakeſpear conſulted moſt, were two or three of his Fellow-Actors, becauſe they had the Care of publiſhing his Works committed to them. Now they, as we are told by Ben Johnſon in his Diſcoveries were extremely pleas'd with their Friend for ſcarce ever making a Blot; and were very angry with Ben, for ſaying he wiſh'd that he had made a thouſand. The Misfortune of it is, that Horace was perfectly of Ben's mind.

—Vos O,
Pompilius ſanguis, carmen reprehendite, quod non
Multa dies, & multa litura coercuit, at (que)
Praeſectum decies non caſtigavit ad unguem.

And ſo was my Lord Roſcommon.

[33]
Poets loſe half the Praiſe they ſhould have got,
Could it be known what they diſcreetly blot.

Theſe Friends then of Shakeſpear were not qualify'd to adviſe him. As for Ben Johnſon, beſides that Shakeſpear began to know him late, and that Ben was not the moſt communicative Perſon in the World of the Secrets of his Art; he ſeems to me to have had no right Notion of Tragedy. Nay, ſo far from it, that he who was indeed a very great Man, and who has writ Comedies, by which he has born away the Prize of Comedy both from Ancients and Moderns, and been an Honour to Great Britain; and who has done this without any Rules to guide him, except what his own incomparable Talent dictated to him; This extraordinary Man has err'd ſo groſsly in Tragedy, of which there were not only ſtated Rules, but Rules which he himſelf had often read, and had even tranſlated, that he has choſen two Subjects, which according to thoſe very Rules, were utterly incapable of exciting either Compaſſion or Terror for the principal Characters, which yet are the chief Paſſions that a Tragick Poet ought to endeavour to excite. So that Shakeſpear having neither had Time to correct, nor [34] Friends to conſult, muſt neceſſarily have frequently left ſuch faults in his Writings, for the Correction of which either a great deal of Time or a judicious and a well natur'd Friend is indiſpenſably neceſſary.

Vir bonus & prudens verſus reprehendet inertes,
Culpabit duros, incomptis allinet Atrum
Tranſverſo calamo ſignum, ambitioſa recidet
Ornamenta, parum claris lucem dare coget,
Arguet ambigue dictum, metanda notabit.

There is more than one Example of every kind of theſe Faults in the Tragedies of Shakeſpear, and even in the Coriolanus. There are Lines that are utterly void of that celeſtial Fire, of which Shakeſpear is ſometimes Maſter in ſo great a Degree. And conſequently there are Lines that are ſtiff and forc'd, and harſh and unmuſical, tho' Shakeſpear had naturally an admirable Ear for the Numbers. But no Man ever was very muſical who did not write with Fire, and no Man can always write with Fire, unleſs he is ſo far Maſter of his Time, as to expect thoſe Hours when his Spirits are warm and volatile. Shakeſpear muſt therefore ſometimes have Lines which are neither ſtrong nor graceful? For who [35] ever had Force or Grace that had not Spirit? There are in his Coriolanus among a great many natural and admirable Beauties, three or four of thoſe Ornaments which Horace would term ambitious; and which we in Engliſh are apt to call Fuſtian or Bombaſt. There are Lines in ſome Places which are very obſcure, and whole Scenes which ought to be alter'd.

I have, Sir, employ'd ſome Time and Pains, and that little Judgment which I have acquir'd in theſe Matters by a long and a faithful reading both of Ancients and Moderns, in adding, retrenching and altering ſeveral Things in the Coriolanus of Shakeſpear, but with what Succeſs I muſt leave to be determin'd by you. I know very well that you will be ſurpriz'd to find, that after all that I have ſaid in the former part of this Letter, againſt Shakeſpear's introducing the Rabble into Coriolanus, I have not only retain'd in the ſecond Act of the following Tragedy the Rabble which is in the Original, but deviated more from the Roman Cuſtoms than Shakeſpear had done before me. I deſire you to look upon it as a voluntary Fault and a Treſpaſs againſt Conviction: 'Tis one of thoſe Things which are ad Populum Phalerae, and by no means inſerted to pleaſe ſuch Men as you.

[36] Thus, Sir, have I laid before you a ſhort but impartial Account of the Beauties and Defects of Shakeſpear, with an Intention to make theſe Letters publick if they are approv'd by you; to teach ſome People to diſtinguiſh between his Beauties and his Defects, that while they imitate the one, they may with Caution avoid the other [there being nothing of more dangerous Contagion to Writers, and eſpecially to young ones than the Faults of great Maſters] and while with Milton they applaud the great Qualities which Shakeſpear had by Nature, they may follow his wiſe Example, and form themſelves as he aſſures us, that he himſelf did, upon the Rules and Writings of the Ancients.

Sir, if ſo candid and able a Judge as yourſelf ſhall happen to approve of this Eſſay in the main, and to excuſe and correct my Errors, that Indulgence and that Correction will not only encourage me to make theſe Letters publick, but will enable me to bear the Reproach of thoſe, who would fix a Brand, even upon the juſteſt Criticiſm, as the Effect of Envy and ill Nature; as if there could poſſibly be any ill Nature in the doing Juſtice, or in the endeavouring to advance a very noble and a very uſeful Art, and conſequently to prove beneficent to Mankind. As for thoſe who may accuſe [37] me of the want of a due Veneration for the Merit of an Author of ſo eſtabliſh'd a Reputation as Shakeſpear, I ſhall beg leave to tell them, that they chuſe the wrongeſt time that they could poſſibly take for ſuch an Accuſation as that. For I appeal to you, Sir, who ſhews moſt Veneration for the Memory of Shakeſpear, he who loves and admires his Charms and makes of them one of his chief Delights, who ſees him and reads him over and over and ſtill remains unſatiated, and who mentions his Faults for no other Reaſon but to make his Excellency the more conſpicuous, or he who pretending to be his blind Admirer, ſhews in Effect the utmoſt Contempt for him, preferring empty effeminate Sound to his ſolid Beauties and manly Graces, and deſerting him every Night for an execrable Italian Ballad, ſo vile that a Boy who ſhould write ſuch lamentable Dogrel, would be turn'd out of Weſtminſter-School for a deſperate Blockhead, too ſtupid to be corrected and amended by the harſheſt Diſcipline of the Place. I am,

SIR,
Yours, &c

To the SPECTATOR upon his Paper on the 16th of April.

[38]

YOU know, Mr. Spectator, that Eſquire Bickerſtaff attack'd the Sharpers with Succeſs; but Shadwell is of Opinion that your Bully with his Box and his falſe Dice is an honeſter Fellow than the Rhetorical Author, who makes uſe of his Tropes and Figures which are his High and his Lowrunners, to cheat us at once of our Money and of our Intellectuals.

I would not have you think, Mr. Spectator, that this Reflection is directed to you: 'Tis only intended againſt one or two of your Correſpondents, and particularly the Inns-ofCourt-man, who, as you told us in your Second Paper ſupplies you with moſt of your Criticiſm: who ſeems to me ſo little to underſtand the Province that he has undertaken, that you would do well to adviſe him to do by you as he has done by his Father, and make a Bargain in the groſs with ſome honeſt Fellow to anſwer all your Occaſions. Which wholeſome Advice if he proves too obſtinate or too proud to take; I am confident [39] at leaſt that he is too gallant a Perſon to take it ill if once a Week or once a Fortnight I ſhould ſhew ſo much Preſumption as to cauſe a Writ of Error to be iſſued out to reverſe his Temple-Judgment.

I cannot wonder that Criticiſm ſhould degenerate ſo vilely at a time when Poetry and Acting are ſunk ſo low. For as Hobbes has obſerv'd, that as often as Reaſon is againſt a Man, a Man will be againſt Reaſon; ſo as often as the Rules are againſt an Author, an Author will be againſt the Rules. Men firſt write fooliſh ridiculous Tragedies, which ſhock all the Rules of Reaſon and Philoſophy, and then they make fooliſh extravagant Rules to fit thoſe fooliſh Plays. 'Tis impoſſible that your Gentleman of the Inns-ofCourt could have ſent you ſo much wrong Senſe as there is in your Paper of the 16th, if he had not formerly writ an abſurd Tragedy. There are as many Bulls and Blunders, and Contradictions in it almoſt as there are Lines, and all deliver'd with that inſolent and that bluſt'ring Air, which uſually attends upon Error, and Deluſion, while Truth, like the Deity that inſpires it, comes calmly and without noiſe.

To ſet a few of his Errors in their proper Light, he tells us in the beginning of that Paper, That the Engliſh Writers of [40] Tragedy are poſſeſs'd with a Notion, that when they repreſent a vertuous or innocent Perſon in Diſtreſs, they ought not to leave him 'till they have deliver'd him out of his Trouble, and made him triumph over his Enemies.

But, Mr. Spectator, is this peculiar to the Engliſh Writers of Tragedy? Have not the French Writers of Tragedy the ſame Notion? Does not Racine tell us, in the Preface to his Iphigenia,that it would have been horrible to have defil'd the Stage with the Murther of a Princeſs ſo virtuous and ſo lovely as was Iphigenia.

But your Correſpondent goes on, This Error, ſays he, with an inſolent and dogmatick Air, they have been led into by a ridiculous Doctrine in modern Criticiſm, that they are oblig'd to an equal Diſtribution of Rewards and Puniſhments, and an impartial Execution of poetical Juſtice.

But who were the firſt who eſtabliſh'd this Rule he is not able to tell. I take it for granted, that a Man who is ingenuous enough to own his Ignorance, is willing to be inſtructed. Let me tell him then, that the firſt who eſtabliſh'd this ridiculous Doctrine of modern Criticiſm, was a certain modern Critick, who liv'd above two thouſand Years ago; and who tells us expreſly in the thirteenth Chapter of his critical Spectator, which Pedants call his Poetick, [41] That ſince a Tragedy, to have all the Beauty of which it is capable, ought to be Implex and not Simple, (by the way, Mr. Spectator, you muſt bear with this critical Cant, as we do with your Speculations and Lucubrations) and ought to move Compaſſion and Terror, for we have already ſhewn that the exciting theſe Paſſions is the proper Effect of a tragical Imitation, it follows neceſſarily, that we muſt not chooſe a very good Man, to plunge him from a proſperous Condition into Adverſity, for inſtead of moving Compaſſion and Terrour, that on the contrary would create Horrour, and be deteſted by all the World.

And does not the ſame deluded Philoſopher tell us in the very ſame Chapter, that the Fable to which he gives the ſecond Preference, is that which has a double Conſtitution, and which ends by a double Cataſtrophe; a Cataſtrophe favourable to the Good, and fatal to the Wicked. Is not here, Mr. Spectator, a very formal Recommendation of the impartial and exact Execution of poetical Juſtice? Thus Ariſtotle was the firſt who eſtabliſh'd this ridiculous Doctrine of modern Criticiſm, but Mr. Rymer was the firſt who introduc'd it into our native Language; who notwithſtanding the Rage of all the Poetaſters of the Times, whom he has exaſperated by opening the Eyes of the Blind that they [42] may ſee their Errors, will always paſs with impartial Poſterity for a moſt learned, a moſt judicious, and a moſt uſeful Critick. Now is not your Correſpondent a profound and a learned Perſon? and ought he not to own himſelf oblig'd to me for this notable piece of Erudition?

But he goes on in his dictatorian way, This Rule, ſays he, whoever eſtabliſh'd it, has, I am ſure, no Foundation in Nature, in Reaſon, and in the Practice of the Ancients. But what will this dogmatick Perſon ſay now, when we ſhew him that this contemptible Doctrine of poetical Juſtice is not only founded in Reaſon and Nature, but is it ſelf the Foundation of all the Rules, and ev'n of Tragedy itſelf? For what Tragedy can there be without a Fable? or what Fable without a Moral? or what Moral without poetical Juſtice? What Moral, where the Good and the Bad are confounded by Deſtiny, and periſh alike promiſcuouſly. Thus we ſee this Doctrine of poetical Juſtice is more founded in Reaſon and Nature than all the reſt of the poetical Rules together. For what can be more natural, and more highly reaſonable, than to employ that Rule in Tragedy, without which that Poem cannot exiſt? Well! but the Practice of the Ancients is againſt this poetical Juſtice! What always, Mr. Spectator! [43] will your Correſpondent have the Aſſurance to affirm that? No, but ſometimes: Why then ſometimes the Ancients offended againſt Reaſon and Nature. And who ever believ'd that the Ancients were without Fault, or brought Tragedy to its Perfection. But I ſhall take another Opportunity to ſhew that the Practice of the Ancients, in all their Maſter-pieces, is exactly according to this fundamental Rule. I have not time to do that in this ſhort Letter, becauſe that would neceſſarily oblige me to ſhew that poetical Juſtice is of a much larger Extent than this profound Critick imagines; but yet I ſhall give the diſcerning Reader a hint of it in that which follows.

Poetical Juſtice, ſays your Correſpondent, has no Foundation in Nature and Reaſon, becauſe we find that good and evil happen alike to all Men on this ſide the Grave. In anſwer to which he muſt give me leave to tell him, that this is not only a very falſe but a very dangerous Aſſertion; that we neither know what Men really are, nor what they really ſuffer.

'Tis not always that we know Men's Crimes, but how ſeldom do we know their Paſſions, and eſpecially their darling Paſſions? And as Paſſion is the Occaſion of infinitely more Diſorder in the World than Malice, [for where one Man falls a Sacrifice to inveterate Malice [44] a thouſand become Victims to Revenge and Ambition; and whereas Malice has ſomething that ſhocks human Nature, Paſſion is pleaſingly catching and contagious.] Can any thing be more juſt, than that that Providence which governs the World ſhould puniſh Men for indulging their Paſſions, as much as for obeying the Dictates of their moſt envenom'd Hatred and Malice?

Thus you ſee, for ought we know, Good and Evil does not happen alike to all Men on this ſide the Grave. Becauſe 'tis for the moſt part, by their Paſſions, that Men offend; and 'tis by their Paſſions, for the moſt part, that they are puniſh'd. But this is certain, that the more Virtue a Man has the more he commands his Paſſions; but the Virtuous alone command them. The Wicked take the utmoſt Care to diſſemble and conceal them; for which reaſon we neither know what our Neighbours are, nor what they really ſuffer. Man is too finite, too ſhallow, and too empty a Creature to know another Man throughly, to know the Creature of an infinite Creator; but dramatical Perſons are Creatures of which a Poet is himſelf the Creator. And tho' a Mortal is not able to know the Almighty's Creatures, he may be allow'd to know his own; to know the utmoſt Extent of their Guilt, and what they ought to ſuffer; [45] nay, he muſt be allow'd not only to know this himſelf, but to make it manifeſt and unqueſtionable to all his Readers and Hearers. The Creatures of a poetical Creator have no Diſſimulation and no Reſerve. We ſee their Paſſions in all their height, and in all their Deformity; and when they are unfortunate, we are never to ſeek for the Cauſe.

But ſuppoſe I ſhould grant that there is not always an equal Diſtribution of Affliction and Happineſs here below. Man is a Creature who was created immortal, and a Creature conſequently that will find a Compenſation in Futurity for any ſeeming Inequality in his Dealing here. But the Creatures of a poetical Creator are imaginary and tranſitory; they have no longer Duration than the Repreſentation of their reſpective Fables; and conſequently, if they offend, they muſt be puniſh'd during that Repreſentation. And therefore we are very far from pretending that poetical Juſtice is an equal Repreſentation of the Juſtice of the Almighty.

We freely confeſs that 'tis but a very narrow and a very imperfect Type of it; ſo very narrow, and ſo very imperfect, that 'tis forc'd by temporal to repreſent eternal Puniſhments; and therefore when we ſhew a Man unfortunate in Tragedy, for [46] not reſtraining his Paſſions, we mean that every one will for ſuch Neglect, unleſs he timely repents, be infallibly puniſh'd by infinite Juſtice either here or hereafter.

If upon this foot we examine the Tragedies of Sophocles and Euripides, we ſhall find that in their moſt beautiful Pieces, they are impartial Executors of Poetick Juſtice. And 'tis upon this foot that Ariſtotle requires that we ſhould examine them. Your Correſpondent I muſt confeſs is in the right when he ſays that that Philoſopher declares for Tragedies, whoſe Cataſtrophes are unhappy with relation to the principal Characters. But then what Inſtructions does he give us for the forming thoſe principal Characters? We are neither to make them very vertuous Perſons on the one ſide, that is Perſons who abſolutely command their Paſſions, nor on the other ſide Villains who are actuated by inveterate Malice, but ſomething between theſe two, that is to ſay Perſons who neglecting their Paſſions ſuffer them to grow outrageous, and to hurry them to Actions which they would otherwiſe abhor. And that Philoſopher expreſsly declares as we have ſhewn above, that to make a vertuous Man unhappy, that is a Man who abſolutely commands his Paſſions, would create Horror inſtead of Compaſſion, and would be deteſted by all [47] the World. And thus we have ſhewn that Ariſtotle is for Poetical Juſtice, notwithſtanding that he is for unhappy Cataſtrophes: And ſo one would think was your Correſpondent. For when he enumerates and commends ſome Engliſh Tragedies, which have unfortunate Cataſtrophes; there are not two of thoſe which he commends, whoſe principal Characters can be ſaid to be innocent, and conſequently there are not two of them where there is not a due Obſervance of poetical Juſtice.

Thus, Mr. Spectator, I have diſcuſſed the Buſineſs of poetical Juſtice, and ſhewn it to be the Foundation of all Tragedy; and therefore whatever Perſons, whether ancient or modern, have writ Dialogues which they call Tragedies, where this Juſtice is not obſerv'd, thoſe Perſons have entertain'd and amus'd the World with romantick lamentable Tales, inſtead of juſt Tragedies, and of lawful Fables.

'Tis not my Buſineſs at preſent to take any farther notice of the Errors of your Correſpondent; perhaps I no more approve of Tragi-Comedies, or Tragedies with double Plots, than he does; but I hope he will not take it ill if I put him in mind that ſeveral of the Plays which he recommended before are Tragi-Comedies, and that moſt of them [48] have double Plots. But he is vilely miſtaken if he thinks that Tragi-Comedy is of the Growth of our Engliſh Theatres.

I ſhall take another Opportunity to ſhew him that he is as much miſtaken in what he has ſaid of Humours, as in what he dictates concerning poetical Juſtice.

I am Your very humble

LETTER to the SPECTATOR upon his Paper on the 24th of April.

[49]
SIR,

I Have read over your Paper of the 24th with a great deal of Satisfaction, and here return you my Acknowledgments for the Honour you have done me in quoting two of my Verſes with Applauſe. I think my ſelf oblig'd in Gratitude, my worthy Friend, to do as much Honour to your Judgment as you have done to my Imagination; and as you have the Goodneſs to allow me to be an humorous Poet, I am bound in Juſtice to celebrate you for a wonderful Critick; and to make it appear that contrary to the Obſervation of the Author of a late Rhapſody, one who has ſhewn himſelf no great Poet may be a prodigious Judge. Indeed the Obſervation of that Author is ſo far from being true, that moſt of the Criticks Ancient and Modern have been no Poets, and moſt of the Poets Ancient and Modern have been no Criticks. I cannot find out that any but Homer, and Virgil, and Horace, and Sophocles, and Euripides among the Ancients were [50] great Criticks. For who can believe that has read them, that Apollonius Rhodius, Nonnus, Lucan, Statius, and Silius Italicus ever ſo much as heard that Nature, and the Philoſophers her Interpreters and Commentators had laid down Rules for an Epick Poem? And who that has read the Moderns could imagine, that moſt of their Dramatick Poets, had ever ſo much as heard that there were ſuch things as the Rules. As Boileau has obſerv'd of the French, that ſome Perſons among them had diſtinguiſh'd themſelves by their Rhimes, who never knew how to diſtinguiſh Lucan from Virgil; ſo ſome among our own Rhimers have been renown'd for verſifying, who never ſo much as knew that Horace and Milton were good Poets. And I can on the other ſide name ſeveral who never diſtinguiſhed themſelves by Poetry, who yet have oblig'd the World with Criticiſms which have been Non-pareillo's, and the very Top-Critick of all thoſe Criticks is my worthy Friend the Spectator.

Tho' who the Devil could have ever expected to have found my worthy Friend a Critick, after he had treated Criticks with ſo much Contempt in two or three of his Immortal Tatlers, and particularly in the 29th and the 246th, where they are pronounc'd to be the ſillieſt of Mortals, [51] Creatures, forſooth, who profeſs Judgment; tho' by the way, Mr Spectator, he who profeſſes or practiſes Poetry, and does not profeſs Judgment in it, profeſſes himſelf an Aſs. It was from thoſe Tatlers and one or two more, Mr. Spectator, that I gueſs'd that you had a mortal Averſion to Criticiſm; but now I find plainly that they were none of your own, but were ſent you by two or three damn'd Poets, who are a ſort of Offenders that have not half the Charity which other Malefactors are wont to ſhew, but bear eternal Malice to their Executioners.

Thus the Invectives againſt Criticks and Criticiſm were other Peoples; you were too wiſe to write any ſuch thing, as knowing that Taſt which declines ſo faſt is only to be reſtor'd and maintain'd by Criticiſm. And therefore inſtead of writing Invectives againſt it, you have oblig'd the World with the thing it ſelf, with Criticiſm upon Criticiſm, and ſuch Criticiſm.—As thoſe Tatlers were the Off-ſpring of ſome certain Poets, which is manifeſt by their inſipid Satyr, like the faint Eagerneſs of Vinegar decay'd: nothing is more clear than that the Criticiſms could be none but yours. For as you may diſcover ex ungue Leonem, & ex pede Hercules, ſo in this Caſe the prodigious Offſpring ſpeaks and confeſſes the Gigantick Father.

[52] In your very Folio of the 24th of April, how have you ſhewn the Fineſs of your Diſcernment, and the Profundity of your Penetration, by your Encomium of two Verſes of my Tranſlation of the Fourth Satyr of Boileau? Tis now thirty Years ſince I tranſlated that Satyr, and conſequently was a very Boy at the Time of that Tranſlation; yet from that Time to this the ſtupid Age has been ignorant of the Beauty of that Couplet. How very flegmatick a Wretch have I been, and how illegitimate an Offſpring of Mr. Bays, not to know any thing of my own Excellence till I heard of it from you?

How little did I imagine when I tranſlated that Couplet, that the great Critick was then in Embrio who thirty Years afterwards ſhould declare it to be a charming Couplet, by giving it a place in his never dying Speculations.

I am perfectly convinc'd, my moſt worthy and moſt ingenious Friend, that we Authors are as blind and as partial Judges of our own Works, as we are unrighteous ones of other Peoples. I was apt to imagine, before I ſubmitted my own Opinion to the deciſive Authority of your Judgment; that you would have done more for the Credit of my Genius and of your own Diſcernment, [53] by commending the following Verſes of the Fourth Book of the Poem upon the Battel of Ramelies, when you had ſo fair an occaſion of taking notice of them, as you had at the writing the 56th Tatler. If I begin the Verſes a little higher than the couching of the Cataracts which is the Subject of the 56th Tatler, I am confident you will have the Goodneſs to pardon me, and the rather becauſe you diſcover'd more than a common Satisfaction when you were preſent with your Friend Mr. A. at the reading thoſe Verſes in Manuſcript. A celeſtial Spirit viſits the Duke of Marlborough in a Viſion the Night before the Battel of Ramelies, and after he has ſaid ſeveral other things to him goes on thus.

A wondrous Victory attends thy Arms,
Great in it ſelf, and in its ſequel vaſt;
Whoſe ecchoing Sound thro' all the Weſt ſhall run
Tranſporting the glad Nations all around,
Who oft ſhall doubt, and oft ſuſpend their Joy,
And oft imagine all an empty Dream;
The Conqueror himſelf ſhall cry amaz'd,
'Tis not our Work, alas we did it not,
The Hand of God, the Hand of God is here,
For thee, ſo great ſhall be thy high Renown
That Fame ſhall think no Muſick like thy Name;
Around the circling Globe it ſhall be ſpread,
[54] And to the World's laſt Ages ſhall endure;
And the moſt lofty, moſt aſpiring Man,
Shall want th' Aſſurance in his ſecret Pray'rs
To aſk ſuch high Felicity and Fame,
As Heav'n has freely granted thee; yet this
That ſeems ſo great, ſo glorious to thee now,
Would look how low, how vile to thy great Mind,
If I could ſet before thy aſtoniſh'd Eyes,
Th' Exceſs of Glory, and th' Exceſs of Bliſs,
That is prepar'd for thy expiring Soul
When thou arriv'ſt at everlaſting Day.
O could embodied Mind but comprehend
The Glories of the Intellectual World,
Or I the bliſsful Secret were allow'd,
But Fate forbids, to Mortals to reveal:
O I could lay a Scene before thy Eyes
Which would diſtract thee with tranſporting Joy,
Fire the rich Blood in thy illuſtrious Veins,
Make ev'ry Nerve with fierce Convulſions ſtart,
Blaſt all thy Spirits and thy Life deſtroy;
Thou could'ſt not taſte th' Extatick Bliſs and live.
As one who has liv'd thirty tedious Years,
And ever ſince his wretched Birth been dark;
His viſual Orbs with cloudy Films o'ercaſt,
And in the Dungeon of the Body dwelt
In utter Ignoranceof Nature's Works
[55] And Wonders of this vaſt material World,
And has no Notion e'er conceiv'd of Light
Or Colours, or the verdant flowry Earth,
Or the ſtupendous Proſpect of the Sky;
If then he finds ſome Artiſt whoſe nice Hand
Couches the Cataracts and clears his Eyes,
And all at once a Flood of glorious Light,
And this bright Temple of the Univerſe,
The cryſtal Firmament, the blazing Sun,
All the amazing Glories of the Heav'ns,
All the Great Maker's high Magnificence
Come ruſhing thro' his Eyes upon his Soul;
He cannot bear th'aſtoniſhing Delight,
But ſtarts, exclaims, and ſtamps and raves, and dies:
So the vaſt Glories of the upper World
If they were ſet before embodied Mind
Would oppreſs Nature and extinguiſh Life.

Theſe are the Verſes, my moſt diſcerning Friend, that I thought might have been preferr'd to the foremention'd Couplet, eſpecially ſince they would as it were have introduced themſelves, whereas the Couplet is dragg'd in by extreme Violence. But I ſubmit to your infallible Judgment, not in the leaſt ſuſpecting that my worthy Friend can have any Malice in this Affair, and inſert that Couplet in his immortal Speculations only on purpoſe to expoſe me; no, far be it [56] from me to entertain any ſuch Jealouſy of my deareſt Friend, who is ſo good, ſo kind, ſo beneficent, and who has ſo often given himſelf the glorious Title of the Lover and Benefactor of Mankind. Who could imagine that one who hath given himſelf that glorious Appellation, could e'er be prompted by Malice or Paſſion, or Intereſt thus ſlily and hypocritically to abuſe one whom he had call'd his Friend?

I have been apt to believe likewiſe, my worthy Friend, that you would have been kinder to your ſelf and to me, if inſtead of commending the foremention'd Couplet you had taken ſome notice of the following Verſes which are in my Paraphraſe upon the Te Deum; eſpecially when you had ſo fair an occaſion to mention them as you had at the writing the 119th Tatler. The Couplet of the tranſlated Satyr was introduced by Violence. But how very naturally would the following Verſes of the Paraphraſe, have been mention'd either before or after the laſt Paragraph of the foremention'd Paper, where a Spirit is introduc'd, who after he has ſpoke of that part of the Creation which is too little for human Sight, comes afterwards to ſpeak of the immenſe Objects of Nature after this manner.

[57]
Tat. 119.
I muſt acknowledge for my own part, that altho' it is with much Delight that I ſee the Traces of Providence in theſe Inſtances, I ſtill ſee greater pleaſure in conſidering the Works of the Creation in their Immenſity, than in their Minuteneſs. For this Reaſon, I rejoice when I ſtrengthen my ſight ſo as to make it pierce into the moſt remote Spaces, and take a view of thoſe Heavenly Bodies, which lie out of the reach of Human Eyes tho' aſſiſted by Teleſcopes; what you look upon as one confus'd White in the milky way, appears to me a long Tract of Heav'ns, diſtinguiſh'd by Stars, that are ranged in proper Figures and Conſtellations: while you are admiring the Sky in a ſtarry Night, I am entertain'd with a variety of Worlds and Suns plac'd one above another, and riſing up to ſuch an immenſe Diſtance that no created Eye can ſee an end of them.

Upon the writing this Paragraph, how could you avoid the making mention of Verſes which had the very ſame Ideas, and Verſes which you had formerly mention'd with Applauſe in private Converſation? I know you will anſwer that you had entirely forgot them, and therefore I take the liberty here to refreſh your Memory. The Angels are introduc'd in that Paraphraſe ſpeaking to [58] God, and ſaying after other things that which follows.

Where-e'er at utmoſt ſtretch we caſt our Eyes,
Thro' the vaſt frightful Spaces of the Skies;
Ev'n there we find thy Glory, there we gaze
On thy bright Majeſty's unbounded Blaze;
Ten thouſand Suns, prodigious Globes of Light
At once in broad Dimenſions ſtrike our ſight;
Millions behind in the remoter Skies,
Appear but Spangles to our wearied Eyes;
And when our wearied Eyes want farther ſtrength
To pierce the Void's immeaſurable Length,
Our vigorous tow'ring Thoughts ſtill farther fly,
And ſtill remoter flaming Worlds deſcry;
But ev'n an Angels comprehenſive Thought
Cannot extend ſo far as thou haſt wrought,
Our vaſt Conceptions are by ſwelling brought,
Swallow'd and loſt in Infinite to nought.

How glad am I that the foremention'd Verſes were writ before the above-nam'd Tatlers? Otherwiſe I ſhould have been thought to have borrow'd from my worthy Friend, without making any manner of acknowledgment, only adding or endeavouring to add to what I borrow'd a little of that Spirit, and Elevation and Magnificence of Expreſſion which the Greatneſs of the Hints requir'd.

[59] 'Tis for this Reaſon that I am glad the Verſes were printed ſome Years before the Proſe. For you know, my dear Friend, that a Plagiary in general is but a ſcandalous Creature, a ſort of a ſpiritual Outlaw, and ought to be treated as ſuch by all the Members of the Commonwealth of Learning. But a Plagiary from living Authors is moſt profligately impudent, and in ſo ſlow and ſplenatick a Nation as ours moſt unjuſt and barbarous. For among us any thing that is admirably good is twenty or thirty Years before it comes to be underſtood. And how infinitely baſe is it in the mean while to deprive an Author of any thing that is valuable in him, and to intercept his coming Praiſe. As Laws are made for the Security of Property, what pity 'tis that there are not ſome enacted for the Security of a Man's Thoughts and Inventions, which alone are properly his. For Land is alienable and Treaſure is tranſitory, and both muſt at one time or other paſs, either by his own voluntary Act, or by the Violence and Injuſtice of others, or at leaſt by Fate. And therefore nothing is truly and really a Man's own.

—Puncto quod mobilis Horae
Nunc prece, nunc precio, nunc vi, nunc ſorte ſupremâ
Permutet Dominos, & cedat in altera Jura.

[60] 'Tis only a Man's Thoughts and Inventions that are properly his: being alone Things that can never be alienated from him, neither by Force nor Perſuaſion, nor by Fate it ſelf; and tho' another may baſely uſurp the Honour of them, yet they muſt for ever rightfully belong to their firſt Inventor. Thus even the richeſt and the happieſt of Men have nothing that is truly and really their own but their Thoughts and Inventions. But Authors for the moſt part, and eſpecially Poets have nothing that can ſo much as be call'd their own but their Thoughts. 'Tis for thoſe alone, and the Glory which they expect from thoſe that they entirely quit their Pretenſions to Riches, and renounce the Pomps and Vanities of this wicked World; and therefore to endeavour to deprive them of thoſe is exceedingly inhuman. What a Joy 'tis to think that the Precedence of Times ſets me free from the Imputation of this Injuſtice? Had I been capable of doing this, and doing it to my worthy Friend, of wronging my deareſt Friend in this manner, who knows how far that Barbarity might have extended it ſelf; I might have proceeded to have upbraided him with ſome weak place in his never-dying Folio's; and having forcibly depriv'd him of his Silver and his Gold, have pelted him with his Braſs and his Copper out of counterfeit [61] Anger or pretended Scorn, becauſe they were of no richer Metal.

But the Caſe of my dear Friend is vaſtly different. You have that Reputation, and the World has that Opinion of your Merit, that they will be ſo far from believing that you have Obligations to a living Author which you have not, that tho' you had really made thus bold with me, it would have been impoſſible to have convinc'd above forty or fifty People of it. And here, my dear Friend, at the ſame time that I acknowledge your uncommon Merit, I cannot but congratulate your incomparable Felicity, It being plain that you have got more Reputation in three Years time than Milton has done in fifty Years, or than Shakeſpear has in an hundred. I ſhall therefore judiciouſly conclude with the generality of your Readers, that you have a Merit paramount to that of all Britiſh Authors both living and dead, and that you have not only more Merit than any one Moraliſt either Ancient or Modern, but that if you continue your Paper Three Years longer, you will have as much Merit as they have all together. I am,

My dear Friend,
With great Reſpect and Fidelity, Your, &c
[62]
Mr. Spectator,

YOU tell us in your Fourth Paper, that you know Peoples Thoughts by their Eyes. How apt we are all to imagine fine Things of our ſelves! eſpecially we Authors, Mr. Spectator. There was a certain Friend of mine, a Squire lately defunct, who made the very ſame boaſt that you do; and yet he recommended a Pettifogger to me for an honeſt Fellow, who diving into my Secrets, betray'd me to thoſe very People with whom he pretended to ſerve me; a Pettifogger thro' whoſe Eyes, even I and ſeveral others who pretend to none of my Friend the Squire's Profundity, can diſcern the working of his miſchievous Thoughts, as plainly as I can ſee the Operations of Bees thro' a Cryſtal Hive.

As ſoon, Mr. Spectator, as I found my ſelf betray'd, I began to enquire into this Fellow's Character, tho' if you were to look between his two Eyes, you wou'd ſwear there was no occaſion for it. For, Mr. Spectator, he tells you what he is, when he only looks on you; and uniting in his pettifogging Perſon both your noble Attributes, is at one [63] and the ſame time Tatler and Spectator. In ſhort, tho' he is an errant Traytor in his Heart, his Face is a plain Dealer, and lets you immediately without Ceremony and without Reſerve into the inmoſt Secrets of his Soul.

Upon Enquiry I found his Character to be as extraordinary as his Perſon. He is by Politicks a Jacobite, by Moral Principle a Setter and a Betrayer, by Religion a Quaker, an utter Foe to all Civil and Religious Ceremony, unleſs it be drinking the Pretender's Health on his Knees, to whom alone of the Race of Men he has been true and faithful: By this one may gueſs that his Education has been very extraordinary. I find upon the moſt curious Enquiry that I have been able to make, that the only Schools that ever he has been at have been ſpunging Houſes and County-Gaols; and that his two Univerſities have been the Fleet and the Queen's-Bench.

I hope, Mr. Spectator, that this Letter may afford you a Hint, for a Lucubration, or a Speculation, or whatever other learned Term you may be pleas'd to give it; which by diſcovering to your Readers the Error and the Frailty of the Squire lately defunct, may convince them how little we know even thoſe with whom we daily converſe. Alas our Judgments of one another are empty [64] and ſuperficial, and either built upon vain Appearances, or the Reports of thoſe, who neither truly know us, nor ſpeak what they really think of us, but often traduce us, and miſrepreſent us, in order to comfort or vindicate, or to ſupport themſelves.

But of all Mankind there are none who know the reſt of Men ſo little as the generality of your Authors; for this Pettifogger was ſo fooliſh a Rogue, that any one might ſee thro' him at firſt ſight. And yet my Friend the Squire was ſtark blind to him: By the way, you may know that my Friend the Squire was an Author, as celebrated an Author as you are, Mr. Spectator, a Penny-Folio Author. He got ſome Reputation by his Lucubrations; but had the Fault of moſt Authors who have more Imagination than Judgment, he could not leave off when he was well; not conſidering, Mr. Spectator, that had honeſt Sir Martin left off in time, his Miſtreſs had never made the Diſcovery that Warner play'd and ſung for him. I am

Your, &c.

To the SPECTATOR.

[65]
Mr. Spectator,

I Have a ſhort Caſe of Conſcience to put to you; to You who have eſtabliſh'd your ſelf in the Office of Ductor Dubitantium general. About January laſt I happen'd to have an Obligation to a certain Author, an Obligation that repoſed a Truſt in me which I have ſince diſcharg'd. Being pleas'd with the Frankneſs of this Author's doing this, I reſolv'd upon reading his celebrated PennyFolio's, I mean upon reading them in order. For till then, I had read but here and there one, and none at all of the firſt two Months. The firſt thing that I obſerv'd in them was, that I was endeavour'd to be expos'd and calumniated clandeſtinely and perfidiouſly by one who at the ſame time careſs'd me wheree'er he ſaw me, and call'd himſelf my Friend, and all this only to ſerve a poor pitiful Turn, which was to eſtabliſh the Opera at the Expence of Dramatick Poetry; I ſay of Dramatick Poetry, Mr. Spectator, if it had not been for which, that Author had long ſince been in the Duſt. The Quere is, whether the foreſaid Obligation ought to debar me of the Right of vindicating the Truth and my ſelf. It was not long after this, Mr. Spectator, that [66] the aboveſaid Author repented him ſo far of the Obligation he had laid on me, that he inſulted and affronted me ſeveral times moſt barbarouſly by a Wretch ſo deſpicable and ſo impotent, that it would have been Cowardice to have beat him; a Wretch whoſe Character will come enclos'd to you in the ſame Cover with this; and not content with that, endeavour'd once more to expoſe me in his Quotidian Folio's. The ſecond Quere is, Mr. Spectator, whether I am not free, now I am got quit of the Obligation which was laid upon me, tho' it had been far greater than it was, to ſhew my juſt Reſentment, which I am about to do by publiſhing three or four modeſt Letters which I have pick'd and cull'd from the numerous company of thoſe which are more bitter, and which I reſolve to ſuppreſs in order to ſhew that I have a Soul that is capable of remembring Obligations, as well as of revenging Injuries I impatiently expect your Deciſion in this matter! in the mean time it ſeems to me that common Senſe obliges me to believe, that no Man can have an Obligation ſtrong enough laid on him to make him paſs by a Box on the Ear, or the being expos'd in Print, without returning each of th' Affronts in kind. I am

Your, &c.
FINIS.

Appendix A Books Printed for BERNARD LINTOTT.

[]

PRaelectiones Poeticae in Schola naturalis Philoſophiae Oxon. habitae. Authore Joſepho Trapp. A. M. Price 2. s. 6 d.

An Hiſtorical Account of the Heathen Gods and Hero's, neceſſary for the underſtanding of the ancient Poets. Being an Improvement of whatever has been hitherto written by the Greek, Latin, French, and Engliſh Authors upon that Subject. By Dr. King, for the Uſe of Weſtminſter and all other Schools. Price 2 s.

Decerpta ex Ovidii Faſtis. Per Thomam Johnſon Uſui Scholae Brentfordienſis & quarumvis aliarum. Price 1 s.

The Iliads of Homer, made Engliſh from the French Verſion of Madam Dacier. Reviſed and compared with the Greek, by Mr. Johnſon late of Eaton, and Fellow of King's-College, Cambridge, now Maſter of the Grammar-School at Brentford. By whom will be made ſome Additional Remarks. Illuſtrated with 26 Copper Plates copy'd from thoſe printed at Paris.

Advice to young Gentlemen concerning the Conduct of Life neceſſary to atrain the greateſt Honours, To which is added ſome Advice of Sergeant Winnington to his Sons relating to Matrimony. Price 1 s. 6 d.

The Art of Love in imitation of Ovid de Arte Amandi. By Dr. King. Price 3 s. 6 d.

Rapin of Gardens, a Latin Poem, in Four Books; of Flowers, Trees, Waters, and Orchards, Engliſhed by Mr. Gardiner. Illuſtrated with Copper Plates. Price 3 s. 6 d.

The Works of Virgil, tranſlated into Engliſh by the Right Honourable the Earl of Lauderdale. Price 5 s.

The Grounds of Criticiſm in Poetry, contain'd in ſome few Diſcoveries never made before, requiſite for the writing and judging of Poems ſurely. By Mr. Dennis. Price 1 s. 6 d.

An Eſſay on Publick Spirit: Being a Satyr in Proſe upon the Manners and Luxury of the Times, the chief Source of our preſent Diviſions. By Mr. Dennis. Price 6 d.

Reflections Critical and Satyrical, upon a late Rhapſody call'd an Eſſay upon Criticiſm. By Mr. Dennis. Price 6 d.

The Second Edition of the Works of Mr. George Farquhar: Containing all his Letters, Poems, Eſſays, and Comedies publiſh'd [] by himſelf, (viz.) Love and a Bottle; The Conſtane Couple, or a Trip to the Jubilee; Sir Harry Wildair; The Inconſtant, or the way to win him; The Twin Rivals; Recruiting Officer, and Beaux Stratagem. Price 6 s. 6 d. Any of theſe Plays may be had ſeparately.

All the Comedies of Mr. Steel, Author of the Tatlers and Chriſtian Hero, viz, The Lying Lovers, or The Lady's Friendſhip; The Funeral, or Grief Alamode; and The Tender Huſband, or The Accompliſh'd Fools. Printed in a neat PocketVolume, upon an Elziver Letter. Price 2 s. 6 d.

A Collection of Poems in two Volumes: Being all the Miſcellanies of Mr. William Shakeſpear, which were publiſh'd by himſelf in the Year 1609. And now correctly printed from thoſe Editions. Price 3 s.

The Lady Chudley's Poems on ſeveral Occaſions. The Second Edition. Price 3 s.

The Miſcellaneous Works of the Right Honourable the late Earls of Rocheſter and Roſcommon: With ſome Memoirs of the late Earl of Rocheſter, in a Letter to the Dutcheſs of Mazarine. By Monſieur St. Evremont. To which is added a Collection of ſeveral other Poems. The Second Edition. Price 5 s.

Familiar Letters written by the late Mrs. Philips, to the late Sir Charles Cotterell, under the borrow'd Names of Orinda to Polyarchus. Printed from Originals. Price 3 s.

Oxford and Cambridge Miſcellany Poems, chiefly written by Mr. Fenton, Mr. [...], Mr. Charles Hopkins, Mr. Philips, Mr. Gardiner, Sir John Denham, Lord Hallifax, Dr. Sprat now Biſhop of Rocheſter, Dr. [...]en, Dr. Waldern of All Souls Mr. Biſhop, Mr. Jackſon, Dr. Chetwood, Mr. Boyle, Col. Henningham, Mr. Otway, Jo. Haynes, Mr. Milton, Mr. Trapp, Mr. D [...]e, Mr. Bate, Mr. H [...]ll, Mr. Burnaby, and Mr. Warm [...]ey, &c. Price 5 s.

Seneca's Morals by way of Abſtract. To which is added, A Diſcourſe under the Title of an After-thought. By Sir Roger L'Eſtrange. The 10th Edition. Price 5 s.

M [...]cipul [...] ſive Cambro-m [...]-machia, proving from learned Antiquity, the Welſh to be the firſt Inventors of Mouſe-traps. A Latin Poem. Price 6 d.

Callipaedia, A Poem in four Books. Written originally in Latin, and tr [...]lated into Engliſh by ſeveral Hands. Illuſtrated with Cuts. Price 1 s. 6 d.

Where may be had moſt of the Comedies and Tragedies Printed theſe ſeven Years.

Distributed by the University of Oxford under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License