Lives Of The Poets, Vol. 1 (fiscle part-III) - Samuel Johnson (classic books to read txt) 📗
- Author: Samuel Johnson
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His Bounties, Or Awed by His Splendour; And, Being able To Take A More
Steady View, Discovers Him To Be A Writer That Sometimes Glimmers, But
Rarely Shines; Feebly Laborious, And, At Best, But Pretty. His Songs Are
Upon Common Topicks; He Hopes, And Grieves, And Repents, And Despairs,
And Rejoices, Like Any Other Maker Of Little Stanzas: To Be Great, He
Hardly Tries; To Be Gay, Is Hardly In his Power[209].
In The Essay On Satire He Was Always Supposed to Have Had The Help Of
Dryden. His Essay On Poetry Is The Great Work For Which He Was Praised by
Roscommon, Dryden, And Pope; And, Doubtless, By Many More, Whose Eulogies
Have Perished.
Upon This Piece He Appears To Have Set A High Value; For He Was All His
Life Improving it By Successive Revisals, So That There Is Scarcely Any
Poem To Be Found Of Which The Last Edition Differs More From The First.
Amongst Other Changes, Mention Is Made Of Some Compositions Of Dryden,
Which Were Written After The First Appearance Of The Essay.
At The Time When This Work First Appeared, Milton'S Fame Was Not Yet
Fully Established, And, Therefore, Tasso And Spenser Were Set Before Him.
The Two Last Lines Were These. The Epick Poet, Says He,
Must Above Milton'S Lofty Flights Prevail,
Succeed where Great Torquato, And Where Greater Spenser, Fail.
The Last Line In succeeding editions Was Shortened, And The Order Of
Names Continued; But Now Milton Is At Last Advanced to The Highest Place,
And The Passage Thus Adjusted:
Must Above Tasso'S Lofty Flights Prevail,
Succeed where Spenser, And Ev'N Milton, Fail.
Amendments Are Seldom Made Without Some Token Of A Rent: _Lofty_ Does Not
Suit Tasso So Well As Milton.
One Celebrated line Seems To Be Borrowed. The Essay Calls A Perfect
Character,
A Faultless Monster Which The World Ne'Er Saw.
Scaliger, In his Poems, Terms Virgil "Sine Labe Monstrum." Sheffield Can
Scarcely Be Supposed to Have Read Scaliger'S Poetry; Perhaps He Found The
Words In a Quotation.
Of This Essay, Which Dryden Has Exalted so Highly, It May Be Justly
Said, That The Precepts Are Judicious, Sometimes New, And Often Happily
Expressed; But There Are, After All The Emendations, Many Weak Lines, And
Some Strange Appearances Of Negligence; As, When He Gives The Laws Of
Elegy, He Insists Upon Connexion And Coherence; Without Which, Says He,
'Tis Epigram, 'Tis Point, 'Tis What You Will;
But Not An Elegy, Nor Writ With Skill,
No Panegyrick, Nor A Cooper'S Hill.
Who Would Not Suppose That Waller'S Panegyrick And Denham'S Cooper'S Hill
Were Elegies?
His Verses Are Often Insipid; But His Memoirs Are Lively And Agreeable;
He Had The Perspicuity And Elegance Of An Historian, But Not The Fire And
Fancy Of A Poet.
[Footnote 207: His Mother Was Elizabeth, One Of The Daughters Of Lionel
Cranfield, Earl Of Middlesex. M.]
[Footnote 208: In the Earliest Editions Of The Duke'S Works He Is Styled
Duke Of Buckingham; And Walpole, In his Catalogue Of Noble Authors,
Mentions A Wish, Cherished by Sheffield, To Be Confounded with His
Predecessor In the Title; "But He Would More Easily," Remarks Walpole,
Sarcastically, "Have Been Mistaken With The Other Buckingham, If He Had
Not Written At All." Burnet Also, And Other Authorities, Speak Of Him
Under The Title Of Duke Of Buckingham. His Epitaph, Being in latin, Will
Not Settle The Point. It Is To Be Regretted, Therefore, That Johnson
Adduced no Better Evidence For His Doubt Than His Own Unsupported
Assertion. Ed.]
[Footnote 209: "The Life Of This Peer Takes Up Fourteen Pages And A Half
In Folio, In the General Dictionary, Where It Has Little Pretensions To
Occupy A Couple: But His Pious Relict Was Always Purchasing places For
Him, Herself, And Their Son, In every Suburb Of The Temple Of Fame; A
Tenure, Against Which, Of All Others, Quo-Warrantos Are Sure To Take
Place. The Author Of The Article In the Dictionary Calls The Duke One Of
The Most Beautiful Prose Writers, And Greatest Poets, Of His Age: Which
Is Also, He Says, Proved by The Finest Writers, His Contemporaries;
Certificates That Have Little Weight, Where The Merit Is Not Proved by
The Author'S Own Works. It Is Certain, That His Grace'S Compositions In
Prose Have Nothing extraordinary In them; His Poetry Is Most Indifferent,
And The Greatest Part Of Both Is Already Fallen Into Total Neglect."
Walpole'S Noble Authors, Vol. I. P. 436 Of His Works.]
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