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The whimp'ring girl, and hoarser-screaming boy,
Join to the yelping treble, fhrilling cries;

The fcolding quean to louder notes doth rise,
And her full pipes thofe fhrilling cries confound i
To her full pipes the grunting hog replies;
The grunting hogs alarm the neighbours round,
And curs, girls, boys, in the deep base are drown'd.

The very turn of thefe numbers, bears the closest resemblance with the following, which are of themselves a complete concert of the most delicious mufic.

The joyous birds shrouded in chearful shade,
Their notes unto the voice attempred sweet;
Th' angelical, foft trembling voices made
To th' inftruments divine refpondence meet;
The filver-founding inftruments did meet
With the base murmure of the water's fall
The water's fall with difference discreet,
Now foft, now loud unto the wind did call ;
The gentle warbling wind low answered to all *.

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These images, one would have thought, were peculiarly calculated to have struck the fancy of our young imitator with fo much admiration, as not to have fuffered him to make a kind of travesty of them.

Book II. Canto 12. Stanza 71.

The

THE next stanza of POPE represents fome allegorical figures, of which his original was fo fond.

Hard by a fty, beneath a roof of thatch
Dwelt OBLOQUY, who in her early days,
Baskets of fish at Billinfgate did watch,

Cod, whiting, oyster, mackarel, sprat or plaice:
There learn'd she speech from tongues that never cease.
SLANDER beside her, like a magpie chatters,
With ENVY (Spitting cat) dread foe to peace;
Like a curs'd cur, MALICE before her clatters,
And vexing every wight, tears cloaths and all to

tatters.

But these personages of Obloquy, Slander, Envy and Malice, are not marked with any distinct attributes, they are not thofe living figures*, whofe attitudes and behaviour

* Mr. Hume is of opinion, that the perufal of Spenfer becomes tedious to almoft all his readers. “ This effect, fays he, [Hiftory of England, pag. 738.] of which every one is conscious, is ufually afcribed to the change of manners; but manners have more changed fince Homer's age, and yet that poet remains still the favourite of every reader of taste and judgment. Homer copied true natural manners, which, however rough and uncultivated, will always form an agreeable and pleasing picture; but the pencil of the English poet was employed in drawing the affectations, and conceits, and fopperies of chivalry, which appear ridiculous as foon as they lofe the recommendation of the mode." But they had not ceafed to be the mode in Spenfer's time.

VOL. II.

Spenfer

Spenfer has minutely drawn with fo much clearness and truth, that we behold them with our eyes, as plainly as we do on the cieling of the banquetting-house. For in truth the pencil of Spenfer is as powerful as that of Rubens, his brother allegorift; which two artists resembled each other in many respects, but Spenfer had more grace, and was as warm a colourift. Among a multitude of objects delineated with the utmost force *, which we might select

on

* Whence it came to pass that Spenser did not give his poem the due fimplicity, coherence and unity of a legiti mate Epopea, the reader may find in Mr. Hurd's entertaining letter to Mr. Mafon, on the Marks of imitation, pag. 19, and in Obfervations on the Faery Queen, pag. 2, 3, 4. "How happened it, fays Mr. Hurd, that Sir Philip Sydney in his Arcadia, and afterwards Spenser in his Faery Queen, obferved fo unnatural a conduct in those works; in which the ftory proceeds as it were by fnatches, and with continual interruptions? How was the good fenfe of those writers, fo converfant befides in the best models of antiquity, feduced into this prepofterous method? The answer, no doubt is, that they were copying the design, or disorder rather of Ariosto, the favourite poet of that time." We must not try the charming fallies of Ariosto by the rigid rules of Ariftotle.

There is a remarkable letter of Bernardo Taffo, the father of Torquato, in which is this paffage. "Ne fò io s'Ariftotele nafceffe a quefta età, et vedeffe il vaghiffimo

poeia

on this occafion, let us stop a moment and take one attentive look at the allegorical figures that rife to our view in the following lines;

By that way's fide there fe infernal Pain,
And faft befide him fat tumultuous Strife;
The one, in hand an iron whip did strain,
The other brandifhed a bloody knife,

And both did guash their teeth, and both did threater. life*.

22.

But gnawing Jealoufic, out of their fight
Sitting alone his bitter lips did bite;

And trembling Feare ftill to and fro did flie,
And found no place where safe he shroud him might.
Lamenting Sorrow did in darknesse lie,

And Shame his ugly face did hide from living eye.

To fhew the richness of his fancy, he has given us another picture of Jealousy, con

poema dell' Ariofto, conofcendo la forza de l' ufo, et vedendo che tanto diletta, come l'esperienza ci dimonftra, mutaffe opinione, et confentiffe che fi poteffe far poema heroico di piu attione: Con la fua mirabil dottrina, et giudicio, dandogli nova norma, et prefcrivuendogli novi leggi."

Lettere di XIII. Huomini Illuftri da Tomaso Po:cacchi,
In Venetia, 1584. Libro XVII. pag. 422.

* Book II. c. 7. 21.

D 2

ceived

ceived with equal ftrength in a fucceeding

book *.

Into that cave he creepes, and thenceforth there
Refolv'd to build his baleful manfion

In dreary darkness, and continual feare
Of that rock's fall; which ever and anon
Threats with huge ruin him to fall upon,
That he dare never fleep, but that one eye
Still ope he keeps for that occafion ·

Ne ever refts he in tranquillity,

The roaring billows beat his bowre so boisterously †.

Here all is in life and motion; here we behold the true Poet or MAKER; this is creation; it is here, "might we cry out to Spenfer," it is here that you difplay to us, that you make us feel the fure effects of genuine poetry, όταν α λεγης, ὑπ ενθεσιασμε και παθες βλεπειν δοκης, και ὑπ' όψιν τιθης This axes. Longinus .

τοις ακ88σιν.

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* Lord Somers was paffionately fond of the Fairy Queen; it was his favourite work; in the last picture which he fate for to Sir Godfrey Kneller, he defired to be painted with a Spenfer in his hand.

+ Book iii. c. 11.

‡ Пeр ut. Sect. 15.

IT

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