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many of empty noise and ridiculous turbulence. The rants of Maximin have been always the sport of criticifm; and were at length, if his own confefsion may be trusted, the fhame of the writer.

Of this play he takes care to let the reader know, that it was contrived and written in feven weeks. Want of time was often his excufe, or perhaps fhortness of time was his private boaft in the form of an apology.

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It was written before the Conquest of Granada, but published after it. The design is to recommend piety. "I confidered that pleasure was not the only end of poefy, "and that even the instructions of morality were not fo wholly the business of a poet, as that precepts and examples of piety were to be omitted; for to leave that employment altogether to the clergy, were "to forget that religion was first taught in "verfe, which the laziness or dulnefs of fucceeding priesthood turned afterwards "into profe." Thus foolishly could Dryden write, rather than not fhew his malice to the parfons.

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The two parts of the Conquest of Granada are written with a feeming determination to glut the public with dramatick wonders; to exhibit in its highest elevation a theatrical meteor of incredible, love and impoffible valour, and to leave no room for a wilder flight to the extravagance of pofterity. All the rays of romantick heat, whether amorous or warlike, glow in Almanzor by a kind of concentration. He is above all laws; he is exempt from all reftraints; he ranges the world at will, and wherever he appears. He fights without enquiring the caufe, and loves in fpite of the obligations of justice, of rejection by his mistress, and of prohibition from the dead. Yet the fcenes are, for the moft part, delightful; they exhibit a kind of illuftrious depravity, and majestick madness: fuch as, if it is sometimes defpifed, is often reverenced, and in which the ridiculous is mingled with the aftonishing.

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In the Epilogue to the fecond part of the Conqueft of Granada, Dryden indulges his favourite pleasure of difcrediting his predeceffors; and this Epilogue he has defended by a long postscript. He had promised a fecond dialogue, in which he should more

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fully treat of the virtues and faults of the English poets, who have written in the dramatick, epick, or lyrick way. This promife was never formally performed; but, with refpect to the dramatick writers, he has given us in his prefaces, and in this poftfcript, fomething equivalent; but his purpose being to exalt himself by the comparison, he fhews faults diftinctly, and only praises excellence in general terms.

A play thus written, in profeffed defiance of probability, naturally drew down upon itfelf the vultures of the theatre. One of the criticks that attacked it was Martin Clifford, to whom Sprat addreffed the Life of Cowley, with such veneration of his critical powers as might naturally excite great expectations of inftruction from his remarks. let honest credulity beware of receiving characters from contemporary writers. Clifford's remarks, by the favour of Dr. Percy, were at laft obtained; and, that no man may ever want them more, I will extract enough to fatisfy all reasonable desire.

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In the firft Letter his obfervation is only general : "You do live," fays he, " in as "much ignorance and darkness as you did

"in the womb: your writings are like a Jack-of-all trades shop; they have a va"riety, but nothing of value; and if thou

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art not the dulleft plant-animal that "ever the earth produced, all that I have "converfed with are ftrangely mistaken in thee,"

In the fecond, he tells him that Almanzor is not more copied from Achilles than from Ancient Piftol. "But I am,'

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fays he, ftrangely mistaken if I have not "feen this very Almanzor of yours in fome

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difguife about this town, and paffing un"der another name. Pr'ythee tell me true, was not this Huffcap once the Indian Emperor, and at another time did he not call himfelf Maximin? Was not Lyndaraxa once called Almeira? I mean under "Montezuma the Indian Emperor. I pro"teft and vow they are either the fame, or "fo alike that I cannot, for my heart, diftinguish one from the other. You are "therefore a strange unconscionable thief; "thou art not content to steal from others, but doft rob thy poor wretched felf too.

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Now was Settle's time to take his revenge. He wrote a vindication of his own lines;

and,

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and, if he is forced to yield any thing, makes reprifals upon his enemy. To fay that his anfwer is equal to the cenfure, is no high commendation. To expofe Dryden's method of analysing his expreffions, he tries the fame experiment upon the defcription of the ships in the Indian Emperor, of which however he does not deny the excellence; but intends to shew, that by studied mifconftruction every thing may be equally reprefented as ridiculous. After fo much of Dryden's elegant animadverfions, justice requires that fomething of Settle's should be exhibited. The following obfervations are therefore extracted from a quarto pamphlet of ninety-five pages:

"Fate after him below with pain did move, "And victory could fcarce keep pace above.

"These two lines, if he can fhew me any "fense or thought in, or any thing but "bombaft and noise, he shall make me be"lieve every word in his obfervations on "Morocco fenfe.

"In the Empress of Morocco were thefe

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