High on Parnaffus' top her fons fhe show'd, Li And pointed out thofe arduous paths they trod; 95 * Juft precepts thus from great examples giv❜n, She drew from them what they deriv'd from Heav'n." 1. The gen'rous Critic fann'd the Poet's fire, COMMENTARY. J new rules may be difcovered from thefe new works, in the fame manner as the old Critics difcovered theirs, from the writings of their contemporary Poets: But these men wanting art and ability to discover thefe new rules, were content to receive and file up for ufe, the old ones of NOTES. 98. Just precepts] Nec enim artibus editis factum eft ut argumenta invenire mus, fed dicta funt omnia 100 antequam præciperentur · 3 mox ea fcriptores obfervata & collecta ediderunt. Quintil, So modern Pothecaries, taught the art The gen'rous Critic fann'd the Poet's fire, COMMENTARY. วจ ( Ariftotle, Quintilian, Longinus, Horace, &c. with the fame vanity and infolence that Apothecaries practise with their Doctors Bills: And thus boldly applying them to new Originals (cafes which they did not hit) it was no more in their power than their will to imitate the practice of the Ancients, when For, as Ignorance when joined with Humility produces a blind admiration, on which account it is fo commonly obferved to be the mother of Devotion; fo when joined with Pride (as it always is in bad Critics) it gives birth to every iniquity of abuse and flander. You then whofe judgment the right courfe would steer, Know well each ANCIENT's proper character;' 19mit : COMMENTÀRY...T VER 118. You then whofe Judgment, ] He comes next to the Ancient Poets, thofe other and more intimate 'commentators of Nature. And fhews [from 117 to 141. that the study of thefe must indifpenfably follow. that of the ancient Critics, as they furnish us with what is not to be fupplied by any Critics, who can only give general directions, infufficient alone to conduct us fafelythro' any confiderable works: But the study of a great original Poet, in His fable, fubject, fcope in ev'ry page, } will help us to thofe particular rules, of fo much fervice to us in their application to whatever work we undertake to examine and without which, as the poet truly obferves, we may cavil indeed, but can never criticife. We might as well think that Vitruvius alone would make a perfect Judge of Architecture, without the knowledge of fome great mafterpiece of fcience, fuch as the Rotonda at Rome, or the Temple of Minerva at Athens; as that Ariflotle fhould make a perfect Judge of wit without the tudy of Homer and Virgil. These therefore he principally recommends to perfect the Critic in his Art. But Without all these at once before your eyes, COMMENTARY. as " as this latter Poet by fome fuperficial writers has been than an original himself, our Author obviates that common error, a fhews it to have arisen (as often error does) from a truth, viz. that Homer and Nature were the fame; and there*fore the ambitious young Poet, tho' he fcorn'd to stoop at any thing fhort of Nature, yet when he understood this great truth, he had the prudence to contemplate her in the place where fhe was feen to most advantage, collected in all her charms in the clear mirror of Homer. Hence it would follow that tho' Virgil studied Nature, the vulgar reader would judge him a copier of Homer; and tho he copied Homer, the judicious would fee him to be an imitator of Nature: The finest praise which any Y one who came after Homer could receive. Zoilus, had thefe been known, without a name Be Homer's works your study, and delight, bring, And trace the Mufes upward to their fpring. NOTES. 130. When first young Maro, &c.]Virgil, Eclog. 6. Cum canerem reges & præha, Cynthius aurem Vellit It is a tradition preferved by Servius, that Virgil began with writing a poem of 140 : the Alban and Roman affairs; which he found above his years, and defcended first to imitate Theocritus on rural fubjects, and afterwards to copy Homer in Heroic poetry. |