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CRITICAL DISSERTATIONS.

I. ON THE IDEA OF UNIVERSAL POETRY.

II. ON THE PROVINCES OF DRAMATIC POETRY. III. ON POETICAL IMITATION.

IV. ON THE MARKS OF IMITATION.

VATIBVS ADDERE CALCAR,

VT STVDIO MAIORE PETANT HELICONA VIRENTEM.

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HOR.

DISSERTATION I

ON

THE IDEA OF UNIVERSAL POETRY.

W

HEN we speak of poetry, as an art, we mean fuch a way or me

is found most

thod of treating a fubject, as pleafing and delightful to us. In all other kinds of literary compofition, pleasure is fubordinate to USE: in poetry only, PLEASURE is the end, to which use itself (however it be, for certain reafons, always pretended) muft fubmit.

This idea of the end of poetry is no novel one, but indeed the very fame which our great philofopher entertained of it; who gives it as the effential note of this part of learning—THAT IT SUBMits the

SHEWS OF THINGS TO THE DESIRES OF THE MIND: WHEREAS REASON • DOTH BUCKLE AND BOW THE MIND UNTO THE NATURE

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NATURE OF THINGS. For to gratify the defires of the mind, is to PLEASE: Pleasure then, in the idea of Lord Bacon, is the ultimate and appropriate end of poetry; for the fake of which it accommodates itself to the defires of the mind, and doth not (as other kinds of writing, which are under the controul of reafon) buckle and bow the mind to the nature of things.

But they, who like a principle the better for feeing it in Greek, may take it in the words of an old philofopher, ERATOSTHENES, who affirmed - ποιητὴν πάλα ςοχάζεσθαι ψυχαγωγίας, ὦ διδασκαλίας - οι which words, the definition given above, is the tranflation.

of

This notion of the end of poetry, if kept fteadily in view, will unfold to us all the myfteries of the poetic art, There needs but to evolve the philofopher's idea, and to apply it, as occafion ferves. The art of poetry will be, univerfally, THE ART OF PLEASING; and all its rules, but fo many MEANS, which experience finds most conducive to that end;

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