In the jected to the gross ordeal of the senses. subsequent stanzas, we however find the traces of some of Milton's boldest imagery, though its effect is injured by the incongruous mixture above stated. "Struck with these great concurrences of things*, He shook himself, and spread his spacious wings, While thus heav'n's highest counsels, by the low Ran trembling through the hollow vaults of night." The poet adds "The while his twisted tail he knaw'd for spite." There is no keeping in this. This action of meanness and mere vulgar spite, common to the most contemptible creatures, takes away from * Alluding to the fulfilment of the prophecies and the birth of the Messiah. +"He spreads his sail-broad vans."-Par. Lost, b. ii. 1.927. the terror and power just ascribed to the prince of Hell, and implied in the nature of the consequences attributed to his every movement of mind or body. Satan's soliloquy to himself is more beautiful and more in character at the same time. "Art thou not Lucifer? he to whom the droves Of stars that gild the morn in charge were given? Ah! wretch! what boots it to cast back thine eyes This is true beauty and true sublimity it is also true pathos and morality: for it interests the mind, and affects it powerfully with the idea of glory tarnished, and happiness forfeited with the loss of virtue: but from the horns and tail of the brute-demon, imagination cannot reascend to the Son of the morning, nor be dejected by the transition from weal to woe, which it cannot, without a violent effort, picture to itself. In our author's account of Cruelty, the chief minister of Satan, there is also a considerable approach to Milton's description of Death and Sin, the portress of hell-gates. "Thrice howl'd the caves of night, and thrice the sound, 'Mongst all the palaces in hell's command, On the whole, this poem, though Milton has undoubtedly availed himself of many ideas and passages in it, raises instead of lowering our conception of him, by shewing how much more he added to it than he has taken from it. Crashaw's translation of Strada's description of the Contention between a nightingale and a musician, is elaborate and spirited, but not equal to Ford's version of the same story in his Lover's Melancholy. One line may serve as a specimen of delicate quaintness, and of Crashaw's style in general. "And with a quavering coyness tastes the strings." * See Satan's reception on his return to Pandemonium, in book x. of Paradise Lost. Sir Philip Sidney is a writer for whom I cannot acquire a taste. As Mr. Burke said, "he could not love the French Republic"-so I may say, that I cannot love the Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia, with all my good-will to it. It will not do for me, however, to imitate the summary petulance of the epigrammatist. "The reason why I cannot tell, But I don't like you, Dr. Fell." I must give my reasons, "on compulsion," for not speaking well of a person like Sir Philip Sidney "The soldier's, scholar's, courtier's eye, tongue, sword, The glass of fashion, and the mould of form;" the splendour of whose personal accomplishments, and of whose wide-spread fame was, in his life time, "Like a gate of steel, Fronting the sun, that renders back His figure and his heat" a writer too who was universally read and enthusiastically admired for a century after his death, and who has been admired with scarce less enthusiastic, but with a more distant homage, for another century, after ceasing to be read. We have lost the art of reading, or the pri vilege of writing, voluminously, since the days of Addison. Learning no longer weaves the interminable page with patient drudgery, nor ignorance pores over it with implicit faith. As authors multiply in number, books diminish in size; we cannot now, as formerly, swallow libraries whole in a single folio: solid quarto has given place to slender duodecimo, and the dingy letter-press contracts its dimensions, and retreats before the white, unsullied, faultless margin. Modern authorship is become a species of stenography: we contrive even to read by proxy. We skim the cream of prose without any trouble; we get at the quintessence of poetry without loss of time. The staple commodity, the coarse, heavy, dirty, unwieldy bullion of books is driven out of the market of learning, and the intercourse of the literary world is carried on, and the credit of the great capitalists sustained by the flimsy circulating medium of magazines and reviews. Those who are chiefly concerned in catering for the taste of others, and serving up critical opinions in a compendious, elegant, and portable form, are not forgetful of themselves: they are not scrupulously solicitous, idly inquisitive about the real merits, the bona fide contents of the works they are deputed to appraise and value, any more than the reading public who employ them. They look no farther |