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Springs they delight or ravish their Readers of Hearers?

I thought proper just to say so much of the Difficulty of the prefent Work, not out of a Defire of gaining Praife, but Pardon; that if I have fallen înto any Errors, I may meet with fome Favour from the Learned. For to their Judgment I fubmit myfelf, and the Fortunes of this Book; always ready to receive more full Inftruction, and to retract, not to defend the Miftakes of it.

But arduous and difficult as these Enquiries are, yet not therefore unpleasant; For it is not to be thought that all Difcourfes which deliver Rules and Precepts are dry and unentertaining; fome are no lefs full of Delight than Advantage. Of which fort is the Subject before us, elegant in its Nature, and agreeable to the Tafte of the moft Polite; who are never better pleased than when they fcrutinife into the Laws of just Writing and true Thought, and have the choiceft Examples of each laid before them. The Mind is charmed with tracing out its own Operations; and while on fo refined a Subject we read Authors of the fame Sentiments with ourfelves, we obfèrve with fecret Complacence, fimilar Ideas arife in our Minds; or if we diffent from a good Writer, we are ready to join in his Praise, tho' not in his Opinion: For fuch an one, tho' he miffes the Truth, yet deviates with Ingenuity, and is elegant even in his Mistakes.

The Difficulties then we are fpeaking of, are fuch that they don't deter the Admirers of Polite Literature, but invite them: Such as are not attended with Uncouthness of Thought or Afperity of Style; but are like the Labours of Lovers, who, to gain the Goodwill of the Fair, go through the moft arduous Tasks and folicite Dangers.

If the Reader fhall obferve in the following Sheets

Sheets fome Errors flipt, fome Defects either in Thought or Expreffion, he will at worft have no Reafon to complain that I have too importunately loaded him. He will rather wonder perhaps, on the other Hand, how I durft pretend to treat of fuch Variety of Matter in fo few Pages: An Accufation, to which I know not how to give a fatisfactory Answer, and which I own I have often been ready to draw up against myself. I can only declare that this has been owing either to Chance, or to the Nature of my Subject, or to my own Inabilities, not to Indolence, for I have omitted nothing which after the most mature Deliberation I thought proper to be taken Notice of. In other refpects I own I ftudied Brevity as much as poffible, rejecting many things that offer'd, which I judged unentertaining, fuperfluous, and fuch as would give the Reader rather Pain than Pleasure; many likewife, which tho' proper Obfervations in themselves, yet had been abundantly taken Notice of by others, whofe Writings I had no Inclination to make fo free with, as to purloin.

And this, I hope, will not be imputed to me as an Imperfection: For Brevity as fuch (to use the Language of the Schoolmen) and confidered in its own Nature, is by no means a Fault; but rather an Excellence, if we keep clear of thofe Faults that often adhere to it. If we do Juftice to our Subject and are at the fame time perfpicuous, we cannot be too concife; especially in those Works where we propofe to delight the Reader, as well as profit

him.

How far this has been effected in the following Sheets, must be left entirely to his Judgment. I am fure my Endeavour has been not to be wanting to both thefe Ends, and I might with more Eafe to myself have wrote a larger Book.

To treat of Elegance in an inelegant Manner is
mere Abfurdity; and Concifenefs is generally an
Attendant of Elegance. Nothing I am fure can
afford more Pleasure to the Understanding than an
accurate Enquiry into the Subjects here treated of:
Nothing greater Difficulty to a Writer, who is to
act the Critic and Philofopher, rather than the Hi-
ftorian. Even Metaphyfics do not more try the
Mind than Poetry, when we fearch into the latent
Sources of its Beauties and Allurements. But the
Pleasure in the one is much greater than in the other:
This has its Thorns; but fuch as grow on the Rofe,
tender and yielding, that heighten at once its Sweet-
nefs and its Beauty.

One Thing I would defire the Reader to observe,

that under each Head of Poetry, I have either

wholly omitted every thing that is Historical, or

but lightly touch'd upon it: Not because I think

by any Means that Part of Learning contemptible;

but partly because I find it more fuitable to my Na-

ture (fuch as it is) to fearch into Things than Facts;

and partly because others, whofe Erudition I very

much reverence, and to whom I always refer my

Reader, have already in this Refpect, deferv'd well

of the Learned. However, in one or two of my

Differtations I could not come at the Nature of the

Subject I treated of without enquiring into the

Hiftory of it: as in those upon the Origin of Poetry

in general, upon Epigram, and Satire. But even in

them to enter into a long Detail of Circumftances

fetch'd from the Writings of the Ancients, wou'd

be doing Nothing but what had been done before;

which is the Thing I have throughout endeavour'd

to avoid. My Aim has been not to be tedious;

and for fear I fhould be fo now, I fhall add no

more; but leave my Book to ftand or fall by the

Opinion of the Learned.

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