"natural order; because it is the order suggested by imagination and desire, which always impel us to mention their object in the "first place. We might, therefore, conclude, "à priori, that this would be the order, in "which words were most commonly arranged at the beginnings of language; and accordingly we find, in fact, that, in this order, "words are arranged in most of the ancient tongues; as in the Greek, and the Latin; and, it is said, also in the Russian, the Scla"vonic, the Gaelic, and several of the Ame"rican tongues *." 66 ፡፡ CHAP. I. Of improved "All the other modern languages of Europe "have adopted a different arrangement from "the ancient. In their prose compositions, very little variety is admitted in the colloca"tion of words: they are mostly fixed to one order; and that order is what may be called "the order of the understanding. They place, first, in the sentence, the person or thing, which speaks or acts; next its action; and lastly, the object of its action. So that the "ideas are made to succeed to one another, 66 35 66 not according to the degree of importance, P. 135, 8vo. ed. CHAP. I. Of improved "which the several objects carry in the imagination, but according to the order of nature, and of time *.” * "It appears that, in all the successive changes, which language has undergone, as "the world advanced, the understanding has gained ground on the fancy and imagination. "The progress of language, in this respect, re"sembles the progress of age in man. The imagination is most vigorous and predo"minant in youth; with advancing years the • "imagination cools, and the understanding "ripens. Thus language, proceeding from sterility to copiousness,, hath, at the same time, proceeded from vivacity to accuracy; "from fire and enthusiasm to coolness and precision †!" 33. The collocation of words, according to the order of desire or imagination, it is easy to perceive, must have been much better adapted to the purposes of poetry, than the collocation of them according to the order of the understanding; but a variety of flexible terminations is absolutely necessary to make words, so ar CHAP. I. Of improved ranged, intelligible; and, in these, all the As honour, love, obedience, troops of friends, says Macbeth, when agitated by remorse and "Videsne, ut ordine verborum paulum commutato, K iisdem CHAP. I. Of improved, who wrote from feeling, has many happy instances of the same kind; as "me of my Perception. lawful pleasure, she bereft, &c. ;" but Milton, and other epic and moral writers in blank verse, who viewed nature through the medium of books, and wrote from the head rather than the heart, have often employed this inverted order merely to stiffen their diction, and keep it out of prose; an artifice, of all others, the most adverse to the genuine purposes of a metrical or poetical style; which, though known to be the result of study and labour, should always appear to flow from inspiration. In matters of taste, it is of little importance: what the understanding knows by inference or analogy; but it is different with what the imagination perceives by immediate impression. 34. The pleasure, which we receive from verse, in light or didactic compositions; or such as are not capable of exciting or sustaining enthusiasm, arises from the charms of neatness, point, and emphasis; all of which are improved and invigorated by the regularity of a metrical style, which facilitates the flow of utterance, and directs and fixes the attention to the particular idea, which the author wishes to impress most strongly. By these means, as well as by the periodical recurrence iisdem verbis stante sententia, ad nihilum omnia recident, cum sint ex aptis dissoluta."-CIC. Orator. CHAP. 1. of similar quantities or modifications of sound, it also greatly facilitates remembrance; and to facilitate remembrance seems to have been Perception. Of improved the original use and purpose of verse: whence the muses were fabled to be the daughters of memory; and the oldest metrical writer extant" addresses his most earnest and emphatical prayer to them, not to obtain their inspiration in developing the counsels of the gods, or in relating the actions of Diomede or Achilles, but to procure their assistance in compiling the catalogue of the Grecian army. 35. In the accentual pronunciation of the different languages of modern Europe, each pronounces the Greek and Latin words accordingly as words of the same number of syllables are usually pronounced in their own respective languages. Thus an Englishman pronounces the first syllable of the verb cano, and of the adjective canus, equally long; and a Frenchman, equally short; though it be invariably long in the latter, and invariably short in the former. In conformity to the idiom of our own language, we also arbitrarily alter the quantity of the first syllable of a word, when another is added to the end of it; as in virum and virus; which are always pronounced as trochees; while virumque and virusque are as invariably turned into amphibrachys. The first |