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with ease and simplicity. Of a familiar correspondence, the most accomplished model are the letters of Madame de Sevigne. They are easy, varied, lively, and beautiful. The letters of Lady Mary Wortley Montague are, perhaps, more agreeable to the epistolary style, than any in the English language.

What is expected in epistolary writing?
What are its fundamental requisites?
Whose letters are the most valuable?
What is said of the letters of Pope?
What is said of the letters of Swift?
What is said of the letters of De Sevigne ?
What is said of the letters of Lady Montague?

FICTITIOUS HISTORY.

THIS species of composition includes a very numerous, and in general a very insignificant class of writings, called romances and novels. Of these, however, the influence is known to be great, both on the morals and taste of a nation. Notwithstanding the bad ends to which this mode of writing is applied, it might be employed for very useful purposes. Romances and novels describe human life and manners, and discover the errors into which we are betrayed by the passions. Wise men in all ages have used fables and fictions as vehicles of knowledge; and it is an observation of Lord Bacon, that the common affairs of the world are insufficient to fill the mind of man. He must create worlds of his own, and wander in the regions of imagination.

All nations whatsoever have discovered a love of fiction, and talents for invention. The Indians, Persians, and Arabians, abounded in fables and parables. Among the Greeks, we hear of the Ionian and Milesian tales. During the dark ages, fiction assumed an unusual form, from the prevalence of chivalry. Romances arose, and carried the marvellous to its summit. Their knights were patterns not only of the most heroic courage, but of religion, generosity, courtesy, and fidelity; and the heroines were no less distinguished for modesty, delicacy, and dignity of manners. Of

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these romances, the most perfect model is the Orlando Furioso. But, as magic and enchantment came to be disbelieved and ridiculed, the chivalerian romances were discontinued, and were succeeded by a new species of fictitious writing.

Of the second stage of romance writing, the Cleopatra of Madame Scuderi, and the Arcadia of Sir Philip Sidney, are good examples. In these, however, there was still too large a proportion of the marvellous; and the books were too voluminous and tedious. Romance writing appeared, therefore, in a new form, and dwindled down to the familiar novel. Interesting situations in real life are the ground-work of novel writing. Upon this plan, the French have produced some works of considerable merit. Such are the Gil Blas of Le Sage, and the Marianne of Marivaux.

In this mode of writing the English are inferior to the French; yet in this kind there are some performances which discover the strength of British genius. No fiction was ever better supported than the adventures of Robinson Crusoe. Fielding's novels are highly distinguished for humour and boldness of character. Richardson, the author of Clarissa, is the most moral of all our novel writers; but he possesses the unfortunate talent of spinning out pieces of amusement into an immeasurable length. The trivial performances which daily appear under the title of lives, adventures, and histories, by anonymous authors, are most insipid, and, it must be confessed, often tend to deprave the morals, and to encourage dissipation and idleness.

What does fictitious history include?
What is said of romances and novels?
What is the remark of Lord Bacon?
When did romances arise?

What is said of the knights?

What was the second stage of this kind of writing?

What the last?

What are the best French novels?

What are the best English novels?

NATURE OF POETRY.-ITS ORIGIN AND PROGRESS.-VERSIFICATION.

WHAT, it may be asked, is poetry? and how does it differ from prose? Many disputes have been maintained among critics upon these questions. The essence of poetry is supposed by Aristotle, Plato, and others, to consist in fiction. But this is too limited a description. Many think the characteristic of poetry lies in imitation. But imitation of manners and characters may be carried on in prose, as well as in poetry. Perhaps the best definition is this: "Poetry is the language of passion, or of enlivened imagination, formed most commonly into regular numbers." As the primary object of a poet is to please and to move, it is to the imagination and the passions that he addresses himself. It is by pleasing and moving, that he aims to instruct and reform.

Poetry is older than prose. In the beginning of society there were occasions, upon which men met together for feasts and sacrifices, when music, dancing and songs, were the chief entertainment. The meetings of American tribes are distinguished by music and songs. In songs they celebrate their religious rites and martial achievements; and in such songs we trace the beginning of poetic composition.

Man is, by nature, both a poet and a musician. The same impulse which produced a poetic style, prompted a certain melody or modulation of sound, suited to the emotions of joy or grief, love or anger. Music and poetry are united in song, and mutually assist and exalt each other. The first poets sung their own verses. Hence the origin of versification, or the arrangement of words to tune or melody.

Poems and songs are the first objects that make their appearance in all nations. Apollo, Orpheus, and Amphion were the first tamers of mankind among the Greeks. The Gothic nations had their scalders, or poets. The Celtic tribes had their bards. Poems and songs are among the antiquities of all countries; and, as the occasions of their being composed are nearly the same, so they remarkably resemble each

other in style. They comprise the celebration of gods, and heroes, and victories. They abound in fire and enthusiasm; they are wild, irregular and glowing.

During the infancy of poetry, all its different kinds were mingled in the same composition; but in the progress of society, poems assumed their different regular forms. Time separated into classes the seveveral kinds of poetic composition. The ode, and the elegy, the epic poem, and the drama, are all reduced to rule, and exercise the acuteness of criticism.

What is poetry?

To what must the poet address himself?
Which is poetry or prose?

What connexion have music and poetry?

ENGLISH VERSIFICATION.

NATIONS, whose language and pronunciation were musical, rested their versification chiefly on the quantities of their syllables; but mere quantity has very little effect in English verse. For the difference, made between long and short syllables, in our manner of pronouncing them, is very inconsiderable.

The only perceptible difference among our syllables, arises from that strong percussion of voice, which is termed accent. This accent, however, does not always make the syllable longer, but only gives it more force of sound; and it is rather upon a certain order and succession of accented, and unaccented syllables, than upon their quantity, that the melody of our verse depends.

In the constitution of our verse, there is another essential circumstance. This is, the cæsural pause, which falls near the middle of each line. This pause may fall after the fourth, fifth, sixth, or seventh syllable; and by this means, uncommon variety and richness are added to English versification.

Our English verse is of Iambic structure, composed of a nearly alternate succession of unaccented and accented syllables. When the pause falls earliest, that is, after the fourth syllable, the briskest melody is

thereby formed. Of this, the following lines from Pope, are a happy illustration:

On her white breast a sparkling cross she wore,
Which Jews might kiss, and infidels adore;
Her lively looks a sprightly mind disclose,
Quick, as her eyes, I and as unfix'd as those.
Favours to none, to all she smiles extends,
Oft she rejects, but never once offends.

When the pause falls after the fifth syllable, dividing the line into two equal portions, the melody is sensibly altered. The verse, losing the brisk air of the former pause, becomes more smooth and flowing.

Eternal sunshine | of the spotless mind.

Each prayer accepted, and each wish resign'd.

When the pause follows the sixth syllable, the melody becomes grave. The movement of the verse is more solemn and measured.

The wrath of Peleus' son, the direful spring
Of all the Grecian woes, O goddess, sing.

The grave cadence becomes still more sensible, when the pause follows the seventh syllable. This kind of verse, however, seldom occurs; and its effect is to diversify the melody.

And in the smooth, descriptive | murmur still.
Long loved, adored ideas, | all adieu.

Our blank verse is a noble, bold, and disencumbered mode of versification. It is free from the full close which rhyme forces upon the ear at the end of every couplet. Hence it is peculiarly suited to subjects of dignity and force. It is more favourable than rhyme to the sublime, and highly pathetic. It is the most proper for an epic poem, and for tragedy. Rhyme finds its proper place in the middle regions of poetry; and blank verse in the highest.

The present form of our English heroic rhyme, in couplets, is modern. The measure used in the days of Elizabeth, James, and Charles I, was the stanza

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