Abbildungen der Seite
PDF
EPUB

the stage. To a great degree, however, this success was due to the very traits in the play which now render it obsolete. Addison, as we have seen, found a hint for his plot in an ephemeral opera of obvious absurdity. The subject thus suggested he proceeded to phrase and to compose according to the strictest rules of that pseudo-classic art which, in common with the best scholarship of his time, he believed permanently excellent. There is perhaps no play in English which more rigidly observes the unities and the other rules of literary decorum which, to our thinking, make the classical tragedies of France such drearily artificial things. Voltaire thought Cato an admirable work of dramatic art. So did the century whose taste Voltaire may stand for.

To us Cato groups itself with the earlier works on which Addison's political fortunes were based. His unquestioning faith in the traditional standards of classical scholarship made this tragedy, where with all the self-consciousness of his own personality he felt bound to do his best, a tissue of tedious and lifeless amenities. Only when masquerading as the imaginary scribbler of essays could Addison ever so abandon himself to his subject as to be a writer of lasting human interest.

VII

Of lasting human interest, however, his essays must always remain. So pleasant have they proved to generation after generation of readers that we are apt now to forget the real work which they did when they were new. The precise function of the Spectator, as we have seen, was to proclaim afresh, after the reckless license of the Restoration, that simple ideal of respectability to which the English race has generally remained loyal. So fully did it accomplish its task that to this day we retain something like a personal memory of its traditions. The eighteenth century, one sometimes feels, survived longer in America than in Europe. At all events a good many

people in America, not yet past middle life, can vividly remember among the older figures who surrounded their youth many an amiable old friend whose thoughts and phrases seemed more in accordance with the England which reveals itself in the literature of Queen Anne and of the early Georges than with that which expresses itself in the literature of Victoria. The traditions of the Spectator are hardly yet extinct in the quieter regions of New England.

What they were in their own day a familiar tragic story of the period reminds us. Among the younger contributors to the Spectator was one Eustace Budgell, a kinsman of Addison's, and to some degree a favorite of his. After Addison's death Budgell went wrong. A wretched career of folly and crime ended in suicide under the arches of London Bridge. The unhappy man, however, retained to the last his reverence for his great kinsman; and after his death there were found in his handwriting these lines, which he had left to justify his self-destruction:

What Cato did, and Addison approved,
Cannot be wrong.

What Addison approved was the test of right to the generation that loved him; and to this day traditional criticism can pay no higher compliment to a prose style than to call it Addisonian.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

I. FIRST EDITIONS.

A. First editions of Addison's undoubted works published during his lifetime.

B. First editions of Addison's undoubted works published after his death.

C. Doubtful works.

II. COLLECTIVE EDITIONS.

III. BIOGRAPHY AND CRITICISM.

IV. FURTHER ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE PERIOD.

The abbreviations in parenthesis after each of the rarer titles indicate some of the libraries where that edition is to be found; the star indicates the library whose copy has been used in making this bibliography. Bodl. Bodleian Library; B. M. = British Museum; B. P. L. Public Library; H.: Harvard College Library; T. C. D. College Library, Dublin.

=

I. FIRST EDITIONS

A. Undoubted Works, 1690-1719

=

Boston
Trinity

1690. Academiæ Oxoniensis | Gratulatio | Pro Exoptato SerenisRegis Guilielmi | Ex | Hibernia Reditu. | [cut] | Oxoniæ, |

simi

E Theatro Sheldoniano Anno Dom. 1690.

Addison's poem "Cum Domini,” etc. (Bohn Edition, VI, 547), begins at the top of p. [y2 recto] and continues to the middle of the next page [y2 verso]. The poem is signed “Joh. Addison, è Col. Mag." (Bodl.; B. M.*)

1693. Theatri | Oxoniensis | Encænia, | Sive | Comitia Philologica. | Julii 7, Anno 1693. celebrata. | [cut] | Oxonii, | E Theatro Sheldoniano, An. Dom. MDCXCIII.

This volume contains an oration, " Nova Philosophia Veteri præferenda est," which has usually been placed among Addison's doubtful works. That it is unquestionably Addison's appears as soon as one examines the "Ordo commissionum Philologicarum in Encaniis prædictis" which follows the title-page:

"I. Johan. Pelling Incept. in Art. ex Æde Christi. Encania aperuit. Oratione soluta. . . . xiv. Jos. Addison, Rich. Smallbrook, Edv. Taylor, A.BB. è Coll. Magd. Lemma habuerunt. Vetus & Nova [sic] Philosophia. Oratione soluta." The book is not paged. On L 2 back - N 2 back are the three orations in the following order:

"Nova Philosophia Veteri præferenda est."

"Vetus Philosophia Novæ præferenda est."

"Quæritur utrum Vetus Philosophia, an Nova sit præferenda." The first, which is Addison's, begins on the back of the twenty-fourth sheet.

(Bodl.*)

1693. Examen Poeticum: | Being | The Third Part | Of | Miscellany Poems. Containing Variety of | New Translations | Of The | Ancient Poets. Together with many | Original Copies, | By The | Most Eminent Hands. Haec potior soboles: hinc Cœli tempore certo, | Dulcia mella premes. Virgil. Geor. 4. | In medium quaesta reponunt. Ibid. | London | Printed by R. E for Jacob Tonson, at the Judges | Head in Chancery-Lane, near Fleetstreet. | MDCXCIII.

Contains the verses "To Mr. Dryden. By Mr. Jo. Addison," which occupy pp. 247-249, and at the end are dated "Mag. Coll. Oxon, June 2, 1693.”

[ocr errors]

(Bodl.; H.*; T. C. D.)

1694. The Annual Miscellany: | For | The Year 1694. | Being | The Fourth Part Of | Miscellany Poems. | Containing Great Variety | Of | New Translations | And | Original Copies, | By The Most Eminent Hands. | London: | Printed by R. E for Jacob Tonson, at the Judges | Head near the Inner Temple-Gate, in Fleetstreet. | MDCXCIV.

This includes the following poems by Addison: "2. Fourth Book of Georgics (except the story of Aristeus)." "II. Song for St. Cecilia's Day at Oxford." 66 12. Story of Salmacis, from the fourth Book of Ovid's Metamorphoses." "47. An Account of the Greatest English Poets. To Mr. H. S. Apr. 3d. 1694." (B. M.; H.*; T. C. D.)

1695. A Poem | To His Majesty, | Presented to the | Lord Keeper. By Mr. Addison, of Mag. Coll. Oxon. | London. | Printed for Jacob Tonson, at the Judge's-Head | near the Inner-Temple-Gate in Fleetstreet, MDCXCV. (B. P. L.*)

1697. The | Works | Of | Virgil: | Containing His Pastorals, | Georgics, | And | Æneis. | Translated into English Verse; By | Mr. Dryden. | Adorn'd with a Hundred Sculptures. | Sequiturque Patrem non passibus Æquis. Virg. Æn. 2. | London, | Printed for Jacob Tonson, at the Judges-Head in Fleetstreet, | near the Inner-Temple-Gate, MDCXCVII.

To this Addison contributed "An Essay on the Georgics," (pp. 6) between pp. 48 and 49. (Bodl.; B. M.; H.*; T. C. D.)

1698. Examen | Poeticum Duplex: | Sive | Musarum Anglicanarum | Delectus Alter; | Cui subjicitur | Epigrammatum | seu | Poematum Minorum | Specimen Novum. | Londini: | Impensis Ric. Wellington, ad insigne chelyos in | Cœmeterio Divi Pauli. MDCXCVIII.

Two parts, octavo; pp. 219 + 56. Part i contains the following poems by Addison:

"8. Sphæristerium. Jo. Addison. Col. Magd. Oxon.” (p. 34).

[ocr errors]

"9. Resurrectio, delineata ad altare Col. Magd. Jo. Addison" (p. 38). “10. Machinæ Gesticulantes, Anglicè. A puppet-show. Jo. Addison' (p. 44).

"II. Insignissimo viro Thomæ Burnet. Jo. Addison" (p. 49). "15. Barometri Descriptio. Jo Addison" (p. 75).

“29. Prælium inter Pygmæos & grues commissium [sic]. Jo. Addison (p. 158).

Part ii, the last fifty-six pages of the book (numbered separately 1-56), is entitled "Epigrammatum | seu | Poematum Minorum | Specimen Novum"; it contains one hundred and two epigrams, of which the authors are not indicated.

(B. M.*)

[1692-11699. Musarum | Anglicanarum | Analecta : | Sive, | Poemata quædam melioris notæ, seu | hactenus Inedita, seu sparsim Edita, | In duo Volumina congesta. | Vol. II. | [cut of Sheldonian Theatre]| Oxon. | E Theatro Sheldoniano, Impensis Joh. Crosley, | An. Dom. M.DC.XCIX.

This volume contains the following poems by Addison; the numbers which precede them give their place in the table of contents, although they are not actually so numbered.

[1.] "Pax, Gulielmi Auspiciis, Europæ reddita, 1697. J. Addison, A.M. Coll. Magd. Soc." (p. 3).

[9.] "Barometri Descriptio, Jo. Addison, A.B. è Coll. Magd." (p. 44). [12.] “ITгMAIO-TEPANOMAXIA, sive Prælium inter Pygmæos & Grues commissum, Jo. Addison è Coll. Magd." (p. 56).

[30.] "Resurrectio Delineata ad Altare Coll. Magd. Oxon. Jo. Addison, è Coll. Magd." (p. 157).

[35] "Sphæristerium, Jo. Addison, è Coll. Magd." (p. 187).

[37.] "Ad DD. Hannes Insignissimum Medicum & Poetam, Jo. Addison, è Coll. Magd." (p. 199).

[45.] "Machine Gesticulantes, Anglicè, A Puppet-show. Jo. Addison, è Coll. Magd." (p. 243).

[53.] "Ad Insignissimum Virum D. Tho. Burnettum, Sacræ Theorie Telluris Autorem, Jo. Addison, A.B. è Coll. Magd.” (p. 284).

« ZurückWeiter »