Imagens da página
PDF
ePub

vielding no fruit, and affording nothing but a barren conceit for the amusement of the idle spectator.

Thus debauched from Nature, how can we relish her genuine productions? As well might a man distinguish objects though a prism, that presents nothing but a variety of colours to the eye; or a maid pining in the green sickness prefer a biscuit to a cinder. It has been often alledged that the passions can never be wholly deposited; and that by appealing to these, a good writer will always be able to force himself into the hearts of his readers: but even the strongest passions are weakened, nay sometimes totally extinguished, by mutual opposition, dissipation, and acquired insensibility. How often at the theatre is the tear of sympathy and the burst of laughter repressed by a ridiculous species of pride, refusing approbation to the author and actor, and renouncing society with the audience! This seeming insensibility is not owing to any original defect. Nature has stretched the string, though it has long ceased to vibrate. It may have been displaced and distracted by the violence of pride; it may have lost its tone through long disuse; or be so twisted or overstrained, as to produce the most jarring discords.

If so little regard is paid to Nature when she knocks so powerfully at the breast, she must be altogether neglected and despised in her calmer mood of serene tranquility, when nothing appears to recommend her but simplicity, propriety, and innocence. A person must have delicate feelings that can taste the cebrated repartee in Terence: Homo sum; nihil humani a me alienum puto: “I am a man ; therefore think I have an interest in every thing that concerns humanity." A clear blue sky, spangled with stars, will prove an insipid object to eyes accustomed to the glare of torches and tapers, gilding and glitter, eyes that will turn with disgust from

the

the green mantle of the spring so gorgeously adorned with buds and foliage, flowers and blossoms, to contemplate a gaudy silken robe, striped and intersected with unfriendly tints, that fritter the masses of light and distract the vision, pinked into the most fantastic forms, flounced, and furbelowed, and fringed with all the littleness of art unknown to elegance.

Those ears, that are offended by the notes of the thrush, the blackbird, and the nightingale, will be regaled and ravished by the squeaking fiddle touched by a musician, who has no other genius than that which lies in his fingers; they will even be entertained with the rattling of coaches, and the alarming knock, by which the doors of fashionable people are so loudly distinguished. The sense of smelling, that delights in the scent of excrementitious animal juices, such as musk, civet, and urinous salts, will loath the fragrance of new-mown hay, the sweetbriar, the honey-suckle, and the rose. The organs, that are gratified with the taste of sickly veal bled into a palsy, crammed fowls, and dropsical brawn, pease without substance, peaches without taste, and pine-apples without flavour, will certainly nauseate the native, genuine, and salutary taste of Welch beef, Banstead mutton, and barn-door fowls, whose juices are concocted by a natural digestion, and whose flesh is consolidated by free air and exercise. In such a total perversion of the senses, the ideas must be misrepresented; the powers of the imagination disordered, and the judgement of conse quence unsound. The disease is attended with a false appetite, which the natural food of the mind will not satisfy. It will prefer Ovid to Tibullus, and the rant of Lee to the tenderness of Otway. The soul sinks into a kind of sleepy idiotism; and is diverted by toys and baubles, which can only be pleasing

pleasing to the most superficial curiosity. It is enlivened by a quick succession of trivial objects, that glisten and dance before the eye; and, like an infant, is kept awake and inspirited by the sound of a rattle. It must not only be dazzled and aroused, but also cheated, hurried, and perplexed by the artifice of deception, business, intricacy, and intrigue; a kind of low juggle, which may be termed the legerdemain of Genius.

In this state of depravity the mind cannot enjoy nor indeed distinguish the charms of natural and moral beauty and decorum. The ingenuous blush of native innocence, the plain language of antient faith and sincerity, the cheerful resignation to the will of Heaven, the mutual affection of the Charities, the voluntary respect paid to superior dignity or station, the virtue of beneficence, extended even to the brute creation, nay the very crimson glow of health, and swelling lines of beauty are despised, detested, scorned, and ridiculed, as ignorance, rudeness, rusticity and superstition. Thus we see how moral and natural beauty are connected; and of what importance it is, even to the formation of Taste, that the manners should be severely superintended. This is a task which ought to take the lead of science; for we will venture to say, that Virtue is the foundation of Taste; or rather, that Virtue and Taste are built upon the same foundation of sensibility, and cannot be disjoined without offering violence to both. But Virtue must be informed, and Taste instructed, otherwise they will both remain imperfect and ineffectual:

Qui didicit patriæ quid debeat, et quid amicis,
Quo sit amore parens, quo frater amandus, et hospes,
Quod fit Conscripti, quod judicis officium qua
Partes in bellum missi ducis; ille profecto
Reddere persona scit convenientia cuique.

THE

The Critic, who with nice discernment knows
What to his country and his friends he owes;
How various Nature warms the human breast,
To love the parent, brother, friend, or guest;
What the great functions of our judges are,
Of Senators, and Generals sent to war;
He can distinguish, with unnerring art,
The strokes peculiar to each different part.

HOR.

Thus we see Taste is composed of Nature improved by Art; of Feeling tutored by Instruction.

ESSAY XIII.

HAVING explained what we conceive to be True Taste, and in some measure accounted for the prevalence of Vitiated Taste, we should proceed to point out the most effectual manner, in which a natural capacity may be improved into a delicacy of judgement, and an intimate acquaintance with the Belles Lettres. Weshall take it for granted that proper means have been used to form the manners, and attach the mind to Virtue. The heart cultivated by precept, and warmed by example, improves in sensibility, which is the foundation of Taste. By distinguishing the influence and scope of morality, and cherishing the ideas of benevolence, it acquires a habit of sympathy, which tenderly feels responsive, like the vibration of unisons, every touch of moral beauty. Hence it is that a man of a social heart, entendered by the practice of virtue, is awakened to the most pathetic emotions by every uncommon instance of generosity, compassion, and greatness of soul. Is there any man so dead to sentiment, so

lost

[ocr errors][ocr errors][ocr errors][merged small][ocr errors][ocr errors][ocr errors][ocr errors][ocr errors][ocr errors][ocr errors][ocr errors]
[ocr errors]

de que suncers ter the words levouri

A vade verere mazeret le tem mure,

ien tunting iman, he wurdiess stat a les 1 From nary a tossand lear's estate pring

On erty iad neselow 1 u nem ov.

The welling es, he mea mi wen mills

Like Bacchanais ney few,

Each other training in a strict emprice,

Nor grun'i a nave; and loud acciaims, till night.
Round the Fraconsui's tent repeated ring

To one acquainted with the Genius of Greece, the character and dispostion of that polished people, admired for science, renowned for an unextinguishable love of freedom, nothing can be more affecting than this instance of generous magnanimity of the Ro* His real name was QUINTUS FLAMINIUS.

man

« AnteriorContinuar »