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formed by contraction, commonly begin and end

with consonants, as,

-Every lower faculty

Of sense, whereby they hear, see, smell, touch, taste.

The difference of harmony arising principally from the collocation of vowels and consonants, will be sufficiently conceived by attending to the following passages:

Immortal Amarant-there grows

And flowers aloft, shading the fount of life,

And where the river of bliss, through midst of heaven
Rolls o'er Elysian flowers her amber stream;

With these that never fade, the spirits elect

Bind their resplendent locks inwreath'd with beams.

The same comparison that I proposed to be made between the fourth and sixth verses of this passage may be repeated between the last lines of the following quotations:

Under foot the violet,

Crocus, and hyacinth, with rich in-lay,

Broider'd the ground, more colour'd than with stone
Of costliest emblem.

Here in close recess,

With flowers, garlands, and sweet smelling herbs,
Espoused Eve first deck'd her nuptial bed;
And heavenly choirs the hymenean sung.

Milton, whose ear had been accustomed not only to the music of the ancient tongues, which, however vitiated by our pronunciation, excel all that are now in use, but to the softness of the Italian, the most mellifluous of all modern poetry, seems fully convinced of the unfitness of our language for smooth versification, and is, therefore, pleased with an opportunity of calling in a softer word to his assistance; for this reason, and I believe for this only,

he sometimes indulges himself in a long series of proper names, and introduces them where they add little but music to his poem.

The richer seat

Of Atabalipa, and yet unspoil'd

Guiana, whose great city Gerion's sons
Call El Dorado.-

The moon

-The Tuscan artist views
At evening, from the top of Fesole
Or in Valdarno, to descry new lands.-

He has, indeed, been more attentive to his syllables than to his accents, and does not often offend by collisions of consonants, or openings of vowels upon each other, at least not more often than other writers who have had less important or complicated subjects to take off their care from the cadence of their lines.

The great peculiarity of Milton's versification, compared with that of later poets, is the elision of one vowel before another, or the suppression of the last syllable of a word ending with a vowel, when a vowel begins the following word. As

Knowledge

Oppresses else with surfeit, and soon turns
Wisdom to folly, as nourishment to wind.

This licence, though now disused in English poetry, was practised by our old writers, and is allowed in many other languages ancient and modern; and, therefore, the critics on Paradise Lost have, without much deliberation, commended Milton for continuing it. But one language cannot communicate its rules to another. We have already tried and rejected the hexameter of the ancients, the double close of the Italians, and the alexandrine of the French; and the elision of vowels, however grace

ful it may seem to other nations, may be very unsuitable to the genius of the English tongue.

There is reason to believe that we have negligently lost part of our vowels, and that the silent e which our ancestors added to most of our monosyllables was once vocal. By this detruncation of our syllables, our language is overstocked with consonants, and it is more necessary to add vowels to the beginning of words than to cut them off from the end.

Milton, therefore, seems to have somewhat mistaken the nature of our language, of which the chief defect is ruggedness and asperity, and has left our harsh cadences yet harsher. But his elisions are not all equally to be censured; in some syllables they may be allowed, and perhaps in a few may be safely imitated. The abscission of a vowel is undoubtedly vicious when it is strongly sounded and makes, with its associate consonant, a full and audible syllable.

-What he gives,

Spiritual, may to purest spirits be found,
No ingrateful food, and food alike these pure
Intelligential substances require.

Fruits-Hesperian fables true,

If true, here only, and of delicious taste.

-Evening now approach'd,

For we have also our evening and our morn.

Of guests he makes them slaves,
Inhospitably, and kills their infant males.

And vital virtue infused, and vital warmth
Throughout the fluid mass.-

God made thee of choice his own, and of his own
To serve him.

I believe every reader will agree that, in all these passages, though not equally in all, the music is in

jured, and in some the meaning obscured. There are other lines in which the vowel is cut off, but it is so faintly pronounced in common speech that the loss of it in poetry is scarcely perceived; and, therefore, such compliance with the measure may be allowed.

Nature breeds

Perverse, all monstrous, all prodigious things,
Abominable, inutterable; and worse
Than fables yet have feign'd

-From the shore

They view'd the vast immeasurable abyss.

Impenetrable, impaled with circling fire.

To none communicable in earth or heaven.

Yet even these contractions increase the roughness of a language too rough already; and, though in long poems they may be sometimes suffered, it never can be faulty to forbear them.

Milton frequently uses in his poems the hypermetrical or redundant line of eleven syllables.

-Thus it shall befall

Him who, to worth in woman over-trusting,

Lets her will rule

I also err'd in over-much admiring.

Verses of this kind occur almost in every page; but, though they are not unpleasing or dissonant, they ought not to be admitted into heroic poetry, since the narrow limits of our language allow us no other distinction of epic and tragic measures than is afforded by the liberty of changing at will the terminations of the dramatic lines, and bringing them by that relaxation of metrical rigour nearer to prose.

VOL. II.

I

No. 89. TUESDAY, JAN. 22, 1751.

Dulce est desipere in loco.

HOR.

Wisdom at proper times is well forgot.

LOCKE, whom there is no reason to suspect of being a favourer of idleness or libertinism, has advanced that whoever hopes to employ any part of his time with efficacy and vigour must allow some of it to pass in trifles. It is beyond the powers of humanity to spend a whole life in profound study and intense meditation, and the most rigorous exacters of industry and seriousness have appointed hours for relaxation and amusement.

It is certain that, with or without our consent, many of the few moments allotted us will slide imperceptibly away, and that the mind will break from confinement to its stated task, into sudden excursions. Severe and connected attention is preserved but for a short time; and when a man shuts himself up in his closet, and bends his thoughts to the discussion of any abstruse question, he will find his faculties continually stealing away to more pleasing entertainments. He often perceives himself transported, he knows not how, to distant tracts of thought, and returns to his first object as from a dream, without knowing when he forsook it, or how long he has been abstracted from it.

It has been observed that the most studious are not always the most learned. There is, indeed, no great difficulty in discovering that this difference of proficiency may arise from the difference of intellectual powers, of the choice of books, or the convenience of information. But I believe it likewise frequently happens that the most recluse are not the

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