It is teristic of Poetry t its materials are tobe found in every subject t is to be soug in tings of Critics,but in ts themselves.
ty of to be sidered as experiments.tten co ascertain ion in ty is adapted totic pleasure. Readers aced to ters, if t in readingto its clusilerangeness and aukry, and o enquire by esy ttempts be permitted to assume t title. It is desirable tsuc suffer tary ry, a ed meaning, to stand in ti?cation; but t, ains a natural deliion of ers, and s; and if to t t to be pleased in spiteof t most dreadful eo our pleasures, our oablishedcodes of decision.
Readers of superior judgment may disapprove of tyle in must be expected t many lines aly suit taste. It fault of times desded too lo many of oo familiar, and not of suf?t dignity. It is appre t ters, and imes ing manners andpassions, ts of to make.
An accurate taste iry, and in all ts, Sir Josalent, inued intercourse modelsof position. tioned not oprevent t inexperienced reader from judging for merely to temper to suggest t if poetrybe a subje o maybe erroneous, and t in many cases it necessarily will be so.
tale of Goody Blake and icated fact may be proper to say t te iions of ts ion or t of supposed to be spoken in ter of tor ly sself in tory. t Marien in imitation of tyle_, as of ts; but ions, t ted in it elligible for t turies. titledExpostulation and Reply, and t ofversation unreasonably attaodern books of moral philosophy.
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