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SPLENDIDIS LONGUM VALEDICO NUGIS

        Footnote:

        {1}    Edton, elder brotton.    ed by Elizabetroller of her household.

        Observe treatise ten t in plain, manly Englis Euprictly reasoned.

        {2}    rodu ends, and t begins s Part 1.    Poetry t Light-giver.

        {3}    A fable from t;amyt; of Laurentius Abstemius, Professor of Belles Lettres at Urbino, and Librarian to Duke Guido Ubaldo uificate of Alexander VI. (1492-1503).

        {4}    Pliny says ("Nat. .," lib. xi., cap. 62) t tient to be born, break ther, and so kill her.

        {5}    Part 2.    Borrowed from by Philosophers.

        {6}    timaeus, tias are represented by Plato as eo tes on a Republic.    Socrates calls on to sate in a.    Critias ell of t citizens of Attica, 10,000 years before, from an inroad of tless invaders lantis, in tern O; a struggle of    Sais, i, and radition to Critias.    But first timaeus agrees to expound tructure of tias, in a piece left unfiniso, proceeds to sy in a against pressure of a da seems irresistible.

        {7}    Platos "Republic," book ii.

        {8}    Part 3.    Borrowed from by orians.

        {9}    Part 4.    ic.

        {10}    Part 5.    And really sacred and propi the Psalms of David.

        {11}    Part 6.    By ts were he name of Makers.

        {12}    Poetry is tive art.    Astronomers and ot hey find.

        {13}    Poets improve Nature.

        {14}    And idealize man.

        {15}     of the Essay begins.

        {16}    Part 1.    Poetry defined.

        {17}    Part 2.    Its kinds.    a. Divine.

        {18} Poo imitative.

        {19} Marcus Manilius e uiberius a metrical treatise on Astronomy, of wars remain.

        {20}    Poetry proper.    {21}    Part 3.    Subdivisions of Poetry proper.

        {22}    Its essence is in t, not in apparelling of verse.

        {23}    ricca, in tury.    ory of t;AEt; ic tale in Greek ed into English.

        {24}    ts ork and Parts.    Part 1. ORK:     Poetry does for us.

        {25}    t;Sucal souls; But ure of decay Dot in,    ." (S;Merc of Venice," act v., sc. 1) {26}    Poetry best advauous a.

        {27}    Its advantage herein over Moral Philosophy.

        {28}    Its advantage ory.

        {29}    "All men make faults, and even I in trespass ; S;So" 35.

        {30}    "itness of times, ligrutress of life, messenger of antiquity."--Cicero, "De Oratore."

        {31}    In    goes beyond Porian, and all oting parison he Divine).

        {32}    he Philosopher.

        {33}    ;Ars Poetica," lines 372-3.    But e "Non ;--"ered ns ted mediocrity is."

        {34}    t;Locus unis," erm used in old roric to represeimonies or pitences of good aut be used for strengt said Keckerma- book in t;Because it is impossible to read t give students of eloquence    form of books of on Places, like t collected by Stobaeus out of Cicero, Seneca, terence, Aristotle; but especially titled Polyant and effective sentences apt to any matter."    Freque to tation to be erm of roric, "a on- place," came to mean a good saying made familiar by incessant quoting, and trite saying good or bad, but only     in it.

        {35}    totle.    t;Poetics" runs:

        "It is not by ing in verse or prose t torian and Poet are distinguisus mig it ill be a species of ory, no less re t.    tinguis tes ry is more p tory, for Poetry is c about general trutory about particular. In ain cer , probably or necessarily, t of Poetry, even icular names. But rut;

        {36}    Justinus, ome of tory us Pompeius, us.

        {37}    Dares Po    of Vul, o ime of AElian, A.D. 230, o be older than homers.

        {38}    Quintus Curtius, a Roman orian of uain date, ory of Alexa in ten books, of    and otive.

        {39}    Not kno practice.

        {40}    t Monarch of all human Sces.

        {41}    In "Loves Labours Lost" a resemblance ion of Biron, and t:- "ongue--ceits expositor - Delivers in sud gracious    aged ears play truant at ables, And younger e ravis and voluble is ;

        {42}    Virgils "AEneid," Book xii.:- "And sed dastard turnus flying vie so vile a to die?" (Pranslation [1573].) {43}    Instances of ts work.

        {44}    Defectuous.    t;defectueux," is used t;Apologie for Poetrie."

        {45}    Part II.    tS of Poetry.

        {46}     Pastoral be ned?

        {47}    ting glory.

        {48}    Or Elegiac?

        {49}    Or Iambic? or Satiric?

        {50}    From t Satire of Persius, line 116, in a description of ire:

        "Omne vafer vitium ridenti Flaccus amico tangit, et admissus circum praecordia ludit," &c.

        Souslated t;Unlike iy ing grace Laug    vice ickle,    made te passes w;

        {51}    From tles (Lib. 1):

        " non animum mutant, qui trans mare currunt, Strenua nos exercet iia; navibus atque Quadrigis petimus bene vivere.    Quod petis, , Est Ulubris, animus si te non deficit aequus."

        t not toil in laboured idleness, ao live at ease iteams.    t o be calm and clear.

        "At Ulubrae"    to saying in t er of ttle totle Pedlington.    to t a grander form in Sartor Resartus:

        "May    say t tual enfranc is even this?

        ruggling and inexpressibly languiso    e your America is uation t    its duty, its ideal, ,    out therefrom, believe, live, and be free.

        Fool! t too is in tion is but tuff t to s same Ideal out of.     matter    or t, so t be ic?    O t pi in t of tual, and criest bitterly to to rule and create, knorut is already    t;

        {52}    Or ic?

        {53}    In pistrinum.    In the pounding-mill (usually worked by horses or asses).

        {54}    ic?

        {55}    ts first form.

        {56}    Or the heroic?

        {57}    Epistles I. ii. 4.    Better tor.    tle stoic, tor t entator upon Plato.

        {58}    Summary of t thus far.

        {59}    Objes stated a.

        {60}    elius Agrippas book, "De Iudi Vanitate Stiarum et Artium,"    publis;Moriae En" ten in a    in a feions.

        {61}    tion to rre.

        {62}    t of tences is from le I. xviii. 69):

        "Fly from tive man, for ;    t;; seems to be varied from Ovid (Fasti, iv. 311):- "scia mei famae mendacia risit: Sed nos in vitium credula turba sumus."

        A mind scious    t towards vice we are a credulous crowd.

        {63}    tions.

        {64}    t time migter spent.

        {65}    Beg tion.

        {66}    t poetry is ther of lies.

        {67}    t poetry is ting us on ailent desires.

        {68}    Rampire, rampart, t;rempart," ;rempar," from "remparer," to fortify.

        {69}    "I give o be foolis;    A variation from t. I. i. 63), "Quid facias illi? jubeas miserum esse libenter."

        {70}    t Plato baniss from his ideal Republic.

        {71}    y certain barbarous and insipid ers    into meaning t poets o be t out of a state.

        {72}    Ion is a r, in dialogue es, and    s floly ; says Socrates; "your talent in expounding    an art acquired by system a s besides.    It is a special gift, imparted to you by Divine poion. true of t you expound.     spring from art, system, or met is a special gift emanating from tion of t is lig pose verses at all so long as ake auting in place of it tion and special impulse . . . Like props and deliverers of oracles, ts aken as of t is not t of trains, it is to us, and speaks t;    Gerote, from e translation of t;Ion" among to.

        {73}    Guards, trimmings or fags.

        {74}    the Sed Summary.

        {75}    Causes of Defe Englisry.

        {76}    From tion at t;Muse, bring to my mind t divinity    one famous for piety s;

        {77}    tal, born in 1505, ical services ( of France, and long labour to repress civil    skill in verse.    he died in 1573.

        {78}    -strings titan (Prometeer clay.    (Juvenal, Sat. xiv. 35).    Dryden translated ts text -

        "Some sons, indeed, some very fe;

        {79}    tor is made, t born.

        {80}     you    t es.

        {81}    "ever I sry to e ;    Sidney quotes from memory, and adapts to ext, tristium IV. x. 26.

        "Sponte sua carmen numeros ve ad aptos, Et quod temptabam dicere, versus erat."

        {82}    ;its" ; t;its" not bei introduced into Englising.

        {83}    Defects in t s tten y years old, and S seventeen,    yet e to London.    tro of S yet begun to e fe.    Marlo ten; and trengt o e of t to be shown.

        {84}    tage.

        {85}    Messenger.

        {86}    From the egg.

        {87}    Bias, slope; Frenc;biais."

        {88}    Juvenal, Sat. iii., lines 152-3.    ;London:"

        "Of all t rest, Sure t bitter is a sful jest."

        {89}    Gee Bacy-six) ten in earlier life four Latin tragedies,    Bordeaux, aigne in his class.

        {90}    Defects in Lyric Poetry.

        {91}    Defects in Di.    tten only a year or ter tion of "Eup; represents t style of t created but represented by t took t;Eup;

        {92}    Nizolian paper-books, are onplace books of quotable passages, so called because an Italian grammarian, Marius Nizolius, born at Bersello iury, and one of teent producers of sucribution ionary of p;tus Liinae e scriptis tullii Ciis collectus."

        {93}    "o te, nay, es to te," &c.

        {94}    Pounded.    Put in tray.

        {95}    Capacities of the English Language.

        {96}    Metre and Rhyme.

        {97}    Last Summary and playful peroration
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