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thor kind of wit which confifts partly in the refemblance of ideas, and partly in the refemblance of words, which for diftinction fake I fhall call mixt wit. This kind of wit is that which abounds in Cowley, more than in any author that ever wrote. Mr. Waller has likewife a great deal of it. Mr. Dryden is very sparing in it. Milton had a genious much above it. Spenfer is in the fame class with Milton. The Italians, even in their epic poetry, are full of it. Monfieur Boileau, who formed himself upon the ancient poets, has every where rejected it with fcorn. If we look after mixt wit among the Greek writers, we shall find it no where but in the epigrammatifts. There are indeed some strokes of it in the little poem afcribed to Mufæus, which by that, as well as many other marks, betrays itself to be a modern compofition. If we look into the Latin writers, we find none of this mixt wit in Virgil, Lucretius, or Catullus: very little in Horace; but a great deal of it in Ovid; and scarce any thing else in Martial.

Out of the innumerable branches of mixt wit, I fhall choose one inftance which may be met with in all the writers of this clafs. The paffion of love in its nature has been thought to resemble fire; for which reason the words fire and flame are made ufe of to fignify Love. The witty poets therefore have taken an advantage from the doubtful meaning of the word fire, to make an infinite number of witticisms. Cowley obferving the cold regard of his mistress's eyes, and at the fame time their power of producing love in him, confiders them as burning-glaffes made of ice; and finding himself able to live in the greatest extremities of love, concludes the Torrid Zone to be habitable, When his mistress had read his letter written in juice of lemon by holding it to the fire, he defires her to read it over a fecond time by love's flames, When the weeps, he withes it were inward heat that distilled thofe drops from the limbec. When she is abfent, he is beyond eighty, that is, thirty degrees nearer the pole than when the is with him. His ambitious love is a fire that naturally mounts upwards; his happy love is the beams of heaven, and his unhappy love flames of hell. When it does not let him fleep, it is a flame that fends up no smoke; when it is opposed by counfel and advice, it is a fire that rages the more by the winds blowing upon it. Upon the dying of a tree in which he had cut his loves, he obferves that his written flames had burnt up and withered the tree. When he refolves to give over his paffion, he tells us that one burnt like him for ever dreads the fire. His heart is an Ætna, that inftead of Vulcan's fhop, inclofes Cupid's forge in it. His endeavouring to drown his love in wine, is throwing oil upon the fire. He would infinu ate to his miftrefs, that the fire of love, like that of the fun, which produces fo many living creatures, fhould not only warm but beget. Love in another place cooks pleasure at his fire. Sometimes the poet's heart is frozen in every breast, and fometimes fcorched in every eye. Sometimes he is drowned in tears, and burnt in love, like a fhip fet on fire in the middle of the fea.

The reader may observe, in every one of thefe in. ftances, that the poet mixes the qualities of fire with thofe of love; and in the fame sentence speaking of it both as a paffion and as real fire, furprifes the reader with thofe fecming resemblances or contradictions that make up all the wit in this kind of writing. Mixt wit therefore is a compofition of pun and true wit, and is more or lefs perfect

as the resemblance lies in the ideas or in the words: its foundations are laid partly in falfhood, and partly in truth: reafon puts in her claim for one half of it, and extravagance for the other. The only province therefore for this kind of wit, is epigram, or those little occafional poems that in their own nature are nothing elfe but a tiffue of epigrams. I cannot conclude this head of mixt wit, without owning that the admirable poet, out of whom I have taken the examples of it, had as and much true wit as any author that ever writ; indeed all other talents of an extraordinary genius,

It may be expected, fince I am upon this fubject, that I fhould take notice of Mr. Dryden's definition of wit? which with all the deference that is due to the judgment of fo great a man, is not fo properly a definition of wit, as of good writing in general. Wit, as he defines it, is a propriety of words and thoughts adapted to the subject.' If this be a true definition of wit, I am apt to think that Euclid was the greatest wit that ever set pen to paper: it is certain that never was a greater propriety of words and thoughts adapted to the fubject, than what that author has made use of in his Elements. I fhall only appeal to my reader, if this definition agrees with any notion he has of wit; if it be a true one, I am fure Mr. Dryden was not only a better poet, but a greater wit, than Mr. Cowley; and Virgil a much more facetious man than either Ovid or Martial.

Bouhours, whom I look upon to be the most penetrating of all the French critics, has taken pains to fhew, that it is impoffible for any thought to be beautiful which is not just, and has not its foundation in the nature of things; that the bafis of all wit is truth; and that no thought can be valuable, of which good fenfe is not the groundwork. Boileau has endeavoured to inculcate the fame notion in feveral parts of his writings, both in profe and verfe. This is that natural way of writing, that beautiful fimplicity, which we fo much admire in the compositions of the ancients: and which nobody deviates from, but those who want ftrength of genius to make a thought shine in its own natural beauties. Poets, who want this strength of genius to give that majestic simplicity to nature, which we so much admire in the works of the ancients, are forced to hunt after foreign ornaments, and not to let any piece of wit of what kind foever escape them. I look upon these writers as Goths in poetry, who, like thofe in architecture, nor being able to come up to the beautiful fimplicity of the old Greeks and Romans, have endeavoured to fupply its place with all the extravagances of an irregular fancy. Mr. Dryden makes a very handsome obfervation, on Ovid's writing a letter from Dido to Æneas, in the following words. Ovid.' fays he, fpeaking of Virgil's fiction of Dido and Æneas, takes it up after him, even in the fame age, and makes an an'cient heroine of Virgil's new-created Dido; dictates a letter for her just before her death to the ' ungrateful fugitive; and, very unluckily for himself, is, for measuring a sword with a man fo much fuperior in force to him on the fame fubject. I think I may be judge of this, because 'I have tranflated both. The famous author of the Art of Love has nothing of his own: he bor

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rows all from a greater master in his own profeffion, and, which is worse, improves nothing which he finds: nature fails him, and being 'forced to his old fhift, he has recourse to wittiL. 2

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cifm. This paffes indeed with his foft admirers, and gives him the preference to Virgil in their efteem.'

Were not I fupported by fo great an authority as that of Mr. Dryden, I fhould not venture to obferve, that the taste of moft of our English poets, as well as readers, is extremely Gothic. He quotes Monfieur Segrais for a threefold diftinction of the readers of poetry in the firft of which he comprehends the rabble of readers, whom he does not treat 'as fuch with regard to their quality, but to their numbers and the coarfenefs of their tafte. His words are as follows: Segrais has diftinguifhed the readers of poetry, according to their capacity of judging, into three claffes. [He might have faid the fame of writers too, if he had pleafed.] In the lowest form he places thofe whom he calls Les Petits Efprits, fuch things as our upper-gallery audience in a playhoufe; who like nothing but the husk and rhind of wit, prefer a quibble, a conceit, an epigram, < before folid fenfe and elegant expreffion: thefe are mob-readers. If Virgil and Martial ftood for parliament-men, we know already who would carry it. But though they make the greateft appearance in the field, and cry the loudeft, the belt on't is they are but a fort of French huguenots, or Dutch boors, brought over in herds, but not naturalized; who have not lands of two pounds per annum in Parnaffus, and therefore are not privileged to poll. Their authors are of the fame level, fit to represent them on a mountebank's stage, or to be mafters of ⚫ the ceremonies in a bear-garden: yet thefe are they who have the most admirers. But it often happens, to their mortification, that as their readers improve their stock of fenfe, as they may by reading better books, and by converfation with men of judgment, they foon forfake

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ployed. The thoughts will be rifing of themselves from time to time, though we give them no encouragement; as the toflings and fluctuations of the fea continue feveral hours after the winds are laid.

It is to this that I impute my last night's dream or vifion, which formed into one continued alle gory the feveral schemes of wit, whether falfe, mixed, or true, that have been the fubject of my late papers.

As I

Methought I was tranfported into a country that was filled with prodigics and enchantments, governed by the goddefs of Falfhood, and intitled The Region of falfe Wit. There was nothing in the fields, the woods, and the rivers that appeared natural. Several of the trees bloffomed in leaf-gold, fome of them produced bone-lace, and fome of them precious ftones. The fountains bubbled in an opera-tune, and were filled with ftags, wild-boars, and mermaids, that lived ameng the waters; at the fame time that dolphins and feveral kinds of fish played upon the banks or took their paftime in the meadows. The birds had many of them golden beaks, and human voices, The flowers perfumed the air with smells of incenfe, amber-greafe, and pulvillios; and were fo interwoven with one another, that they grow up in pieces of embroidery. The winds were filled with fighs and meffages of diftant lovers. was walking to and fro in this enchanted wildernefs, I could not forbear breaking out into foliloquies upon the feveral wonders which lay before me, when to my great furprise I found there were artificial echoes in every walk, that, by repetitions of certain words which I fpoke, agreed with me, or contradicted me, in every thing I faid. In the midst of my converfation with these invifible companions, I discovered in the centre of a very dark grove a monstrous fabric built after the Gothic manner, and covered with innumerable devices in that barbarous kind of sculpture. Iimmediately went up to it, and found it to be a kind of heathen temple confecrated to the god of Dulnefs. Upon my entrance, I faw the deity of the place dreffed in the habit of a monk, with a book in one hand, and a rattle in the other. Upon his right hand was Induftry, with a lamp burning before her; and on his left Caprice, with a monkey fitting on her shoulder. Before his feet there flood an altar of a very odd make, which, as I af. terwards found, was fhaped in that manner to comply with the infcription that surrounded it. Upon the altar there lay feveral offerings of axes, wings, and eggs, cut in paper, and infcribed with verfes. The temple was filled with votaries, who applied themfelves to different diverfions, as their fancies directed them. In one part of it I faw a regiment of Anagrams, who were continually in motion, turning to the right or to the left, facing about, doubling their ranks, shifting their stations, and throwing themselves into all the figures and countermarches of the most changeable and perplexed exercife.

Not far from thefe was a body of Acroftics, made up of very difproportioned persons. It was themselves in a line on the left-hand of each codifpofed into three columns, the officers planting

lumn. The officers were all of them at least fix feet high, and made three rows of very proper men; but the common foldiers, who filled up the spaces between the officers, were fuch dwarfs, cripples, and fcarecrows, that one could hardly look upon them without laughing. There were

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behind the Acroftics two or three files of Chronograms, which differed only from the former, as their officers were equipped, like the figure of time, with an hour-glafs in one hand, and a fcythe in the other, and took their pofts promifcuoufly among the private men whom they commanded. In the body of the temple, and before the very face of the deity, methought I faw the phantom of Tryphiodorus the Lipogrammatist, engaged in a ball with four-and-twenty perfons, who purfued him by turns through all the intricacies and labyrinths of a country dance, without being able to overtake him.

Obferving several to be very bufy at the western end of the Temple, I inquired into what they were doing, and found there was in that quarter the great magazine of Rebus's. There were feveral things of the most different natures tied up in bundles, and thrown upon one another in heaps like faggots, You might behold an anchor, a night-rail, and a hobby-horse, bound up together. One of the workmen seeing me very much furprized, told me, there was an infinite deal of wit in feveral of those bundles, and that he would explain them to me if I pleafed. I thanked him for his civility, but told him I was in very great hafte at that time. As I was going out of the Temple, 1 obferved in one corner of it a cluster of men and women laughing very heartily, and diverting themfelves at a game of Crambo. I heard feveral Double Rhymes as I paffed by them, which raifed a great deal of mirth.

I was

tiers of the enchanted region, which I have before defcribed, were inhabited by the fpecies of Mixed Wit, who made a very odd appearance when they were mustered together in an army. There were men whofe bodies were stuck full of darts, and women whofe eyes were burningglaffes; men that had hearts of fire, and women that had breafts of fnow. It would be endless to defcribe feveral monsters of the like nature, that compofed this great army; which immediately fell afunder and divided itself into two parts, the one half throwing themfelves behind the banners of Truth, and the others behind those of Falfhood.

Not far from thefe was another fet of merry people engaged at a diverfion, in which the whole jeft was to mistake one perfon for another. To give occafion for thefe ludicrous mistakes, they were divided into pairs, every pair being covered from head to foot with the fame kind of dress, though perhaps there was not the leaft refemblance in their faces. By this means an old man was fometimes mistaken for a boy, a woman for a man, and a black-a-moor for an European, which very often produced great peals of laughter. Thefe I gueffed to be a party of Puns. But being very defirous to get out of this world of magic, which had almost turned my brain, I left the temple, and croffed over the fields that lay about it with all the fpeed I could make. not gone far before I heard the found of trumpets and alarms, which feemned to proclaim the march of an enemy; and, as I afterwards found, was in reality what I apprehended it. There appeared at a great diftance a very fhining light, and, in the midst of it, a perfon of a most beautiful afpect; her name was Truth. On her righthand there marched a male deity, who bore feveral quivers on his fhoulder, and grafped feveral arrows in his hand. His name was Wit. The approach of thefe two enemies filled all the territories of Falfe Wit with an unfpeakable confternation, infomuch that the goddess of thofe regions appeared in perfon upon her frontiers, with the feveral inferior deities, and the different bodies of forces which I had before feen in the temple, who were now drawn up in array, and prepared to give their foes a warm reception. As the march of the enemy was very flow, it gave time to the feveral inhabitants who bordered upon the regions of Falfhood to draw their forces into a body, with a defign to stand upon their guard as neuters, and attend the iffue of the combat.

I must here inform my reader, that the fron

The goddess of Falfhood was of gigantic ftature, and advanced fome paces before the front of her army; but as the dazzling light, which flowed from Truth, began to fhine upon her, she faded infenfibly; infomuch, that in a little space fhe looked rather like an huge phantom than a real fubftance. At length, as the goddefs of Truth approached ftill nearer to her, the fell away intirely, and vanifhed amidst the brightness of her prefence; fo that there did not remain the leaft trace or impreffion of her figure in the place where the had been seen.

As at the rifing of the fun the constellations grow thin, and the stars go out one after another, till the whole hemifphere is extinguifhed; fuch was the vanishing of the goddess: and not only of the goddefs herfelf, but of the whole army that attended her, which fympathized with their leader, and fhrunk into nothing, in proportion as the goddefs difappeared. At the fame time the whole temple funk, the fish betook themselves to the ftreams, and the wild beafts to the woods, the fountains recovered their murmurs, the birds their voices, the trees their leaves, the flowers their fcents, and the whole face of nature its true and genuine appearance. Though I still continued afleep, I fancied myself as it were awakened out of a dream, when I faw this region of prodigies reftored to woods and rivers, fields and meadows.

Upon the removal of that wild fcene of wonders, which had very much disturbed my imagination, I took a full furvey of the perfons of Wit and Truth; for indeed it was impoffible to look upon the firit, without feeing the other at the fame time. There was behind them a strong and compact body of figur. s. The genius of Heroic Poetry appeared with the fword in her hand, and a laurel on her head. Tragedy was crowned with cyprefs, and covered with robes dipped in blood. Satire had fmiles in her look, and a dagger under her garment. Rhetoric was known by her thunderbolt; and Comedy by her mask. After feveral other figures, Epigram marched up in the rear, who had been pofted there at the beginning of the expedition, that he might not revolt to the enemy, whom he w is fufpected to favour in his heart. I was very much awed and delighted with the appearance of the God of Wit; there was fomething fo amiable, and yet fo piercing in his looks, as infpired me at once with love and terror, As I was gazing on him, to my unspeakable joy, he took a quiver of arrows from his fhoulder, in order to make me a prefent of it; but as I was reaching out my hand to receive it of him, I knocked it against a chair, and by that means awaked,

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TH

HE most improper things we commit in the conduct of our lives, we are led into by the force of fashion. Inftances might be given, in which a prevailing custom makes us act against the rules of nature, law, and common fenfe; but at prefent I fhall confine my confideration of the effect it has upon men's minds, by looking into our behaviour when it is the fashion to go into mourning. The custom of representing the grief we have for the tofs of the dead by our habits, certainly had its rife from the real forrow of fuch as were too much diftreffed to take the proper care they ought of their drefs. By degrees it prevailed, that fuch as had this inward oppreffion upon their minds, made an apology for not joining with the reft of the world in their ordinary diverfions by drefs fuited to their condition. This therefore was at first affumed by fuch only as were under real distress; to whom it was a relief that they had nothing about them fo light and gay as to be irkfome to the gloom and melancholy of their inward reflections, or that might misrepresent them to others. In procefs of time this laudable diftinction of the forrowful was loft, and mourning is now worn by heirs and widows. You see nothing but magnificence and folemnity in the equipage of the relict, and an air of release from fervitude in the pomp of a fon who has loft a wealthy father. This fafhion of forrow is now become a generous part of the ceremonial between princes and fovereigns, who in the language of all nations are ftiled brothers to each other, and put on the purple upon the death of any potentate with whom they live in amity. Courtiers, and all who with themfelves fuch, are immediately seized with grief from head to foot upon this difafter to their prince; fo that one may know, by the very buckles of a gentleman-ufher, what degree of friendfhip any deceafed monarch maintained with the court to which he belongs. A good courtier's habit and behaviour is hieroglyphical on these occaLions; he deals much in whispers, and you may fee he dreffes according to the best intelligence. The general affectation among men, of appearing greater than they are, makes the whole world run into the habit of the court. You fee the lady, who the day before was as various as a rainbow, upon the time appointed for beginning to mourn, as dark as a cloud. This humour does not prevail only on those whofe fortunes can fupport any change in their equipage, not on thofe only whofe incomes demand the wantonnefs of new appearances; but on fuch alfo who have juft enough to clothe them. An old acquaintance of mine, of ninety pounds a year, who has naturally the vanity of being a man of fafhion deep at his heart, is very much put to it to bear the mortality of princes. He made a new black fuit upon the death of the King of Spain, he turned it for the King of Portugal, and he now keeps his chamber while it is fcouring for the emperor. He is a good economift in his extravagance, and makes only a fresh Hack button upon his iron-gray foit for any potntate of fmall territories; he indeed adds his crape hatband for a prince whofe exploits he has

admired in the Gazette. But whatever compliments may be made on these occafions, the true mourners are the mercers, filkmen, lacemen, and milliners. A prince of a merciful and royal difpofition would reflect with great anxiety upon the profpect of his death, if he confidered what numbers would be reduced to mifery by that accident only; who would think it of moment enough to direct, that in the notification of his departure, the honour done to him might be restrained to thofe of the houshold of the prince to whom it fhould be fignified. He would think a general mourning to be in a lefs degree the fame ceremony which is practifed in barbarous nations, of killing their flaves to attend the obfequies of their kings.

I had been wonderfully at a lofs for many months together, to guess at the character of a man who came now and then to our coffee-house; he ever ended a news-paper with this reflection, Well, I fee all the foreign princes are in good health.' If you asked, Pray Sir, what fays the Poftman from Vienna? he answered, Make us 'thankful, the German princes are all well.' What does he fay from Barcelona? He does not fpeak but that the country agrees very well with the new queen.' After very much inquiry, I found this man of universal loyalty was a wholefale dealer in filks and ribbons; his way is, it feems, if he hires a weaver, or workman, to have it inferted in his articles, That all this fhall be well and truly performed, provided no foreign potentate shall depart this life within the time ' abovementioned.' It happens in all public mournings, that the many trades which depend upon our habits, are during that folly either pinched with present want, or terrified with the apparent approach of it. All the atonement which men can make for wanton expences, which is a fort of infulting the fcarcity under which others labour, is, that the fuperfluities of the wealthy give fupplies to the neceffities of the poor; but, inftead of any other good arifing from the affectation of being in courtly habits of mourning, all order feems to be destroyed by it; and the true honour, which one court does to another on that occafion, lofes its force and efficacy. When a fo. reign minifter beholds the court of a nation, which flourishes in riches and plenty, lay afide, upon the lofs of his master, all marks of fplendor and magnificence, though the head of fuch a joyful people, he will conceive a greater idea of the honour done his mafter, than when he fees the generality of the people in the fame habit. When one is afraid to ask the wife of a tradefman whom the has loft of her family; and after fome preparation endeavours to know whom the mourns for; how ridiculous is it to hear her explain herself, that we have loft one of the house of Auftria? Princes are elevated fo highly above the rest of mankind, that it is a prefumptuous diftinction to take a part in honours done to their memories, except we have authority for it, by being related in a particular manner to the court which pays that veneration to their friendship, and feems to exprefs on fuch an occafion the fenfe of the uncertainty of human life in general, by affuming the habit of forrow, though in the full poffetion of triumph and royalty.

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No.

N° 65. TUESDAY, MAY 15.
-Demetri teque Tigelli

Difcipulorum inter jubeo plorare cathedras,

HOR. Sat. I. x. 90.
Demetrius and Tigellius, know your place;
Go hence, and whine among the fchool-boy race.

FTER having at large explained what wit

A is, and defcribed the falfe appearances of

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Now for Mrs. Harriot; fhe laughs at obedience to an absent mother, whofe tendernefs Bufy defcribes to be very exquifite, for "that the is fo (6 pleafed with finding Harriot again, that the cannot chide her for being out of the way." This witty daughter, and fine lady, has fo little refpect for this good woman, that the ridicules her air in taking leave, and cries, "In what "ftruggle is my poor mother yonder? See, fee "her head tottering, her eyes ftaring, and her un"der-lip trembling." But all this is atoned for, it, all that labour feems but an ufelefs inquiry, becaufe" fhe has more wit than is usual in her without fome time be spent in confidering the ap- "fex, and as much malice, though fhe is as wild. plication of it. The feat of wit, when one fpeaks" as you would with her, and has a demureness as a man of the town and the world, is the play- "in her looks that makes it fo furprifing!" Then house; I fhall therefore fill this paper with reflec- to recommend her as a fit spouse for his hero, the tions upon the use of it in that place. The appli- poet makes her speak her fenfe of marriage very cation of wit in the theatre has as ftrong an affect ingenioufly; "I think," fays fhe, "I might be upon the manners of our gentlemen, as the tafte brought to endure him, and that is all a reafonaof it has upon the writings of our authors. It ble woman fhould expect in an husband." It is, may, perhaps, look like a very prefumptuous methinks, unnatural that we are not made to unwork, though not foreign from the duty of a Spec- derstand how she that was bred under a filly pitator, to tax the writings of fuch as have long had ous old mother, that would never truft her out of the general applause of a nation; but I fhall al- her fight, came to be so polite. ways make reafon, truth, and nature, the measures of praise and difpraife; if thofe are for me, the generality of opinion is of no confequence against me; if they are against me, the general opinion cannot long fupport me.

Without further preface, I am going to look into fome of our moft applauded plays, and fee whether they deferve the figure they at present bear in the imaginations of men, or not.

In reflecting upon these works, I fall chiefly dwell upon that for which each respective play is moft celebrated. The prefent paper shall be employed upon Sir Fopling Flutter. The received character of this play is, that it is the pattern of genteel comedy. Dorimant and Harriot are the characters of greateft confequence: and if these are low and mean, the reputation of the play is very unjust,

I will take for granted, that a fine gentleman fhould be honeft in his actions, and refined in his language. Instead of this, our hero in this piece is a direct knave in his designs, and a clown in his language, Bellair is his admirer and friend; in return of which, because he is forfooth a greater wit than his faid friend, he thinks it reafonable to perfuade him to marry a young lady, whofe virtue, he thinks, will last no longer than till the is a wife, and then she cannot but fall to his fhare, as he is an irresistible fine gentleman. The falfhood to Mrs. Loveit, and the barbarity of triumphing over her anguish for lofing him, is another inftance of his honesty, as well as his goodAs to his fine language; he calls the orange-woman, who it feems is inclined to grow fat, "An over-grown jade, with a flasket of guts "before her;" and falutes her with a pretty "phrafe of, How now, double tripe?" Upon the mention of a country gentlewoman, whom he knows nothing of, no one can imagine why, he "will lay his life the is fome awkward ill"fashioned country toad, who, not having above "four dozen of hairs on her head, has adorned "her baldness with a large white fruz, that fhe may look fparkifhly in the fore-front of the "king's box at an old play." Unnatural mixture of fenfelefs common-place!

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As to the generosity of his temper, he tells his poor footman. "If he did not wait better-"he would turn him away, in the infolent phrafe of "I'll uncafe you."

It cannot be denied, but that the negligence of every thing, which engages the attention of the fober and valuable part of mankind, appears very well drawn in this piece; but it is denied, that it is necessary to the character of a fine gentleman, that he should in that manner trample upon all order and decency. As for the character of Dorimant, it is more of a coxcomb than that of Fopling. He fays of one of his companions, that a good correspondence between them is their mutual intereft. Speaking of that friend, he declares, their being much together "makes the

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women think the better of his understanding, "and judge more favourably of my reputation. "It makes him pass upon fome for a man of ve"ry good fenfe, and me upon others for a very "civil perfon."

This whole celebrated piece is a perfect contradiction to good manners, good fenfe, and common honefty; and as there is nothing in it but what is built upon the ruin of virtue and innocence, according to the notion of merit in this comedy, I take the fhoemaker to be, in reality, the fine gentleman of the play; for it feems he is an Atheist, if we may depend upon his character as given by the orange-woman, who is herself far from being the loweft in the play. She fays of a fine man, who is Dorimant's companion, there "is not fuch another heathen in the town, except "the fhoemaker." His pretenfion to be the hero of the Drama appears ftill more in his own defcription of his way of living with his lady. "There is," fays he, "never a man in town lives

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more like a gentleman with his wife than I do; "I never mind her motions; fhe never inquires "into mine. We fpeak to one another civilly, "hate one another heartily; and because it is "vulgar to lie and foak together, we have each "of us our several fettle-bed." That of foaking together is as good as if Dorimant had spoken it himself; and, I think, fince he puts human nature in as ugly a form as the circumftance will bear, and is a ftanch unbeliever, he is very much wronged in having no part of the good fortune bestowed in the laft act.

To speak plainly of this whole work, I think nothing but being loft to a fense of innocence and virtue can make any one fee this comedy, without obferving more frequent occafion to move

forrow

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