On this page
-
Text (2)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Untitled Article
In templo [ Qw . templum ?] Dei offert tmusquisque quod potest . —HiKitoNvni . Job iii . 6 , — That night—let Darkness seize upon it . Bishop Lowth * properly considers this language < c as the strongest indication of passion and a perturbed mind , and as an example of sublime poetic diction arising from the state of the emotions . To illustrate it , he quotes a passage from the Odes of Horace , *! " which is extremely pertinent and impressive . Speaking of that fine effusion of the pen of the Roman poet , he says , w anger and vexation dissipated the order of his ideas , and destroyed the construction of his introductory sentence . " The criticism is exact and tasteful : so far , the two compositions throw light upon each other ; and thus , in judicious hands , classical learning may he made explanatory of parts of the Jewish Scriptures .
One description of my readers may not be displeased , if I transcribe a further remark of Lowth s on the words that he cites from Horace : it is , I am sorry to add , a personal remark , yet serves to elucidate his own literary histoTy and that of the times in which he lived . After enlarging on the beauties of the commencement of the Ode , the critic subjoins the following sentence :
' * But should some officious grammarian take in hand the passage ( for this is a very diligent race of beings , and sometimes more than sufficientlyexact and scrupulous ) , and attempt to restore it to its primitive purity and jerfection , the whole grace and excellence of that beautiful exordium would ? e instantly annihilated , all the impetuosity and ardour would in a mement > e extinguished . " J The individual designated as " some officious Grammarian , '' is Bentley He who consults the edition of Horace by that most sagacious verbal critic [ Lib . ii . Od . xiii . ] , and Lowth ' s Letter to Warburton , &c , pp . 80 , 81 , will have no doubts in respect of the accuracy of this statement . In matters of pure taste , Lowth was eminently superior to Bentley : but , for the credit of the accomplished author of the Prcelectiones , &c , we must wish that he had not expressed himself so contemptuously of a scholar of almost unequalled fame in one branch of learning . ^ Prov . vi . 6—8 , compared with xxx . 25 , ** Go to the ant , thou sluggard , consider her ways , and be wise : which having no guide , overseer , or ruler , provideth her meat in the summer , and gathereth her food in the harvest . ' " The ants are a people not strong , yet they prepare their meat in the summer , " On the former of these texts , Poole [ Annot ., &c , ver . 8 ) observes that " in winter ants stir not out of their holes . * ' The observation may be accurate enough , in point of feet , but appears superfluous and misplaced ; since in neither passage does Solomon mention the inactive or torpid state of ants
? De Sacra Poesrtlebraeor ., &c ., Prael . xiv . f Lib . ii . xiiL , pronounced by Dr . Joseph Warton [ Essay on the Genius , &c , of Pope , ed . 5 , Vol . I . p . 250 ] *< the best ode of Horace . " The received and unquestionable text is , " llle et nefasto , " &c . Bentley , against authority of every kind , would read , ' Ilium 6 nefasto , " &c . X Gregory ' s Transl . of Lowth ' s Lectures , &c , No . XIV . § In Warton ' a Essay on Pope , II . 200 , there seems to be a severe but not disrespectful censure of the style of the Rqmbler , &c .
Untitled Article
NOTES ON PASSAGES OF SCRIPTURE .
Untitled Article
C 518 )
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Aug. 2, 1830, page 518, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2587/page/14/
-