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And from thence can foar as foon
To the corners of the moon,

Mortals, that would follow me,
Love Virtue, she alone is free,
She can teach ye how to clime
Higher than the sphery chime:
Or, if Virtue feeble were,

Heav'n itself would ftoop to her.*

1016. And from thence can foar as foon

1020

To the corners of the moon.] Oberon fays of the swiftnefs

of his fairies, MIDS. N. DR. A. iv. S. i,

We the globe can compass foon
Swifter than the wandering moon.

And Drayton, NYMPHID. vol. ii. p. 552.
Whence lies a way up to the moon,
And thence the faery can as foon, &c.

Compare MACBETH, A. iii. Ș. v.

Upon the CORNER of the MOON

There hangs a vaporous drop profound.

And B. and Fletcher, SE A VOYAGE, A. i. S. i. vol. ix. p. 81. I saw a dolphin hang i' th' moon,

Shot from a wave.--

And Puck's Fairy, in MIDS. N. DR. A. ii. S. i.

I do wander every where

Swifter than the moon's sphere.

We plainly discern Milton's track of reading.

1021. Higher than the fphery chime.] Chime, Ital. Cima. Yet he uses chime in the common fenfe, ODE NATIV. v. 128. He may do fo here, but then the expreffion is licentious, I fuppofe for the fake of the rhyme.

H.

See Note on PAR. REG. ii. 263. SPHERY Occurs in Mins. N. DR. A. ii. S. vii. "Hermia's SPHERY eyne."

* If this Mafk had been revised by Milton, when his ear and judgement were perfectly formed, it had been the most exquifite of all his poems. As it is, there are some puerilities in it, and many inaccuracies of expreffion and verfification. The two editions of his POEMS, are of 1645 and 1673. In 1645, he was, as he would think, better employed. In 1673, he would condemn himself

for

for having written fuch a thing as a Mask, especially to a great lord, and a fort of vice-roy. H.

:

We must not read CoмUS with an eye to the stage, or with the expectation of dramatic propriety. Under this restriction, the abfurdity of the Spirit fpeaking to an audience in a folitary foreft at midnight, and the want of reciprocation in the dialogue, are overlooked. Coмus is a fuite of Speeches, not interefting by difcrimimation of character; not conveying a variety of incidents, nor gradually exciting curiofity: but perpetually attracting attention by fublime fentiment, by fanciful imagery of the richest vein, by an exuberance of picturesque defcription, poetical allufion, and ornamental expreffion. While it widely departs from the grotesque anomalies of the Mask now in fafhion, it does not nearly approach to the natural conftitution of a regular play. There is a chastity in the application and conduct of the machinery and Sabrina is introduced with much addrefs, after the Brothers had imprudently fuffered the inchantment of Comus to take effect. This is the first time the old English Mask was in fome degree reduced to the principles and form of rational compofition; yet ftill it could not but retain fome of its arbitrary peculiarities. The poet had here properly no more to do with the Pathos of tragedy, than the Character of comedy: nor do I know that he was confined to the usual modes of theatrical interlocution. A great critic obferves, that the difpute between the Lady and Comus is the moft animated and affecting fcene of the piece. Perhaps fome other scenes, either confifting only of a foliloquy, or of three or four speeches only, have afforded more true pleasure. The fame critic thinks, that in all the moral dialogue, although the language is poetical, and the fentiments generous, fomething is ftill wanting to allure attention. But furely, in such paffages, fentiments fo generous, and language fo poetical, are fufficient to roufe all our feelings. For this reason I cannot admit his pofition, that CoмUS is a drama tediously inftructive. And if, as he fays, to these ethical difcuffions the auditor liftens, as to a lecture, without paffion, without anxiety, yet he liftens with elevation and delight. The action is faid to be improbable: because the Brothers, when their fifter finks with fatigue in a pathless wildernefs, wander both away together in fearch of berries, too far to find their way back, and leave a helpless lady to all the sadness and danger of folitude. But here is no defertion, or neglect of the lady. The Brothers leave their fifter under a fpreading pine in the foreft, fainting for refreshment: they go to procure berries or fome other fruit for her immediate relief, and, with great probability, lofe their way in going or returning. To fay nothing of the poet's art, in making this very natural and fimple accident to be productive of the distress, which forms the future hufinefs and complication of the fable. It is certainly a fault, that the Brothers, although with fome indications of anxiety, fhould enter with so much tranquillity, when their fifter is loft, and at leisure pronounce philo

fophical

sophical panegyrics on the mysteries of virginity. But we must not too fcrupulously attend to the exigencies of fituation, nor fuffer ourfelves to fuppofe that we are reading a play, which Milton did not mean to write. Thefe fplendid infertions will please, independently of the ftory, from which however they refult; and their elegance and fublimity will overbalance their want of place. In a Greek tragedy, such sentimental harangues, arifing from the sub. ject, would have been given to a chorus.

On the whole, whether CoмUS, be or be not, deficient as a drama, whether it is confidered as an Epic drama, a series of lines, a Mask, or a poem, I am of opinion, that our author is here only inferiour to his own PARADISE LOST.

O DE S.

O DE

S.

ON THE MORNING OF

CHRIST'S

T

NATIVITY.*

I.

HIS is the month, and this the happy morn, Wherein the Son of heav'n's eternal king, Of wedded Maid, and Virgin Mother born, Our great redemption from above did bring;

* This Ode, in which the many learned allufions are highly poetical, was probably compofed as a college-exercise at Cambridge, our author being now only twenty one years old. In the edition of 1645, in its title it is faid to have been written in 1629. We are informed by himself, that he was employed in writing this piece, in the conclusion of the fixth Elegy to his friend Deodate, which appears to have been fent about the clofe of the month December. Deodate had inquired how he was spending his time. Milton anfwers, v. 81.

Paciferum canimus cœlefti femine regem,,
Fauftaque facratis fæcula pacta libris ;
Vagitumque Dei, et ftabulantem paupere tecto
Qui fuprema fuo cum patre regna colit.

Stelliparumque polum, modulantefque æthere turmas.

The concluding pentameter of the paragraph points out the beft part of the Ode.

Et fubito elifos ad fua fana deos.

See

For fo the holy fages once did fing,

That he our deadly forfeit should release, And with his Father work us a perpetual peace.

II.

5

That glorious form, that light unfufferable,
And that far-beaming blaze of majesty,
Wherewith he wont at heav'n's high council-table
To fit the midft of Trinal Unity,

He laid afide; and here with us to be,

Forfook the courts of everlasting day,

II

And chofe with us a darksome house of mortal clay.

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The Oracles are dumb,

No voice or hideous hum, &c. &c.

The rest of the Ode chiefly confifts of a string of affected con-. ceits, which his early youth, and the fashion of the times, can only excuse. But there is a dignity and fimplicity in these lines, worthy the matureft years, and the best times. ft. iv.

No war, or battel's found

Was heard the world around,

The idle fpear and shield were high up hung;
The hooked chariot stood

Unftain'd with human blood,

The trumpet spake not to the armed throng:

And kings fate ftill with awful eye

As if they furely knew their fovran Lord was nigh.

Nor is the poetry of the stanza immediately following, an expreffion or two excepted, unworthy of Milton.

But peaceful was the night,

Wherein the prince of light

His reign of peace upon the earth began;

The wind, with wonder whift,

Smoothly the waters kift,

Whifp'ring new joys to the mild ocean,

Who now had quite forgot to rave,

While birds of calm fit brooding on the charmed wave.

But I must avoid general anticipation, and come to particulars.

5.

Sages.-] The prophets, of the Old Testament.

VOL. I.

LI

III. Say,

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