farce.-Ridiculously has our poet, and ridiculously has our taste been represented, by a writer of universal fame; and through the medium of an almost universal language. Superficial criticisms hit the level of shallow minds, to whom a Bon Mot will appear Reason, and an epigrammatic Turn, Argument; so that many of our countrymen have hastily adopted this lively writer's opinion of the extravagance, and total want of design in Shakespear's dramas. With the more learned, deep, and sober critics, however, he lies under one confiderable disadvantage. For copying nature, as he found it, in the bufy walks of human life, he drew from an original, with which the Literati are seldom well acquainted. They perceive his portraits are not of the Grecian or of the Roman school; fo that after finding them unlike to the dignified characters preferved in learned museums, they do not deign to enquire, whether they resemble the living perfons, they were intended to represent. Among these connoiffeurs, whose acquaintance with man kind is formed in the library, not in the street, the camp, or village, whatever is unpolished and uncouth passes for fantastic and abfurd, though, in fact, it is a faithful representation of a really exifting cha racter. But it must be acknowledged, that, when this objection is obviated, there will yet remain another cause of cenfure; for though our author, from want of delicacy or from a defire to please the popular tafte, thought he had done well, when he faithfully copied nature, or represented customs, it will appear to politer times, the error of an untutored mind, which the example of judicious artists, and the admonitions of delicate connoiffeurs had not taught, that only graceful nature and decent customs give proper fubjects for imitation. It may be said in mitigation of his fault, that the vulgar here had not, as at Athens, been used to behold, Gorgeous i Homer's works alone were sufficient to teach the Greek poets how to write, and their audience how to judge. The songs fung by our bards at feasts and merry-makings were of a very coarse kind: as the people were totally illiterate, and the better fort alone could read even their mother tongue, their taste was formed on these compositions. As yet our stage had exhibited only those palpable allegories, by which rude unlettered moralists instruct and please the gross and ignorant multitude. Nothing can more plainly evince the opinion, the poets of those times had of the ignorance of the people, than the condescension shewn to it by the learned Earl of Dorset, in his tragedy of Gorboduc; in which the moral of each act is represented on the stage in dumb thew. It is therefore strange that Mr. de Voltaire, who B 2 who affects an impartial and philosophic spirit, should not rather speak with admiration, than contempt, of an author, who by the force of genius rose so much above the age and circumstances in which he was born, and who, even when he deviates most from rules, can rise to faults true critics dare not mend. In delineating characters he must be allowed very far to furpass all dramatic writers, and even Homer himself; he gives an air of reality to every thing, and, in spite of many and great faults, effects, better than any one has ever done, the chief purposes of theatrical representation. It avails little to prove, that the means by which he effects them are not those prescribed in any Art of Poetry. While we feel the power and energy of his predominant genius, shall we not be apt to treat the cold formal precepts of the Critic, with the fame peevish contempt, that the good lady in the Guardian, smarting in the anguish of a burn, does her fon's pedantic intrusion of Mr. Lock's doctrine, to prove that there is no heat in fire ? Nature and |