Lectures on rhetoric and belles lettres: By Hugh Blair, ... In three volumes. ... [pt.2]

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Lectures on rhetoric and belles lettres: By Hugh Blair, ... In three volumes. ... [pt.2]
Author
Blair, Hugh, 1718-1800.
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Dublin :: printed for Messrs. Whitestone, Colles, Burnet, Moncrieffe, Gilbert, [and 8 others in Dublin],
1783.
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"Lectures on rhetoric and belles lettres: By Hugh Blair, ... In three volumes. ... [pt.2]." In the digital collection Eighteenth Century Collections Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/004786433.0001.002. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 12, 2025.

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Page [unnumbered]

LECTURE XVIII. FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE—GENE|RAL CHARACTERS OF STYLE—DIFFUSE, CONCISE—FEEBLE, NERVOUS—DRY, PLAIN, NEAT, ELEGANT, FLOWERY.

HAVING treated, at considerable length, of the Figures of Speech, of their origin, of their nature, and of the management of such of them as are import|ant enough to require a particular discus|sion, before finally dismissing this subject, I think it incumbent on me, to make some observations concerning the proper use of Figurative Language in general. These, indeed, I have, in part, already anticipat|ed. But, as great errors are often commit|ted in this part of Style, especially by young writers, it may be of use that I bring together, under one view, the most mate|rial directions on this head.

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I BEGIN with repeating an observation, formerly made, that neither all the beau|ties, nor even the chief beauties of compo|sition, depend upon Tropes and Figures. Some of the most sublime and most pathetic passages of the most admired authors, both in prose and poetry, are expressed in the most simple Style, without any figure at all; instances of which I have before given. On the other hand, a composition may abound with these studied ornaments; the language may be artful, splendid, and highly figured, and yet the composition be on the whole frigid and unaffecting. Not to speak of sentiment and thought, which constitute the real and lasting merit of any work, if the style be stiff and affected, if it be deficient in perspicuity or precision, or in ease and neatness, all the Figures that can be employed will never render it agree|able: they may dazzle a vulgar, but will never please a judicious, eye.

IN the second place, Figures, in order to be beautiful, must always rise naturally from the subject. I have shown that all of them are the language either of Imagina|tion, or of Passion; some of them suggest|ed by Imagination, when it is awakened and sprightly, such as Metaphors and Com|parisons; others by Passion or more heat|ed emotion, such as Personifications and Apostrophes. Of course they are beauti|ful then only, when they are prompted by

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fancy, or by passion. They must rise of their own accord; they must flow from a mind warmed by the object which it seeks to describe; we should never interrupt the course of thought to cast about for Figures. If they be fought after coolly, and fastened on as designed ornaments, they will have a miserable effect. It is a very erroneous idea, which many have of the ornaments of Style, as if they were things detached from the subject, and that could be stuck to it, like lace upon a coat: this is indeed,

Purpureus late qui splendeat unus aut alter Assuitur pannus* 1.1 ARS POET.
And it is this false idea which has often brought attention to the beauties of writ|ing into disrepute. Whereas, the real and proper ornaments of Style are wrought into the substance of it. They flow in the same stream with the current of thought. A writer of genius conceives his subject strongly; his imagination is filled and im|pressed with it; and pours itself forth in that Figurative Language which Imagina|tion naturally speaks He puts on no emo|tion which his subject does not raise in him; he speaks as he feels; but his style will be beautiful, because his feelings are lively. On occasions, when fancy is lan|guid,

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or finds nothing to rouse it, we should never attempt to hunt for figures. We then work, as it is said,

"invitâ Minervâ;"
supposing figures invented, they will have the appearance of being forced; and in this case, they had much better be wanted.

In the third place, even when Imagina|tion prompts, and the subject naturally gives rise to Figures, they must, however, not be employed too frequently. In all beauty,

"simplex munditiis;"
is a capital quality. Nothing derogates more from the weight and dignity of any composition, than too great attention to ornament. When the ornaments cost labour, that la|bour always appears; though they should cost us none, still the reader or hearer may be surfeited with them; and when they come too thick, they give the impression of a light and frothy genius, that evapo|rates in shew, rather than brings forth what is solid. The directions of the ancient critics, on this head, are full of good sense, and deserve careful attention.
"Volup|tatibus maximis,"
says Cicero, de Orat. L. iii.
"fastidium finitimum est in rebus omnibus; quo hoc minus in oratione miremur. In qua vel ex poëtis, vel oratoribus possumus judicare, concin|nam, ornatam, festivam sine intermis|sione, quamvis claris sit coloribus picta, vel poësis, vel oratio, non posse in de|lectatione esse diuturnâ. Quare, bene

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et praeclare, quamvis nobis saepe dica|tur, belie et festive nimium saepe no|lo* 1.2."
To the same purpose, are the excellent directions with which Quinctilian concludes his discourse concerning Figures, L. ix. C. 3.
"Ego illud de iis figuris quae vere fiunt, adjiciam breviter, sicut or|nant orationem opportunae positae, ita ineptissimas esse cum immodice petuntur. Sunt, qui neglecto rerum pondere et viri|bus sententiarum, si vel inania verba in hos modos depravarunt, summos se ju|dicant artifices; ideoque non desinunt eas nectere; quas sine sententia sectare, tam est ridiculum quam quaerere habitum gestumque sine corpore. Ne hae quidem quae rectae fiunt, densandae sunt nimis. Sciendum imprimis quid quisque postu|let locus, quid persona, quid tempus. Major enim pars harum figurarum posita est in delectatione. Ubi verò, atrocitate, invidiâ, miseratione pugnandum est; quis ferat verbis contrapositis, et consi|milibus, & pariter cadentibus, irascen|tem, flentem, rogantem? Cum in his rebus, cura verborum deroget affectibus fidem; et ubicunque ars ostentatur, ve|ritas

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abesse videatur* 1.3."
After these judicious and useful observations, I have no more to add, on this subject, except this admonition.

IN the fourth place, that without a ge|nius for Figurative Language, none should attempt it. Imagination is a power not to be acquired; it must be derived from na|ture. Its redundancies we may prune, its deviations we may correct, its sphere we may enlarge; but the faculty itself we cannot create: and all efforts towards a metaphorical ornamented style, if we are destitute of the proper genius for it, will prove awkward and disgusting. Let us satisfy ourselves, however, by consider|ing, that without this talent, or at least

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with a very small measure of it, we may both write and speak to advantage. Good sense, clear ideas, perspicuity of language, and proper arrangement of words and thoughts, will always command attention. These are indeed the foundations of all solid merit, both in speaking and writing. Many subjects require nothing more; and those which admit of ornament, admit it only as a secondary requisite. To study and to know our own genius well; to fol|low nature; to seek to improve, but not to force it, are directions which cannot be too often given to those who desire to excell in the liberal arts.

WHEN I entered on the consideration of Style, I observed that words being the co|pies of our ideas, there must always be a very intimate connection between the manner in which every writer employs words, and his manner of thinking; and that, from the peculiarity of thought and expression which belongs to him, there is a certain character imprinted on his Style, which may be denominated his manner; commonly expressed by such general terms, as strong, weak, dry, simple, affected, or the like. These distinctions carry, in ge|neral, some reference to an author's man|ner of thinking, but refer chiefly to his mode of expression. They arise from the whole tenour of his language; and com|prehend the effect produced by all those

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parts of Style which we have already con|sidered; the choice which he makes of single words; his arrangement of these in sentences; the degree of his precision; and his embellishment, by means of musical ca|dence, figures, or other arts of speech. Of such general Characters of Style, therefore, it remains now to speak, as the result of those underparts of which I have hitherto treated.

THAT different subjects require to be treated of in different sorts of Style, is a position so obvious, that I shall not stay to illustrate it. Every one sees that Treatises of Philosophy, for instance, ought not to be composed in the same style with ora|tions. Every one sees also, that different parts of the same composition require a va|riation in the style and manner. In a ser|mon, for instance, or any harangue, the application or peroration admits more or|nament, and requires more warmth, than the didactic part. But what I mean at present to remark is, that amidst this va|riety, we still expect to find, in the com|positions of any one man, some degree of uniformity or consistency with himself in manner; we expect to find some predomi|nant character of Style impressed on all his writings, which shall be suited to, and shall mark, his particular genius, and turn of mind. The orations in Livy differ much in Style, as they ought to do, from the rest

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of his history. The same is the case with those in Tacitus. Yet both in Livy's ora|tions, and in those of Tacitus, we are able clearly to trace the distinguishing manner of each historian; the magnificent fullness of the one, and the sententious conciseness of the other. The "Lettres Persanes," and "L'Esprit de Loix," are the works of the same author. They required very dif|ferent composition surely, and accordingly they differ widely; yet still we see the same hand. Wherever there is real and native ge|nius, it gives a determination to one kind of Style rather than another. Where no|thing of this appears; where there is no marked nor peculiar character in the com|positions of any author, we are apt to in|fer, not without reason, that he is a vul|gar and trivial author, who writes from imitation, and not from the impulse of original genius. As the most celebrated painters are known by their hand, so the best and most original writers are known and distinguished, throughout all their works, by their Style and peculiar man|ner. This will be found to hold almost without exception.

THE ancient Critics attended to these general characters of Style which we are now to consider. Dionysius of Halicarnas|sus divides them into three kinds; and calls them the Austere, the Florid, and the Middle. By the Austere, he means a Style

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distinguished for strength and firmness, with a neglect of smoothness and orna|ment; for examples of which, he gives Pindar and Aeschylus among the Poets, and Thucydides among the Prose writers. By the Florid, he means, as the name indi|cates, a Style ornamented, flowing, and sweet; resting more upon numbers and grace, than strength; he instances Hesiod, Sappho, Anacreon, Euripides, and princi|pally Isocrates. The Middle kind is the just mean between these, and comprehends the beauties of both; in which class he places Homer and Sophocles among the Poets; in Prose, Herodotus, Demosthenes, Plato, and (what seems strange) Aristotle. This must be a very wide class indeed, which comprehends Plato and Aristotle un|der one article as to Style* 1.4. Cicero and Quinctilian make also a threefold division of Style, though with respect to different qualities of it; in which they are followed by most of the modern writers on Rheto|ric; the Simplex, Tenue, or Subtile; the Grave or Vehemens; and the Medium, or, temperatum genus dicendi. But these divi|sions, and the illustrations they give of them, are so loose and general, that they cannot advance us much in our ideas of Style. I shall endeavour to be a little more particular in what I have to say on this subject.

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ONE of the first and most obvious distinc|tions of the different kinds of Style, is what arises from an author's spreading out his thoughts more or less. This distinction forms, what are called the Diffuse and the Concise Styles. A concise writer com|presses his thought into the fewest possible words; he seeks to employ none but such as are most expressive; he lops off, as re|dundant, every expression which does not add something material to the sense. Or|nament he does not reject; he may be lively and figured; but his ornament is in|tended for the sake of force, rather than grace. He never gives you the same thought twice. He places it in the light which appears to him the most striking; but if you do not apprehend it well in that light, you need not expect to find it in any other. His sentences are arranged with compactness and strength, rather than with cadence and harmony. The utmost pre|cision is studied in them; and they are commonly designed to suggest more to the reader's imagination than they directly express.

A DIFFUSE writer unfolds his thought fully. He places it in a variety of lights, and gives the reader every possible assist|ance for understanding it completely. He is not very careful to express it at first in its full strength; because he is to repeat the impression; and what he wants in

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strength, he proposes to supply by copious|ness. Writers of this character generally love magnificence and amplification. Their periods naturally run out into some length, and having room for ornament of every kind, they admit it freely.

EACH of these manners has its peculiar advantages; and each becomes faulty when carried to the extreme. The extreme of conciseness becomes abrupt and obscure; it is apt also to lead into a Style too point|ed, and bordering on the epigrammatic. The extreme diffuseness becomes weak and languid, and tires the reader. However, to one or other of these two manners, a writer may lean according as his genius prompts him: and under the general cha|racter of a concise, or of a more open and diffuse Style, may possess much beauty in his composition.

FOR illustrations of these general cha|racters, I can only refer to the writers who are examples of them. It is not so much from detached passages, such as I was wont formerly to quote for instances, as from the current of an author's Style, that we are to collect the idea of a formed manner of writing. The two most remarkable ex|amples that I know, of conciseness carried as far as propriety will allow, perhaps in some cases farther, are Tacitus the Histo|rian, and the President Montesquieu in

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"L'Esprit de Loix." Aristotle too holds an eminent rank among didactic wri|ters for his brevity. Perhaps no writer in the world was ever so frugal of his words as Aristotle; but this frugality of expres|sion frequently darkens his meaning. Of a beautiful and magnificent diffuseness, Ci|cero is, beyond doubt, the most illustrious instance that can be given. Addison also, and Sir William Temple, come in some de|gree under this class.

IN judging when it is proper to lean to the concise, and when to the diffuse man|ner, we must be directed by the nature of the Composition. Discourses that are to be spoken, require a more copious Style, than books that are to be read. When the whole meaning must be catched from the mouth of the speaker, without the advantage which books afford of pausing at pleasure, and reviewing what appears obscure, great conciseness is always to be avoided. We should never presume too much on the quickness of our hearer's understanding; but our Style ought to be such, that the bulk of men can go along with us easily, and without effort. A flowing copious Style, therefore, is required in all public speakers; guarding, at the same time, against such a degree of diffusion, as ren|ders them languid and tiresome; which will always prove the case, when they

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inculcate too much, and present the same thought under too many different views.

IN written Compositions, a certain degree of conciseness possesses great advantages. It is more lively; keeps up attention; makes a brisker and stronger impression; and gratifies the mind by supplying more exercise to a reader's own thought. A sen|timent, which, expressed diffusely, will barely be admitted to be just, expressed concisely, will be admired as spirited. Description, when we want to have it vi|vid and animated, should be in a concise strain. This is different from the common opinion; most persons being ready to sup|pose, that upon description a writer may dwell more safely than upon other things, and that by a full and extended Style, it is rendered more rich and expressive. I ap|prehend, on the contrary, that a diffuse manner generally weakens it. Any redun|dant words or circumstances encumber the fancy, and make the object we present to it, appear confused and indistinct. Ac|cordingly, the most masterly describers, Homer, Tacitus, Milton, are almost always concise in their descriptions. They shew us more of an object at one glance, than a feeble diffuse writer can show, by turning it round and round in a variety of lights. The strength and vivacity of description, whether in prose or poetry, depend much more upon the happy choice of one or two

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striking circumstances, than upon the mul|tiplication of them.

ADDRESSES to the passions, likewise, ought to be in the concise, rather than the diffuse manner. In these, it is dangerous to be diffuse, because it is very difficult to support proper warmth for any length of time. When we become prolix, we are always in hazard of cooling the reader. The heart, too, and the fancy run fast; and if once we can put them in motion, they supply many particulars to greater advantage than an author can display them. The case is different, when we address our|selves to the understanding; as in all mat|ters of reasoning, explication, and instruc|tion. There I would prefer a more free and diffuse manner. When you are to strike the fancy, or to move the heart, be concise; when you are to inform the un|derstanding, which moves more slowly, and requires the assistance of a guide, it is bet|ter to be full. Historical narration may be beautiful, either in a concise or diffuse manner, according to the writer's genius. Livy and Herodotus are diffuse; Thucy|dides and Sallust are succinct; yet all of them agreeable.

I OBSERVED that a diffuse style inclines most to long periods; and a concise writer, it is certain, will often employ short sen|tences. It is not, however, to be inferred

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from this, that long or short sentences are fully characteristical of the one or the other manner. It is very possible for one to com|pose always in short sentences, and to be withal extremely diffuse, if a small measure of sentiment be spread through many of these sentences. Seneca is a remarkable example. By the shortness and quaintness of his sentences, he may appear at first view very concise; yet he is far from being so. He transfigures the same thought into many different forms. He makes it pass for a new one, only by giving it a new turn. So also, most of the French writers compose in short sentences; though their style, in general, is not concise; common|ly less so than the bulk of English writers, whose sentences are much longer. A French author breaks down into two or three sen|tences, that portion of thought which an English author crowds into one. The di|rect effect of short sentences, is to render the Style brisk and lively, but not always con|cise. By the quick successive impulses which they make on the mind, they keep it awake; and give to Composition more of a spirited character. Long periods, like Lord Clarendon's are grave and stately; but, like all grave things, they are in ha|zard of becoming dull. An intermixture of both long and short ones is requisite, when we would support solemnity, toge|ther with vivacity; leaning more to the one or the other, according as propriety

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requires, that the solemn or the sprightly should be predominant in our composition. But of long and short sentences, I had occasion, formerly, to treat under the head of the construction of periods.

THE Nervous and the Feeble, are gene|rally held to be characters of Style, of the same import with the Concise and the Dif|fuse. They do indeed very often coincide. Diffuse writers have for the most part some degree of feebleness; and nervous writers will generally be inclined to a concise ex|pression. This, however, does not always hold; and there are instances of writers, who, in the midst of a full and ample Style, have maintained a great degree of strength. Livy is an example; and in the English lan|guage, Dr. Barrow. Barrow's Style has many faults. It is unequal, incorrect and redundant; but withal, for force and ex|pressiveness uncommonly distinguished. On every subject, he multiplies words with an overflowing copiousness; but it is always a torrent of strong ideas and significant ex|pressions which he pours forth. Indeed, the foundations of a nervous or a weak Style are laid in an author's manner of think|ing. If he conceives an object strongly, he will express it with energy: but, if he has only an indistinct view of his subject; if his ideas be loose and wavering; if his ge|nius be such, or, at the time of his writ|ing, so carelessly exerted, that he has no

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firm hold of the conception which he would communicate to us; the marks of this will clearly appear in his Style. Several un|meaning words and loose epithets will be found; his expressions will be vague and general; his arrangement indistinct and feeble; we shall conceive somewhat of his meaning, but our conception will be faint. Whereas a nervous writer, whether he em|ploys an extended or a concise Style, gives us always a strong impression of his mean|ing; his mind is full of his subject, and his words are all expressive; every phrase and every figure which he uses, tends to render the picture, which he would set be|fore us, more lively and complete.

I OBSERVED, under the head of Diffuse and Concise Style, that an author might lean either to the one or to the other, and yet be beautiful. This is not the case with respect to the nervous and the feeble. Eve|ry author, in every composition, ought to study to express himself with some strength, and, in proportion, as he approaches to the feeble, he becomes a bad writer. In all kinds of writing, however, the same de|gree of strength is not demanded. But the more grave and weighty any composition is, the more should a character of strength predominate in the Style. Hence in histo|ry, philosophy, and solemn discourses, it is expected most. One of the most com|plete

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models of a nervous Style, is Demost|henes in his orations.

AS every good quality in Style has an extreme, when pursued to which it be|comes faulty, this holds of the Nervous Style as well as others. Too great a study of strength, to the neglect of the other qualities of Style, is found to betray writers into a harsh manner. Harshness arises from unusual words, from forced inversions in the construction of a Sentence, and too much neglect of smoothness and ease. This is reckoned the fault of some of our earli|est classics in the English language; such as Sir Walter Raleigh, Sir Francis Bacon, Hooker, Chillingworth, Milton in his prose works, Harrington, Cudworth, and other writers of considerable note in the days of Queen Elizabeth, James I. and Charles I. These writers had nerves and strength in a high degree, and are to this day eminent for that quality in Style. But the language in their hands was exceedingly different from what it is now, and was indeed entirely formed upon the idiom and construction of the Latin in the arrangement of Sentences. Hooker, for instance, begins the Preface to his celebrated work of Ecclesiastical Polity, with the following Sentence:

"Though for no other cause, yet for this, that poste|rity may know we have not loosely, through silence, permitted things to pass away as in dream, there shall be, for

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men's information, extant this much, concerning the present state of the church of God established amongst us, and their careful endeavours which would have upheld the same."
Such a sentence now sounds harsh in our ears. Yet some ad|vantages certainly attended this sort of Style; and whether we have gained, or lost, upon the whole, by departing from it, may bear a question. By the freedom of arrangement, which it permitted, it ren|dered the Language susceptible of more strength, of more variety of collocation, and more harmony of period. But howe|ver this be, such a style is now obsolete; and no modern writer could adopt it with|out the censure of harshness and affecta|tion. The present form which the Lan|guage has assumed, has, in some measure, sacrificed the study of strength to that of perspicutiy and ease. Our arrangement of words has become less forcible, perhaps, but more plain and natural: and this is now understood to be the genius of our Language.

THE restoration of King Charles II. seems to be the aera of the formation of our present style. Lord Clarendon was one of the first who laid aside those fre|quent inversions which prevailed among writers of the former age. After him, Sir William Temple, polished the Language still more. But the author, who, by the

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number and reputation of his works, formed it more than any one, into its present state, is Dryden. Dryden began to write at the Restoration, and continued long an author both in poetry and prose. He had made the language his study; and though he wrote hastily, and often incorrectly, and his style is not free from faults, yet there is a richness in his diction, a copiousness, ease, and variety in his expression, which has not been surpassed by any who have come after him* 1.5. Since his time, conside|rable attention has been paid to Purity and Elegance of Style: But it is Elegance, ra|ther than Strength, that forms the distin|guishing quality of most of the good En|glish writers. Some of them compose in a more manly and nervous manner than others; but, whether it be from the genius of our Language, or from whatever other cause, it appears to me, that we are far from the strength of several of the Greek and Roman authors.

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HITHERTO we have considered Style un|der those characters that respect its expres|siveness of an author's meaning. Let us now proceed to consider it in another view, with respect to the degree of ornament employed to beautify it. Here, the Style of different authors seems to raise, in the following gradation: a Dry, a Plain, a Neat, an Elegant, a Flowery manner. Of each of these in their order.

FIRST, a Dry manner. This excludes all ornament of every kind. Content with being understood, it has not the least aim to please, either the fancy or the ear. This is tolerable only in pure didactic writ|ing; and even there, to make us bear it, great weight and solidity of matter is re|quisite; and entire perspicuity of Lan|guage. Aristotle is the thorough example of a Dry Style. Never, perhaps, was there any author who adhered so rigidly to the strictness of a didactic manner, through|out all his writings, and conveyed so much instruction without the least approach to ornament. With the most profound geni|us, and extensive views, he writes like a pure intelligence, who addresses himself sole|ly to the understanding, without making any use of the channel of the imagination. But this is a manner which deserves not to be imitated. For, although the goodness of the matter may compensate the dryness or harshness of the Style, yet is that dryness a considerable defect; as it fatigues attenti|on,

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and conveys our sentiments, with disad|vantage, to the reader or hearer.

A PLAIN Style rises one degree above a Dry one. A writer of this character, em|ploys very little ornament of any kind, and rests, almost, entirely upon his sense. But, if he is at no pains to engage us by the em|ployment of figures, musical arrangement, or any other art of writing, he studies, how|ever, to avoid disgusting us like a dry and a harsh writer. Besides Perspicuity, he pur|sues Propriety, Purity, and Precision, in his Language; which form one degree, and no inconsiderable one, of beauty. Liveliness too, and force, may be consistent with a very Plain Style: and, therefore, such an author, if his sentiments be good, may be abun|dantly agreeable. The difference between a dry and plain writer, is, that the former is incapable of ornament, and seems not to know what it is; the latter seeks not after it. He gives us his meaning, in good lan|guage, distinct and pure; any further orna|ment he gives himself no trouble about; ei|ther, because he thinks it unnecessary to his subject; or, because his genius does not lead him to delight in it; or, because it leads him to despise it* 1.6.

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THIS last was the case with Dean Swift, who may be placed at the head of those that have employed the Plain Style. Few writ|ers have discovered more capacity. He treats every subject which he handles, whether se|rious or ludicrous, in a masterly manner. He knew, almost, beyond any man, the Pu|rity, the Extent, the Precision of the En|glish Language; and, therefore, to such as wish to attain a pure and correct Style, he is one of the most useful models. But we must not look for much ornament and grace in his Language. His haughty and morose genius, made him despise any embellish|ment of this kind as beneath his dignity. He delivers his sentiments in a plain, down|right, positive manner, like one who is sure he is in the right; and is very indifferent whether you be pleased or not. His sentences are com|monly negligently arranged; distinctly e|nough as to the sense; but, without any regard to smoothness of sound; often without much regard to compactness, or elegance. If a metaphor, or any other figure, chanced to render his satire more poignant, he would, perhaps, vouchsafe to adopt it, when it came in his way; but if it tended only to embel|lish and illustrate, he would rather throw it aside. Hence, in his serious pieces, his style often borders upon the dry and unpleasing; in his humourous ones, the plainness of his

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manner gives his wit a singular edge, and sets it off to the highest advantage. There is no froth, nor affectation in it; it flows without any studied preparation; and while he hardly appears to smile himself, he makes his reader laugh heartily. To a writer of such a genius as Dean Swift, the Plain Style was most admirably fitted. Among our phi|losophical writers, Mr. Locke comes under this class; perspicuous and pure, but almost without any ornament whatever. In works which admit, or require, ever so much or|nament, there are parts where the plain manner ought to predominate. But we must remember, that when this is the cha|racter which a writer affects throughout his whole composition, great weight of matter, and great force of sentiment, are required, in order to keep up the reader's attention, and prevent him from tiring of the author.

WHAT is called a Neat Style comes next in order; and here we are got into the re|gion of ornament; but that ornament not of the highest or most sparkling kind. A writer of this character shows, that he does not despise the beauty of Language. It is an object of his attention. But his atten|tion is shown in the choice of his words, and in a graceful collocation of them; ra|ther than in any high efforts of imaginati|on, or eloquence. His sentences are al|ways clean, and free from the incumbrance of superfluous words; of a moderate

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length; rather inclining to brevity, than a swelling structure; closing with propriety; without any tails, or adjections dragging after the proper close. His cadence is va|ried; but not of the studied musical kind. His figures, if he uses any, are short and correct; rather than bold and glowing. Such a Style as this, may be attained by a writer who has no great powers of fancy or genius; by industry merely, and careful attention to the rules of writing; and it is a Style always agreeable. It imprints a character of moderate elevation on our composition, and carries a decent degree of ornament, which is not unsuitable to any subject whatever. A familiar letter, or a law paper, on the driest subject, may be written with neatness; and a sermon, or a philosophical treatise, in a Neat Style, will be read with pleasure.

AN Elegant Style is a character, expres|sing a higher degree of ornament than a neat one; and, indeed, is the term usually applied to Style, when possessing all the vir|tues of ornament, without any of its ex|cesses or defects. From what has been formerly delivered, it will easily be under|stood, that complete Elegance implies great perspicuity and propriety; purity in the choice of words, and care and dexterity in their harmonious and happy arrangement. It implies, farther, the grace and beauty of Imagination spread over Style, as far as the

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subject admits it; and all the illustration which Figurative Language adds, when properly employed. In a word, an elegant writer is one who pleases the fancy and the ear, while he informs the understanding; and who gives us his ideas clothed with all the beauty of expression, but not over|charged with any of its misplaced finery. In this class, therefore, we place only the first rate writers in the Language; such as, Addison, Dryden, Pope, Temple, Boling|broke, Atterbury, and a few more: writers who differ widely from one another in ma|ny of the attributes of Style, but whom we now class together, under the denomi|nation of Elegant, as in the scale of Or|nament, possessing nearly the same place.

WHEN the ornaments, applied to Style, are too rich and gaudy in proportion to the subject; when they return upon us too fast, and strike us either with a dazzling lustre, or a false brilliancy, this forms what is call|ed a Florid Style; a term commonly used to signify the excess of ornament. In a young composer this is very pardonable. Perhaps, it is even a promising symptom in young people, that their Style should in|cline to the Florid and Luxuriant:

"Volo se efferat in adolescente faecunditas,"
says Quinctilian,
"multum inde decoquent an|ni, multum ratio limabit, aliquid velut usu ipso deteretur; sit modo unde excidi poffit quid et exculpi.—Audeat haec aetas

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plura, et inveniat et inventis gaudeat; sint licet illa non satis interim sicca et se|vera. Facile remedium est ubertatis: sterilia nullo labore vincuntur* 1.7."
But, although the Florid Style may be allowed to youth, in their first essays, it must not receive the same indulgence from writers of maturer years. It is to be expected, that judgment, as it ripens, should chasten ima|gination, and reject, as juvenile, all such ornaments as are redundant, unsuitable to the subject, or not conducive to illustrate it. Nothing can be more contemptible than that tinsel splendor of Language, which some writers perpetually affect. It were well, if this could be ascribed to the real overflowing of a rich imagination. We should then have something to amuse us, at least, if we found little to instruct us. But the worst is, that with those frothy writers, it is a luxuriancy of words, not of fancy. We see a laboured attempt to rise to a splendour of composition, of which they have formed to themselves some loose idea; but having no strength of geni|us for attaining it, they endeavour to sup|ply

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the defect by poetical words, by cold exclamations, by common place figures, and every thing that has the appearance of pomp and magnificence. It has escaped these writers, that sobriety in ornament, is one great secret for rendering it pleasing; and that, without a foundation of good sense and solid thought, the most Florid Style is but a childish imposition on the Public. The Public, however, are but too apt to be so imposed on; at least, the mob of Readers, who are very ready to be caught, at first, with whatever is dazzling and gaudy.

I CANNOT help thinking, that it reflects more honour on the religious turn, and good dispositions of the present age, than on the public taste, that Mr. Harvey's Me|ditations have had so great a currency. The pious and benevolent heart, which is always displayed in them, and the lively fancy which, on some occasions, appears, justly merited applause: but the perpetual glitter of expression, the swoln imagery, and strained description which abound in them, are ornaments of a false kind. I would, therefore, advise students of ora|tory to imitate Mr. Harvey's piety, rather than his Style; and, in all compositions of a serious kind, to turn their attention, as Mr. Pope says,

"from sounds to things, from fancy to the heart."
Admonitions of this kind, I have already had occasion

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to give, and may hereafter repeat them; as I conceive nothing more incumbent on me in this course of Lectures, than to take every opportunity of cautioning my Read|ers against the affected and frivolous use of ornament; and, instead of that slight and superficial taste in writing, which I appre|hend to be at present too fashionable, to introduce, as far as my endeavours can avail, a taste for more solid thought, and more manly simplicity in Style.

Notes

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