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from the former, and was a medley of prose and verse: it will be a more pleasing, as well as a more useful employ, to enter a little into what Dryden, I know not for what reason, calls the most difficult part of his undertaking; "a comparative view of the Satirists;" not certainly with the design of depressing one at the expense of another, (for though I have translated Juvenal, I have no quarrel with Horace and Persius,) but for the purpose of pointing out the characteristick excellencies and defects of them all. To do this the more effectually, it will be previously necessary to take a cursory view of the times in which their respective works were produced.

LUCILIUS, to whom Horace, forgetting what he had said in another place, attributes the invention of Satire, flourished in the interval between the siege of Carthage and the defeat of the Cimbri and Teutons, by Marius. He lived therefore in an age in which the struggle between the old and new manners, though daily becoming more equal, or rather inclining to the worse side, was still far from being decided. The freedom of speaking and writing, was yet unchecked by fear, or by any law more precise than that which, as

of theirs is not ill exposed by one of those scurrilous writers of (Silli, or) parodies ; 8 κακώς τις παρεποίησε των σατρών τέτων

ποιητων

Αρματα δ' αλλοτε μεν χθονι πίλνατο πολυβοτείρη,
Αλλοτε δ' εξασκε μετηορα· τοι δε θεαται
Θωκοίς εν σφετέροις, εθ ̓ ἑτασαν, εδ' εκάθηντο,
Χλωροι ὑπαν δειὲς πεφοβημενοι, εδ' ύπο νικης
Αλληλοισι τε κεκλομενοι, και πασι θεοισι
Κειρας ανίσχοντες, μεγαλ' ευχετόωντο έκασοι.
Ηυτε περ κλαγγη γερανων πελει, τα κολοιων,
Αι σ' επει εν ζυθον τ' έπιον, και αθεσπατον οίνον,

Κλαγγή και γε πέτονται απο σαδίοιο κελεύθε. κ. τ. λ.

Ad Alexand. Orat. xxx11.

d

7

has been already mentioned, was introduced to restrain the coarse ebullitions of rustick malignity. Add to this, that Lucilius was of a most respectable family, (he was great-uncle to Pompey,) and lived in habits of intimacy with the chiefs of the republick, with Lælius, Scipio, and others, who were well able to protect him from the Lupi and Mutii of the day, had they attempted, which they probably did not, to silence or molest him. Hence that boldness of satirizing the vicious by name, which startled Horace, and on which Juvenal and Persius delight to felicitate him.

Too little remains of Lucilius, to enable us to judge of his manner: his style seems, however, to bear fewer marks of delicacy than of strength, and his strictures appear harsh and violent. With all this, he must have been an extraordinary man; since Horace, who is evidently hurt by his reputation, can say nothing worse of his compositions than that they are careless and hasty, and that if he had lived at a more refined period, he would have partaken of the general amelioration. I do not remember to have heard it observed, but I suspect that there was something of political spleen in the excessive popularity of Lucilius under Augustus, and something of courtly complacency in the attempt of Horace to counteract it. Augustus enlarged the law of the twelve tables respecting libels; and the people, who found themselves thus abridged of the liberty of satirizing the great by name, might not improbably seek to avenge themselves, by an overstrained attachment to the works of a man who, living, as they would insinuate, in better times, practised without fear, what he enjoyed without restraint.

The space between Horace and his predecessor, was a dreadful interval "filled up with horrour

all, and big with death." Luxury and a long train of vices which followed the immense wealth incessantly poured in from the conquered provinces, sapped the foundations of the republick, which were finally shaken to pieces by the civil wars, the perpetual dictatorship of Cæsar, and the second triumvirate, which threw the Roman world, without a hope of escape, into the power of an individual.

Augustus, whose sword was yet reeking with the best blood of the state, now that submission left him no pretence for further cruelty, was desirous of enjoying in tranquillity the fruits of his guilt. He displayed, therefore, a magnificence hitherto unknown; and his example, which was followed by his ministers, quickly spread among the people, who were not very unwilling to exchange the agitation and terrour of successive proscriptions, for the security and quiet of undisputed despotism.

Tiberius had other views, and other methods of accomplishing them. He did not indeed put an actual stop to the elegant institutions of his predecessor, but he surveyed them with silent contempt, and they rapidly degenerated. The race of informers multiplied with dreadful celerity; and danger, which could only be averted by complying with a caprice not always easy to discover, created an abject disposition, fitted for the reception of the grossest vices, and eminently favourable to the designs of the Emperour; which were to procure, by universal depravation, that submission which Augustus sought to, obtain by the blandishments of luxury, and the arts.

From this gloomy and suspicious tyrant, the empire was transferred to a profligate madman. It can scarcely be told without indignation, that when the sword of Chærea had freed the earth from his

disgraceful sway, the senate had not sufficient virtue to resume the rights of which they had been deprived; but, after a timid debate, delivered up the state to a pedantick dotard, incapable of governing himself.

To the vices of his predecessors, Nero added a frivolity which rendered his reign at once odious and contemptible. Depravity could reach no further, but misery might yet be extended. This was fully experienced through the turbulent and murderous usurpations of Galba, Otho, and Vitellius; when the accession of Vespasian and Titus gave the groaning world a temporary respite.

To these succeeded Domitian, whose crimes form the subject of many a melancholy page in the ensuing work, and need not therefore be dwelt. on here. Under him, every trace of ancient man-› ners was obliterated; liberty was unknown, law openly trampled upon, and, while the national rites were either neglected or contemned, a base and blind superstition took possession of the enfeebled and distempered mind.

Better times followed. Nerva, and Trajan, and Hadrian, and the Antonines, restored the Romans to safety and tranquillity; but they could do no more: liberty and virtue were gone for ever: and after a short period of comparative happiness," which they scarcely appear to have deserved, and which brought with it no amelioration of mind, no return of the ancient modesty and frugality, they were finally resigned to destruction.

I now proceed to the "comparative view" of which I have already spoken; as the subject has been so often treated, little of novelty can be expected from it: to read, compare, and judge, is almost all that remains.

HORACE, who was gay, and lively, and gentle,

and affectionate, seems fitted for the period in which he wrote. He had seen the worst times of the republick, and might therefore, with no great suspicion of his integrity, be allowed to acquiesce in the infant monarchy, which brought with it stability, peace, and pleasure. How he reconciled himself to his political tergiversation it is useless to inquire. What was so general, we may suppose, brought with it but little obloquy; and it should be remembered, to his praise, that he took no active part in the government he had once opposed: If he celebrates the master of the world, it is not until he is asked by him whether he is ashamed that posterity should know them to be friends; and he declines a post, which few of his detractors have merit to deserve, or virtue to refuse.

His choice of privacy, however, was in some measure constitutional; for he had an easiness of temper which bordered on indolence; hence he

I doubt whether he was ever a good royalist at heart; he frequently, perhaps unconsciously, betrays a lurking dissatisfaction; but having, as Johnson says of a much greater man, tasted the honey of favour, he did not choose to return to hunger and philosophy. Indeed, he was not happy; in the country he sighs for the town, in town for the country; and he is always restless, and straining after something which he never obtains. To float, like Aristippus, with the stream, is a bad recipe for felicity; there should be some fixed principle, by which the passions and desires may be regulated.

+He is careful to disclaim all participation in publick affairs. He accompanies Mæcenas in his carriage, but their chat, he wishes it to be believed, is on the common topicks of the day, the weather, amusements, &c. Though this may not be strictly true, it is yet probable that politicks furnished but a small part of their conversation. That both Augustus and his minister were warmly attached to him, cannot be denied, but then it was as to a plaything. In a word, Horace seems to have been the enfant gaté of the palace, and was viewed, I believe, with more tenderness than respect.

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