Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
Excerpt from Songs: Chiefly in the Rural Language of Scotland
Infinite is their pleasure in conjuring up logical conceits, quaint and remote allusions, and subtle prettinesses Of ex pression; they surprize the heart without being able to' seize it, and lift the soul to momentary wonder without possessing the power Of captivating, or filling it with deli cions agitation. TO them belongs a true scholastic con tempt for the uncultivated beauties of British landscape; they are particularly careful to encompass their mistresses with Eastern forests, floods, and habitations; neither do they permit them to repose in the shade Of a tree, to saunter in an arbour, nor press their foot upon a flower whose appearance cannot be justified by classical quota tion. Thus they make continual excursions for imagery in those paradisiacal regions, where the imagination can repose itself wholly undisturbed by those rural sounds which are familiar and welcome to a British car; What ever is Of native growth to them is vulgar, and the reader, wearied of their presence, dismisses their compositions; conscious that those who keep themselves always within the trammels of classical imitation, will ever succeed in.
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