[1] That praises are without reason lavished on the dead, and
that the honours due only to excellence are paid to antiquity, is a
complaint likely to be always continued by those, who, being able to add
nothing to truth, hope for eminence from the heresies of paradox; or those,
who, being forced by disappointment upon consolatory expedients, are willing
to hope from posterity what the present age refuses, and flatter themselves
that the regard which is yet denied by envy, will be at last bestowed by
time.
[2] Antiquity, like every other quality that
attracts the notice of mankind, has undoubtedly votaries
that reverence it, not from reason, but from prejudice.
Some seem to admire indiscriminately whatever has been
long preserved, without considering that time has
sometimes cooperated with chance; all perhaps are more
willing to honour past than present excellence ; and the
mind contemplates genius through the shades of age, as
the eye surveys the sun through artificial opacity. The
great contention of criticism is to find the faults of
the moderns, and the beauties of the ancients. While an
author is yet living, we estimate his powers by his
worst performance; and when he is dead, we rate them by
his best.
[3] To works, however, of which the
excellence is not absolute and definite, but gradual and
comparative ; to works not raised upon principles
demonstrative and scientifick, but appealing wholly to
observation and experience, no other test can be applied
than length of duration and continuance of esteem. What
mankind have long possessed they have often examined and
compared, and if they persist to value the possession,
it is because frequent comparisons have confirmed
opinion in its favour. As among the works of nature no
man can properly call a river deep, or a mountain high,
without the knowledge of many mountains, and many rivers
; so in the production of genius, nothing can be styled
excellent till it has been compared with other works of
the same kind. Demonstration immediately displays its
power, and has nothing to hope or fear from the flux of
years ; but works tentative and experimental must be
estimated by their proportion to the general and
collective ability of man, as it is discovered in a
long succession of endeavours. Of the first building
that was raised, it might be with certainty determined
that it was round or square ; but whether it was
spacious or lofty must have been referred to time. The
Pythagorean scale of numbers was at once discovered to
be perfect ; but the poems of Homer we yet know not to
transcend the common limits of human intelligence, but
by remarking, that nation after nation, and century
after century, has been able to do little more than
transpose his incidents, new name his characters, and
paraphrase his sentiments.
[4] The reverence due to writings that have
long subsisted, arises therefore, not from any credulous
confidence in the superior wisdom of past pages, or
gloomy per-suasions of the degeneracy of mankind, but is
the consequence of acknowledged and indubitable
positions, that what has been longest known has been
most considered, and what is most considered is best
understood.
[5] The poet, of whose works I have undertaken the
revision, may now begin to assume the dignity of an
ancient, and claim the privilege of an established fame
and prescriptive veneration. He has long outlived his
century, the term commonly fixed as the test of literary
merit. Whatever advantages he might once derive from
personal allusions, local customs, or temporary
opinions, have for many years been lost ; and every
topick of merriment or motive of sorrow, which the modes
of artificial life afforded him, now only obscure the
scenes which they once illuminated. The effects of
favour and competition are at an end; the tradition of
his friendships and his enmities has perished; his
works support no opinion with arguments, nor supply any
faction with invectives ; they can neither indulge
vanity, nor gratify malignity ; but are read without any
other reason than the desire of pleasure, and are
therefore praised only as pleasure is obtained; yet,
thus unassisted by interest or passion, they have past
through variations of taste and changes of manners, and,
as they devolved from one generation to another, have
received new honours at every transmission.
[6] But because human judgment, though it be gradually
gaining upon certainty, never becomes infallible; and
approbation, though long continued, may yet be only the
approbation of prejudice or fashion ; it is proper to
inquire, by what peculiarities of excellence Shakespeare
has gained and kept the favour of his countrymen.
[7] Nothing can please many, and please long, but just
representations of general nature. Particular manners
can be known to few, and therefore few only can judge
how nearly they are copied. The irregular combinations
of fanciful invention may delight awhile, by that
novelty of which the common satiety of life sends us all
in quest ;
the pleasures of sudden wonder are soon exhausted, and
the mind can only repose on the stability of truth.
Shakespeare is above all writers, at least above all
modern writers, the poet of nature; the poet that holds
up to his readers a faithful mirror of manners and of
life. His characters are not modified by the customs of
particular places, unpractised by the rest of the world,
by the peculiarities of studies or professions, which
can operate but upon small numbers ; or by the accidents
of transient fashions or temporary opinions: they are
the genuine progeny of common humanity, such as the
world will always supply, and observation will always
find. His persons act and speak by the influence of
those general passions and principles by which all minds
are agitated, and the whole system of life is continued
in motion. In the writings of other poets a character is
too often an individual; in those of Shakespeare it is
commonly a species.
[8] It is from this wide extension of design that so much
instruction is derived. It is this which fills the plays
of Shakespeare with practical axioms and domestick
wisdom. It was said of Euripides, that every verse was a
precept ; and it may be said of Shakespeare, that from
his works may be collected a system of civil and
economical prudence. Yet his real power is not shown in
the splendour of particular passages, but by the
progress of his fable, and the tenor of his dialogue ;
and he that tries to recommend him by select quotations,
will succeed like the pedant in Hierocles, who, when he
offered his house to sale, carried a brick in his pocket
as a specimen.
[9] It will not easily be imagined how much Shakespeare
excels in accommodating his sentiments to real life, but
by comparing him with other authors. It was observed of
the ancient schools of declamation, that the more
diligently they were frequented, the more was the
student disqualified for the world, because he found
nothing there which he should ever meet in any other
place. The same remark may be applied to every stage but
that of Shakespeare. The theatre, when it is under any
other direction, is peopled by such characters as were
never seen, conversing in a language which was never
heard, upon topicks which will never arise in the
commerce of mankind. But the dialogue of this author is
often so evidently determined by the incident which
produces it, and is pursued with so much ease and
simplicity, that it seems scarcely to claim the merit
of fiction, but to have been gleaned by diligent
selection out of common conversation, and common
occurrences.
[10] Upon every other stage the universal
agent is love, by whose power all good and evil is
distributed, and every action quickened or retarded.
To bring a lover, a lady, and a rival into the
fable; to entangle them in contradictory
obligations, perplex them with oppositions of interest,
and harass them with violence of desires inconsistent
with each other ; to make them meet in rapture, and part
in agony ; to fill their mouths with hyperbolical joy
and outrageous sorrow ; to distress them as nothing
human ever was distressed ; to deliver them as nothing
human ever was delivered, is the business of a modern
dramatist. For this, probability is violated, life is
misrepresented, and language is depraved. But love is
only one of many passions, and as it has no great
influence upon the sum of life, it has little operation
in the dramas of a poet, who caught his ideas from the
living world, and exhibited only what he saw before him.
He knew, that any other passion, as it was regular or
exorbitant, was a cause of happiness or calamity.
[11] Characters thus ample and general were not easily
discriminated and preserved, yet perhaps no poet ever
kept his personages more distinct from each other. I
will not say with Pope, that every speech may be
assigned to the proper speaker, because many speeches
there were which have nothing characteristical ; but,
perhaps, though some may be equally adapted to every
person, it will be difficult to find any that can be
properly transferred from the present possessor to
another claimant. The choice is right, when there is
reason for choice.
[12] Other dramatists can only gain
attention by hyperbolical or aggravated characters,
by fabulous and unexampled excellence or depravity
as the writers of barbarous romances invigorated the
reader by a giant and a dwarf ; and he that should
form his expectation of human affairs from the play,
or from the tale, would be equally deceived.
Shakespeare has no heroes ; his scenes are occupied
only by men, who act and speak as the reader thinks
that he should himself have spoken and acted on the
same occasion : even where the agency is
super-natural, the dialogue is level with life.
Other writers disguise the most natural passions and
most frequent incidents ; so that he who
contemplates them in the book will not know them in
the world : Shakespeare approximates the remote, and
familiarizes the wonderful;
the event which he represents will not happen, but if it
were possible, its effects would probably be such as he
has assigned ; and it may be said, that he has not only
shown human nature as it acts in real exigencies,
but as it would be found in trials, to which it cannot
be exposed.
[13] This, therefore, is the praise of Shakespeare, that his
drama is the mirror of life ; that he who has mazed his
imagination, in following the phantoms which other
writers raise up before him, may here be cured of his
delirious ecstasies, by reading human sentiments in
human language, by scenes from which a hermit may
estimate the transactions of the world, and a confessor
predict the progress of the passions.
[14] His adherence to general nature has exposed him to the
censure of criticks, who form their judgments upon
narrow principles. Dennis and Rymer think his Romans not
sufficiently Roman ; and Voltaire censures his kings as
not completely royal. Dennis is offended, that Menenius,
a senator of Rome, should play the buffoon ; and
Voltaire perhaps thinks decency violated when the Danish
usurper is represented as a drunkard. But Shakespeare
always makes nature predominate over accidents ; and if
he preserves the essential character, is not very
careful of distinctions superinduced and adventitious.
His story requires Romans or kings, but he thinks only
on men. He knew that Rome, like every other city, had
men of all dispositions ; and wanting a buffoon, he went
into the senate-house for that which the senate-house
would certainly have afforded him.
[15] He was inclined to show an usurper and a murderer not
only odious, but despicable ; he therefore added drunk-enness
to his other qualities, knowing that kings love wine
like other men, and that wine exerts its natural power
upon kings. These are the petty cavils of petty minds ;
a poet overlooks the casual distinction of country
and condition, as a painter, satisfied with the figure,
neglects the drapery.
[16] The censure which he has incurred by mixing comick and
tragick scenes, as it extends to all his works, deserves
more consideration. Let the fact be first stated, and
then examined.
[17] Shakespeare's plays are not in the rigorous and critical
sense either tragedies or comedies, but compositions of
a distinct kind ; exhibiting the real state of sublunary
nature, which partakes of good and evil, joy and sorrow,
mingled with endless variety of proportion and
innumerable modes of combination ; and expressing the
course of the world, in which the loss of one is the
gain of another ; in which, at the same time, the reveller is hasting to his wine, and the mourner burying
his friend; in which the malignity of one is sometimes
defeated by the frolick of another ; and many mis¬chiefs
and many benefits are done and hindered without design.
[18] Out of this chaos of mingled purposes and casualties the
ancient poets, according to the laws which custom had
prescribed, selected some the crimes of men, and some
their absurdities : some the momentous vicissitudes of
life, and some the lighter occurrences ; some the
terrors of distress, and some the gayeties of
prosperity. Thus rose the two modes of imitation, known
by the names of tragedy and comedy, compositions
intended to promote different ends by contrary means,
and con¬sidered as so little allied, that I do not
recollect among the Greeks or Romans, a single writer
who attempted both.
[19] Shakespeare has united the powers of exciting laughter
and sorrow not only in one mind, but in one composition.
Almost all his plays are divided between serious and
ludicrous characters, and in the successive evolutions
of the design, sometimes produce seriousness and sorrow,
and sometimes levity and laughter.
[20] That this is a practice contrary to the rules of
criticism will be readily allowed ; but there is always
an appeal open from criticism to nature. The end of
writing is to instruct ; the end of poetry is to
instruct by pleasing. That the mingled drama may convey
all the instruction of tragedy or comedy cannot be
denied, because it included both in its alternations of
exhibition, and approaches nearer than either to the
appearance of life, by showing how great machinations
and slender designs may promote or obviate one another,
and the high and the low co-operate in the general
system of unavoidable concatenation.
[21] It is objected, that by this change of scenes the
passions are interrupted in their progression, and that
the principal event, being not advanced by a due
gradation of preparatory incidents, wants at last the
power to move, which constitutes the perfection of
dramatick poetry. This reasoning is so specious, that it
is received as true, even by those who in daily
experience feel it to be false. The interchanges of
mingled scenes seldom fail to produce the intended
vicissitudes of passion. Fiction cannot move so much,
but that the attention may be easily transferred ; and
though it must be allowed that pleasing melancholy be
sometimes interrupted by unwelcome levity, yet let it
be considered likewise, that melancholy is often not
pleasing, and that the disturbance of one man may be the
relief of another ; that different auditors have
different habitudes ; and that, upon the whole, all
pleasure consists in variety.
[22] The players, who in their edition divided our author's
works into comedies, histories, and tragedies, seem not
to have distinguished the three kinds, by any very exact
or definite ideas.
[23] An action which ended happily to the principal per-sons,
however serious or distressful through its inter-mediate
incidents, in their opinion constituted a comedy. This
idea of a comedy continued long amongst us, and plays
were written, which, by changing the catastrophe, were
tragedies to-day, and comedies to-morrow.
Tragedy was not in those times a poem of more general
dignity or elevation than comedy ; it required only a
calamitous conclusion, with which the common criticism
of that age was satisfied, whatever lighter pleasure it
afforded in its progress.
[24] History was a series of actions, with no other than
chronological succession, dependent on each other, and
without any tendency to introduce and regulate the
conclusion. It is not always very nicely distinguished
from tragedy. There is not much nearer approach to unity
of action in the tragedy of " Antony and Cleopatra,"
than in the history of " Richard the Second." But a
history might be continued through many plays ; as it
had no plan, it had no limits.
[25] Through all these denominations of the drama,
Shakespeare's mode of composition is the same ; an interchange of seriousness and merriment, by which the
mind is softened at one time, and exhilarated at
another. But whatever be his purpose, whether to gladden
or depress, or to conduct the story, without vehemence
or emotion, through tracts of easy and familiar
dialogue, he never fails to attain his purpose ; as he
commands
us, we laugh or mourn, or sit silent with quiet
expectation, in tranquillity without indifference. When
Shakespeare's plan is understood, most of the
criticisms of Rymer and Voltaire vanish away. The play
of " Hamlet " is opened, without impropriety, by two
centinels ; Iago bellows at Brabantio's window, without
injury to the scheme of the play, though in terms which
a modern audience would not easily endure; the
character of Polonius is seasonable and useful ; and
the Gravediggers themselves may be heard with applause.
Shakespeare engaged in dramatick poetry with the world
open before him; the rules of the ancients were yet
known to few ; the publick judgment was unformed; he had
no example of such fame as might force him upon
imitation, nor criticks of such authority as might
restrain his extravagance: he therefore indulged his
natural disposition, and his disposition, as Rymer has
remarked, led him to comedy. In tragedy he often writes
with great appearance of toil and study, what is written
at last with little felicity ; but in his comick scenes,
he seems to produce without labour, what no labour can
improve. In tragedy he is always struggling after some
occasion to be comick, but in comedy he seems to repose,
or to luxuriate, as in a mode of thinking congenial to
his nature. In his tragick scenes there is always
something wanting, but his comedy often surpasses
expectation or desire. His comedy pleases by the
thoughts and the language, and his tragedy for the
greater part by incident and action. His tragedy seems
to be skill, his comedy to be instinct.
[26] The force of his comick scenes has suffered little
dimi-nution from the changes made by a century and a
half, in manners or in words. As his personages act upon
principles arising from genuine passion, very little
modified by particular forms, their pleasures and
vexa-tions are communicable to all times and to all
places ; they are natural, and therefore durable ; the
adventitious peculiarities of personal habits, are only
superficial dies, bright and pleasing for a little
while, yet soon faded to a dim tint, without any remains
of former lustre ; and the discrimination of true
passion are the colours of nature ; they pervade the
whole mass, and can only perish with the body that
exhibits them. The accidental compositions of
heterogeneous modes are dissolved by the chance that
combined them ; but the uniform sim¬plicity of primitive
qualities neither admits increase, nor suffers decay.
The sand heaped by one flood is scattered by another,
but the rock always continues in its place. The stream
of time, which is continually washing the dissoluble
fabricks of other poets, passes without injury by the
adamant of Shakespeare.
[27] If there be, what I believe there is, in every nation, a
style which never becomes obsolete, a certain mode of
phraseology so consonant and congenial to the analogy
and principles of its respective language, as to remain
settled and unaltered: this style is probably to be
sought in the common intercourse of life, among those
who speak only to be understood, without ambition of
elegance. The polite are always catching modish
inno¬vations, and the learned depart from established
forms of speech, in hope of finding or making better ;
those who wish for distinction forsake the vulgar, when
the vulgar is right ; but there is a conversation above
grossness and below refinement, where propriety
resides, and where this poet scorns to have gathered his
comick dialogue. He is therefore, more agreeable to the
ears
of the present age, than any other author equally
remote, and among his other excellencies deserves to be
studied as one of the original masters of our language.
[28] These observations are to be considered not as
unexceptionably constant, but as containing general and
predominant truth. Shakespeare's familiar dialogue is
affirmed to be smooth and clear, yet not wholly without
ruggedness or difficulty ; as a country may be eminently
fruitful, though it has spots unfit for cultivation :
his characters are praised as natural, though their
sentiments are sometimes forced, and their actions
improbable ; as the earth upon the whole is spherical,
though its surface is varied with protuberances and
cavities.
[29] Shakespeare, with his excellencies, has likewise faults,
and faults sufficient to obscure and overwhelm any other
merit. I shall show them in the proportion in which they
appear to me, without envious malignity or
superstitious veneration. No question can be more
innocently discussed than a dead poet's pretensions to
renown ; and little regard is due to that bigotry which
sets candour higher than truth.
[30] His first defect is that to which may be imputed most of
the evil in books or in men. He sacrifices virtue to
convenience, and is so much more careful to please than
to instruct, that he seems to write without any moral
purpose. From his writings indeed a system of social
duty may be selected, for he that thinks reasonably must
think morally ; but his precepts and axioms drop
casually from him; he makes no just distribution of good
or evil, nor is always careful to show in the virtuous
a disapprobation of the wicked; he carries his
persons indifferently through right and wrong, and at
the close dismisses them without further care, and
leaves their examples to operate by chance. This fault
the barbarity of his age cannot extenuate; for it is
always a writer's duty to make the world better, and
justice is a virtue independent on time or place.
[31] The plots are often so loosely formed that a very slight
consideration may improve them, and so carelessly
pursued, that he seems not always fully to comprehend
his own design. He omits opportunities of instructing or
delighting, which the train of his story seems to force
upon him, and apparently rejects those exhibitions which
would be more affecting, for the sake of those which are
more easy.
[32] It may be observed, that in many of his plays, the
latter part is evidently neglected. 'When he found
himself near the end of his work, and in view of his
reward, he shortened the labour to snatch the profit. He
therefore remits his efforts where he should most
vigorously exert them, and his catastrophe is improbably
produced or imperfectly represented.
[33] He had no regard to distinction of time or place, but
gives to one age or nation, without scruple, the
customs, institutions, and opinions of another, at the
expence not only of likelihood. but of possibility.
These faults Pope has endeavoured, with more zeal than
judgment, to transfer to his imagined interpolators. We
need not wonder to find Hector quoting Aristotle, when
we see the loves of Theseus and Hippolyta combined with
the Gothick mythology of fairies. Shakespeare, indeed,
was not the only violator of chronology, for in the same
age Sidney, who wanted not the advantages of learning,
has, in his " Arcadia," confounded the pastoral with the
feudal times, the days of innocence, quiet, and
security, with those of turbulence, violence, and
adventure. In his comick scenes, he is seldom very
successful, when he engages his characters in
reciprocations of smartness and contests of sarcasm ;
their jests are commonly gross, and their pleasantry
licentious ; neither his gentlemen nor his ladies have
much delicacy, nor are sufficiently distinguished from
his clowns by any appearance of refined manners.
Whether he represented the real conversation of his time
is not easy to determine ; the reign of Elizabeth is
commonly supposed to have been a time of stateliness,
formality, and reserve, yet perhaps, the relaxations of
that severity were not very elegant. There must,
however, have been always some modes of gaiety
preferable to others, and a writer ought to choose the
best.
[34] In tragedy his performance seems constantly to be worse,
as his labour is more. The effusions of passion, which
exigence forces out, are for the most part striking and
energetick ; but whenever he solicits his invention, or
strains his faculties, the offspring of his throes is
tumour, meanness, tediousness, and obscurity.
[36] In narration he affects a disproportionate pomp of
diction, and a wearisome train of circumlocution, and
tells the incident imperfectly in many words, which
might have been more plainly delivered in few.
Narra¬tion in dramatick poetry is naturally tedious, as
it is unanimated and inactive, and obstructs the
progress of the action ; it should, therefore, always be
rapid, and enlivened by frequent interruption.
Shakespeare found it an incumbrance, and instead of
lightening it by brevity, endeavoured to recommend it by
dignity and splendour.
[37] His declamations or set speeches are commonly cold and
weak, for his power was the power of nature; when he
endeavoured, like other tragic writers, to catch
opportunities of amplification, and instead of inquiring
what the occasion demanded, to show how much his stores
of knowledge could supply, he seldom escapes without the
pity or resentment of his reader.
[38] It is incident to him to be now and then entangled with
an unwieldy sentiment, which he cannot well express,
and will not reject ; he struggles with it a while, and
if it continues stubborn, comprises it in words such as
occur, and leaves it to be disentangled and evolved by
those who have more leisure to bestow upon it.
[39] Not that always where the language is intricate, the
thought is subtle, or the image always great where the
line is bulky ; the equality of words to things is very
often neglected, and trivial sentiments and vulgar ideas
disappoint the attention, to which they are recommended
by sonorous epithets and swelling figures.
[40] But the admirers of this great poet have most reason to
complain when he approaches nearest to his highest
excellence, and seems fully resolved to sink them in
dejection, and mollify them with tender emotions by the
fall of greatness, the danger of innocence, or the
crosses of love. What he does best, he soon ceases to
do. He is not long soft and pathetick without some idle
conceit, or contemptible equivocation. He no sooner
begins to move, than he counteracts himself ; and terror
and pity, as they are rising in the mind, are checked
and blasted by sudden frigidity.
[41] A quibble is to Shakespeare, what luminous vapours are
to the traveller ; he follows it at all adventures ; it
is sure to lead him out of his way, and sure to engulf
him in the mire. It has some malignant power over his
mind, and its fascinations are irresistible. Whatever be
the dignity or profundity of his disquisitions, whether
he be enlarging knowledge, or exalting affec¬tion,
whether he be amusing attention with incidents, or
enchaining it in suspense, let but a quibble spring up
before him, and he leaves his work unfinished. A quibble
is the golden apple for which he will always turn aside
from his career, or stoop from his elevation. A quibble,
poor and barren as it is, gave him such delight, that he
was content to purchase it by the sacrifice of reason,
propriety and truth. A quibble was to him the fatal
Cleopatra for which he lost the world, and was content
to lose it.
[42] It will be thought strange, that, in enumerating the
defects of this writer, I have not yet mentioned his
neglect of the unities ; his violation of those laws
which have been instituted and established by the joint
authority of poets and criticks.
[43] For his other deviations from the art of writing, I
resign him to critical justice, without making any other
demand in his favour than that which must be indulged to
all human excellence ; that his virtues be rated
with his failings : but, from the censure which this
irregularity may bring upon him, I shall, with due
reverence to that learning which I must oppose,
adventure to try how I can defend him.
[44] His histories, being neither tragedies nor comedies, are
not subject to any of their laws ; nothing is more
necessary to all the praise which they expect, than that
the changes of action be so prepared as to be
understood, that the incidents be various and affecting,
and the characters consistent, natural, and distinct. No
other unity is intended, and therefore none is to be
sought. In his other works he has well enough preserved the
unity of action. He has not, indeed, an intrigue
regularly perplexed and regularly unravelled; he does
not endeavour to hide his design only to discover it,
for this is seldom the order of real events, and
Shakespeare is the poet of nature: but his plan has
commonly what Aristotle requires, a beginning, a middle,
and an end ; one event concatenated with another, and
the con-clusion follows by easy consequence. There are,
per-haps, some incidents that might be spared, as in
other poets there is much talk that only fills up time
upon the stage ; but the general system makes gradual
advances, and the end of the play is the end of
expectation.
[45] To the unities of time and place, he has shown no regard
; and perhaps a nearer view of the principles on which
they stand will diminish their value, and with-draw from
the veneration which, from the time of Corneille, they
have very generally received, by discovering that they
have given more trouble to the poet, than pleasure to
the auditor.
[46] The necessity of observing the unities of time and place
arises from the supposed necessity of making the drama
credible. The criticks hold it impossible that an action
of months or years can be possibly believed to pass in
three hours ; or that the spectator can suppose himself
to sit in the theatre, while ambassadors go and return
between distant kings, while armies are levied and towns
besieged, while an exile wanders and returns, or till he
whom they saw courting his mistress, shall
lament the untimely fall of his son. The mind revolts
from evident falsehood, and fiction loses its force when
it departs from the resemblance of reality.
[47] From the narrow limitation of time necessarily arises
the contraction of place. The spectator, who knows that
he saw the first act at Alexandria, cannot suppose that
he sees the next at Rome, at a distance to which not the
dragons of Medea could, in so short a time, have
transported him; he knows with certainty that he has not
changed his place ; and he knows that place cannot
change itself ; that what was a house cannot become a
plain ; that what was Thebes can never be Persepolis.
[48] Such is the triumphant language with which a critick
exults over the misery of an irregular poet, and exults
commonly without resistance or reply. It is time,
therefore, to tell him, by the authority of Shakespeare,
that he assumes, as an unquestionable principle, a
position, which, while his breath is forming it into
words, his understanding pronounces to be false. It is
false, that any representation is mistaken for reality ;
that any dramatick fable in its materiality was ever
credible, or, for a single moment, was ever credited.
[49] The objection arising from the impossibility of passing
the first hour at Alexandria, and the next at Rome,
supposes, that when the play opens, the spectator really
imagines himself at Alexandria, and believes that his
walk to the theatre has been a voyage to Egypt, and that
he lives in the days of Antony and Cleopatra. Surely he
that imagines this may imagine more. He that can take
the stage at one time for the palace of the Ptolemies,
may take it in half an hour for the prom¬ontory of
Actium. Delusion, if delusion be admitted, has no
certain limitation ; if the spectator can be once
persuaded, that his old acquaintance are Alexander and
Caesar, that a room illuminated with candles is the
plain of Pharsalia, or the bank of Granicus, he is in a
state of elevation above the reach of reason, or of
truth, and from the heights of empyrean poetry, may
despise the circumscriptions of terrestrial nature.
There is no reason why a mind thus wandering in ecstacy
should count the clock, or why an hour should not be a
century in that calenture of the brains that can make
the stage a field.
[50] The truth is, that the spectators are always in their
senses, and know, from the first act to the last, that
the stage is only a stage, and that the players are only
players. They come to hear a certain number of lines
recited with just gesture and elegant modulation. The
lines relate to some action, and an action must be in
some place ; but the different actions that complete a
story may be in places very remote from each other ; and
where is the absurdity of allowing that space to
represent first Athens, and then Sicily, which was
always known to be neither Sicily nor Athens, but a
modern theatre?
[51] By supposition, as place is introduced, time may be
extended ; the time required by the fable elapses, for
the most part, between the acts ; for, of so much of the
action as is represented, the real and poetical duration
is the same. If, in the first act, preparations for war
against Mithridates are represented to be made in Rome,
the event of the war may, without absurdity, be
represented, in the catastrophe, as happening in Pontus
; we know that there is neither war, nor preparation for
war ; we know that we are neither in Rome nor Pontus ;
that neither Mithridates nor Lucullus are before us.The drama exhibits successive imitations of successive
actions, and why may not the second imitation represent
an action that happened years after the first ; if it be
so connected with it, that nothing but time can be
supposed to intervene? Time is, of all modes of exist-ence,
most obsequious to the imagination ; a lapse of years is
as easily conceived as a passage of hours. In
contemplation we easily contract the time of real
actions, and therefore, willingly permit it to be
contracted when we only see their imitation.
[52] It will be asked, how the drama moves, if it is not
credited. It is credited with all the credit due to a
drama. It is credited, whenever it moves, as a just
picture of a real original ; as representing to the
auditor what he would himself feel, if he were to do or
suffer what is there feigned to be suffered or to be
done. The reflection that strikes the heart is not, that
the evils before us are real evils, but that they are
evils to which we ourselves may be exposed. If there be
any fallacy, it is not that we fancy the players, but
that we fancy ourselves unhappy for a moment ; but we
rather lament the possibility than suppose the presence
of misery, as a mother weeps over her babe, when she
remembers that death may take it from her. The delight
of tragedy proceeds from our consciousness of fiction ;
if we thought murders and treasons real, they would
please no more.
[53] Imitations produce pain or pleasure, not because they
are mistaken for realities, but because they bring
realities to mind. When the imagination is recreated by
a painted landscape, the trees are not supposed capable
to give us shade, or the fountains coolness ; but we
consider, how we should be pleased with such
fountains playing beside us, and such woods waving over
us. We are agitated in reading the History of "Henry the
Fifth," yet no man takes his book for the field of
Agincourt. A dramatick exhibition is a book recited with
concomitants that increase or diminish its effect.
Familiar comedy is often more powerful on the theatre
than in the page ; imperial tragedy is always less. The
humour of Petruchio may be heightened by grimace; but
what voice or what gesture can hope to add dignity or
force to the soliloquy of Cato?
[54] A play read, affects the mind like a play acted. It is
therefore evident that the action is not supposed to be
real; and it follows, that between the acts a longer or
shorter time may be allowed to pass, and that no more
account of space or duration is to be taken by the
auditor of a drama, than by the reader of a narrative,
before whom may pass in an hour the life of a hero, or
the revolutions of an empire.
[55] Whether Shakespeare knew the unities, and rejected them
by design, or deviated from them by happy ignor-ance, it
is, I think, impossible to decide, and useless to
enquire. We may reasonably suppose, that, when he rose
to notice, he did not want the counsels and admoni¬tions
of scholars and criticks, and that he at last
deliberately persisted in a practice, which he might
have begun by chance.
[56] As nothing is essential to the fable, but unity of
action, and as the unities of time and place arise
evidently from false assumptions, and, by
circum-scribing the extent of the drama, lessen its
variety, I cannot think it much to be lamented that they
were not known by him, or not observed: nor, if such
another poet could arise, should I very vehemently
reproach him, that
his first act passed at Venice, and his next in Cyprus.
Such violations of rules merely positive, became the
comprehensive genius of Shakespeare, and such censures
are suitable to the minute and slender criticism of
Voltaire:
" Non usque adeo permiscuit imis
Longus summa dies, ut non, si voce Metelli
Serventure
leges, malint a Caesare tolli."
[57] Yet when I speak thus slightly of dramatick rules, I
cannot but recollect how much wit and learning may be
produced against me; before such authorities I am afraid
to stand, not that I think the present question one of
those that are to be decided by mere authority, but
because it is to be suspected that these precepts have
not been so easily received, but for better reasons than
I have yet been able to find. The result of my
inquiries, in which it would be ludicrous to boast of
impartiality, is that the unities of time and place are
not essential to a just drama, that though they may
sometimes conduce to pleasure, they are always to be
sacrificed to the nobler beauties of variety and
instruction ; and that a play, written with nice
observation of critical rules, is to be contemplated as
an elaborate curiosity, as the product of superfluous
and ostentatious art, by which is shown, rather what is
possible, than what is necessary.
[58] He that, without diminution of any other excellence,
shall preserve all the unities unbroken, deserves the
like applause with the architect, who shall display all
the orders of architecture in a citadel, without any
deduction from its strength ; but the principal beauty
of a citadel is to exclude the enemy; and the greatest
graces of a play are to copy nature and instruct life.
[59] Perhaps, what I have here not dogmatically but
deliberately written, may recall the principles of the
drama to a new examination. I am almost frightened at my
own temerity; and when I estimate the fame and the
strength of those that maintain the contrary opinion, am
ready to sink down in reverential silence; as Aeneas
withdrew from the defence of Troy, when he saw Neptune
shaking the wall, and Juno heading the besiegers.
[60] Those whom my arguments cannot persuade to give their
approbation to the judgment of Shakespeare, will easily,
if they consider the condition of his life, make some
allowance for his ignorance.
[61] Every man's performances, to be rightly estimated, must
be compared to the state of the age in which he lived,
and with his own particular opportunities ; and though
to a reader a book be not worse or better for the
circumstances of the author, yet as there is always a
silent reference of human works to human abilities, and
as the enquiry, how far man may extend his designs, or
how high he may rate his native force, is of far greater
dignity than in what rank we shall place any particular
performance, curiosity is always busy to discover the
instruments, as well as to survey the workmanship, to
know how much is to be ascribed to original powers, and
how much to casual and adventitious help. The palaces of
Peru or Mexico were certainly mean and incommodious
habitations, if compared to the houses of European
monarchs ; yet who could forbear to view them with
astonishment, who remembered that they were built
without the use of iron?
[62] The English nation, in the time of Shakespeare, was yet
struggling to emerge from barbarity. The philology of Italy had been translated hither in the reign
of Henry the Eighth; and the learned languages had been
successfully cultivated by Lilly, Linacre, and More; by
Pole, Cheke, and Gardiner ; and afterwards by Smith,
Clerk, Haddon, and Ascham. Greek was now taught to boys
in the principal schools ; and those who united elegance
with learning, read, with great diligence, the Italian
and Spanish poets. But literature was yet confined to
professed scholars, or to men and women of high rank.
The publick was gross and dark ; and to be able to read
and write was an accomplish-ment still valued for its
rarity.
[63] Nations, like individuals, have their infancy. A people
newly awakened to literary curiosity, being yet
un-acquainted with the true state of things, knows not
how to judge of that which is proposed as its
resemblance. 'Whatever is remote from common
appearances is always welcome to vulgar, as to childish
credulity ; and of a country unenlightened by learning,
the whole people is the vulgar. The study of those who
then as-pired to plebeian learning was laid out upon
adventures, giants, dragons, and enchantments. The "
Death of Arthur" was the favourite volume.
[64] The mind, which has feasted on the luxurious wonders of
fiction, has no taste for the insipidity of truth. A
play, which imitated only the common occurrences of the
world, would, upon the admirers of Palmerin and Guy of
Warwick, have made little impression ; he that wrote for
such an audience was under the necessity of looking
round for strange events and fabulous trans¬actions, and
that incredibility, by which maturer knowledge is
offended, was the chief recommendation of writings to
unskilful curiosity.
[65] Our author's plots are generally borrowed from novels ;
and it is reasonable to suppose that he chose the most
popular, such as were read by many, and related by more;
for his audience could not have followed him through the
intricacies of the drama, had they not held the thread
of the story in their hands.
[66] The stories, which we now find only in remoter authors,
were in his time accessible and familiar. The fable of
"As You Like It," which is supposed to be copied from
Chaucer's " Gamelyne," was a little pamphlet of those
times ; and old Mr. Cibber remembered the tale of "
Hamlet " in plain English prose, which the criticks have
now to seek in Saxo Grammaticus.
[67] His English histories he took from English chroni-cles
and English ballads ; and as the ancient writers were
made known to his countrymen by versions, they supplied
him with new subjects ; he dilated some of Plutarch's
lives into plays, when they had been translated by
North.
[68] His plots, whether historical or fabulous, are always
crowded with incidents, by which the attention of a rude
people was more easily caught than by sentiment or
argumentation ; and such is the power of' the marvellous,
even over those who despise it, that every man finds his
mind more strongly seized by the tragedies of
Shakespeare than of any other writer ; others please us
by particular speeches, but he always makes us anxious
for the event, and has perhaps excelled all but Homer in
securing the first purpose of a writer, by exciting
restless and unquenchable curiosity, and compelling him
that reads his work to read it through.
[69] The shows and bustle with
which his plays abound have the same original. As
knowledge advances, pleasure
passes from the eye to the ear but returns, as it
declines, from the ear to the eye. Those to whom our
author's labours were exhibited had more skill in pomps
or processions than in poetical language, and perhaps
wanted some visible and discriminated events, as
comments on the dialogue. He knew how he should most
please ; and whether his practice is more agreeable to
nature, or whether his example has prejudiced the
nation, we still find that on our stage something must
be done as well as said, and inactive declamation is
very coldly heard, however musical or elegant,
passionate or sublime.
[70] Voltaire expresses his
wonder, that our author's extravagances
are endured by a nation which has seen the tragedy of "Cato." Let him be answered, that Addison speaks the
language of poets, and Shakespeare of men. We find in "
Cato " innumerable beauties which enamour us of its
author, but we see nothing that acquaints us with human
sentiments or human actions ; rove place it with the
fairest and the noblest progeny which judgment
propagates by conjunction with learning; but " Othello
" is the vigorous and vivacious offspring of
observation impregnated by genius. " Cato " affords a
splendid exhibition of artificial and fictitious
manners, and delivers just and noble sentiments, in
diction easy and harmonious, but its hopes and fears
communicate no vibration to the heart ; the composition
refers us only to the writer; we pronounce the name of "
Cato," but we think on Addison.
[71] The work of a correct and regular writer is a garden
accurately formed and diligently planted, varied with
shades, and scented with flowers : the composition of
Shakespeare is a forest, in which oaks extend their
branches, and pines tower in the air, interspersed
sometimes with the weeds and brambles, and sometimes
giving shelter to myrtles and to roses ; filling the eye
with awful pomp and gratifying the mind with endless
diversity. Other poets display cabinets of precious
rarities, minutely finished, wrought into shape, and
polished into brightness. Shakespeare opens a mine which
contains gold and diamonds in unexhaustible plenty,
though clouded by incrustations, debased by impurities,
and mingled with a mass of meaner minerals.
[72] It has been much disputed, whether Shakespeare owed his
excellence to his own native force, or whether he had
the common helps of scholastic education, the precepts
of critical science, and the examples of ancient
authors.
[73] There has always prevailed a
tradition, that Shakespeare
wanted learning, that he had no regular education nor
much skill in the dead languages. Jonson, his friend,
affirms that he had small Latin, and less Greek ; who,
besides that he had no imaginable temptation to
false¬hood, wrote at a time when the character and
acquisitions of Shakespeare were known to multitudes.
His evidence ought, therefore, to decide the
controversy, unless some testimony of equal force could
be opposed.
[74] Some have imagined that they have discovered deep
learning in imitation of old writers ; but the examples
which I have known urged, were drawn from books
translated in his time ; or were such easy coincidences
of thought, as will happen to all who consider the same
subjects ; or such remarks on life or axioms of
mortality
as float in conversation, and are transmitted through
the world in proverbial sentences.
[75] I have found it remarked, that, in this important
sentence, " Go before, I'll follow," we read a
translation of, I prae sequar. I have been told, that
when Caliban, after a pleasing dream, says, " I cried to
sleep again," the author imitates Anacreon, who had,
like every other man the same wish on the same occasion.
[76] There are a few passages which may pass for imitation,
but so few, that the exception only confirms the rule ;
he obtained them from accidental quotations, or by oral
communication, and as he used what he had, would have
used more if he had obtained it.
[77] "The Comedy of Errors " is confessedly taken from the " Menaechmi " of Plautus ; from the only play of Plautus
which was then in English. What can be more probable,
than that he who copied that, would have copied more ;
but that those which were not translated were
inaccessible?
[78] Whether he knew the modern languages is uncertain. That
his plays have some French scenes proves but little ; he
might easily procure them to be written, and probably,
even though he had known the language in the common
degree, he could not have written it without assistance.
In the story of " Romeo and Juliet " he is observed to
have followed the English translation, where it deviates
from the Italian ; but this on the other part proves
nothing against his knowledge of the original. He was to
copy, not what he knew himself, but what was known to
his audience.
[79] It is most likely that he had learned Latin sufficiently
to make him acquainted with construction, but that he
never advanced to an easy perusal of the Roman
authors. Concerning his skill in modern languages, I can
find no sufficient ground of determination ; but as no
imitations of French or Italian authors have been
discovered, though the Italian poetry was then in high
esteem, I am inclined to believe, that he read little
more than English, and chose for his fables only such
tales as he found translated.
[80] That much knowledge is scattered over his works is very
justly observed by Pope, but it is often such knowledge
as books did not supply. He that will understand
Shakespeare, must not be content to study him in the
closet, he must look for his meaning some-times among
the sports of the field, and sometimes among the
manufactures of the shop.
[81] There is, however, proof enough that he was a very
diligent reader, nor was our language then so indigent
of books, but that he might very liberally indulge his
curiosity without excursions into foreign literature.
Many of the Roman authors were translated, and some of
the Greek; the Reformation had filled the kingdom with
theological learning ; most of the topicks of human
disquisition had found English writers ; and poetry had
been cultivated, not only with diligence, but success.
This was a stock of knowledge sufficient for a mind so
capable of appropriating and improving it.
[82] But the greater part of his excellence was the product
of his own genius. He found the English stage in a state
of the utmost rudeness ; no essays either in tragedy or
comedy had appeared, from which it could be discovered
to what degree of delight either one or the other might
be carried. Neither character nor dialogue were yet
understood. Shakespeare may be truly said to have
introduced them both amongst us,
and in some of his happier scenes to have carried them
both to the utmost height.
[83] By what gradations of improvement he proceeded, is not
easily known ; for the chronology of his works is yet
unsettled. Rowe is of opinion that perhaps we are not to
look for his beginning, like those of other writers, in
his least perfect works ; art had so little, and nature
so large a share in what he did, that for aught I know,
says he, the performances of his youth, as they were the
most vigorous, were the best. But the power of nature is
only the power of using to any certain purpose the
materials which diligence procures or opportunity
supplies. Nature gives no man knowledge, and when images
are collected by study and experience, can only assist
in combining or applying them. Shakespeare, however,
favoured by nature, could impart only what he had
learned ; and as he must increase his ideas, like other
mortals, by gradual acquisition he, like them, grew
wiser as he grew older, could display life better, as he
knew it more, and instruct with more efficacy, as he was
himself more amply instructed.
[84] There is a vigilance of observation and accuracy of
distinction which books and precepts cannot confer ;
from this almost all original and native excellence
proceeds. Shakespeare must have looked upon man-kind
with perspicacity, in the highest degree curious and
attentive. Other writers borrow their characters from
preceding writers, and diversify them only by the
accidental appendages of present manners ; the dress is
a little varied, but the body is the same. Our author
had both matter and form to provide; for, except the
characters of Chaucer, to whom I think he is not much
indebted, there were no writers in English, and perhaps
not many in other modern languages, which showed life in
its native colours.
[85] The contest about the original benevolence or malignity
of man, had not yet commenced. Speculation had not yet
attempted to analyse the mind, to trace the passions to
their sources, to unfold the seminal principles of vice
and virtue, or sound the depths of the heart for the
motives of action. All those enquiries, which from that
time that human nature became the fashionable study,
have been made sometimes with nice discernment, but
often with idle subtilty, were yet unattempted. The
tales, with which the infancy of learning was
satisfied, exhibited only the superficial appearances of
action, related the events, but omitted the causes, and
were formed for such as delighted in wonders rather than
in truth. Mankind was not then to be studied in the
closet ; he that would know the world, was under the
necessity of gleaning his own remarks by mingling as he
could in its business and amusements.
[86] Boyle congratulated himself upon his high birth, because
it favoured his curiosity, by facilitating his access.
Shakespeare had no such advantage; he came to London a
needy adventurer, and lived for a time by very mean
employments. Many works of genius and learning have been
performed in states of life that appear very little
favourable to thought or to enquiry ; so many, that he
who considers them is inclined to think that he sees
enterprise and perseverance predominating over all
external agency, and bidding help and hindrance vanish
before them. The genius of Shakespeare was not to be
depressed by the weight of poverty nor limited by the
narrow conversation to which men in
want are inevitably condemned ; the incumbrances of his
fortune were shaken from his mind, as dew-drops from a
lion's mane.
[87] Though he had so many difficulties to encounter, and so
little assistance to surmount them, he has been able to
obtain an exact knowledge of many modes of life, and
many casts of native dispositions ; to vary them with
great multiplicity ; to mark them by nice distinctions;
and to show them in full view by proper combinations. In
this part of his performances he had none to imitate,
but has himself been imitated by all succeeding writers
; and it may be doubted whether from all his successors
more maxims of theoretical knowledge, or more rules of
practical prudence, can be collected, than he alone has
given to his country.
[88] Nor was his attention
confined to the actions of men; he was an exact
surveyor of the inanimate world; his descriptions
have always some peculiarities, gathered by
contemplating things as they really exist. It may be
observed that the earliest poets of many nations
preserve their reputation, and that the following
generations of wit, after a short celebrity, sink
into oblivion. The first, whoever they be, must take
their sentiments and 'descriptions immediately from
knowledge; the resemblance is therefore just, their
descriptions are verified by every eye, and their
sentiments acknowledged by every breast. Those whom
their fame invites to the same studies, copy partly
them, and partly nature, till the books of one age
gain such authority, as to stand in the place of
nature to another, and imitation, always deviating a
little, becomes at last capricious and casual.
Shakespeare, whether life or nature be his subject,
shows plainly that he has seen with his own eyes ;
he gives the image which he receives, not weakened
or distorted by the intervention of any other mind; the
ignorant feel his representations to be just, and the
learned see that they are complete.
[89] Perhaps it would not be easy to find any author, except
Homer, who invented so much as Shakespeare, who so much
advanced the studies which he cultivated, or effused so
much novelty upon his age or country. The form, the
character, the language, and the shows of the English
drama are his. " He seems," says Dennis, " to have been
the very original of our English tragical harmony, that
is, the harmony of blank verse, diversified often by
dissyllable and trissyllable terminations. For the
diversity distinguishes it from heroick harmony, and by
bringing it nearer to common use makes it more proper to
gain attention, and more fit for action and dialogue.
Such verse we make when we are writing . prose; we make
such verse in common conversation."
[90] I know not whether this praise is rigorously just. The
dissyllable termination, which the critick rightly
appro-priates to the drama, is to be found, though I
think not in Gorboduc, which is confessedly before our
author; yet in Hieronymo, of which the date is not
certain, but which there is reason to believe at least
as old as his earliest plays. This, however, is certain,
that he is the first who taught either tragedy or comedy
to please, there being no theatrical piece of any older
writer, of which the name is known, except to
antiquaries and collectors of books, which are sought
because they are scarce, and would not have been scarce,
had they been much esteemed.
[91] To him we must ascribe the praise, unless Spenser may
divide it with him, of having first discovered to how
much smoothness and harmony the English language could
be softened. He has speeches, perhaps sometimes scenes,
which have all the delicacy of Rowe, without his
effeminacy. He endeavours indeed commonly to strike by
the force and vigour of his dialogue, but he never
executes his purpose better than when he tries to sooth
by softness.
[92] Yet it must be at last confessed, that as we owe
everything to him, he owes something to us ; that, if
much of his praise is paid by perception and judgment,
much is likewise given by custom and veneration. We fix
our eyes upon his graces, and turn them from his deformities, and endure in him what we should in
another loath or despise. If we endure without praising,
respect for the father of our drama might excuse us ;
but I have seen, in the book of some modern critick, a
collection of anomalies, which show that he has
corrupted language by every mode of depravation, but
which his admirer has accumulated as a monument of
honour.
[93] He has scenes of undoubted and perpetual excellence, but
perhaps not one play, which, if it were now exhibited
as the work of a contemporary writer, would be heard to
the conclusion. I am indeed far from thinking that his
works were wrought to his own ideas of perfection ; when
they were such as would satisfy the audience, they
satisfied the writer. It is seldom that authors, though
more studious of fame than Shakespeare, rise much above
the standard of their own age ;
to add a little to what is best will always be
sufficient for present praise, and those who find
themselves exalted into fame, are willing to credit
their encomiasts, and to spare the labour of contending
with themselves.
[94] It does not appear that Shakespeare thought his works
worthy of their posterity, that he levied any ideal
tribute upon future times, or had any further prospects
than of present popularity and present profit. When his
plays had been acted his hope was at an end; he
solicited no addition of honour from the reader. He
therefore made no scruple to repeat the same jests in
many dialogues, or to entangle different plots by the
same knot of perplexity, which may be at least forgiven
him, by those who recollect, that of Congreve's four
comedies, two are concluded by a marriage in a mask ; by
a deception, which perhaps never happened, and which,
whether likely or not, he did not invent.
[95] So careless was this great poet of future fame, that,
though he retired to ease and plenty, while he was yet
little declined into the vale of years, before he could
be disgusted with fatigue, or disabled by infirmity, he
made no collection of his works, nor desired to rescue
those that had been already published from the
depravations that obscured them, or secure to the rest
a better destiny, by giving them to the world in their
genuine state.
[96] Of the plays which bear the name of Shakespeare in the
late editions, the greater part were not published till
about seven years after his death, and the few which
appeared in his life, are apparently thrust into the
world without the care of the author, and therefore
probably without his knowledge.
[97] Of all the publishers, clandestine or professed, the
negligence and unskilfulness has by the late revisers,
been sufficiently shown. The faults of all are indeed
numerous and gross, and have not only corrupted many
passages perhaps beyond recovery, but have brought
others into suspicion, which are only obscured by
obsolete phraseology, or by the writer's unskilfulness
and affectation. To alter is more easy than to explain,
and temerity is a more common quality than diligence.
Those who saw that they must employ conjecture to a
certain degree, were willing to indulge it a little
further. Had the author published his own works, we
should have sat quietly down to disentangle his
intricacies, and clear his obscurities ; but now we tear
what we cannot loose, and eject what we happen not to
understand.
[98] The faults are more than could have happened without the
concurrence of many causes. The style of Shakespeare
was in itself ungrammatical, perplexed, and obscure ;
his works were transcribed for the players by those who
may be supposed to have seldom understood them; they
were transmitted by copiers equally unskilful, who still
multiplied errors ; they were, perhaps, sometimes
mutilated by the actors, for the sake of shortening the
speeches ; and were at last printed without correction
of the press.
[99] In this state they remained, not as Dr. Warburton
supposed, because they were unregarded, but because the
editor's art was not yet applied to modern languages,
and our ancestors were accustomed to so much negligence
of English printers, that they could very patiently
endure it. At last an edition was undertaken by Rowe ;
not because a poet was to be published by a poet, for
Rowe seems to have thought very little on
correction or explanation, but that our author's works
might appear like those of his fraternity, with the
appendages of a life and recommendatory preface. Rowe
has been clamorously blamed for not performing what he
did not undertake, and it is time that justice be done
him, by confessing, that though he seems to have had no
thought of corruption beyond the printer's errors, yet
he has made many emendations, if they were not made
before, which his successors have received without
acknowledgment, and which, if they had produced them,
would have filled pages and pages with censures of the
stupidity by which the faults were committed, with
displays of the absurdities which they involved, with
ostentatious expositions of the new reading, and
self-congratulations on the happiness of discovering it.
[100] As of the other editors I have preserved the prefaces, I
have likewise borrowed the author's life from Rowe,
though not written with much elegance or spirit ; it
relates, however, what is now to be known, and therefore
deserves to pass through all succeeding publications.
[101] The nation had been, for many years, content enough with
Mr. Rowe's performance, when Mr. Pope made them
acquainted with the true state of Shakespeare's text,
showed that it was extremely corrupt, and gave reason to
hope that there was means of reforming it. He collated
the old copies, which none had thought to examine
before, and restored many lines to their integ-rity;
but, by a very compendious criticism, he rejected
whatever he disliked, and thought more of amputation
than of cure.
[102] I know not why he is commended by Dr. Warburton for
distinguishing the genuine from the spurious plays.
In this choice he exerted no judgment of his own ; the
plays which he received, were given to Hemings and
Condel, the first editors ; and those which he rejected
; though, according to the licentiousness of the press
in those times, they were printed during Shakespeare's
life, with his name, had been omitted by his friends,
and were never added to his works before the edition of
1664, from which they were copied by the latter
printers.
[103] This was a work which Pope seems to have thought
unworthy of his abilities, being not able to suppress
his contempt of the dull duty of an editor. He
understood but half his undertaking. The duty of a
collator is indeed dull, yet like other tedious tasks is
very necessary; but an emendatory critick would ill
discharge his duty, without qualities very different
from dullness. In perusing a corrupted piece, he must
have before him all possibilities of meaning, with all
possibilities of expression. Such must be his
comprehension of thought, and such his copiousness of
language. Out of many readings possible, he must be able
to select that which best suits with the state,
opinions, and modes of language prevailing in every age,
and with his author's particular cast of thought and
turn of expression. Such must be his knowledge, and such
his taste. Conjectural criticism demands more than
humanity possesses, and he that exercises it with most
praise, has very frequent need of indulgence. Let us now
be told no more of the dull duty of an editor.
Confidence is the common consequence of success. They
whose excellence of any kind has been loudly celebrated,
are ready to conclude that their powers are universal.
Pope's edition fell below his own expectations, and he
was so much
offended, when he was found to have left any thing for
others to do, that he passed the latter part of his life
in a state of hostility with verbal criticism.
[104] I have retained all his notes, that no fragment of so
great a writer may be lost ; his preface, valuable alike
for elegance of composition and justness of remark, and
containing a general criticism on his author, so
extensive that little can be added, and so exact that
little can be disputed, every editor has an interest to
suppress, but that every reader would demand its
insertion.
[105] Pope was succeeded by Theobald, a man of narrow
comprehension, and small acquisitions, with no native
and intrinsick splendour of genius, with little of the
artificial light of learning, but zealous for minute
accuracy, and not negligent in pursuing it. He collated
the ancient copies, and rectified many errors. A man so
anxiously scrupulous might have been expected to do
more, but what little he did was commonly right.
[106] In his report of copies and editions he is not to be
trusted without examination. He speaks sometimes
indefinitely of copies, when he has only one. In his
enumeration of editions, he mentions the first two
folios as of high, and the third folio as of middle
authority; but the truth is, that the first is
equivalent to all others, and that the rest only deviate
from it by the printer's negligence. Whoever has any of
the folios, has all, excepting those diversities which
mere reitera-tion of editions will produce. I collated
them all at the beginning, but afterwards used only the
first.
[107] Of his notes I have generally retained those which he
retained himself in his second edition, except when they
were confuted by subsequent annotators, or were too
minute to merit preservation. I have sometimes adopted
his restoration of a comma, without inserting the
panegyrick in which he celebrated himself for his
achievement.
[108] The exuberant excrescence of his diction I have often
lopped, his triumphant exultations over Pope and Rowe I
have sometimes suppressed, and his contemptible
ostentation I have frequently concealed; but I have in
some places shown him, as he would have shown himself,
for the reader's diversion, that the inflated emptiness
of some notes may justify or excuse the contraction of
the rest.
[109] Theobald, thus weak and ignorant, thus mean and
faithless, thus petulant and ostentatious, by the good
luck of having Pope for his enemy, has escaped, and
escaped alone, with reputation, from this undertaking.
So willingly does the world support those who solicit
favour, against those who command reverence; and so
easily is he praised, whom no man can envy.
[110] Our author fell then into the hands of Sir Thomas Hanmer,
the Oxford editor, a man, in my opinion, eminently
qualified by nature for such studies. He had, what is
the first requisite to emendatory criticism, that
intuition by which the poet's intention is immediately
discovered, and that dexterity of intellect which
despatches its work by the easiest means. He had
undoubtedly read much; his acquaintance with customs,
opinions, and traditions, seems to have been large; and
he is often learned without show. He seldom passes what
he does not understand, without an attempt to find or to
make a meaning, and some times hastily makes what a
little more attention would have found. He is solicitous
to
reduce to grammar, what he could not be sure that his
author intended to be grammatical. Shakespeare regarded
more the series of ideas, than of words ; and his
language, not being designed for the reader's desk, was
all that he desired it to be, if it conveyed his meaning
to the audience.
[111] Hanmer's care of the metre has been too violently
censured. He found the measure reformed in so many
passages, by the silent labours of some editors, with
the silent acquiescence of the rest, that he thought
him¬self allowed to extend a little further the licence,
which had already been carried so far without
reprehension ; and of his corrections in general, it
must be confessed, that they are often just, and made
commonly with the least possible violation of the text.
[112] But, by inserting his emendations,
whether invented or borrowed, into the page, without
any notice of varying
copies, he has appropriated the labour of his
predecessors, and made his own edition of little
authority. His confidence, indeed, both in himself and
others, was too great ; he supposed all to be right that
was done by Pope and Theobald; he seems not to suspect
a critick of fallibility, and it was but reasonable that
he should claim what he so liberally granted.
[113] As he never writes without careful enquiry and dili¬gent
consideration, I have received all his notes, and
believe that every reader will wish for more.
[114] Of the last editor it is more difficult to speak.
Respect is due to high place, tenderness to living
reputation, and veneration to genius and learning; but
he cannot be justly offended at the liberty of which he
has himself so frequently given an example, nor very
solicitous what is thought of notes, which he ought
never to have considered as part of his serious employment, and which, I
suppose, since the ardour of composition is remitted, he
no longer numbers among his happy effusions. The
original and predominant error of his commentary is
acquiescence in his first thoughts; that precipitation
which is produced by consciousness of quick discernment
; and that confidence which presumes to do, by surveying
the surface, what labour only can per-form, by
penetrating the bottom. His notes exhibit sometimes
perverse interpretations, and sometimes improbable
conjectures; he at one time gives the author more
profundity of meaning than the sentence admits, and at
another discovers absurdities, where the sense is plain
to every other reader. But his emendations are likewise
often happy and just ; and his interpretation of obscure
passages learned and sagacious.
[115] Of his notes, I have commonly rejected those, against
which the general voice of the publick has exclaimed, or
which their own incongruity immediately condemns, and
which, I suppose the author himself would desire to be
forgotten. Of the rest, to part I have given the highest
approbation, by inserting the offered reading in the
text ; part I have left to the judgment of the reader,
as doubtful, though specious; and part I have censured
without reserve, but I am sure without bitterness of
malice, and, I hope, without wantonness of insult.
[116] It is no pleasure to me, in revising my volumes, to
observe how much paper is wasted in confutation. Whoever
considers the revolutions of learning, and the various
questions of greater or less importance, upon which wit
and reason have exercised their powers, must lament the
unsuccessfulness of enquiry, and the slow advances of
truth, when he reflects, that great part of
the labour of every writer is only the destruction of
those that went before him. The first care of the
builder of a new system is to demolish the fabricks
which are standing. The chief desire of him that
comments an author, is to show how much other
commentators have corrupted and obscured him. The
opinions prevalent in one age, as truths above the reach
of controversy, are confuted and rejected in another,
and rise again to reception in remoter times. Thus the
human mind is kept in motion without progress. Thus
sometimes truth and error, and sometimes contrarieties
of error, take each other's place by reciprocal
invasion. The tide of seeming knowledge which is poured
over one generation, retires and leaves another naked
and barren ; the sudden meteors of intelligence, which
for a while appear to shoot their beams into the regions
of obscurity, on a sudden withdraw their lustre, and
leave mortals again to grope their way.
[117] These elevations and depressions of renown, and the
contradictions to which all improvers of knowledge must
for ever be exposed, since they are not escaped by the
highest and brightest of mankind, may surely be endured
with patience by criticks and annotators, who can rank
themselves but as the satellites of their authors. How
canst thou beg for life, says Homer's hero to his
captive, when thou knowest that thou art now to suffer
only what must another day be suffered by Achilles?
[118] Dr. Warburton had a name sufficient to confer celebrity
on those who could exalt themselves into antagonists,
and his notes have raised a clamour too loud to be
distinct. His chief assailants are the authors of " The
Canons of Criticism," and of " The Revisal of
Shakespeare's Text " ; of whom one ridicules his errors
with airy petulance, suitable enough to the levity of
the controversy ; the other attacks them with gloomy
malig¬nity, as if he were dragging to justice an
assassin or incendiary. The one stings like a fly, sucks
a little blood, takes a gay flutter, and returns for
more; the other bites like a viper, and would be glad to
leave inflammations and gangrene behind him. When I
think on one, with his confederates, I remember the
danger of Coriolanus, who was afraid that girls with
spits, and boys with stones, should slay him in puny
battle; when the other crosses my imagination, I
remember the prodigy in "Macbeth":
" A falcon tow'ring in his pride of place,
Was by a mousing owl hawk'd at and kill'd."
[119] Let me, however, do them justice. One is a wit, and one
a scholar. They have both shown acuteness sufficient in
the discovery of faults, and have both advanced some
probable interpretations of obscure passages ; but when
they aspire to conjecture and emendation, it appears how
falsely we all estimate our own abilities, and the
little which they have been able to perform might have
taught them more candour to the endeavours of others.
[120] Before Dr. Warburton's edition, "Critical Observation
on Shakespeare," had been published by Mr. Upton, a man
skilled in languages, and acquainted with books, but who
seems to have had no great vigour of genius or nicety of
taste. Many of his explanations are curious and useful,
but he likewise, though he professed to oppose the
licentious confidence of editors, and adhere to the old
copies, is unable to restrain the rage of
emendation, though his ardour is ill seconded by his
skill. Every cold empirick, when his heart expanded by a
successful experiment, swells into a theorist, and the
laborious collator at some unlucky moment frolicks in
conjecture.
[121] Critical, historical, and explanatory notes have been
likewise published upon Shakespeare by Dr. Grey, whose
diligent perusal of the old English writers has enabled
him to make some useful observations. What he undertook
he has well enough performed, but as he neither attempts
judicial nor emendatory criticisms, he employs rather
his memory than his sagacity. It were to be wished that
all would endeavour to imitate his modesty, who have not
been able to surpass his knowledge.
[122] I can say with great sincerity of all my predecessors,
what I hope will hereafter be said of me, that not one
has left Shakespeare without improvement, nor is there
one to whom I have not been indebted for assistance and
information. Whatever I have taken from them, it was my
intention to refer to its original author, and it is
certain, that what I have not given to another, I
believe when I wrote it to be my own. In some, perhaps,
I have been anticipated ; but if I am ever found to
encroach upon the remarks of any other commentator, I am
willing that the honour, be it more or less, should be
transferred to the first claimant, for his right, and
his alone, stands above dispute; the second can prove
his pretensions only to himself, nor can himself always
distinguish invention, with sufficient certainty, from
recollection.
[123] They have all been treated by me with candour, which
they have not been careful of observing to one another.
It is not easy to discover from what cause the acrimony
of a scholiast can naturally proceed. The subjects to be
discussed by him are of very small importance; they
involve neither property nor liberty ; nor favour the
interest of sect or party. The various readings of
copies, and different interpretations of a passage, seem
to be questions that might exercise the wit, without
engaging the passions. But whether it be, that small
things make mean men proud, and vanity catches small
occasions ; or that all contrariety of opinion, even in
those that can defend it no longer, makes proud men
angry ; there is often found in commentaries a spontaneous strain of invective and contempt, more
eager and venomous than is vented by the most furious
controvertist in politicks against those whom he is
hired to defame.
[124] Perhaps the lightness of the matter may conduce to the
vehemence of the agency ; when the truth to be
investigated is so near to inexistence as to escape
attention, its bulk is to be enlarged by rage and
exclamation : that to which all would be indifferent in
its original state may attract notice when the fate of a
name is appended to it. A commentator has indeed great
temptations to supply by turbulence what he wants of
dignity, to beat his little gold to a spacious surface,
to work that to foam which no art or diligence can exalt
to spirit.
[125] The notes which I have borrowed or written, are either
illustrative, by which difficulties are explained; or
judicial, by which faults and beauties are remarked; or
emendatory, by which depravations are corrected.
[126] The explanations transcribed from others, if I do not
subjoin any other interpretation, I suppose commonly
to be right, at least I intend by acquiescence to
confess that I have nothing better to propose.
[127] After the labours of all the
editors, I found many passages, which appeared to me
likely to obstruct the greater number of readers,
and thought it my duty to facilitate their passage.
It is impossible for the expositor not to write too little for some, and too
much for others. He can only judge what is necessary by
his own experience ; and how long soever he may
deliberate, will at last explain many lines which the
learned will think impossible to be mistaken, and omit
many for which the ignorant will want his help. These
are censures merely relative, and must be quietly
endured. I have endeavoured to be neither superfluously
copious, nor scrupulously reserved, and hope that I have
made my author's meaning accessible to many, who before
were frighted from perusing him, and contributed
something to the publick, by diffusing innocent and
rational pleasure.
[128] The complete explanation of an author not systematick
and consequential, but desultory and vagrant, abounding
in casual allusions and light hints, is not to be
expected from any single scholiast. All personal
reflections, when names are suppressed, must be in a few
years irrecoverably obliterated ; and customs, too
minute to attract the notice of law, yet such as modes
of dress, formalities of conversation, rules of visits,
disposition of furniture, and practices of ceremony,
which naturally find places in familiar dialogue, are
so fugitive and unsubstantial that they are not easily
retained or recovered. What can be known will be
collected by chance, from the recesses of obscure and
obsolete papers, pursued commonly with some other view.
Of
this knowledge every man has some, and none has much ;
but when an author has engaged the publick attention,
those who can add any thing to his illustration, communicate
their discoveries, and time produces what had eluded
diligence.
[129] To time I have been obliged to resign many passages,
which, though I did not understand them, will perhaps
hereafter be explained, having, I hope, illustrated
some, which others have neglected or mistaken,
sometimes by short remarks, or marginal directions,
such as every editor has added at his will, and often by
comments more laborious than the matter will seem to
deserve; but that which is most difficult is not always
most important, and to an editor nothing is a trifle by
which his author is obscured.
[130] The poetical beauties or defects I have not been very
diligent to observe. Some plays have more, and some
fewer judicial observations, not in proportion to their
difference of merit, but because I gave this part of my
design to chance, and to caprice. The reader, I believe,
is seldom pleased to find his opinion anticipated; it is
natural to delight more in what we find or make, than in
what we receive. Judgment, like other faculties, is
improved by practice, and its advancement is hindered by
submission to dictatorial decisions, as the memory grows
torpid by the use of a table-book. Some initiation is
however necessary ; of all skill, part is infused by
precept, and part is obtained by habit ; I have,
therefore, shown so much as may enable the candidate of
criticism to discover the rest.
[131] To the end of most plays I have added short strictures,
containing a general censure of faults, or praise of
excellence; in which I know not how much I have concurred with the current opinion ; but I have not, by any
affectation or singularity, deviated from it. Nothing is
minutely and particularly examined, and therefore, it is
to be supposed that in the plays which are condemned
there is much to be praised, and in these which are
praised much to be condemned.
[132] The part of criticism in which the whole succession of
editors has laboured with the greatest diligence, which
has occasioned the most arrogant ostentation, and
excited the keenest acrimony, is the emendation of
corrupted passages, to which the publick attention
having been first drawn by the violence of the
contention between Pope and Theobald, has been continued
by the persecution, which, with a kind of conspiracy,
has been since raised against all the publishers of
Shakespeare.
[133] That many passages have passed in a state of
depravation through all the editions is indubitably
certain ; of these, the restoration is only to be
attempted by collation of copies, or sagacity of
conjecture. The collator's province is safe and easy,
the conjecturer's perilous and difficult. Yet as the
greater part of the plays are extant only in one copy,
the peril must not be avoided, nor the difficulty
refused.
[134] Of the readings which this emulation of amendment has
hitherto produced, some from the labours of every
publisher I have advanced into the text ; those are to
be considered as in my opinion sufficiently supported ;
some I have rejected without mention, as evidently
erroneous ; some I have left in the notes without
censure or approbation, as resting in equipoise between
objection and defence ; and some, which seemed specious
but not right, I have inserted with a subsequent
animadversion.
[135] Having classed the observations of others, I was at last
to try what I could substitute for their mistakes, and
how could I supply their omissions. I collated such
copies as I could procure, and wished for more, but have
not found the collectors of these rarities very
communicative. Of the editions which chance or kind-ness
put into my hands I have given an enumeration, that I
may not be blamed for neglecting what I had not the
power to do.
[136] By examining the old copies, I soon found that the later
publishers, with all their boasts of diligence,
suffered many passages to stand unauthorized, and
contented themselves with Rowe's regulation of the text,
even where they knew it to be arbitrary, and with a
little consideration might have found it to be wrong.
Some of these alterations are only the ejection of a
word for one that appeared to him more elegant or more
intelligible.
[137] These corruptions I have often silently rectified; for
the history of our language, and the true force of our
words, can only be preserved by keeping the text of
authors free from adulteration. Others, and those very
frequent, smoothed the cadence, or regulated the measure
; on these I have not exercised the same rigour ; if
only a word was transposed, or a particle inserted or
omitted, I have sometimes suffered the line to stand ;
for the inconstancy of the copies is such, as that some
liberties may be easily permitted. But this practice I
have not suffered to proceed far, having restored the
primitive diction wherever it could for any reason be
preferred.
[138] The emendations, which comparison of copies sup-plied, I
have inserted in the text ; sometimes, where the
improvement was slight, without notice, and sometimes
with an account of the reasons of the change.
Conjecture, though it be sometimes unavoidable, I have
not wantonly nor licentiously indulged. It has been my
settled principle, that the reading of the ancient books
is probably true, and therefore is not to be disturbed
for the sake of elegance, perspicuity, or mere
improvement of the sense. For though much credit is not
due to the fidelity, nor any to the judgment of the
first publishers, yet they who had the copy before
their eyes were more likely to read it right, than we
who read it only by imagination. But it is evident that
they have often made strange mistakes by ignorance or
negligence, and that, therefore, something may be
properly attempted by criticism, keeping the middle way
between presump¬tion and timidity.
[139] Such criticism I have attempted to practice, and where
any passage appeared inextricably perplexed, have
endeavored to discover how it may be recalled to sense,
with least violence. But my first labour is, always to
turn the old text on every side, and try if there be any
interstice, through which light can find its way ; nor
would Huetius himself condemn me, as refusing the
trouble of research, for the ambition of alteration. In
this modest industry, I have not been unsuccessful. I
have rescued many lines from the violations of temerity,
and secured many scenes from the inroads of correction. I have adopted the Roman sentiment that it is more ,
honourable to save a citizen than to kill an enemy, and
have been more careful to protect than to attack.
[140] I have preserved the common distribution of the plays
into acts, though I believe it to be in almost all the
plays void of authority. Some of those which are divided
in
the later editions have no division in the first folio,
and some that are divided in the folio have no division
in the preceding copies. The settled mode of the theatre
requires four intervals in the play, but few, if any, of
our author's compositions can be properly distributed in
that manner. An act is so much of the drama as passes
without intervention of time, or change of place. A
pause makes a new act. In every real, and therefore in
every imitative action, the intervals may be more or
fewer, the restriction of five acts being accidental and
arbitrary. This Shakespeare knew, and this he practised;
his plays were written, and at first printed in one
unbroken continuity, and ought now to be exhibited with
short pauses, interposed as often as the scene is
changed, or any considerable time is required to pass.
This method would at once quell a thousand absurdities.
[141] In restoring the author's works to their integrity, I
have considered the punctuation as wholly in my power ;
for what could be their care of colons and commas, who
corrupted words and sentences ? Whatever could be done
by adjusting points, is therefore silently performed,
in some plays, with much diligence, in others with less
; it is hard to keep a busy eye steadily fixed upon
evanescent atoms, or a discursive mind upon evanescent
truth.
[142] The same liberty has been taken with
a few particles, or other words of slight effect. I
have sometimes inserted
or omitted them without notice. I have done that
sometimes, which the other editors have done always, and
which, indeed, the state of the text may sufficiently
justify.
[143] The greater part of readers, instead of blaming us for
passing trifles, will wonder that on mere trifles so
much
labour is expended, with such importance of debate, and
such solemnity of diction. To these I answer with
con¬fidence, that they are judging of an art which they
do not understand ; yet cannot much reproach them with
their ignorance, nor promise that they would become in
general, by learning criticism, more useful, happier, or
wiser.
[144] As I practised conjecture more, I learned to trust it
less ; and after I had printed a few plays, resolved to
insert none of my own readings in the text. Upon this
caution I now congratulate myself, for every day
increases my doubt of my emendations.
[145] Since I have confined my imagination to the margin, it
must not be considered as very reprehensible, if I have
suffered it to play some freaks in its own dominion.
There is no danger in conjecture, if it be proposed as
conjecture; and while the text remains uninjured, those
changes may be safely offered, which are not considered
even by him that offers them as necessary or safe.
[146] If my readings are of little value, they have not been
ostentatiously displayed or importunately obtruded. I
could have written longer notes, for the art of writing
notes is not of difficult attainment. The work is
per-formed first by railing at the stupidity,
negligence, ignorance, and asinine tastelessness of the
former editors, showing, from all that goes before and
all that follows, the inelegance and absurdity of the
old reading ; then by proposing something, which to
superficial readers would seem specious, but which the
editor rejects with indignation ; then by producing the
true reading, with a long paraphrase, and concluding
with loud acclamations on the discovery, and a sober
wish for the advancement and prosperity of genuine
criticism.
[147] All this may be done, and perhaps done sometimes
without impropriety. But I have always suspected that
the reading is right, which requires many words to prove
it wrong ; and the emendation wrong, that cannot
with-out so much labour appear to be right. The justness
of a happy restoration strikes at once, and the moral
precept may be well applied to criticism, quod dubitas
ne feceris.
[148] To dread the shore which he sees spread with wrecks, is
natural to the sailor. I had before my eye, so many
critical adventures ended in miscarriage, that caution
was forced upon me. I encountered in every page wit
struggling with its own sophistry, and learning
con-fused by the multiplicity of its views. I was forced
to censure those whom I admired, and could not but
reflect, while I was dispossessing their emendations,
how soon the same fate might happen to my own, and how
many of the readings which I have corrected may be by
some other editor defended and established.
"Criticks I saw, that others, names efface,
And fix their own, with labour, in the place;
Their own,
like others, soon their place resign'd, Or
disappear'd,
and left the first behind."—Pope.
[149] That a conjectural critick should often be mistaken,
cannot be wonderful, either to others, or himself, if it
be considered, that in his art there is no system, no
principal and axiomatical truth that regulates
subordinate positions. His chance of error is renewed at
every at¬tempt ; an oblique view of the passage, a
slight misapprehension of a phrase, a casual
inattention to the parts connected, is sufficient to
make him not only fail, but fail ridiculously ; and when
he succeeds best he produces
perhaps but one reading of many probable, and he that
suggests another will always be able to dispute his
claims.
[150] It is an unhappy state, in which danger is hid under
pleasure. The allurements of emendation are scarcely
resistible. Conjecture has all the joy and all the pride
of invention, and he that has once started a happy
change, is too much delighted to consider what
objections may rise against it.
[151] Yet conjectural criticism has been of great use in the
learned world ; nor is it my intention to depreciate a
study, that has exercised so many mighty minds, from the
revival of learning to our own age, from the Bishop of
Aleria to English Bentley. The criticks on ancient
authors have, in the exercise of their sagacity,
many assistances, which the editor of Shakespeare is
condemned
to want. They are employed upon grammatical and settled
languages, whose construction contributes so much to
perspicuity, that Homer has fewer passages
unintelligible than Chaucer. The words have not only a
known regimen, but invariable quantities, which direct
and confine the choice. There are commonly more
manuscripts than one ; and they do not often conspire in
the same mistakes. Yet Scaliger could confess to
Salmasius how little satisfaction his emendations gave
him. Illudunt nobis conjecturae, quarum nos pudet,
posteaquam in meliores codices incidimus. And Lipsius
could complain, that criticks were making faults, by
trying to remove them, Ut olim vitiis, ita nunc remediis
laboratur. And indeed, when mere conjecture is to be
used, the emendations of Scaliger and Lipsius,
not-withstanding their wonderful sagacity and erudition,
are often vague and disputable, like mine or Theobald's.
[152] Perhaps I may not be more censured for doing wrong than
for doing little ; for raising in the publick
expectations which at last I have not answered. The
expectation of ignorance is indefinite, and that of
knowledge is often tyrannical. It is hard to satisfy
those who know not what to demand, or those who demand
by design what they think impossible to be done. I have
indeed disappointed no opinion more than my own ; yet I
have endeavoured to perform my task with no slight
solicitude. Not a single passage in the whole work has
appeared to me corrupt, which I have not attempted to
restore ; or obscure, which I have not endeavoured
to illustrate. In many I have failed like others ; and from
many, after all my efforts, I have retreated, and confessed the repulse. I have not passed over, with
affected superiority, what is equally difficult to the
reader and to myself, but where I could not instruct
him, have owned my ignorance. I might easily have
accumulated a mass of seeming learning upon easy scenes
; but it ought not to be imputed to negligence, that,
where nothing was necessary, nothing has been done, or
that, where others have said enough, I have said no
more.
[153] Notes are often necessary, but they are necessary evils.
Let him, that is yet unacquainted with the powers of
Shakespeare, and who desires to feel the highest
pleasure that the drama can give, read every play, from
the first scene to the last, with utter negligence of
all his commentators. When his fancy is once on the
wing, let it not stoop at correction or explanation.
When his attention
is strongly engaged, let it disdain alike to turn aside
to the name of Theobald and of Pope. Let him read on
through brightness and obscurity, through integrity and
corruption ; let him preserve his comprehension of the
dialogue and his interest in the fable. And when the
pleasures of novelty have ceased, let him attempt
exactness, and read the commentators.
[154] Particular passages are cleared by
notes, but the general effect of the work is
weakened. The mind is refrigerated
by interruption ; the thoughts are diverted from the
principal subject ; the reader is weary, he suspects
not why ; and at last throws away the book which he has
too diligently studied.
[155] Parts are not to be examined till the whole has been
surveyed ; there is a kind of intellectual remoteness
necessary for the comprehension of any great work in its
full design and in its true proportions ; a close
approach shows the smaller niceties, but the beauty of
the whole is discerned no longer.
[156] It is not very grateful to consider how little the succession
of editors has added to this author's power of pleasing.
He was read, admired, studied, and imitated, while he
was yet deformed with all the improprieties which
ignorance and neglect could accumulate upon him ; while
the reading was yet not rectified, nor his allusions
understood ; yet then did Dryden pronounce, "that
Shakespeare was the man who, of all modern and perhaps
ancient poets, had the largest and most comprehensive
soul. All the images of nature were still present to
him, and he drew them not laboriously, but luckily ;
when he describes anything, you more than see it, you
feel it, too. Those, who accuse him to have wanted
learning, give him the greater commendation ; he was
naturally learned ;
he needed not the spectacles of books to read nature; he
looked inwards, and found her there. I cannot say he is
everywhere alike; were he so, I should do him injury to
compare him with the greatest of mankind. He is many
times flat and insipid ; his comic wit degenerating into
clenches, his serious swelling into bombast. But he is
always great, when some great occasion is presented to
him: no man can say, he ever had a fit subject for his
wit, and did not then raise himself as high above the
rest of poets.
"'Quantum lento Solent inter viburna cupressi.'"
[157] It is to be lamented, that such a writer should want a
commentary ; that his language should become obsolete,
or his sentiments obscure. But it is vain to carry
wishes beyond the condition of human things ; that which
must happen to all, has happened to Shakespeare, by
accident and time; and more than has been suffered by
any other writer since the use of types, has been
suffered by him through his own negligence of fame, or
perhaps, by that superiority of mind, which despised its
own performances, when it compared them with its powers,
and judged those works unworthy to be pre-served, which
the criticks of following ages were to contend for the
fame of restoring and explaining.
[158] Among these candidates of inferior fame, I am now to
stand the judgment of the publick ; and wish that I
could confidently produce my commentary as equal to the
encouragement which I have had the honour of receiving.
Every work of this kind is by its nature deficient, and
I should feel little solicitude about the sentence, were
it to be pronounced only by the skillful and the
learned.