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ews." "The New Inn." Notes On Beaumont And Fletcher. Harris's Commendatory Poem On Fletcher. Life Of Fletcher In Stockdale's Edition, 1811. "Maid's Tragedy." "A King And No King." "The Scornful Lady." "The Custom Of The Country." "The Elder Brother." "The Spanish Curate." "Wit Without Money." "The Humorous Lieutenant." "The Mad Lover." "The Loyal Subject." "Rule A Wife And Have A Wife." "The Laws Of Candy." "The Little French Lawyer." "Valentinian." "Rollo." "The Wildgoose Chase." "A Wife For A Month." "The Pilgrim." "The Queen Of Corinth." "The Noble Gentleman." "The Coronation." "Wit At Several Weapons." "The Fair Maid Of The Inn." "The Two Noble Kinsmen." "The Woman Hater." SHAKESPEARE, WITH INTRODUCTORY MATTER ON POETRY, THE DRAMA, AND THE STAGE. Definition Of Poetry. Poetry is not the proper antithesis to prose, but to science. Poetry is opposed to science, and prose to metre. The proper and immediate object of science is the acquirement, or communication, of truth; the proper and immediate object of poetry is the communication of immediate pleasure. This definition is useful; but as it would include novels and other works of fiction, which yet we do not call poems, there must be some additional character by which poetry is not only divided from opposites, but likewise distinguished from disparate, though similar, modes of composition. Now how is this to be effected? In animated prose, the beauties of nature, and the passions and accidents of human nature, are often expressed in that natural language which the contemplation of them would suggest to a pure and benevolent mind; yet still neither we nor the writers call such a work a poem, though no work could deserve that name which did not include all this, together with something else. What is this? It is that pleasurable emotion, that peculiar state and degree of excitement, which arises in the poet himself in the act of composition;--and in order to understand this, we must combine a more than ordinary sympathy with the objects, emotions, or incidents contemplated by the poet, consequent on a more than common sensibility, with a more than ordinary activity of the mind in respect of the fancy and the imagination. Hence is produced a more vivid reflection of the truths of nature and of the human heart, united with a constant activity modifying
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