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Spring of Harmony and Nature, would employ the powers it derived from the former to celebrate the beauty and benevolence of the latter.

ACCORDINGLY we find that the most ancient poems treat of agriculture, aftronomy, and other objects within the rural and natural fystems.

WHAT conftitutes the difference between the Georgic and the Paftoral is love and the colloquial, or dramatic form of compofition peculiar to the latter; this form of compofition is fometimes difpenfed with, and love and rural imagery alone are thought fufficient to diftinguish the pastoral. The tender paffion, however, feems to be effential to this fpecies of poetry, and is hardly ever excluded from those pieces that were intended to come under this denomination: even in those eclogues of the Amo

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bean kind, whose only purport is a trial of skill between contending fhepherds, love has its ufual fhare, and the praises of their respective miftreffes are the general fubjects of the competitors.

IT is to be lamented that fcarce any oriental compofitions of this kind have survived the ravages of ignorance, tyranny and time; we cannot doubt that many fuch have been extant, poffibly as far down as that fatal period, never to be mentioned in the world of letters without horrour, when the glorious mor numents of human ingenuity perished in the ahes of the Alexandrian library.

THOSE ingenious Greeks whom we call the parents of paftoral poetry were, probably, no more than imitators of imitators, that derived their harmony from higher and remoter four

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ces, and kindled their poetical fires at those then unextinguished lamps which burned within the tombs of oriental genius.

IT is evident that Homer has availed himself of those magnificent images and descriptions fo frequently to be met with in the books of the Old Teftament; and why may not Theocritusy Mofchus and Bion have found their archetypes in other eastern writers, whofe names have perished with their works? yet, though it may not be illiberal to admit fuch a fuppofition, it would, certainly, be invidious to conclude what the malignity of cavillers alone could fuggeft with regard to Homer, that they destroyedthe fources from which they borrowed, and, as it is fabled of the young of the pelican, drained their supporters to death.

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As the feptuagint-tranflation of the Old Teftament was performed at the request, and under the patronage of Ptolemy Phliladelphus, it were not to be wondered if Theocritus, who was entertained at that prince's court, had borrowed fome part of his paftoral imagery from the poetical paffages of those books.-I think it can hardly be doubted that the Sicilian poet had in his eye certain expreffions of the prophet Isaiah, when he wrote the following lines.

Νυν τα μεν φορεοίε βατοι, φορεοιτε δ' ἀκανθαι
Α δε καλα ναρκισσω επ άρκευθοισι κόμασαι
Παντα δ ̓ ἐναλλα γενοιντο, και & πιτυς όχνας ενεικαι
και τως κυνας ὧλαφος ἑλκοι.

Let vexing brambles the blue violet bear,
On the rude thorn Narciffus drefs his hair-
All, all revers'd-The pine with pears be
crown'd,

And the bold deer fhall drag the trembling

hound.

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the caufe, indeed, of these phoenomena is very different in the Greek from what it is in the

Hebrew poet; the former employing them on the death, the latter on the Birth of an important perfon but the marks of imitation are nevertheless obvious.

It might, however, be expected that if Theocritus had borrowed at all from the facred writers, the celebrated paftoral Epithalamium of Solomon, fo much within his own walk of Poetry, would not certainly have escaped his notice. His Epithalamium on the marriage of Helena, moreover, gave him an open field for Imitation; therefore, if he has any obligations to the royal bard, we may expect to find them there. The very opening of the poem is in the spirit of the Hebrew fong:

Ουτω δε πρωΐζα κατεδραθος, ὦ φίλε γαμβρε ;

The

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