A Critical Essay on Characteristic-Writings eBook

Henry Gally Knight
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 48 pages of information about A Critical Essay on Characteristic-Writings.

A Critical Essay on Characteristic-Writings eBook

Henry Gally Knight
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 48 pages of information about A Critical Essay on Characteristic-Writings.

A consummate Delicacy of Sentiments, and an exquisite Judgment are the very Soul of Characteristic-Writing; for every particular Stroke, as well as the whole Character, has a proper Degree of Perfection.  To attain this Point, and to bring the several Parts, as well as the Whole, exactly to this Pitch, is the Work of a sagacious Head, and of a perfect Judgment.—­An Author, in this Kind, must not dwell too long upon one Idea:  As soon as the masterly Stroke is given, he must immediately pass on to another Idea.  This will give Life to the Work, and serve to keep up the Spirit of the Writing, and of the Reader too:  Forif, after the masterly Stroke is given, the Author shou’d, in a paraphrastical Manner, still insist upon the same Idea, the Work will immediately flag, the Character grow languid, and the Person characteris’d will insensibly vanish from the Eyes of the Reader.

An honest Writer, who has the Profit as well as the Pleasure of his Reader in View, ought always to tell the Truth.  But as he is at Liberty to chuse his manner of telling it, so that Method of Instruction ought to be observ’d in Characteristic-Writings, which will keep up the good Humour of the Reader, altho’ he is, at the same Time, made sensible of his Errors.  And this Artifice ought industriously to be pursu’d, since the proper Management of it is so necessary to the Success of Characteristic-Writings.  For those who love and admire Truth themselves, must yet be sensible that ’tis generally unwelcome, both to themselves and to others, when the Point of Self-Interest is concern’d.  And the Reason of it is, not because Truth is really ugly and deform’d, but because it presents to our View certain Inconsistencies and Errors, which Self-Love will not allow us to condemn.  And therefore the great Art and Difficulty, in making Truth pleasant and profitable, is so to expose Error, as not to seem to make any Attacks upon the Province of Self-Love.

  [F] Omne vafer vitium ridenti Flaccus amico
  Tangit, & admissus circum praecordia ludit,
  Callidus excusso Populum suspendere naso.

  [F:  Persius Sat.  I. V. 116, &c.]

      ——­With conceal’d Design,
    Did crafty Horace his low Numbers join: 
    And, with a sly insinuating Grace,
    Laugh’d at his Friend, and look’d him in the Face: 
    Wou’d raise a Blush, where secret Vice he found;
    And tickle, while he gently prob’d the Wound. 
    With seeming Innocence the Crowd beguil’d;
    But made the desp’rate Passes, when he smil’d. 
      Mr. Dryden.

This was the Character of one of the greatest Roman Poets; and in this Art, amongst the Moderns, [G]_Benserade_ particularly excell’d, if we may believe his Successor and Panegyrist Pavillon.

  [G:  Dictionaire de Bayle.  Artic. Benserade. Not.  L.]

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A Critical Essay on Characteristic-Writings from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.