The Letters of Horace Walpole, Earl of Orford — Volume 4 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,055 pages of information about The Letters of Horace Walpole, Earl of Orford — Volume 4.

The Letters of Horace Walpole, Earl of Orford — Volume 4 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,055 pages of information about The Letters of Horace Walpole, Earl of Orford — Volume 4.
Every petty writer will contest very novel institutions:  every inch of change in language will be disputed; and the language will remain as it was, longer than the tribunal which should dictate very heterogeneous alterations.  With regard to adding a or o to final consonants, consider, Sir, should the usage be adopted, what havoc it would make!  All our poetry would be defective in metre, or would become at once as obsolete as Chaucer; and could we promise ourselves, that, though we should have better harmony and more rhymes, we should have a new crop of poets, to replace Milton, Dryden, Gray, and, I am sorry you will not allow me to add, Pope!  You might enjoin our prose to be reformed, as you have done by the Spectator in your thirty-fourth Letter; but try Dryden’s Ode by your new institution.

I beg your pardon for these trivial observations:  I assure you I could write a letter ten times as long, if I were to specify all I like in your work.  I more than like most of it; and I am charmed with your glorious love of liberty, and your other humane and noble sentiments.  Your book I shall with great pleasure send to Mr. Colman:  may I tell him, without naming you, that it is written by the author of the comedy I offered to him?  He must be struck with your very handsome and generous conduct in printing your encomiums on him, after his rejecting your piece.  It is as great as uncommon, and gives me ,,Is good an opinion of your heart, Sir, as your book does of your great sense.  Both assure me that you will not take ill the liberty I have used in expressing my doubts on your plan for amending our language, or for any I may use in dissenting from a few other sentiments in your work; as I shall in what I think your too low opinion of some of the French writers, of your preferring Lady Mary Wortley to Madame de S`evign`e, and of your esteeming Mr. Hume a man of a deeper and more solid understanding than Mr. Gray.  In the two last articles it is impossible to think more differently than we do.  In Lady Mary’s Letters, which I never could read but once, I discovered no merit of any sort; yet I have seen others by her (unpublished)(544) that have a good deal of wit; and for Mr. Hume give me leave to say that I think your opinion, “that he might have ruled a state,” ought to be qualified a little; as in the very next page you say, his History is “a mere apology for prerogative,” and a very weak one.  If he could have ruled a state, one must presume, at best, that he would have been an able tyrant; and yet I should suspect that a man, who, sitting coolly in his chamber, could forge but a weak apology for the prerogative, would not have exercised it very wisely.  I knew personally and well both Mr. Hume and Mr. Gray, and thought there was no degree of comparison between their understandings; and, in fact, Mr. Hume’s writings were so superior to his conversation, that I frequently said he understood nothing till he had written upon it.  What you

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The Letters of Horace Walpole, Earl of Orford — Volume 4 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.