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Rous'd from his trance, he mounts with eyes aghast,
When o'er the ship in undulation vast

A giant surge down rushes from on high,
And fore and aft dissever'd ruins lie;
As when, Britannia's empire to maintain,
Great HAWKE descends in thunder on the main,
Around the brazen voice of battle roars,
And fatal lightnings blast the hostile shores;
Beneath the storm their shatter'd navies groan,
The trembling deep recoils from zone to zone:
Thus the torn vessel felt th' enormous stroke,
The beams beneath the thund'ring deluge broke.

In reading this passage the voice ought to fall into a lower tone at the fifth line, and continue nearly in a monotone till thunder on the main, the first of which words must have the falling, and the last the rising inflexion: the next couplet assumes the same low monotone, and continues it to hostile shores, which adopt the falling and rising inflexions like thunder and main: the succeeding couplet commences and continues the monotone like the last till the two words zone and zone, the first of which has the falling, and the last the rising inflexion, in a somewhat higher tone than in the two former lines; but the last couplet, which applies the simile, begins in a high tone of voice, adopts the falling inflexion on vessel, and lowers the voice gradually on the last line to the end.

Prosopopéia.

PROSOPOPEIA, or Personification, is the investing of qualities or things inanimate with the character of persons, or the introducing of dead or absent persons as if they were alive and present. This is at once one of the boldest and finest figures in rhetoric. Poets are prodigal in their use of this figure, but orators more sparing,

as nothing but a degree of enthusiasm can make it appear natural. The general rule for pronouncing this species of figure will be easily conceived, when we recollect that, wherever we give language to a character, we must give that language such a pronunciation as is suitable to that character. Thus, when Cicero introduced Milo as speaking to the citizens of Rome :

Should he, holding up his bloody sword, cry out, " Attend, I pray, hearken, O citizens! I have killed Clodius; by this sword, and by this right hand, I have kept off his rage from your throats, which no laws, no courts of judicature could restrain; it is by my means that justice, equity, laws, liberty, shame, and modesty, remain in the city."-Is it to be feared how the city would bear this declaration? Is there who, in such a case, would not approve and commend it?

any one

In pronouncing this passage we must give the words of Milo all that energy and fire which we suppose would actuate him on such an occasion. The right arm must be lifted up and extended: the voice loud and elevated, as if speaking to a multitude, and almost every word must be emphatical; a long pause must precede the first question, which must begin in a low tone of voice, and end with the rising inflexion; and as the last question is in opposition to the first, by contrasting approbation with disapprobation, it ought to be pronounced differently, and end with the falling inflexion according to the rule laid down in the Elements of Elocution, vol.i. p. 297.

But here a question will naturally arise about the force we are to give to this figure when we only read it. Are we, it will be demanded, to give all the force and energy which we suppose Milo made use of, when we merely read it in Cicero's orations? Yes, it may be answered, if we read these orations oratorically. But if we read them only to inform our hearers of the subject,

without assuming the character of the orator, it is certain that there is no necessity for the same force as in the rostrum. The character we assume when we take up the book makes all the difference. The pronunciation expected from a gentleman by a small circle of his friends, is as different from that of the orator, as the language of the orator is from the chit-chat of conversation; but if the gentleman should, for the entertainment of his friends, assume the character of the orator, it is then expected that he should give the composition all the force and energy of which it is susceptible, that is, all the force and energy that would become the characters whose words are assumed. Thus Milton may be read by a person who forms no pretensions to public notice, in a manner very differently from one who pronounces from the rostrum; but if Milton be read to the greatest advantage, it must certainly be in the latter, and not the former manner though it must still be carefully observed, that these two manners differ only in degrees of force; the tones, inflexions, and gesticulations, are essentially the same in both.

It was observed, in speaking of the Hypotyposis, that there is often a leading passion, which so absorbs the mind of the speaker, as to give every other passion which passes through it a strong tincture of itself. This leading passion may, for the sake of distinction, be called primary, and the other, secondary. If we so far forget the primary passion as to assume the secondary entirely, we fall into mimicry, and render our expression, however just in other respects, ridiculous. Thus, in the following speech of Hotspur in the first part of Henry the IVth:

-For it made me mad

To see him shine so brisk, and smell so sweet,

And talk, so like a waiting gentlewoman,

Of guns, and drums, and wounds, (Heav'n save the mark!)
And telling me the sovereign'st thing on Earth
Was spermaceti for an inward bruise:
And that it was great pity, so it was,
That villanous saltpetre should be digg'd
Out of the bowels of the harmless Earth,
Which many a good tall fellow had destroy'd
So cowardly; and but for these vile guns,
He would himself have been a soldier.
This bald unjointed chat of his, my lord,
I answer'd indirectly, as I said;
And I beseech you let not his report
Come current for an accusation

Betwixt my love and your high majesty.

If the hero who pronounces this description were to divest himself of the primary passions, anger and contempt, and go so far into the secondary as to assume the character he describes, we might laugh at him as a mimic, but should despise him as a man:-no; while the leading passions, anger and contempt, have proper possession of him, they will keep him from a too servile imitation of the object of his resentment; but that a considerable degree of imitation should be allowed in the pronunciation of this passage is not to be disputed. The same observations hold good in pronouncing the words of Cæsar, in a speech of Cassius, where he is describing that hero under the paroxysms of a fever:

I did hear him groan :

Ay, and that tongue of his, that bade the Romans
Mark him, and write his speeches in their books,
Alas! it cried, Give me some drink, Titinius;

As a sick girl

Shakspeare's Julius Cæsar.

If these words of Cæsar, Give me some drink,

Titinius, were to be pronounced untinctured with that scorn and contempt with which Cassius is overflowing, and the small feeble voice of a sick person were to be perfectly imitated, it would be unworthy the character of Cassius, and fit only for a buffoon in a farce.

These observations will lead us to decide in

many other cases. There is a beautiful prosopopeia of a hoary-headed swain, in Gray's Elegy in a Country Church-yard:

For thee who, mindful of th' unhonour'd dead,
Dost in these lines their artless tale relate,
If chance, by lonely contemplation led,
Some kindred spirit should inquire thy fate,

Haply some hoary-headed swain may say,
"Ŏft have we seen him,
at the peep of dawn,
"Brushing with hasty steps the dews away,

"To meet the sun upon the upland lawn, &c."

Nothing can be conceived more truly ridicu lous, in reading this passage, than quitting the melancholy tone of the relator, and assuming the indifferent and rustic accent of the old swain: and yet no errour so likely to be mistaken for a beauty by a reader of no taste while a good reader, without entirely dropping the plaintive tone, will abate it a little, and give it a slight tincture only of the indifference and rusticity of the person introduced.

But where the personification is assumed instantaneously, and does not arise out of any other passion, provided we are reading to the public, it ought to have exactly the same force and energy as in dramatic composition. Thus the sublime rage of Gray's Bard:

Ruin seize thee, ruthless king,

Confusion on thy banners wait!

Though fann'd by conquest's crimson wing,
They mock the air in idle state,

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