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ments to the idle, who have fcarcely left behind them a coin or a stone, which has not been examined and explained a thousand times, and whofe dress, and food, and houfhold ftuff, it has been the pride of learning to understand.

A man need not fear to incur the imputation of vicious diffidence or affected humility, who fhould have forborn to promife many novelties, when he perceived fuch multitudes of writers poffeffed of the fame materials, and intent upon the fame purpose. Mr. Blackwell knows well the opinion of Horace, concerning thofe that open their undertakings with magnificent promifes; and he knows likewife the dictates of common fenfe and common honefty, names of greater authority than that of Horace, who direct that no man fhould promife what he cannot perform.

1 do not mean to declare that this volume has nothing new, or that the labours of those who have gone before our author, have made his performance an ufelefs addition to the burden of literature. New works may be conftructed with old materials, the difpofition of the parts may fhew contrivance, the ornaments interfperfed may difcover elegance.

It is not always without good effect that men of proper qualifications write in fucceffion on the fame fubject, even when the latter add nothing to the infor mation given by the former; for the fame ideas may be delivered more intelligibly or more delightfully by one than by another, or with attractions that may lure minds of a different form. No writer pleases all, and every writer may please fome.

But after all, to inherit is not to acquire; to decorate is not to make; and the man who had no

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thing to do but to read the ancient authors, who mention the Roman affairs, and reduce them to common-places, ought not to boat himself as a great benefactor to t' ftudious world.

After a preface of boaft, and a letter of flattery, in which he feems to imitate the addrefs of Horace in his vile potabis modicis Sabinum-he opens his book with telling us, that the "Roman republic, "after the horrible profcription, was no more at "bleeding Rome. The regal power of her confuls, "the authority of her fenate, and the majefty of "her people, were now trampled under foot; these

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[for thofe] divine laws and hallowed cuftoms, that "had been the effence of her conftitution-were fet "at nought, and her beft friends were lying exposed " in their blood."

These were furely very difmal times to thofe who fuffered; but I know not why any one but a schoolboy in his declamation fhould whine over the commonwealth of Rome, which grew great only by the mifery of the rest of mankind. The Romans, like others, as foon as they grew rich grew corrupt, and, in their corruption, fold the lives and freedoms of themselves, and of one another.

"About this time Brutus had his patience put "to the highest trial: he had been married to Clodia; "but whether the family did not pleafe him, or "whether he was diffatisfied with the lady's be"haviour during his abfence, he foon entertained

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thoughts of a feparation. This raifed a good deal of talk, and the women of the Clodian family inveighed bitterly against Brutus-but he married "Portia, who was worthy of fuch a father as M. VOL. II.

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"Cato,

"Cato, and fuch a husband as M. Brutus. She had

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a foul capable of an exalted passion, and found a proper object to raise and give it a fanction; fhe "did not only love but adored her husband; his "worth, his truth, his every fhining and heroic

quality, made her gaze on him like a god, while "the endearing returns of efteem and tenderness she met with, brought her joy, her pride, her every "wish to centre in her beloved Brutus."

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When the reader has been awakened by this rapturous preparation, he hears the whole ftory of Portia in the fame luxuriant ftyle, till fhe breathed out her laft, a little before the bloody profcription, and " Brutus complained heavily of his friends at Rome, as not having paid due attention to his Lady in the declining ftate of her health."

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He is a great lover of modern terms. His fenators and their wives are Gentlemen and Ladies. In this review of Brutus's army, who was under the command of gallant men, not braver officers, than true patriots, he tells us, "that Sextus the Queftor was Paymaster, Secretary at War, and Commissary General, "and that the facred difcipline of the Romans required "the clofeft connection, like that of father and fon, to "fubfift between the General of an army and his Quef"tor. Cicero was General of the Cavalry, and the next general oficer was Flavius, Mafter of the Artillery,

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the elder Lentulus was Admiral, and the younger rode "in the Band of Volunteers; under thefe the tribunes, "with many others too tedious to name." Lentulus, however, was but a fubordinate officer; for we are informed afterwards, that the Romans had made Sextus Pompeius Lord High Admiral in all the feas of their dominions.

Among

Among other affectations of this writer is a furious and unneceffary zeal for liberty, or rather for one form of government as preferable to another. This indeed might be fuffered, because political inftitution is a fubject in which men have always differed, and if they continue to obey their lawful governors, and attempt not to make innovations for the fake of their favourite fchemes, they may differ for ever without any juft reproach from one another. But who can bear the hardy champion who ventures nothing? who in full fecurity undertakes the defence of the affaffination of Cæfar, and declares his refolution to speak plain? Yet let not just fentiments be overlooked: he has juftly obferved, that the greater part of mankind will be naturally prejudiced against Brutus, for all feel the benefits of private friendship; but few can difcern the advantages of a well-conftituted government.

We know not whether fome apology may not be neceffary for the diftance between the first account of this book and its continuation. The truth is, that this work not being forced upon our attention by much publick applause or cenfure, was fometimes neglected, and fometimes forgotten; nor would it, perhaps, have been now refumed, but that we might avoid to disappoint our readers by an abrupt defertion of any fubject.

It is not our design to criticise the facts of this history, but the ftyle; not the veracity, but the addrefs of the writer; for, an account of the ancient Romans, as it cannot nearly intereft any prefent reader, and must be drawn from writings that have been long known, can owe its value only to the language in which

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which it is delivered, and the reflections with which it is accompanied. Dr. Blackwell, however, feems to have heated his imagination fo as to be much affected with every event, and to believe that he can affect others. Enthufiafm is indeed fufficiently contagious; but I never found any of his readers much enamoured of the glorious Pompey, the patriot approv'd, or much incensed against the lawless Cæfar, whom this author probably ftabs every day and night in his fleeping or waking dreams.

He is come too late into the world with his fury for freedom, with his Brutus and Caffius. We have all on this fide of the Tweed long fince fettled our opinions his zeal for Roman liberty and declamations against the violators of the republican conftitution, only ftand now in the reader's way, who wishes to proceed in the narrative without the interruption of epithets and exclamations. It is not easy to forbear laughter at a man fo bold in fighting fhadows, fo bufy in a difpute two thoufand years paft, and fo zealous for the honour of a people who while they were poor robbed mankind, and as foon as they became rich, robbed one another. Of thefe robberies our author feems to have no very quick fenfe, except when they are committed by Cafar's party, for every act is fantified by the name of a patriot.

If this author's fkill in ancient literature were lefs generally acknowledged, one might fometimes fufpect that he had too frequently confulted the French writers. He tells us that Archelaus the Rhodian made a fpeech to Caffius, and in fo faying dropt fome tears, and that Caffius after the reduction of Rhodes

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