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he punisheth; when he exerciseth his justice, and when he exerciseth His goodness: because, in either case, he displays that general excellence, that love of order, which is the ground of my love and obedience.I ought to adore and love him, as much when he drowns the world, as when he promiseth to drown it no more: when he unlocks the gates of hell, as when he openeth the doors of heaven: when he saith to the impenitent-" Depart, ye cursed, to the devil and his angels:" as when he saith to his elect-" Come, ye blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world."

We wonder that Mr. Rivers did not give Saurin's celebrated character of his adversary Bayle; which is certainly one of his most eloquent and brilliant pieces.We are much tempted to transcribe it from the original:-will the English reader excuse ús?

C'etoit un de ces hommes contradictoires, que la plus grande pénétra tion ne saurait concilier avec lui même; et dont les qualités opposées nous laissent toujours en suspens, si nous le devons placer, ou dans une extremité, ou dans l'extremité opposée. D'un côté, grand philosophe, sachant demêler le vrai d'avec le faux, voir l'enchainure d'un principe, et suivre une conséquence; d'un autre côté, grand sophiste, prenant à tache de confondre le faux avec le vrai, de tordre un principe, de renverser une conséquences D'un côté, plein d'erudition et de lumière, ayant lu tout ce qu'on peut lire, et retenu tout ce qu'on peut retenir; d'un autre côté, ignorant, ou du moins feignant d'ignorer, les choses les plus communes, avançant des difficultés qu'on a mille fois refutées, proposant des objections que les plus novices de l'école n'oseroit alléguer sans rougir.-D'un côté, attaquant les plus grands hommes, ouvrant un vaste champ à leur travaux, et les conduisant par des routes difficiles et par des sentiers raboteux; et, sinon les surmontant, du moins leur donnant toujours de la peine à vaincre ; d'an autre côté, s'aidant de plus petits esprits, leur prodiguant son encens, et salissant ses écrits de ces noms que des bouches doctes n'avoient jamais prononcés. D'un côté, exempt, du moins en apparence, de toute passion contraire à l'esprit de l'evangile; chaste dans ses moeurs, grave dans ses discours, sobre dans ses alimens, austere dans son genre de vie; d'un autre côté, employant toute la pointe de son genie á combattre les bonnes moeurs, à attaquer la chasteté, la modestie, toutes les vertus Chrétiennes. D'un côté, appellant au tribunal de l'orthodoxie la ples severe, puisant dans les sources les plus pures, empruntant les argumens des Docteurs les moins suspects: d'un autre côté, suivant la route des heretiques, ramenant les objections des anciens hérésiarques, leur prêtant des armes nouvelles; et réunissant, dans nôtre siècle, toutes les erreurs des siècles passés. Puisse cet homme, qui fût doué de tant de talens, avoir été absous, devant Dieu, du mauvais usage qu'on lui en vit faire. Puisse ce Jesus, qu'il attaqua tant de fois, avoir expié tous ses crimes !"

If this be not a true portrait, it must be allowed to be a mas terly caricature. The Hague preacher speaks feelingly; and not without reason: for he had received many hard blows from the Professor of Rotterdame

The

The great work of Saurin, as it is commonly called, (probably from its bulk,) we mean his Dissertations on the Old and New Testaments, is rather an undigested mass of erudition and eloquence, than a sound body of judicious criticism. At least, so to us it has always appeared. It is scarcely ever mentioned by the learned Biblical scholars of the present day.

By John

ART. VIII. Hogarth illustrated, from his own MSS.
Vol. III. * and last. Royal 8vo. pp. 400. 11. 168.

Ireland.
Boards. Nicol.

WE

1798.

E have had many opportunities of examining into the great and original merits of our countryman, Hogarth; and we have experienced sincere pleasure in our endeavours to do justice to his admirable productions. He was an artist sui generis; and, as he copied from none who preceded him, he has not been successfully imitated by any subsequent painters. The life and the works of such a man, who reflected so much credit on his country, both by the genius and the moral tendency of his exertions, naturally excite that curiosity which the present publication is calculated to gratify.

Mr. Ireland has already indulged the world with a circumstantial account of Hogarth; and the present volume is intended as a supplement to that work, and to convey the information with which fresh materials have furnished him.Lord Orford, Dr. Trusler, Mr. Nichols, and Mr. Samuel Ireland have all written on the same subject, and are each entitled to the praise of having communicated useful and amusing particulars. The volume before us, however, possesses great and exclusive advantages, for it is chiefly compiled from the MSS. of Mr. Hogarth himself. Yet, without intending to question the autho rity of those papers, we cannot help expressing our wonder that Mrs. Hogarth, with whom the writer of this article was for many years intimately acquainted, and whom he not unfrequently consulted on the subject of preparing a life of her husband for the Biographia Britannica, should never once have mentioned the circumstance of her having in her possession such valuable materials; more especially as she appeared to be pleased with the design, and promised her best assistance in the execution of it.

Of the manner in which these MSS. came to the hands of the editor, and of the use which he has made of them, he shall speak for himself.

See M. Rev. N. S. vol. xii. p. 311.

Ged..s.

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The MSS. from which the principal parts of this volume are compiled, were written by the late Mr. Hogarth; had he lived a little longer, he would have methodized and published them. On his decease, they devolved to his widow, who kept them sacred and entire until her death; when they became the property of her rela tion and executrix, Mrs. Lewis, of Chiswick, by whose kindness and friendship they are now in my possession.

This is the fair and honest Pedigree of the Papers, which may be thus divided;

6

I. Hogarth's life, comprehending his course of study, corre. spondence, political quarrels, &c.

II. A manuscript volume, containing the autographs of the subscribers to his Elections, and intended print of Sigismunda; and letters to and from Lord Grosvenor, relative to that picture.

III. The manuscript of the Analysis of Beauty, corrected by the Author; with the original sketches, and many remarks omitted in the printed copy.

IV. A Supplement to the Analysis, never published; comprising a succinct history of the arts in his own time, his account of the institution of the Royal Academy, &c.

V. Sundry memoranda relative to the subject of his satire in several of his prints.

4.These manuscripts being written in a careless hand, generally on loose pieces of paper, and not paged, my first endeavour was to find the connection, separate the subjects, and place each in its proper class. This, in such a mass of papers, I found no very easy task; especially as the Author, when dissatisfied with his first expression, has frequently varied the form of the same sentence two or three times: in such instances, I have selected that which I thought best constructed. Every paper has been attentively examined, and is to the best of my judgment arranged as the author intended. I have incorporated Hogarth's account of the Arts, Academy, &c. with his narrative of his own life, and, to keep distinct the various subjects on which he treats, divided the whole into chapters. Where from ne gligence, or haste, he has omitted a word, I have supplied it with that which the context leads me to believe he would have used; where the sentences have been very long, I have occasionally broken them into shorter paragraphs, and sometimes tried to render the style more perspicuous, by the retrenchment of redundant expressions; but in every case, the sense of the Author is faithfully adhered to.

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As he has usually given the progress of his life, opinions, &c. in the first person, I have adopted the same rale; and to distinguish my own remarks from Hogarth's narrative, the beginning of each sen tence written by him, is marked with inverted commas. His correspondence is regulated by the dates of the letters; and the copies from sketches in the MS, Analysis, are placed in the chapter which contains Hogarth's account of that publication.

In the papers which relate to the subject of his satire in some of his prints, he appears to have projected more than his life allowed him to perform; the few remarks which he made are inserted in the Ap‚pendis.”.

We

We meet with few anecdotes with which we were not before acquainted, but we find many remarks and opinions which amply compensate for the want of domestic particulars. The observations are written in so easy and perspicuous a manner, that they incontestibly prove that Hogarth was by no means ignorant of literary composition; and that, when he applied to Mr. Ralph, Dr. Morell, and others, for assistance with regard to language *, in his Analysis of Beauty, such application must have been the suggestion of diffidence, and not the result of inability.

His opinion of the institutions of the Royal Academy, and the Society for the Encouragement of Arts, was unfavourable. The reasons which he assigns for his opposition are sensible, and serve to shew his intimate acquaintance with his subject. He gives the following short account of former attempts at similar establishments:

"Much has been said about the immense benefit likely to result from the establisment of an academy in this country, but as I do not see it in the same light with many of my contemporaries, I shall take the freedom of making my objections to the plan on which they propose forming it; and as a sort of preliminary to the subject, state some slight particulars concerning the fate of former attempts at similar establishments.

"The first place of this sort was in Queen-street, about sixty years ago; it was begun by some gentlemen-painters of the first rank, who in their general forms imitated the plan of that in France, but conducted their business with far less fuss and solemnity; yet the little that there was, in a very short time became the object of ridicule. Jealousies arose, parties were formed, and the president and all his adherents found themselves comically represented, as marching in ridiculous procession round the walls of the room. The first proprietors soon put a padlock on the door; the rest, by their right as subscribers, did the same, and thus ended this academy.

"Sir James Thornhill, at the head of one of these parties, then set up another in a room he built at the back of his own house, now next the playhouse, and furnished tickets gratis to all that required admission; but so few would lay themselves under such an obligation, that this also soon sunk into insignificance. Mr. Vanderbank headed the rebellious party, and conyerted an old Presbyterian meeting-house into an academy, with the addition of a woman figure, to make it the more inviting to subscribers. This lasted a few years; but the treasurer sinking the subscription money, the lamp, stove, &c. were seized for rent; and that also dropped.

"Sir James dying, I became possessed of his neglected apparatus; and thinking that an academy conducted on proper and moderate

Which, after all their friendly attempts, they could not furnish, to his satisfaction. "Merely as Men of Letters," he said, "they could not perfectly express his ideas." Rev.

Ee 3

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principles had some use, proposed that a number of artists should enter into a subscription for the hire of a place large enough to admit thirty or forty people to draw after a naked figure. This was soon agreed to, and a room taken in St. Martin's Lane. To serve the society, I lent them the furniture which had belonged to Sir James Thornhill's academy; and as I attributed the failure of that and Mr. Vanderbank's to the leading members assuming a superiority which their fellow students could not brook, I proposed that every member should contribute an equal sum to the establishment, and have an equal right to vote in every question relative to the society. As to electing presidents, directors, professors, &c. I considered it as a ridiculous imitation of the foolish parade of the French academy, by the establishment of which Lewis XIV. got a large portion of fame and flattery on very easy terms. But I could never learn that the arts were benefited, or that members acquired any other advantages than what arose to a few leaders from their paltry salaries, not more I am told than fifty pounds a year; which, as must always be the case, were engrossed by those who had most influence, without any regard to their relative merit *. As a proof of the little benefit the arts derived from this Royal Academy, Voltaire asserts that after its establishment, no one work of genius appeared in the country; the whole band, adds the same lively and sensible writer, became mannerists and imitators †. It may be said in answer to this, that all painting is but imitation: granted; but if we go no farther than copying what has been done before, without entering into the spirit, causes, and effects, what are we doing? If we vary from our original, we fall off from it, and it ceases to be a copy; and if we strictly adhere to it, we can have no hopes of getting beyond it; for, if two men ride on a horse, one of them must be behind.

"To return to our own academy; by the regulations I have mentioned, of a general equality, &c. it has now subsisted near thirty years; and is, to every useful purpose, equal to that in France, or any other; but this does not satisfy. The members finding his present majesty's partiality to the arts, met at the Turk's Head, in Ge rard-street, Soho, laid out the public money in advertisements, to call all sorts of artists together, and have resolved to draw up and present a ridiculous address to king, lords, and commons, to do for them, what they have (as well as it can be) done for themselves. Thus to

* The designer of a print which was published in 1753-and intended to burlesque some of the figures in the Analysis of Beauty, seems to have believed that Hogarth intended to have published his objections to the establishment of the academy. The print is entitled Pugg's Graces, and the artist is represented with the legs of a satyr, and painting Moses before Pharaoh's daughter. One of his hoofs rests on three books, the lowest of which is labelled Analysis of Beauty. A little lower in the print is an open volume, on one page of which is written, Reasons against a public academy, 1753; and on the other, No salary.'

+ Lewis XIV. founded an academy for the French at Rome; but Poussin and Le Seur, painters who have done the most credit to France, were prior to the establishment'

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