Author's note: Previous to making the present copy of these lines, I re-read Grey [sic], with the view of finally testing their justice-and saw no reason for altering a word in them. Beyond an exquisite finish, - exquisite to fastidiousness,-and a sculpture-like art of personification, I cannot see the vaunted wonderfulness of his poetry. Nay, with all the figurative life of poetry, he seems to me to have been deficient, like Pope, of its diviner breath:- that something which we cannot describe, nor always readily apprehend; but which, if faithful to our poetical faculty, we can always miss, where it is not.
Still Grey’s [sic] productions will always be held in high scholarly esteem-and deservedly so. Their classical completeness, regarded simply as compositions, will forever secure to them a standard rank in English literature.
I speak in the text of the style of the elder English poets in comparison with that of the modern songsters of the order of Grey [sic]-and express, by implication, my preference of the former. Oh, those glorious old penmen of the Muses! Who amongst the so-called classical minors of the 'after days,' has written anything of a like kind and compass, which is at all comparable with the following epitaph by Browne, the author of Britannia's Pastorals, (though long attributed to Ben Johnson)? In every thought, in every line of it, there is all the dreamy earnestness-all the ideal abandonment of the right poetic faith; with all the simple, unforecasted, and yet sufficing harmony of real poetic passion.