Capitolo 29
Determined _The the precedence of Library_, for the other one it was in every respect the
more extraordinary. But Burke, a conservative in this as in other matters,
he/she probably thought that a new poet that desires to be felt would have been wiser in
immediately ending not the old runs. The readers of poetry still had a
tastes for didactic epigram varied by a certain amount of florid
rhetoric. And there was few over this in the moralisings of Crabbe on
the respective functions of the theology, history, poetry and the rest, as
represented on the shelves of a library, and on the benedictions of
the literature to the heart when tired with business and the cares of
life. The verses of Crabbe on such themes are from any half inefficacies. He had
perfectly taken so early the makeup of the school to pass away. He is as
flowing and plentiful--as skilled in to spread an evident truth on a dozen
lines that well-play--as some of his/her predecessors. There is a little new in
the way of the ideas. Crabbe had as he/she anchors any wide acumen in books and
authors, and he was forced to greatly give in generality. But him
it showed that he already had some idea of style; and if, when he had this way
few he could tell him/it with so a lot of semblance of the power to say, was
certainly that when he had observed and you/he/she had thought for him he would go
further and ago a deeper mark. The heroic couplet checked him to the
end of his/her life, and there is without doubt that was not only the timidity
that did him/it withdraw himself/herself/themselves to the old beaten footstep. The thoughts of Crabbe
raced a lot in antithesis, and the couplet was all right this tendency. But
it had his/her serious limitations. Southey is touching rooms--
"My days among the corpse have passed,"
although incarnate ideas are not novel that Crabbe anymore, it is worth
results of such lines as these--
"With reverential fear, I tread around these silent walks;
These are the durable mansions of the corpse:
'The corpse!' methinks thousand reply of languages;