Capitolo 39
enterprise of present with greater joy.
In this and one or two papers of following, I will trace out the
history of the false intelligence, and it distinguishes the some son-in-laws of him as
they has prevailed in centuries different of the world. This that I think
the most necessary currently, because I observed there was
attempts afoot the last winter to revive some of that aged
ways of intelligence of which you/he/she has been exploded from very out in the republic
letters. There were a lot of satires and panegyrics you date around in
an acrostic from what it intends some of the more arrants uncontested
forms for hats on the city started to entertain ambitious thoughts, and
to put above for kind authors. I will describe therefore for a long time
those a lot of arts of false intelligence in which a writer doesn't show
him a man of a beautiful genius, but of great industry.
The first kind of false intelligence with which I have met is a lot of
venerable for his/her antiquity, and you/he/she has produced many pieces that
you/he/she has lived very near until the "Iliad" same: I mean those,
short poems stamped among the Greek and smaller poets that resemble to the
figure of an egg, a pair of wings an ax, the pipe of a shepherd and a
altar.
As for the first one, it is poem a little oval, and it improperly is not able
has called the egg of a researcher. I am able endeavour to brood him/it, or, in
more intelligible language, tradurrlo in the English didn't do me
you find the very difficult interpretation of him; for the author it seems
to have been more intense on the figure of his/her poem that on the
sense of him.
The pair of wings consists of twelve verses, or rather the pens,
each verse that gradually decreases in the his/her second his/her measure
situation in the wing. His subject, as in the rest of the
poems that follow, bear some remote affinity with the figure, for
it describes a god of love that is always painted with wings.
The ax, methinks would have been a good figure for a satire, it had
his edge consisted some most satirical parts of the job;