A Critical Essay on Characteristic-Writings - From his translation of The Moral Characters of Theophrastus (1725) by Henry Gally
page 24 of 53 (45%)
page 24 of 53 (45%)
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immediately pass on to another Idea. This will give Life to the Work,
and serve to keep up the Spirit of the Writing, and of the Reader too: Forif, after the masterly Stroke is given, the Author shouâd, in a paraphrastical Manner, still insist upon the same Idea, the Work will immediately flag, the Character grow languid, and the Person characterisâd will insensibly vanish from the Eyes of the Reader. An honest Writer, who has the Profit as well as the Pleasure of his Reader in View, ought always to tell the Truth. But as he is at Liberty to chuse his manner of telling it, so that Method of Instruction ought to be observâd in _Characteristic-Writings_, which will keep up the good Humour of the Reader, althoâ he is, at the same Time, made sensible of his Errors. And this Artifice ought industriously to be pursuâd, since the proper Management of it is so necessary to the Success of _Characteristic-Writings_. For those who love and admire Truth themselves, must yet be sensible that âtis generally unwelcome, both to themselves and to others, when the Point of Self-Interest is concernâd. And the Reason of it is, not because Truth is really ugly and deformâd, but because it presents to our View certain Inconsistencies and Errors, which Self-Love will not allow us to condemn. And therefore the great Art and Difficulty, in making Truth pleasant and profitable, is so to expose Error, as not to seem to make any Attacks upon the Province of Self-Love. [F] _Omne vafer vitium ridenti Flaccus amico Tangit, & admissus circum præcordia ludit, Callidus excusso Populum suspendere naso._ [F: Persius Sat. I. V. 116, &c.] |
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