after the real Mufic had ceas'd which play'd behind him. The Editor therefore is now empower'd to declare, that the Author is determin'd neither to make material Alterations in any future Edition, nor to tire the Public with wiredrawing the Subject into a second Volume. THE 1. A Good Taste an instantaneous Feel- Beauty, and Utility coincident; in- fanced in a view of a rural Profpect, in Architecture, in the mimetic Arts, and in Characters and in Manners. That Tafte precedes the flower Facul- ties of the Reason, and thofe of Imagi- nation, but is never repugnant to the of Diftinction, in all Objects. Redu- III. Probable Conjectures to be made con- IV. That Artifts cannot avoid discovering but upon a happy Union of all three. Mr. ADDISON had an exquifite Taste, but no great Talents for Poetry, A beautiful Defcription in the ILIAD equal'd by Mr. POPE's Tranflation. An Encomium on a Latin Poem, and VI. An Opinion in the laft Letter concern- ing Mr. ADDISON fupported. A Cri- ticism on two celebrated Paffages in VII. Poetry and Painting compared. Some Subjects peculiar to one, and fome in common to both. The Superiority of the former to the latter. Night-Pieces SPEAR. The inimitable Taste and Excellence of the last in Defcription. Obfervations on a Short Sketch of the Evening by HOMER. Part of an Ode Το L Letter To the Same. P. 52 To the Same. p. 61 IX. The wretched Tafte for Architecture, To EUGENIO. warned L |