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upon each Book, and endeavoured not only to

prove

[2]

that the Poem is beautiful in general, but to point out its Particular Beauties, and to determine wherein they consist. I have endeavoured to shew how some Passages are beautiful by being Sublime, others by being Soft, others by being Natural; which of them are recommended by the Passion, which by the Moral, which by the Sentiment, and which by the Expression. I have likewise endeavoured to shew how the Genius of the Poet shines by a happy Invention, a distant Allusion, or a judicious Imitation; how he has copied or improved

Homer

or

Virgil

, and raised his own Imaginations by the Use which he has made of several Poetical Passages in Scripture. I might have

[inserted]