[2]

, &c.

King Lear

is an admirable Tragedy of the same Kind, as

Shakespear

wrote it; but as it is reformed according to the chymerical Notion of Poetical Justice, in my humble Opinion it has lost half its Beauty.

[At]

the same time I must allow, that there are very noble Tragedies which have been framed upon the other Plan, and have ended happily; as indeed most of the good Tragedies, which have been written since the starting of the above-mentioned Criticism, have taken this Turn: As

The Mourning Bride, Tamerlane, Ulysses, Phædra

and