[48] Don Quixote, b. iv. c. 22.
[49] Mr. Warton, Obs. on the F. Q. p. 7. vol. i. Lond. 1762.
[50] Lord Shaftesbury, Adv. to an Author.
[51] Adv. to an Author, Part III. S. II.
[52] Spectator, vol. i. No 5. vol. v. No 369.
[53] For an account of some other wonders in Romance, such as enchanted arms, invulnerable bodies, flying horses, &c. see L’Esprit des Loix, l. xxviii. c. 22.
[54] Voltaire, Essai sur la Poësie Epique, ch. vii.
[55] A celebrated writer, whose good sense, or whose perverseness, would not suffer him to be the dupe of French prejudices, declares himself roundly of this opinion: “On a voulu mettre en representation (says he, speaking of the absurd magnificence of the French Opera) le MERVEILLEUX, qui, n’etant fait que pour être imaginé, EST AUSSI BIEN PLACE DANS UN POEME EPIQUE que ridiculement sur un theatre.” [Nouv. Heloise, p. II. l. xxiii.]
[56] Sir W. Davenant’s Preface.
[57] Θεῖος ὄνειρος. Homer.