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SECTION IV.

Illuftrations of the Dorine flated in the preceding Section.

A

CCORDING

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I. Of Wit.

to Locke, Wit confifts" in the affemblage of ideas; and putting those toge"ther with quickness and variety, wherein can be "found any resemblance or congruity." I would add to this definition, (rather by way of comment than of amendment,) that wit implies a power of calling up at pleasure the ideas which it combines and I am inclined to believe, that the entertainment which it gives to the hearer, is founded, in a confiderable degree, on his furprife, at the command which the man of wit has acquired over a part of the conftitution, which is fo little fubject to the will.

That the effect of wit depends partly, at least, on the circumstance now mentioned, appears evidently from this, that we are more pleased with a bon mot, which occurs in converfation, than with one in print; and that we never fail to receive difguft from wit, when we fufpect it to be premeditated. The pleasure, too, we receive from wit, is heightened, when the original idea is started by one perfon, and the related) idea by another. Dr. Campbell has remarked, that "a witty repartee is infinitely more pleafing, than a witty attack; and that an allufion will appear ex

66

Effay on Human Understanding, book it. chap. 11.

"cellent

"cellent when thrown out extempore in conversa. ❝tion, which would be deemed execrable in print." In all these cases, the wit confidered abfolutely is the fame. The relations which are difcovered between the compared ideas are equally new: and yet, as foon as we fufpect that the wit was premeditated,' the pleasure we receive from it is infinitely diminished. Instances indeed may be mentioned, in which we are pleased with contemplating an unexpected relation between ideas, without any reference to the habits of affociation in the mind of the person who discovered it. A bon mot produced at the game of cross-purpofes, would not fail to create amufement; but in fuch cases, our pleasure seems chiefly to arise from the furprise we feel at fo extraordinary a coincidence between a question and an anfwer coming from perfons who had no direct communication with each other.

Of the effect added to wit by the promptitude with which its combinations are formed, Fuller appears to have had a very juft idea, from what he has recorded of the focial hours of our two great English Dramatifts. "Johnson's parts were not fo ready "to run of themselves, as able to answer the spur; "fo that it may be truly faid of him, that he had "an elaborate wit, wrought out by his own industry. "Many were the wit-combats between him and Shakefpeare, which two I behold like a Spanish great galleon, and an English man of war. John"fon (like the former) was built far higher in learning; folid, but flow in his performances: Shakefpeare, with the English man of war, leffer in bulk,

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"but

"but lighter in failing, could turn with all tides, tack "about and take advantage of all winds, by the quick"nefs of his wit and invention *."

I before obferved, that the pleasure we receive from wit is increased, when the two ideas between which the relation is discovered, are suggested by different perfons. In the cafe of a bon mot occurring in converfation, the reason of this is abundantly obvious; because, when the related ideas are fuggefted by dif ferent perfons, we have a proof that the wit was not premeditated. But even in a written com. pofition, we are much more delighted when the fut ject was furnished to the author by another perfon, than when he chufes the topic on which he is to difplay his wit. How much would the pleasure we receive from the Key to the Lock be diminished, if we suspected that the author had the key in view when he wrote that poem; and that he introduced fome expreffions, in order to furnish a subject for the wit of the commentator? How totally would it deftroy the pleasure we receive from a parody on a poem, if we fufpected that both were productions of the fame author? The truth feems to be, that when both the related ideas are fuggefted by the fame person, we have not a very fatisfactory proof of any thing ur. common in the intellectual habits of the author. We may fufpect that both ideas occurred to him at the fame time; and we know that in the dullest and most phlegmatic minds, fuch extraordinary affociations will fometimes take place. But when the subject of the

Hiftory of the Worthies of England. London, 1662.

wit is furnished by one person, and the wit fuggefted by another, we have a proof, not only that the author's mind abounds with such fingular affociations, but that he has his wit perfectly at command.

As an additional confirmation of thefe obfervations, we may remark, that the more an author is limited by his fubject, the more we are pleased with his wit. And, therefore, the effect of wit does not arise folely from the unexpected relations which it presents to the mind, but arises, in part, from the surprise it excites at those intellectual habits which give it birth. It is evident, that the more the author is circumfcribed in the choice of his materials, the greater must be the command which he has acquired over thofe affociating principles on which wit depends, and of consequence, according to the foregoing doctrine the greater must be the surprise and the pleasure which his wit produces. In Addison's celebrated verfes to Sir Godfrey Kneller on his picture of George the First, in which he compares the painter to Phidias, and the fubjects of his pencil to the Grecian Deities, the range of the Poet's wit was neceffarily confined within very narrow bounds; and what principally delights us in that performance is, the furpri fing ease and felicity with which he runs the parallel between the English history and the Greek mythology. Of all the allufions which the following paffage contains, there is not one, taken fingly, of very extraordinary merit; and yet the effect of the whole is uncommonly great, from the fingular power of combination, which fo long and fo difficult an exertion discovers.

"Wife Phidias thus, his skill to prove,
"Thro' many a god advanced to Jove,
"And taught the polish'd rocks to fhine
"With airs and lineaments divine,
"Till Greece amaz'd and half afraid,
"Th' affembled Deities furvey'd.

"Great Pan, who wont to chase the fair,
"And lov'd the spreading oak, was there;
"Old Saturn, too, with up-cast eyes,
"Beheld his abdicated skies;

"And mighty Mars, for war renown'd,
"In adamantine armour frown'd;
"By him the childlefs Goddess rofe,
"Minerva, ftudious to compofe

"Her twisted threads; the web she strung,
"And o'er a loom of marble hung;
"Thetis, the troubled ocean's queen,
"Match'd with a mortal next was feen,
Reclining on a funeral urn,

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"Her fhort-liv'd darling fon to mourn;
"The laft was he, whofe thunder flew
"The Titan race, a rebel crew,

"That from a hundred hills ally'd,

"In impious league their King defy'd."

According to the view which I have given of the nature of Wit, the pleafure we derive from that affemblage of ideas which it prefents, is greatly heightened and enlivened by our furprife at the command difplayed over a part of the conftitution, which, in our own cafe, we find to be fo little fubject to the will. We confider Wit as a fort of feat or trick of intellectual dexterity, analogous, in some respects, to the extraordinary performances of jugglers and rope-dancers; and, in both cafes, the pleasure we reX

ceive

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