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is oftenest found in odd and irregular minds: but this peculiar turn diftorts wit, and though it gives it a burlefque air, which excites momentary mirth, renders it lefs juft, and confequently lefs agreeable to our judgments. Gluttony, corpulency, and cowardice, are the peculiarities of Falstaffe's compofition, they render him ridiculous without folly, throw an air of jeft and feftivity about him, and make his manners fuit with his fentiments, without giving to his understanding any particular bias. As the contempt attendant on these vices and defects is the best antidote against any infection that might be caught in his fociety, fo it was very skilful to make him as ridiculous as witty, and as contemptible as entertaining. The admirable speech upon

honour would have been both indecent and

dangerous from any other person. We must every where allow his wit is just, his humour genuine, and his character perfectly original, and fuftained through every fcene, in every play, in which it appears.

As

As Falstaffe, whom the author certainly intended to be perfectly witty, is less addicted to quibble and play on words, than any of his comic characters, I think we may fairly conclude, our author was fenfible it was but a falfe kind of wit, which he practised from the hard neceffity of the times for in that age, the profeffor quibbled in his chair, the judge quibbled on the bench, the prelate quibbled in the pulpit, the statesman quibbled at the council-board ; nay even majefty quibbled on the throne.

THE

THE

SECOND PART

OF

HENRY IV.

As Falstaffe, whom the author certainly intended to be perfectly witty, is less addicted to quibble and play on words, than any of his comic characters, I think we may fairly conclude, our author was fenfible it was but a falfe kind of wit, which he practised from the hard neceffity of the times for in that age, the profeffor quibbled in his chair, the judge quibbled on the bench, the prelate quibbled in the pulpit, the statesman quibbled at the council-board ; nay even majesty quibbled on the throne.

:

THE

THE

SECOND PART

OF

HENRY IV.

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