Page:Encyclopædia Britannica, Ninth Edition, v. 24.djvu/402

Rh 378 W A K W A R went to Oxford together, and took the degree of B.A. in the same year (1713). Warton was far from having the genius of Collins, but he had abundance of poetical enthu siasm, and they were at one in their impatience under the prevailing taste for moral and ethical poetry. Whoever wishes to understand how early the discontent under Pope s ascendency began should read Warton s The En thusiast, or The Love of Nature, and remember that it was written by an undergraduate in 1740, Avhile Pope was still alive. Warton sounded a bold note in 1746, in the preface to his Odes on Several Subjects. &quot; As he is convinced,&quot; he wrote, &quot; that the fashion of moralizing in verses has been carried too far, and as he looks upon invention and imagination to be the chief faculties of a poet, so he will be happy if the following odes may be looked upon as an attempt to bring back poetry into its right channel.&quot; Warton thereafter married, became a country clergyman, a master in Winchester school, eventually for thirty years (1766-96) a much respected headmaster, but all his leisure was given to literature, and he remained constant to his conception of the &quot; right channel &quot; in poetry, though he soon abandoned the idea of setting the world right by his own example. He became an active and prominent man of letters, produced an edition of Virgil, in 1753, with distinguished coadjutors, and a translation of the Eclogues and the Georgics, and a preparatory essay by him self ; made the acquaintance of Johnson, and wrote papers on Shakespeare and Homer in The Adventurer- published the first part of an essay on Pope in 1756, an essay re garded at the time as revolutionary, by Dictator Johnson at least, because it put Pope in the second rank to Shakespeare, Spenser, and Milton, on the ground that moral and ethical poetry, however excellent, is an inferior species ; held his own against Johnson in the Literary Club ; and, after enduring many jests about the promised second part and the delay in its appearance, published it at last, retracting nothing, in 1782. Of this essay Campbell justly says that &quot; it abounds with criticism of more research than Addison s, of more amenity than Kurd s or Warburton s, and of more insinuating tact than Johnson s.&quot; Warton s edition of Pope was the work of his old age ; when pub lished in 1797, it found a larger number of sympathizers with his criticism of the poetic idol of the 18th century than had welcomed his first essay forty years before in the same vein. The last three years of the critic s life were spent in preparing an edition of Dryden, which was completed and published by his son in 1811. He died in London in February 1800, at the age of seventy-eight. THOMAS WARTON (1728-1790), the younger brother of Joseph, at least as active and influential as he in enlarg ing the poetic ideas of the 18th century, was born at Basingstoke in 1728. He was still more precocious as a poet than his brother translated one of Martial s epigrams at nine, and wrote The Pleasures of Melancholy at seventeen and he showed exactly the same bent, Milton and Spenser being his favourite poets, though he &quot; did not fail to cultivate his mind with the soft thrillings of the tragic muse &quot; of Shakespeare. He wrote as follows in 1745 : Through Pope s soft song though all the Graces breathe, And happiest art adorn his Attic page, Yet does my mind with sweeter transport glow As, at the root of mossy trunk reclined, In magic Spenser s wildly warbled song I see deserted Una, &c. In the same poem he shows the delight in Gothic churches and ruined castles which inspired so much of his subsequent work in romantic revival. Most of Warton s poetry, humorous and serious, and the humorous mock heroic was better within his powers than serious verse, was written before the age of twenty-three, when he took his M.A. degree and became a fellow of his college (Trinity, Oxford). He did not altogether abandon verse ; his sonnets, especially, which are the best of his poems, were written later, and during the last six years of his life he was poet- laureate, and one of the happiest in the execution of the delicate duties that have ever held the office. But his main energies wee given to omnivorous poetical reading and criticism. He was the first to turn to literary account the mediaeval treasures of the Bodleian Library. It was through him, in fact, that the mediaeval spirit which always lingered in Oxford first began to stir after its long inaction, and to claim an influence in the modern world. Warton, like his brother, entered the church, and held, one after another, various livings, but he did not marry. He gave little atten tion to his clerical duties, and Oxford always remained his home. He was a very easy and convivial as well as a very learned don, with a taste for pothouses and crowds as well as dim aisles and romances in manuscript and black letter. The first proof that he gave of his extraordinarily wide scholarship Avas in his Observations on the Poetry of Spenser, published in 1754, when the author was twenty- six. Three years later he was appointed professor of poetry and held the office for ten years, sending round, according to the story, at the beginning of term to inquire whether anybody unshed him to lecture. The first volume of his monumental work, The History of English Poetry, appeared twenty years later, in 1774, the second volume in 1778, and the third in 1781. A work of such enormous labour and research could proceed but slowly, and it was no wonder that Warton flagged in the execution of it, and stopped to refresh himself with annotating the minor poems of Milton, pouring out in this delightful work the accumu lated suggestions of forty years. Specialists may here and there detect errors and imperfections in Warton s History, but its miscellaneous and curious lore must make it always an interesting book, while its breadth and exactness of scholarship must always command wonder and respect. Through this work Warton became the veritable literary father of Sir Walter Scott ; if he could have lived to read the Lay and Marmion he would have found realized there what he vaguely desiderated in modern poetry. Among Warton s minor works were a selection of Roman metrical inscriptions (1758); the humorous Oxford Companion to the Guide and Guide to the Companion (1762); The Oxford Sausage (1764); an edition of Theocritus (1770) ; lives of Thomas Pope and Bathurst, college benefactors ; a History of the Antiquities of Kiddington Parish, of which he held the living (1781); and an Inquiry into the Authenticity of the Poems attributed to Thomas Roiuley (1782). His busy and convivial life was ended by a paralytic stroke in May 1790. (w. M.) WARWICK, a midland county of England, is bounded Plalo on the N. by Stafford, on the E. by Leicester and North- VIIJ - ampton, on the S. by Oxford and Gloucester, and on the W. by Worcester. Its greatest length from north to south is 50 miles, and its greatest breadth 33 miles, Its area is 566,458 acres, or about 885 square miles. Camden describes it as being &quot; divided into two parts, the Feldon and Woodland [or Arden], that is into a plain champain and a woody country ; which parts, the Avon, running crookedlie from north-east to south-west, doth, after a sort, sever one from the other.&quot; Surface and Geology. The surface of the county is of a gently undulating nature. For a description of the scenery and early history the reader is referred to the article SHAKESPEARE, vol. xxi. pp. 738 sq. The chief elevations are the Edge Hills on the southern border of the county, where they rise in some places to about 800 feet above sea-level. In the same neighbourhood are the Burton Dassett and Farnborough Hills ; north east of these are the Napton and Shuckburgh Hills, and