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PASTORAL

Volume 17 · 269 words · 1810 Edition

in general, something that relates to shepherds: hence we say, pastoral life, manners, poetry, &c.

Pastoral life may be considered in three different Blair's views; either such as it now actually is; when the Lectures state of shepherds is reduced to be a mean, fertile, and vol. iii. laborious state; when their employments are become p. 117, disagreeable, and their ideas grofs and low; or such as we may suppose it once to have been, in the more early and simple ages, when it was a life of ease and abundance; when the wealth of men consisted chiefly in flocks and herds, and the shepherd, though unrestrained in his manners, was respectable in his state: or, lastly, such as it never was, and never can in reality be, when, to the ease, innocence, and simplicity of the early ages, we attempt to add the polished taste, and cultivated manners of modern times. Of these three states, the first is too grofs and mean, the last too refined and unnatural, to be made the groundwork of pastoral poetry. Either of these extremes is a rock upon which the poet will split, if he approach too near it. We will be disgusted if he give us too much of the servile employments and low ideas of actual peasants, as Theocritus is censured for having sometimes done; and if, like some of the French and Italian writers of pastorals he make his shepherds discourse as if they were courtiers and scholars, he then retains the name only, but wants the spirit of pastoral poetry.

PASTORAL Poetry. See Poetry, Part II. sect. 4.