102 Sect. XII.
V k o o ? $ of the Enquiry into
P.3! 5 (m)< r_T 32>:-jj JTJ.0MER seems, as in a Concert of Music, ' to have sung all the several Part's which ' can possibly be introduced into Poetry ; and
- to have out-stript all his contemporary Poets
- in that very thing in which each of them
' excelled. He is more noble and lofy in his
- Language than Orpheus ; his Verse is sweeter
' than Htfoits, and in other respects he has ' out-done the rest. The Subjcfi he treats of ' is the TrGjan Story, into which Fortune had ' collected, and as it were set forth all the ' Virtues both of the Greeks, and barbarous ' Nations : There he has represented Wars of ' all kinds ; sometimes of Men against Men, ' sometimes against Horses ; sometimes against ' Walls and Rivers, and sometimes against Gods ' and Goddesses. He has likewise represented
- Peace in all it's Effects ; has described Dances
' and Songs, and Loves and Feasts ; has taught
- what belongs to Agriculture, and has mark' ed the Seasons which are fit for the seve' ral rural Toils : He has lung of Navigation,
- and of the Art of working Metals by Fire ;
' and has punted the different Figures and
- Manners of Men. All this I think Homer
' has done in a wonderful and almost super' natural Manner ; and those who are not in Love
c with