Excerpt from A Sermon: Preached at Bridge Street, Bristol, October 19, 1803, Being the Day Appointed for a General Fast
Well known to every one who has the smallest tincture of learning, that the great critic Of antiquity represents the design of tragedy to be that of purifying the heart by pity and terror. It appeared to the author that infidelity, by the crimes and disorders it has produced in society, was not incapable of answering a similar purpose. He accordingly availed himself of the compa rison; but it having occurred to him afterwards that he had read a similar passage in Mrs. More, he thought it right to, notice this circumstance in an advertisement, UI which he says he ap prehends the allusion to the tragic muse to belong to Mrs. More. It was not the opinion of its being the purpose of tragedy to purify the heart by pity and terror, that he ascribed to that celebrated female; but solely the allu sion to that opinion, as illustrating the effect of infidelity. It is on this Slender foundation, however, that the writer in the Monthly Review, with what design is best known to himself, has thought fit to represent him as ascribing to Mrs. More, as its author, a critical opinion.
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