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The Psalms of David, Imitated in the Language of the New Testament, And applied to the Christian State and Worship / by I[saac] Watts. [Nebst] Hymns and Spiritual Songs
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LIFE OF DR. WATTS.

petual repetition, and the sanctity of the mat­ter rejects the ornaments of figurative diction. It is sufficient for Watts to have done better than others what no man has done well.

His poems, on other subjects, seldom rise higher than might be expected from the amuse­ments of a Man of Letters, and have different degrees of value as they are more or less labour­ed, or as the occasion was more or less favour­able to invention.

He writes too often without regular measures, and too often in blank verse; the rhymes are not always sufficiently correspondent. He is particularly unhappy in coining names ex­pressive of characters. His lines are commonly smooth and easy, and his thoughts always reli­giously pure; but who is there that, to so much piety and innocence, does not wish for a greater measure of sprightliness and vigour? He is at least one of the few poets with whom youth and innocence may be safely pleased; and happy will be that reader whose mind is disposed by his verses, or his prose, to imitate him in all but his non- conformity, to copy his benevolence to man, and his reverence to God.