Page:The Lives of the Most Eminent English Poets, Volume 3.djvu/72

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BLACKMORE.

His ardour of poetry still continued; and not long after (1700) he published a Paraphrase on the Book of Job, and other parts of the Scripture. This performance Dryden, who pursued him with great malignity, lived long enough to ridicule in a Prologue.

The wits easily confederated against him, as Dryden, whose favour they almost all courted, was his professed adversary. He had besides given them reason for resentment, as, in his Preface to Prince Arthur, he has said of the Dramatick Writers almost all that was alleged afterwards by Collier; but Blackmore's censure was cold and general, Collier's was personal and ardent; Blackmore taught his reader to dislike, what Collier incited him to abhor.

In his Preface to King Arthur he endeavoured to gain at least one friend, and propitiated Congreve by higher praise of his Mourning Bride, than it had obtained from any other critick.

The same year he published a Satire on Wit; a proclamation of defiance which united poets almost all against him, and which brought upon him lampoons and ridicule from every side. This he doubtless foresaw, and evidently

despised;