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uch compositions as James Russell Lowell's inimitable _Biglow Papers_, as well as in more recent volumes, of which Mr. Owen Seaman's verse is an example; while are not its prose forms legion in the pages of our periodical press? It has, however, now lost that vitriolic quality which made it so scorching and offensively personal. The man who wrote nowadays as did Dryden, and Junius, and Canning, or, in social satire, as did Peter Pindar and Byron, would be forthwith ostracized from literary fellowship. But what more need be said of an introductory character to these selections that are now placed before the reader? English satire, though perhaps less in evidence to-day as a separate department in letters, is still as cardinal a quality as ever in the productions of our leading authors. If satires are no longer in fashion, satire is perennial as an attribute in literature, and we have every reason to cherish it and welcome it as warmly as of old. The novels of Thackeray, as I have already said, contain some of the most delicately incisive shafts of satire that have been barbed by any writer of the present century. "George Eliot", also, though in a less degree, has shown herself a satirist of much power and pungency, while others of our latter-day novelists manifest themselves as possessed of a faculty of satire both virile and trenchant. It is one of the indispensable qualities of a great writer's style, because its quarry is one of the most widely diffused of existing things on the face of the globe. There is no age without its folly, no epoch without its faults. So long, therefore, as man and his works are imperfect, so long shall there be existent among us abuses, social, political, professional, and ecclesiastical, and so long, too, shall it be the province and the privilege of those who feel themselves called upon to play the difficult part of _censor morum_, to prick the bubbles of falsehood, vanity, and vice with the shafts of ridicule and raillery. [Footnote 1: _The English Humorists of the Eighteenth Century_.] [Footnote 2: Cf. Lenient, _History of French Satire_.] [Footnote 3: Thomson's _Ante-Augustan Latin Poetry_.] [Footnote 4: Cf. Mackail; Paten, _Etudes sur la Poesie latine_.] [Footnote 5: See Skeat's "Langland" in _Encyclop. Brit._] [Footnote 6: See Arber's Reprints for 1868.] [Footnote 7: Arber's Select Reprints.] [Footnote 8: _Palladis Tamia: Wits Treasury_.] [Footnote 9: This, of cou
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