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t:-- To join these squadrons, o'er the champaign came A numerous race of no ignoble name; _Riddle_ and _Rebus_, Riddle's dearest son, And _false Conundrum_ and _insidious Pun_. _Fustian_, who scarcely deigns to tread the ground, And _Rondeau_, wheeling in repeated round. On their fair standards, by the wind display'd, _Eggs_, _altars_, _wings_, _pipes_, _axes_, were pourtray'd. I find the origin of _Bouts-rimes_, or "Rhyming Ends," in Goujet's Bib. Fr. xvi. p. 181. One Dulot, a foolish poet, when sonnets were in demand, had a singular custom of preparing the rhymes of these poems to be filled up at his leisure. Having been robbed of his papers, he was regretting most the loss of three hundred sonnets: his friends were astonished that he had written so many which they had never heard. "They were _blank sonnets_," he replied; and explained the mystery by describing his _Bouts-rimes_. The idea appeared ridiculously amusing; and it soon became fashionable to collect the most difficult rhymes, and fill up the lines. The _Charade_ is of recent birth, and I cannot discover the origin of this species of logogriphes. It was not known in France so late as in 1771; in the great Dictionnaire de Trevoux, the term appears only as the name of an Indian sect of a military character. Its mystical conceits have occasionally displayed singular felicity. _Anagrams_ were another whimsical invention; with the _letters_ of any _name_ they contrived to make out some entire word, descriptive of the character of the person who bore the name. These anagrams, therefore, were either satirical or complimentary. When in fashion, lovers made use of them continually: I have read of one, whose mistress's name was Magdalen, for whom he composed, not only an epic under that name, but as a proof of his passion, one day he sent her three dozen of anagrams all on her lovely name. Scioppius imagined himself fortunate that his adversary _Scaliger_ was perfectly _Sacrilege_ in all the oblique cases of the Latin language; on this principle Sir John _Wiat_ was made out, to his own satisfaction--_a wit_. They were not always correct when a great compliment was required; the poet _John Cleveland_ was strained hard to make _Heliconian dew_. This literary trifle has, however, in our own times produced several, equally ingenious and caustic. Verses of grotesque shapes have sometimes been contrived to convey ingenious thought
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