how all conditions, how all minds, (As well of glib and 
slippery creatures, as Of grave and austere quality,) tender down Their
services to Lord Timon; his large fortune, Upon his good and gracious 
nature hanging, Subdues and properties to his love and tendance All 
sorts of hearts; yea, from the glass-faced flatterer To Apemantus, that 
few things loves better Than to abhor himself; even he drops down The 
knee before him, and returns in peace, Most rich in Timon's nod. 
There was almost a necessity that the spectator should be made 
acquainted with the character of Timon before his appearance; for his 
profuseness could be illustrated, after being known, better than it could 
make itself known in dialogue and action in which he should bear a 
part. And of the hundreds of English plays opening with an explanation 
or narrative of foregone matters, there is none where the formality is 
concealed by a more ingenious artifice than is used in this scene. The 
spectator is fore-possessed with Timon's character, and (in the outline 
the Poet is proceeding to give) with a suspicion that he is going to see 
him ruined in the course of the piece; and this is accomplished in the 
description of a panegyric, incidentally, briefly, picturesquely, artfully, 
with an art that tutors Nature, and which so well conceals itself that it 
can scarcely be perceived except in this our microscopic analysis. Here 
also we have Apemantus introduced beforehand. And with all this, the 
Painter and Poet speak minutely and broadly in character; the one sees 
scenes, the other plans an action (which is just what his own creator 
had done) and talks in poetic language. It is no more than the text 
warrants to remark that the next observation, primarily intended to 
break the poet's speech, was also intended to be the natural thought and 
words of a 
Painter. I saw them speak together. 
Poet. Sir, I have upon a high and pleasant hill Feigned Fortune to be 
throned: the base of the mount Is ranked with all deserts, all kinds of 
natures That labor on the bosom of this sphere To propagate their states; 
amongst them all, Whose eyes are on this sovereign lady fixed, One do 
I personate of Lord Timon's frame, Whom Fortune with her ivory hand 
wafts to her; Whose present grace to present slaves and servants 
Translates his rivals. 
Painter. 'Tis conceived to scope. This throne, this Fortune, and this hill,
methinks, With one man beckoned from the rest below, Bowing his 
head against the steepy mount To climb his happiness, would be well 
expressed In our condition. 
Poet. Nay, Sir, but hear me on. 
The artifice is to secure the attention of the spectator. The interruptions 
give naturalness and force to the narrative; and the questions and 
entreaties, though addressed to each other by the personages on the 
stage, have their effect in the front. The same artifice is employed in the 
most obvious manner where Prospero (Tempest, Act i. Sc. 2) narrates 
his and her previous history to Miranda. The Poet continues:-- 
All those which were his fellows but of late (Some better than his value) 
on the moment Follow his strides, his lobbies fill with tendance, Rain 
sacrificial whisperings in his ear, Make sacred even his stirrup, and 
through him Drink the free air. 
Painter. Ay, marry, what of these? 
The Poet has half deserted his figure, and is losing himself in a new 
description, from which the Painter impatiently recalls him. The text is 
so artificially natural that it will bear the nicest natural construction. 
Poet. When Fortune, in her shift and change of mood, Spurns down her 
late beloved, all his dependants, Which labored after him to the 
mountain's top, Even on their knees and hands, let him slip down, Not 
one accompanying his declining foot. 
Painter. 'Tis common: A thousand moral paintings I can show That 
shall demonstrate these quick blows of Fortune More pregnantly than 
words. Yet you do well To show Lord Timon that mean eyes have seen 
The foot above the head. 
[_Trumpets sound. Enter Timon, attended; the servant of Ventidius 
talking with him_. 
Thus far (and it is of no consequence if we have once or twice forgotten
it while pursuing our analysis) we have fancied ourselves present, 
seeing Shakspeare write this, and looking into his mind. But although 
divining his intentions, we have not made him intend any more than his 
words show that he did intend. Let us presently fancy, that, before 
introducing his principal character, he here turns back to see if he has 
brought in everything that is necessary. It would have been easier to 
plan this scene after the rest of the play had been done,--and, as already 
remarked, it may have been so written; but when the whole    
    
		
	
	
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