[Sir Walter Scott by Richard H. Hutton]@TWC D-Link book
Sir Walter Scott

CHAPTER V
18/19

But I have said enough now of his poetry, in which, good as it is, Scott's genius did not reach its highest point.

The hurried tramp of his somewhat monotonous metre, is apt to weary the ears of men who do not find their sufficient happiness, as he did, in dreaming of the wild and daring enterprises of his loved Border-land.

The very quality in his verse which makes it seize so powerfully on the imaginations of plain, bold, adventurous men, often makes it hammer fatiguingly against the brain of those who need the relief of a wider horizon and a richer world.
FOOTNOTES: [Footnote 12: Lockhart's _Life of Scott_, ii.

217.] [Footnote 13: Lockhart's _Life of Scott_, ii.

226.] [Footnote 14: Lockhart's _Life of Scott_, v.


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