Page:A Dissertation on Reading the Classics and Forming a Just Style.djvu/207

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Dr. Beveridge.
163

ble Evidence to the Doctrines he defendeth. There is something so Great, Primitive, and Apostolical in his Writings, that it creates an Awe and Veneration in our Mind: The Importance of his Subjects are above the Decorations of Words, and what is Great and Majestic in itself, looketh most like itself, the less it is adorned. The true Sublime in the great Articles of our Faith is lodged in the plainest Words. The Divine Revelations are best expressed in the Language they were revealed in, and as I observed before of the Scriptures, they will suffer no Ornament or Amendment.

But