published occasional panegyrics and invectives: and the design of these slavish compositions encouraged
his propensity to exceed the limits of truth and nature. These imperfections, however, are compensated
in some degree by the poetical virtues of Claudian. He was endowed with the rare and precious talent
of raising the meanest, of adorning the most barren, and of diversifying the most similar, topics: his coloring,
more especially in descriptive poetry, is soft and splendid; and he seldom fails to display, and even to
abuse, the advantages of a cultivated understanding, a copious fancy, an easy, and sometimes forcible,
expression; and a perpetual flow of harmonious versification. To these commendations, independent
of any accidents of time and place, we must add the peculiar merit which Claudian derived from the
unfavorable circumstances of his birth. In the decline of arts, and of empire, a native of Egypt, who had
received the education of a Greek, assumed, in a mature age, the familiar use, and absolute command,
of the Latin language; soared above the heads of his feeble contemporaries; and placed himself, after an
interval of three hundred years, among the poets of ancient Rome.