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56 ON THE AUTHENTICITY
SECTION III.
Of the Mode in which these Foeim have beenpreser'
ved, and transmitted to us, through so mani/ Ages.
1 HAT such a mass of poetry, as has been
presented to the public by Mr Macpherson,
together with what may be reckoned ancient
and genuine, in Dr Smith's collection, should
have been preserved amongst a rude people,
and transmitted by oral tradition, through a
period of more than fifteen centuries, with any
degree of purity, is, it must be acknowledg-
ed, a phenomenon, of which we have no ex-
ample in the history of literature. It can be
accounted for only, by remarking, that we
have no example, in the history of Europe,
of a people placed in similar circumstances.

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