Poetical Works of Pope, Vol. II

Alexander Pope

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  • THE GENIUS AND POETRY OF POPE.
  • MORAL ESSAYS.
  • EPISTLE II.—TO A LADY.
  • TRANSLATIONS AND IMITATIONS.
  • PROLOGUE AND EPILOGUES
  • MISCELLANIES
  • THE DUNCIAD.
  • BOOK THE FIRST.
  • BOOK THE SECOND.
  • BOOK THE THIRD.
  • BOOK THE FOURTH.
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    THE


    POETICAL WORKS


    OF


    ALEXANDER POPE.





    With Memoir, Critical Dissertation, and Explanatory Notes,


    BY THE


    REV. GEORGE GILFILLAN.





    VOL. II.


    M.DCCC.LVI.






    THE GENIUS AND POETRY OF POPE.



    Few poets during their lifetime have been at once so much admired and so
    much abused as Pope. Some writers, destined to oblivion in after-ages,
    have been loaded with laurels in their own time; while others, on whom
    Fame was one day to “wait like a menial,” have gone to the grave
    neglected, if not decried and depreciated. But it was the fate of Pope
    to combine in his single experience the extremes of detraction and
    flattery—to have the sunshine of applause and the hail-storm of calumny
    mingled on his living head; while over his dead body, as over the body
    of Patroclus, there has raged a critical controversy, involving not
    merely his character as a man, but his claims as a poet. For this,
    unquestionably, there are some subordinate reasons. Pope's religious
    creed, his political connexions, his easy circumstances, his popularity
    with the upper classes, as well as his testy temper and malicious
    disposition, all tended to rouse against him, while he lived, a personal
    as well as public hostility, altogether irrespective of the mere merit
    or demerit of his poetry. “We cannot bear a Papist to be our principal
    bard,” said one class. “No Tory for our translator of Homer,” cried the
    zealous Whigs, “Poets should be poor, and Pope is independent,” growled
    Grub Street. The ancients could not endure that a “poet should build an
    house, but this varlet has dug a grotto, and established a clandestine
    connexion between Parnassus and the Temple of Plutus.” “Pope,” said
    others, “is hand-in-glove with Lords Oxford and Bolingbroke, and it was
    never so seen before in any genuine child of genius.” “He is a little
    ugly insect,” cried another class; “can such a misbegotten brat be a
    favourite with the beautiful Apollo?” “He is as venomous and spiteful as
    he is small; never was so much of the 'essence of devil' packed into
    such a tiny compass,” said another set; “and this, to be sure, is
    England's great poet!” Besides these personal objections, there were
    others of a more solid character. While all admitted the exquisite
    polish and terse language of Pope's compositions, many felt that they
    were too artificial—that they were often imitative—that they seldom
    displayed those qualities of original thought and sublime enthusiasm
    which had formed the chief characteristics of England's best bards, and
    were slow to rank the author of “Eloisa and Abelard,” with the creator
    of “Hamlet,” “Othello,” and “Lear;” the author of the “Rape of the Lock"
    with the author of “Paradise Lost;” the author of the “Pastorals,” with
    the author of the “Faery Queen;” and the author of the “Imitations of
    Horace,” with the author of the “Canterbury Tales.” On the one hand,
    Pope's ardent friends erred in classing him with or above these great
    old writers; and on the other, his enemies were thus provoked to thrust
    him too far down in the scale, and to deny him genius altogether. Since
    his death, his fame has continued to vibrate between extremes. Lord
    Byron and Lord Carlisle (the latter, in a lecture delivered in Leeds in
    December 1850, and published afterwards) have placed him ridiculously
    high; while Wordsworth, Coleridge, and Bowles, have underrated him. It
    shall be our endeavour, in our succeeding remarks, to steer a middle
    course between the parties.


    Lord Carlisle commenced his able and eloquent prelection by deploring
    the fact, that Pope had sunk in estimation. And yet, a few sentences
    after, he told us that the “Commissioners of the Fine Arts" selected
    Pope, along with Chaucer, Shakspeare, Spenser, Milton, and Dryden, to
    fill the six vacant places in the New Palace of Westminster. This does
    not substantiate the assertion, that Pope has sunk in estimation. Had he
    sunk to any great extent, the Commissioners would not have dared to put
    his name and statue beside those of the acknowledged masters of English
    poetry. But apart from this, we do think that Lord Carlisle has
    exaggerated the “Decline and Fall” of the empire of Pope. He is still,
    with the exception, perhaps, of Cowper, the most popular poet of the
    eighteenth century. His “Essay on Man,” and his “Eloisa and Abelard,”
    are probably in every good library, public and private, in Great
    Britain. Can we say as much of Chaucer and Spenser? Passages and lines
    of his poetry are stamped on the memory of all well-educated men. More
    pointed sayings of Pope are afloat than of any English poet, except
    Shakspeare and Young. Indeed, if frequency of quotation be the principal
    proof of popularity, Pope, with Shakspeare, Young, and Spenser, is one
    of the four most popular of English poets. In America, too, Lord
    Carlisle found, he tells us, the most cultivated and literary portion of
    that great community warmly imbued with an admiration of Pope.


    What more would, or at least should, his lordship desire? Pope is, by
    his own showing, a great favourite with many wherever the English
    language is spoken, and that, too, a century after his death. And there
    are few critics who would refuse to subscribe, on the whole, Lord
    Carlisle's enumeration of the Poet's qualities; his terse and motto-like
    lines—the elaborate gloss of his mock-heroic vein—the tenderness of
    his pathos—the point and polished strength of his satire—the force and
    vraisemblance of his descriptions of character—the delicacy and
    refinement of his compliments, “each of which,” says Hazlitt, “is as
    good as an house or estate”—and the heights of moral grandeur into
    which he can at times soar, whenever he has manly indignation, or
    warm-hearted patriotism, or high-minded scorn to express. If Lord
    Carlisle's object, then, was to elevate Pope to the rank of a classic,
    it was a superfluous task; if it was to justify the Commissioners in
    placing him on a level with Chaucer, Shakspeare, Spenser, and Milton,
    our remarks will show that we think it as vain as superfluous.


    In endeavouring to fix the rank of a poet, there are, we think, the
    following elements to be analysed:—His original genius—his kind and
    degree of culture—his purpose—his special faculties—the works he has
    written—and the amount of impression he has made on, and impulse he has
    given to, his own age and the world. In other words, what were his
    native powers, and what has he done, for, by, and with them?


    Now, that Pope possessed genius, and genius of a high order, we
    strenuously maintain. But whether this amounted to creative power, the
    highest quality of the poet, is a very different question. In native
    imagination, that eyesight of the soul, which sees in the rose a richer
    red, in the sky a deeper azure, in the sea a more dazzling foam, in the
    stars a softer and more spiritual gold, and in the sky a more dread
    magnificence than nature ever gave them, that beholds the Ideal always
    shining through and above the Real, and that lights the poet on to form
    within a new and more gorgeous nature, the fresh creation of his own
    inspired mind, Pope was not only inferior to Chaucer, Shakspeare,
    Spenser, and Milton, but to Young, Thomson, Collins, Burns, Wordsworth,
    Keats, Shelley, Byron, Coleridge, and many other poets. His native
    faculty, indeed, seems rather fine than powerful—rather timid than
    daring, and resembles rather the petal of a rose peeping out into the
    summer air, which seems scarce warm enough for its shrinking loveliness,
    than the feather of the wing of a great eagle, dipping into the night
    tempest, which raves around the inaccessible rock of his birthplace. He
    was not eminently original in his thinking. In proof of this, many of
    those fine sentiments which Pope has thrown into such perfect shape, and
    to which he has given such dazzling burnish, are found by Watson (see
    the “Adventurer") in Pascal and others. Shakspeare's wisdom, on the
    other hand, can be traced to Shakspeare's brain, and no further,
    although he has borrowed the plots of his plays. Who lent Chaucer his
    pictures, fresh as dewdrops from the womb of the morning? Spenser's
    Allegories are as native to him as his dreams; and if Milton has now and
    then carried off a load which belonged to another, it was a load which
    only a giant's arm could lift, and which he added to a caravan of
    priceless wealth, the native inheritance of his own genius.


    The highest rank of poets descend on their sublime subjects, like Uriel,
    descending alongst his sunbeam on the mountain tops; another order, with
    care, and effort, and circumspection, often with


    'Labour dire and weary woe,'


    reach noble heights, and there wave their hats, and dance in
    astonishment at their own perseverance and success. So it is with Pope
    in his peroration to the Dunciad, and in many other of the serious and
    really eloquent passages of his works. They ARE eloquent, brilliant, in
    composition faultless; but the intense self-consciousness of their
    author, and their visible elaboration, prevent them from seeming or
    being great. Of Pope, you say, “He smells of the midnight lamp;” of
    Dante, boys cried out on the street, “Lo! the man that was in hell.”
    With the very first class of poets, artificial objects become natural,
    the “rod” becomes a “serpent;” with Pope, natural objects become
    artificial, the “serpent” becomes a “rod.” Wordsworth makes a spade
    poetical; Pope would have made Skiddaw little better than a mass of
    prose.


    Let us hear Hazlitt: “Pope saw nature only dressed by art; he judged of
    beauty by fashion; he sought for truth in the opinions of the world; he
    judged the feelings of others by his own. The capacious soul of
    Shakspeare had an intuitive and mighty sympathy with whatever could
    enter into the heart of man in all possible circumstances; Pope had an
    exact knowledge of all that he himself loved or hated, wished or wanted.
    Milton has winged his daring flight from heaven to earth, through Chaos
    and old Night; Pope's Muse never wandered in safety, but from his
    library to his grotto, or from his grotto into his library, back again.
    His mind dwelt with greater pleasure on his own garden than on the
    garden of Eden; he could describe the faultless whole-length mirror that
    reflected his own person, better than the smooth surface of the lake
    that reflects the face of heaven; a piece of cut glass or pair of
    paste-buckles with more brilliancy and effect than a thousand dewdrops
    glittering in the sun. He would be more delighted with a patent lamp
    than with the 'pale reflex of Cynthia's brow,' that fills the sky with
    the soft silent lustre that trembles through the cottage window, and
    cheers the mariner on the lonely wave. He was the poet of personality
    and polished life. That which was nearest to him was the greatest. His
    mind was the antithesis of strength and grandeur; its power was the
    power of indifference. He had none of the enthusiasm of poetry; he was
    in poetry what the sceptic is in religion. In his smooth and polished
    verse we meet with no prodigies of nature, but with miracles of wit; the
    thunders of his pen are whispered flatteries; its forked lightnings,
    pointed sarcasms; for the 'gnarled oak,' he gives us the 'soft myrtle;'
    for rocks, and seas, and mountains, artificial grass-plots,
    gravel-walks, and tinkling rills; for earthquakes and tempests, the
    breaking of a flower-pot or the fall of a China jar; for the tug and war
    of the elements, or the deadly strife of the passions,


    “'Calm contemplation and poetic ease.'


    “Yet within this retired and narrow circle, how much, and that how
    exquisite, was contained! What discrimination, what wit, what delicacy,
    what fancy, what lurking spleen, what elegance of thought, what pampered
    refinement of sentiment!”


    A great deal of discussion took place, during the famous controversy
    about Pope between Bowles and Byron, on the questions—what objects are
    and are not fitted for poetic purposes, and whether natural or
    artificial objects be better suited for the treatment of the poet. In
    our life of Bowles we promised, and shall now proceed to attempt, a
    short review of the question then at issue, and which on both sides was
    pled with such ingenuity, ardour, and eloquence.


    The question, professedly that of the province, slides away into what
    is the nature of poetry. The object of poetry is, we think, to show
    the infinite through the finite—to reveal the ideal in the real—it
    seeks, by clustering analogies and associations around objects, to give
    them a beautiful, or sublime, or interesting, or terrible aspect which
    is not entirely their own. Now, as all objects in comparison with the
    infinite are finite, and all realities in comparison with the ideal are
    little, it follows that between artificial and natural objects, as
    fitted for poetic purposes, there is no immense disparity, and that both
    are capable of poetic treatment. Both, accordingly, have become
    subservient to high poetic effect; and even the preponderance, whatever
    it be on the part of natural objects, has sometimes been equalised by
    the power of genius, and artificial things have often been made to wring
    the heart or awaken the fancy, as much or more than the other class.
    Think, for instance, of the words in Lear,


    “Prithee, undo this button. Thank you, sir.”


    What more contemptibly artificial than a button? And yet, beating in the
    wind of the hysterical passion which is tearing the heart of the poor
    dying king, what a powerful index of misery it becomes, and its
    “undoing,” as the sign of the end of the tragedy, and the letting forth
    of the great injured soul, has melted many to tears! When Lady Macbeth
    exclaims, in that terrible crisis,


    “Give me the daggers!”'


    who feels not, that, although a dagger be only an artificial thing, no
    natural or supernatural thing, not the flaming sword of the Cherubim
    itself, could seem, in the circumstances, more fearfully sublime. What
    action more artificial than dancing, and yet how grand it seems, in
    Ford's heroine, who continues to dance on till the ball is finished,
    while the news of “death, and death, and death” of friend, brother,
    husband, are successively recounted to her—and then herself expires!
    There seems no comparison between a diamond and a star, and yet a
    Shakspeare or a Schiller could so describe the trembling of a diamond on
    the brow say of Belshazzar when the apparition of the writing on the
    wall disturbed his impious feast, that it would seem more ideal and more
    magnificent than a star “trembling on the hand of God” when newly
    created, or trembling on the verge of everlasting darkness, when its
    hour had come. A slipper seems a very commonplace object; but how
    interesting the veritable slipper of Empedocles, who flung himself into
    Etna, whose slipper was disgorged by the volcano, and as a link,
    connecting the seen with the unseen, the grassy earth with the burning
    entrails of the eternal furnace, became intensely imaginative! A feather
    in a cap (even though it were an eagle's) seems, from its position, an
    object sufficiently artificial; but how affecting the black plume of
    Ravenswood floating on the waves which had engulphed the proud head that
    once bore it, and which old Caleb took up, dried, and placed in his
    bosom!


    Nor are we sure that there are any objects so small or vulgar but what
    genius could extract poetry from them. In Pope's hands, indeed, the
    “clouded cane” and the “amber snuff-box” of Sir Plume assume no ideal
    aspect; but in Shakspeare's it might have been different; and the
    highest order of genius, like true catholicity of faith, counts “nothing
    common or unclean.” What poetry Burns has gathered up even in “Poosie
    Nancy's,” which had been lying unsuspected at the feet of beggars,
    prostitutes, and pickpockets! What powerful imagination there is in
    Crabbe's descriptions of poorhouses, prisons, and asylums; and in
    Wordsworth's “Old Cumberland Beggar,” who, although he lived and died in
    the “eye of nature,” was clothed in rags, and had the vulgar, mendicant
    meal-bag slung over his shoulders! What pathos Scott extracts from that
    “black bitch of a boat,” which Mucklebackit, in the frenzy of his grief,
    accuses for the loss of his son! Which of the lower animals less
    poetical or coarser than a swine? and yet Shakspeare introduces such a
    creature with great effect in “Macbeth,” in that weird dialogue of the
    witches—


    “Where hast thou been, sister?”
    “Killing swine.”


    And Goethe makes it ideal by mingling it with the mad revelry of the
    “Walpurgis Night”—


    “An able sow, with old Baubo upon her.
    Is worthy of glory and worthy of honour.”


    The whole truth on this vexed question may perhaps be summed up in the
    following propositions:—1st, No object, natural or artificial, is per
    se
    out of the province of imagination; 2d, There is no infinite gulf
    between natural and artificial objects, or between the higher and lower
    degrees of either, as subjects for the idealising power of poetry; 3d,
    Ere any object natural or artificial, become poetical, it must be
    subjected more or less to the transfiguring power of imagination; and,
    4th, Some objects in nature, and some in art, need less of this
    transforming magic than others, and are thus intrinsically, although
    not immeasurably, superior in adaptation to the purposes of poetry.


    The great point, after all, is, What eye beholds objects, whether
    natural or artificial? Is it a poetical eye or not? For given a poet's
    eye, then it matters little on what object that eye be fixed, it becomes
    poetical; where there is intrinsic poetry—as in mountains, the sea, the
    sky, the stars—it comes rushing out to the silent spell of genius;
    where there is less—as in artificial objects, or the poorer productions
    of nature—the mind of the poet must exert itself tenfold, and shed on
    it its own wealth and glory. Now, Pope, we fear, wanted almost entirely
    this true second sight. Take, for instance, the “lock” in the famous
    “Rape!” What fancy, humour, wit, eloquence, he brings to play around it!
    But he never touches it, even en passant, with a ray of poetry. You
    never could dream of intertwining it with


    “The tangles of Neaera's hair,”


    far less with the “golden tresses” and “wanton ringlets” of our primeval
    parent in the garden of Eden. Shakspeare, on the other hand, would have
    made it a dropping from the shorn sun, or a mad moonbeam gone astray, or
    a tress fallen from the hair of the star Venus, as she gazed too
    intently at her own image in the calm evening sea. Nor will Pope leave
    the “lock” entire in its beautiful smallness. He must apply a microscope
    to it, and stake his fame on idealising its subdivided, single hairs.
    The sylphs are created by combining the agility of Ariel with the lively
    impertinence of the inhabitants of Lilliput. Yet with what ease,
    elegance, and lingering love does he draw his petty Pucks, till, though
    too tiny for touch, they become palpable to vision! On the whole, had
    not the “Tempest” and the “Midsummer Night's Dream” existed before the
    “Rape of the Lock,” the machinery in it would have proclaimed Pope a man
    of creative imagination. As it is, it proves wonderful activity of
    fancy. Shakspeare's delicate creations are touched again without
    crumbling at the touch, clad in new down, fed on a fresh supply of
    “honey-dew,” and sent out on minor but aerial errands—although, after
    all, we prefer Puck and Ariel—not to speak of those delectable
    personages, Cobweb, Peaseblossom, and Mustardseed. Ariel's “oak,” in our
    poet's hands, becomes a “vial”—“knotty entrails” are exchanged for a
    “bodkin's eye”—the fine dew of the “still vexed Bermoothes” is degraded
    into an “essence;” pomatum takes the place of poetry; the enchanted
    lock, of an enchanted isle; and the transformation of original
    imagination into ingenious fancy is completed before your eyes. Let the
    admirers of Pope, like the worshippers of Caesar of old, “beg a hair of
    him for memory;” for certainly he is more at home among hairs and curls
    than in any field where he has chosen to exercise his powers.


    About Pope originally there was a small, trivial, and stinted
    something which did not promise even the greatness he actually
    attained. We do not allude merely to his small stature, remembering that
    the nine-pin Napoleon overthrew half the thrones in Europe. But he
    possessed sana mens in sano copore, an erect figure, and was “every
    inch a man,” although his inches were few; while in Pope, both bodily
    and mentally, there lay a crooked, waspish, and petty nature. His form
    too faithfully reflected his character. He was never, from the beginning
    to the close of his life, a great, broad, genial being. There was an
    unhealthy taint which partly enfeebled and partly corrupted him. His
    self-will, his ambition, his Pariah position, as belonging to the Roman
    Catholic faith, the feebleness of his constitution, the uncertainty of
    his real creed, and one or two other circumstances we do not choose to
    name, combined to create a life-long ulcer in his heart and temper,
    against which the vigour of his mind, the enthusiasm of his literary
    tastes, and the warmth of his heart, struggled with much difficulty. He
    had not, in short, the basis of a truly great poet, either in
    imagination or in nature. Nor, with all his incredible industry, tact,
    and talent, did he ever rise into the “seventh heaven of invention.” A
    splendid sylph let us call him—a “giant angel” he was not.


    His culture, like his genius, was rather elegant than profound. He lived
    in an age when a knowledge of the classics, with a tincture of the
    metaphysics of the schools, was thought a good average stock of
    learning, although it was the age, too, of such mighty scholars as
    Bentley, Clarke, and Warlburton. Pope seems to have glanced over a great
    variety of subjects with a rapid recherce eye, not examined any one
    with a quiet, deep, longing, lingering, exhaustive look. He was no
    literary Behemoth, “trusting that he could draw up Jordan into his
    mouth.” He became thus neither an ill-informed writer, like Goldsmith,
    whose ingenuity must make up for his ignorance, nor one of those
    doctorum vatum, those learned poets, such as Dante, Milton, and
    Coleridge, whose works alone, according at least to Buchanan, are to
    obtain the rare and regal palm of immortality—


    Sola doctorum monumenta vatum
    Nesciunt fati imperium severi:
    Sola contemnunt Phlegethonta, et Orci

              Jura superbi.”


    That his philosophy was empirical, is proved by his “Essay on Man,”
    which, notwithstanding all its brilliant rhetoric, is the shallow
    version of a shallow system of naturalism. And one may accommodate to
    him the well-known saying of Lyndhurst about Lord Brougham, “who would
    have made a capital Chancellor if he had had only a little law;” so Pope
    was very well qualified to have translated Homer, barring his ignorance
    of Greek. But every page of his writings proves a wide and diversified
    knowledge—a knowledge, too, which he has perfectly under control—which
    he can make to go a great way—and by which, with admirable skill, he
    can subserve alike his moral and literary purpose. But the question now
    arises—What was his purpose? Was it worthy of his powers? Was it high,
    holy, and faithfully pursued? No poet, we venture to say, can be great
    without a great purpose. “Purpose is the edge and point of character; it
    is the stamp and superscription of genius; it is the direction on the
    letter of talent. Character without it is blunt and torpid; talent
    without it is a letter which, undirected, goes nowhere; genius without
    it is bullion, sluggish, splendid, and uncirculating.” Now, Pope's
    purpose seems, on the whole, dim and uncertain. He is indifferent to
    destruction, and careless about conserving. He is neither an infidel nor
    a Christian; no Whig, but no very ardent Tory either. He seems to wish
    to support morality, but his support is stumbling and precarious;
    although, on the other hand, notwithstanding his frequent coarseness of
    language and looseness of allusion, he exhibits no desire to overturn or
    undermine it. His bursts of moral feeling are very beautiful (such as
    that containing the noble lines—


    “Vice is undone if she forgets her earth,
    And stoops from angels to the dregs of birth.
    But 'tis the fall degrades her to a whore:
    Let greatness own her and she's mean no more.
    Her birth, her beauty, crowds and courts confess,
    Chaste matrons praise her, and grave bishops bless.
    In golden chains the willing world she draws,
    And hers the gospel is, and hers the laws;
    Mounts the tribunal, lifts her scarlet head,
    And sees pale Virtue carted in her stead.”)


    But they are brief, seem the result of momentary moods rather than the
    spray of a strong, steady current; and he soon turns from them to the
    expression of his petty chagrins and personal animosities. In satire, he
    has not the indomitable pace and deep-mouthed bellow of a Juvenal,
    pursuing his object like a bloodhound: he resembles more a half-angry,
    half-playful terrier. To obtain a terse and musical expression for his
    thought is his artistic purpose, but that of his mind and moral nature
    is not so apparent in his poetry. Indeed, we are tempted at times to
    class him with his own sylphs in this respect, as well as in the
    elegance and swiftness of his genius. They neither belonged to heaven
    nor hell, but vibrated between in graceful gyrations. They laughed at,
    and toyed with, all things—never rising to dangerous heights, never
    sinking into profound abysses—fancying a lock a universe, and a
    universe only a larger lock—dancing like evening ephemerae in the
    sunbeam, which was to be their sepulchre, and shutting their tiny eyes
    to all the solemn responsibilities, grave uncertainties, and mysterious
    destinies of human nature. And so, too often, did their poet.


    Pope's special faculties are easily seen, and may be briefly enumerated.
    Destitute of the highest imagination, and perhaps of constructive
    power—(he has produced many brilliant parts, and many little, but no
    large wholes)—he is otherwise prodigally endowed. He has a keen,
    strong, clear intellect, which, if it seldom reaches sublimity, never
    fails to eliminate sense. He has wit of a polished and vigorous
    kind—less easy, indeed, than Addison's, the very curl of whose lip was
    crucifixion to his foe. This wit, when exasperated into satire, is very
    formidable, for, like Addison's, it does its work with little noise.
    Pope whispers poetic perdition—he deals in drops of concentrated
    bitterness—he stabs with a poisoned bodkin—he touches his enemies into
    stone with the light and playful finger of a fairy—and his more
    elaborate invectives glitter all over with the polish of profound
    malignity. His knowledge of human nature, particularly of woman's heart,
    is great, but seems more the result of impish eavesdropping than of that
    thorough and genial insight which sympathy produces. He has listened at
    the keyhole, not by any “Open Sesame” entered the chamber. He has rather
    painted manners than men. His power of simulating passion is great; but
    the passion must, in general, be mingled with unnatural elements ere he
    can realise it—the game must be putrid ere he can enjoy its flavour. He
    has no humour, at least in his poetry. It is too much of an unconscious
    outflow, and partakes too much of the genial and the human nature for
    him. His fancy is lively and copious, but its poetical products often
    resemble the forced fruits of a hothouse rather than those of a natural
    soil and climate. His description of Sporus, lauded by Byron as a piece
    of imagination, is exceedingly artificial and far-fetched in its
    figures—a mere mass of smoked gumflowers. Compare for fancy the
    speeches of Mercutio, in “Romeo and Juliet,” the “Rape of the Lock,” if
    we would see the difference between a spontaneous and artificial
    outpouring of images, between a fancy as free as fervid, and one lashing
    itself into productiveness. His power of describing natural objects is
    far from first-rate; he enumerates instead of describing; he omits
    nothing in the scene except the one thing needful—the bright poetical
    gleam or haze which ought to have been there. There is the “grass" but
    not the “splendour”—the “flower” but not the “glory.” In depicting
    character, it is very different. His likenesses of men and women, so far
    as manners, external features, and the contrasts produced by the
    accidents of circumstances and the mutation of affairs, are inimitable.
    His power of complimenting is superior even to that of Louis XIV. He
    picks out the one best quality in a man, sets it in gold, and presents
    it as if he were conferring instead of describing a noble gift.


    “Would you be blest, despise low joys, low gains,
    Disdain whatever Cornbury disdains;
    Be virtuous, and be happy for your pains.”


    Pope's language seems as if it were laboriously formed by himself for
    his peculiar shape of mind, habits of thought, and style of poetry.
    Compared to all English before him, Pope's English is a new although a
    lesser language. He has so cut down, shorn, and trimmed the broad old
    oak of Shakspeare's speech, that it seems another tree altogether.
    Everything is so terse, so clear, so pointed, so elaborately easy, so
    monotonously brilliant, that you must pause to remember. “These are the
    very copulatives, diphthongs, and adjectives of Hooker, Milton, and
    Jeremy Taylor.” The change at first is pleasant, and has been generally
    popular; but those who know and love our early authors, soon miss their
    deep organ-tones, their gnarled strength, their intricate but intense
    sweetness, their varied and voluminous music, their linked chains of
    lightning, and feel the difference between the fabricator of clever
    lines and sparkling sentences, and the former of great passages and
    works. In keeping with his style is his versification, the incessant
    tinkling of a sheep-bell—sweet, small, monotonous—producing
    perfectly-melodious single lines, but no grand interwoven swells and
    well-proportioned masses of harmony. “Pope,” says Hazlitt, “has turned
    Pegasus into a rocking-horse.” The noble gallop of Dryden's verse is
    exchanged for a quick trot. And there is not even a point of comparison
    between his sweet sing-song, and the wavy, snow-like, spirit-like motion
    of Milton's loftier passages; or the gliding, pausing, fitful,
    river-like progress of Shakspeare's verse; or the fretted fury, and
    “torrent-rapture” of brave old Chapman in his translation of Homer; or
    the rich, long-drawn-out, slow-swimming, now soft-languishing, and now
    full-gushing melody of Spenser's “Faery Queen.”—Yet, within his own
    sphere, Pope was, as Scott calls him, a “Deacon of his craft;” he aimed
    at, and secured, correctness and elegance; his part is not the highest,
    but in it he approaches absolute perfection; and with all his monotony
    of manner and versification, he is one of the most interesting of
    writers, and many find a greater luxury in reading his pages than those
    of any other poet. He is the facile princeps of those poetical writers
    who have written for, and are so singularly appreciated by, the
    fastidious—that class who are more staggered by faults than delighted
    with beauties.


    Our glance at his individual works must be brief and cursory. His “Ode
    to Solitude” is the most simple and natural thing he ever wrote, and in
    it he seems to say to nature, “Vale, longum vale.” His “Pastorals" have
    an unnatural and luscious sweetness. He has sugared his milk; it is not,
    as it ought to be, warm from the cow, and fresh as the clover. How
    different his “Rural Life” from the rude, rough pictures of Theocritus,
    and the delightfully true and genial pages of the “Gentle Shepherd!” His
    “Windsor Forest” is an elegant accumulation of sweet sonnets and
    pleasant images, but the freshness of the dew is not resting on every
    bud and blade. No shadowy forms are seen retiring amidst the glades of
    the forest; no Uriels seem descending on the sudden slips of afternoon
    sunshine which pierce athwart the green or brown masses of foliage; and
    you cannot say of his descriptions that


    “Visions, as poetic eyes avow,
    Hang on each leaf and cling to every bough.”


    Shelley studied the scenery of his fine poem, “Alastor,” in the same
    shades with Pope; but he had, like Jonathan of old, touched his lips
    with a rod dipped in poetic honey, and his “eyes were enlightened" to
    see sights of beauty and mystery which to the other are denied. Keats
    could have comprised all the poetry of “Windsor Forest” into one sonnet
    or line; indeed, has he not done so, where, describing his soul
    following the note of the nightingale into the far depths of the woods,
    where she is pouring out her heart in song, he says—


    “And with thee fade away into the forest dim?”


    The “Essay on Criticism” is rather a wonderful, intellectual, and
    artistic feat, than a true poem. It is astonishing as the work of a boy
    of nineteen, and contains a unique collection of clever and sparkling
    sentences, displaying the highest powers of acuteness and assimilation,
    if not much profound and original insight or genius. This poem suggests
    the wish that more of our critics would write in verse. The music might
    lessen the malice, and set off the commonplace to advantage, so that if
    there were no “reason,” there might be at least “rhyme.” His “Lines to
    the Memory of an Unfortunate Lady” are too elaborate and artificial for
    the theme. It is a tale of intrigue, murder, and suicide, set to a
    musical snuff-box! His “Rape of the Lock” we have already characterised.
    It is an “Iliad in a nutshell,” an Epic of Lilliput, where all the
    proportions are accurately observed, and where the finishing is so exact
    and admirable, that you fancy the author to have had microscopic eyes.
    It contains certainly the most elegant and brilliant badinage, the most
    graceful raillery, the most finished nonsense, and one of the most
    exquisitely-managed machineries in the language. His “Eloisa and
    Abelard,” a poem beautiful and almost unequalled in execution, is ill
    chosen in subject. He compels you indeed to weep, but you blame and
    trample on your tears after they are shed. Pope in this poem, as Shelley
    in the “Cenci,” has tried to extract beauty from moral deformity, and to
    glorify putrefaction. But who can long love to gaze at worms, however
    well painted, or will be disposed to pardon the monstrous choice of a
    dead or demon bride for the splendour of her wedding-garment? The
    passion of the Eloisa and that of the Cenci were both indeed facts; but
    many facts should be veiled statues in the Temple of Truth. To do,
    however, both Pope and Shelley justice, they touch their painful and
    shocking themes with extreme delicacy. “Dryden,” well remarks Campbell,
    “would have given but a coarse draught of Eloisa's passion.” Pope's
    Epistles, Satires, Imitations, &c., contain much of the most spirited
    sense and elegant sarcasm in literature. The portraits of “Villars" and
    “Atticus” will occur to every reader as masterpieces in power, although
    we deem the latter grossly unjust to a good and great man. His Homer is
    rather an adaptation than a translation—far less a “transfusion" of the
    Grecian bard. Pope does not, indeed, clothe the old blind rhapsodist
    with a bag-wig and sword; but he does all short of this to make him a
    fine modern gentleman. Scott, we think, could have best rendered Homer
    in his ballad-rhyme. Chapman is Chapman, but he is not Homer. Pope is
    Pope, and Hobbes is Hobbes, and Sotheby is Sotheby, and Cowper is
    Cowper, each doing his best to render Homer, but none of them is the
    grand old Greek, whose lines are all simple and plain as brands, but
    like brands pointed on their edges with fire.


    The “Essay on Man” ought to have been called an “Epigram on Man,” or,
    better still, should have been propounded as a riddle, to which the word
    “Man” was to supply the solution. But an antithesis, epigram, or riddle
    on man of 1300 lines, is rather long. It seems so especially as there is
    no real or new light cast in it on man's nature or destiny. (We refer
    our readers to the notes of Dr Croly's edition for a running commentary
    of confutation to the “Essay on Man” distinguished by solid and
    unanswerable acuteness of argument.) But such an eloquent and ingenious
    puzzle as it is! It might have issued from the work-basket of Titania
    herself. It is another evidence of Pope's greatness in trifles. How he
    would have shone in fabricating the staves of the ark, or the fringes of
    the tabernacle!


    The “Dunciad” is in many respects the ablest, the most elaborate, and
    the most characteristic of Pope's poems. In embalming insignificance and
    impaling folly he seems to have found, at last, his most congenial work.
    With what apparently sovereign contempt, masterly ease, artistic calm,
    and judicial gravity, does he set about it! And once his museum of
    dunces is completed, with what dignity—the little tyrant that he
    was!—does he march through it, and with what complacency does he point
    to his slain and dried Dunces, and say, “Behold the work of my hands!”
    It never seems to have occurred to him that his poem was destined to be
    an everlasting memorial, not only of his enemies, but of the annoyance
    he had met from them—at once of his strength in crushing, and his
    weakness in feeling, their attacks, and in showing their mummies for
    money.


    That Pope deserves, on the whole, the name of “poet,” we are willing, as
    aforesaid, to concede. But he was the most artificial of true poets. He
    had in him a real though limited vein, but did not trust sufficiently to
    it, and at once weakened and strengthened it by his peculiar kind of
    cultivation. He weakened it as a faculty, but strengthened it as an art;
    he lessened its inward force, but increased the elegance and facility of
    its outward expression. What he might have attained, had he left his
    study and trim gardens, and visited the Alps, Snowdon, or the
    Grampians—had he studied Boileau less, and Dante, Milton, or the Bible
    more—we cannot tell; but he certainly, in this case, would have left
    works greater, if not more graceful, behind him; and if he had pleased
    his own taste and that of his age less, he might have more effectually
    touched the chord of the heart of all future time by his poetry. As it
    is, his works resemble rather the London Colosseum than Westminster
    Abbey. They are exquisite imitations of nature; but we never can apply
    to them the words of the poet—


    “O'er England's abbeys bends the sky,
    As on its friends, with kindred eye;
    For Nature gladly gave them place,
    Adopted them into her race,
    And granted them an equal date
    With Andes and with Ararat.”


    Read, and admired, Pope must always be—if not for his poetry and
    passion, yet for his elegance, wit, satiric force, fidelity as a painter
    of artificial life, and the clear, pellucid English. But his deficiency
    in the creative faculty (a deficiency very marked in two of his most
    lauded poems we have not specified, his “Messiah” and “Temple of Fame,”
    both eloquent imitations), his lack of profound thought, the general
    poverty of his natural pictures (there are some fine ones in “Eloisa and
    Abelard"), the coarse and bitter element often intermingled with his
    satire, the monotonous glitter of his verse, and the want of profound
    purpose in his writings, combine to class him below the first file of
    poets. And vain are all attempts, such as those of Byron and Lord
    Carlisle, to alter the general verdict. It is very difficult, after a
    time, either to raise or depress an acknowledged classic; and Pope must
    come, if he has not come already, to a peculiarly defined and strictly
    apportioned place on the shelf. He was unquestionably the poet of his
    age. But his age was far from being one of a lofty order: it was a low,
    languid, artificial, and lazily sceptical age. It loved to be tickled;
    and Pope tickled it with the finger of a master. It liked to be lulled,
    at other times, into half-slumber; and the soft and even monotonies of
    Pope's pastorals and “Windsor Forest” effected this end. It loved to be
    suspended in a state of semi-doubt, swung to and fro in agreeable
    equipoise; and the “Essay on Man” was precisely such a swing. It was
    fond of a mixture of strong English sense with French graces and charms
    of manner; and Pope supplied it. It was fond of keen, yet artfully
    managed satire; and Pope furnished it in abundance. It loved nothing
    that threatened greatly to disturb its equanimity or over-much to excite
    or arouse it; and there was little of this in Pope. Had he been a really
    great poet of the old Homer or Dante breed, he would have outshot his
    age, till he “dwindled in the distance;” but in lieu of immediate fame,
    and of elaborate lectures in the next century, to bolster it unduly up,
    all generations would have “risen and called him blessed.”


    We had intended some remarks on Pope as a prose-writer, and as a
    correspondent; but want of space has compelled us to confine ourselves
    to his poetry.











    MORAL ESSAYS.



    The 'Essay on Man' was intended to have been comprised in four books:—


    The first of which, the author has given us under that title, in four
    epistles.


    The second was to have consisted of the same number:—1. Of the extent
    and limits of human reason. 2. Of those arts and sciences, and of the
    parts of them, which are useful, and therefore attainable, together with
    those which are unuseful, and therefore unattainable. 3. Of the nature,
    ends, use, and application of the different capacities of men. 4. Of the
    use of learning, of the science of the world, and of wit; concluding
    with a satire against the misapplication of them, illustrated by
    pictures, characters, and examples.


    The third book regarded civil regimen, or the science of politics, in
    which the several forms of a republic were to have been examined and
    explained; together with the several modes of religious worship, as far
    forth as they affect society; between which the author always supposed
    there was the most interesting relation and closest connexion; so that
    this part would have treated of civil and religious society in their
    full extent.


    The fourth and last book concerned private ethics or practical morality,
    considered in all the circumstances, orders, professions, and stations
    of human life.


    The scheme of all this had been maturely digested, and communicated to
    the Lord Bolingbroke, Dr Swift, and one or two more, and was intended
    for the only work of his riper years; but was, partly through ill
    health, partly through discouragements from the depravity of the times,
    and partly on prudential and other considerations, interrupted,
    postponed, and, lastly, in a manner laid aside.


    But as this was the author's favourite work, which more exactly
    reflected the image of his strong capacious mind, and as we can have but
    a very imperfect idea of it from the disjecta membra poetae that now
    remain, it may not be amiss to be a little more particular concerning
    each of these projected books. The first, as it treats of man in the
    abstract, and considers him in general under every one of his relations,
    becomes the foundation, and furnishes out the subjects, of the three
    following; so that—


    The second book takes up again the first and second epistles of the
    first book, and treats of man in his intellectual capacity at large, as
    has been explained above. Of this, only a small part of the conclusion
    (which, as we said, was to have contained a satire against the
    misapplication of wit and learning) may be found in the fourth book of
    'The Dunciad,' and up and down, occasionally, in the other three.


    The third book, in like manner, reassumes the subject of the third
    epistle of the first, which treats of man in his social, political, and
    religious capacity. But this part the poet afterwards conceived might be
    best executed in an epic poem; as the action would make it more
    animated, and the fable less invidious; in which all the great
    principles of true and false governments and religions should be chiefly
    delivered in feigned examples.


    The fourth and last book pursues the subject of the fourth epistle of
    the first, and treats of ethics, or practical morality; and would have
    consisted of many members; of which the four following epistles were
    detached portions: the two first, on the characters of men and women,
    being the introductory part of this concluding book.—Warburton.



    EPISTLE I.—TO SIR RICHARD TEMPLE, LORD COBHAM.


    ARGUMENT.


    OF THE KNOWLEDGE AND CHARACTERS OF MEN.


    That it is not sufficient for this knowledge to consider man in the
    abstract: books will not serve the purpose, nor yet our own experience
    singly, ver. 1. General maxims, unless they be formed upon both, will be
    but notional, ver. 10. Some peculiarity in every man, characteristic to
    himself, yet varying from himself, ver. 15. Difficulties arising from
    our own passions, fancies, faculties, &c., ver. 31. The shortness of
    life, to observe in, and the uncertainty of the principles of action in
    men, to observe by, ver. 37, &c. Our own principle of action often hid
    from ourselves, ver. 41. Some few characters plain, but in general
    confounded, dissembled, or inconsistent, ver. 51. The same man utterly
    different in different places and seasons, ver. 71. Unimaginable
    weaknesses in the greatest, ver. 70, &c. Nothing constant and certain
    but God and nature, ver. 95. No judging of the motives from the actions;
    the same actions proceeding from contrary motives, and the same motives
    influencing contrary actions, ver. 100. II. Yet to form characters, we
    can only take the strongest actions of a man's life, and try to make
    them agree: the utter uncertainty of this, from nature itself, and from
    policy, ver. 120. Characters given according to the rank of men of the
    world, ver. 135. And some reason for it, ver. 140. Education alters the
    nature, or at least character of many, ver. 149. Actions, passions,
    opinions, manners, humours, or principles, all subject to change. No
    judging by nature, from ver. 158 to 174. III. It only remains to find
    (if we can) his ruling passion: that will certainly influence all the
    rest, and can reconcile the seeming or real inconsistency of all his
    actions, ver. 175. Instanced in the extraordinary character of Clodio,
    ver. 179. A caution against mistaking second qualities for first, which
    will destroy all possibility of the knowledge of mankind, ver. 210.
    Examples of the strength of the ruling passion, and its continuation to
    the last breath, ver. 222, &c.


    Yes, you despise the man to books confined,
    Who from his study rails at human kind;
    Though what he learns he speaks, and may advance
    Some general maxims, or be right by chance.
    The coxcomb bird, so talkative and grave,
    That from his cage cries 'Cuckold,' 'Whore,' and 'Knave,'
    Though many a passenger he rightly call,
    You hold him no philosopher at all.


    And yet the fate of all extremes is such,
    Men may be read, as well as books, too much. 10
    To observations which ourselves we make,
    We grow more partial for the observer's sake;
    To written wisdom, as another's, less:
    Maxims are drawn from notions, those from guess.
    There's some peculiar in each leaf and grain,
    Some unmark'd fibre, or some varying vein:
    Shall only man be taken in the gross?
    Grant but as many sorts of mind as moss.


    That each from other differs, first confess;
    Next that he varies from himself no less: 20
    Add nature's, custom's, reason's, passion's strife,
    And all opinion's colours cast on life.


    Our depths who fathoms, or our shallows finds,
    Quick whirls, and shifting eddies, of our minds?
    On human actions reason though you can,
    It may be reason, but it is not man:
    His principle of action once explore,
    That instant 'tis his principle no more.
    Like following life through creatures you dissect,
    You lose it in the moment you detect. 30


    Yet more; the difference is as great between
    The optics seeing, as the objects seen.
    All manners take a tincture from our own;
    Or come discolour'd, through our passions shown;
    Or fancy's beam enlarges, multiplies,
    Contracts, inverts, and gives ten thousand dyes.


    Nor will life's stream for observation stay,
    It hurries all too fast to mark their way:
    In vain sedate reflections we would make,
    When half our knowledge we must snatch, not take. 40
    Oft, in the passions' wild rotation toss'd,
    Our spring of action to ourselves is lost:
    Tired, not determined, to the last we yield,
    And what comes then is master of the field.
    As the last image of that troubled heap,
    When sense subsides, and fancy sports in sleep,
    (Though past the recollection of the thought),
    Becomes the stuff of which our dream is wrought:
    Something as dim to our internal view,
    Is thus, perhaps, the cause of most we do. 50


    True, some are open, and to all men known;
    Others so very close, they're hid from none;
    (So darkness strikes the sense no less than light)
    Thus gracious Chandos is beloved at sight;
    And every child hates Shylock, though his soul
    Still sits at squat, and peeps not from its hole.
    At half mankind when generous Manly raves,
    All know 'tis virtue, for he thinks them knaves:
    When universal homage Umbra pays,
    All see 'tis vice, and itch of vulgar praise. 60
    When flattery glares, all hate it in a queen,
    While one there is who charms us with his spleen.


    But these plain characters we rarely find;
    Though strong the bent, yet quick the turns of mind:
    Or puzzling contraries confound the whole;
    Or affectations quite reverse the soul.
    The dull, flat falsehood serves for policy;
    And, in the cunning, truth itself's a lie:
    Unthought-of frailties cheat us in the wise;
    The fool lies hid in inconsistencies. 70


    See the same man, in vigour, in the gout;
    Alone, in company; in place, or out;
    Early at business, and at hazard late;
    Mad at a fox-chase, wise at a debate;
    Drunk at a borough, civil at a ball;
    Friendly at Hackney, faithless at Whitehall.


    Catius is ever moral, ever grave,
    Thinks who endures a knave, is next a knave,
    Save just at dinner—then prefers, no doubt,
    A rogue with venison to a saint without. 80


    Who would not praise Patricio's[1] high desert,
    His hand unstain'd, his uncorrupted heart,
    His comprehensive head, all interests weigh'd,
    All Europe saved, yet Britain not betray'd?
    He thanks you not, his pride is in picquet,
    Newmarket fame, and judgment at a bet.


    What made (says Montaigne, or more sage Charron[2])
    Otho a warrior, Cromwell a buffoon?
    A perjured prince[3] a leaden saint revere,
    A godless regent[4] tremble at a star? 90
    The throne a bigot keep, a genius quit,
    Faithless through piety, and duped through wit?
    Europe a woman, child, or dotard rule,
    And just her wisest monarch made a fool?


    Know, God and Nature only are the same:
    In man, the judgment shoots at flying game;
    A bird of passage! gone as soon as found,
    Now in the moon perhaps, now under ground.


    II. In vain the sage, with retrospective eye,
    Would from the apparent what conclude the why, 100
    Infer the motive from the deed, and show
    That what we chanced was what we meant to do.
    Behold! if fortune or a mistress frowns,
    Some plunge in business, others shave their crowns:
    To ease the soul of one oppressive weight,
    This quits an empire, that embroils a state:
    The same adust complexion has impell'd
    Charles[5] to the convent, Philip[6] to the field.


    Not always actions show the man: we find
    Who does a kindness, is not therefore kind; 110
    Perhaps prosperity becalm'd his breast,
    Perhaps the wind just shifted from the east:
    Not therefore humble he who seeks retreat,
    Pride guides his steps, and bids him shun the great:
    Who combats bravely is not therefore brave,
    He dreads a death-bed like the meanest slave:
    Who reasons wisely is not therefore wise,
    His pride in reasoning, not in acting, lies.


    But grant that actions best discover man;
    Take the most strong, and sort them as you can: 120
    The few that glare, each character must mark,
    You balance not the many in the dark.
    What will you do with such as disagree?
    Suppress them, or miscall them policy?
    Must then at once (the character to save)
    The plain rough hero turn a crafty knave?
    Alas! in truth the man but changed his mind,
    Perhaps was sick, in love, or had not dined.
    Ask why from Britain Caesar would retreat?
    Caesar himself might whisper he was beat. 130
    Why risk the world's great empire for a punk?[7]
    Caesar perhaps might answer he was drunk.
    But, sage historians! 'tis your task to prove
    One action, conduct; one, heroic love.


    'Tis from high life high characters are drawn;
    A saint in crape is twice a saint in lawn;
    A judge is just, a chancellor juster still;
    A gownman, learn'd; a bishop, what you will;
    Wise, if a minister; but, if a king,
    More wise, more learn'd, more just, more everything, 140
    Court-virtues bear, like gems, the highest rate,
    Born where Heaven's influence scarce can penetrate:
    In life's low vale, the soil the virtues like,
    They please as beauties, here as wonders strike.
    Though the same sun with all-diffusive rays
    Blush in the rose, and in the diamond blaze,
    We prize the stronger effort of his power,
    And justly set the gem above the flower.


    'Tis education forms the common mind,
    Just as the twig is bent, the tree's inclined. 150
    Boastful and rough, your first son is a squire;
    The next a tradesman, meek, and much a liar;
    Tom struts a soldier, open, bold, and brave;
    Will sneaks a scrivener, an exceeding knave:
    Is he a Churchman? then he's fond of power:
    A Quaker? sly: A Presbyterian? sour:
    A smart free-thinker? all things in an hour.
    Ask men's opinions: Scoto now shall tell
    How trade increases, and the world goes well;
    Strike off his pension, by the setting sun, 160
    And Britain, if not Europe, is undone.


    That gay free-thinker, a fine talker once,
    What turns him now a stupid silent dunce?
    Some god, or spirit he has lately found;
    Or chanced to meet a minister that frown'd.


    Judge we by nature? Habit can efface,
    Interest o'ercome, or policy take place:
    By actions? those uncertainty divides:
    By passions? these dissimulation hides:
    Opinions? they still take a wider range: 170
    Find, if you can, in what you cannot change.


    Manners with fortunes, humours turn with climes,
    Tenets with books, and principles with times.


    III. Search, then, the ruling passion: there, alone,
    The wild are constant, and the cunning known;
    The fool consistent, and the false sincere;
    Priests, princes, women, no dissemblers here.
    This clue once found, unravels all the rest,
    The prospect clears, and Wharton stands confess'd.
    Wharton, the scorn and wonder of our days, 180
    Whose ruling passion was the lust of praise:
    Born with whate'er could win it from the wise,
    Women and fools must like him or he dies;
    Though wondering senates hung on all he spoke,
    The club must hail him master of the joke.
    Shall parts so various aim at nothing new?
    He'll shine a Tully and a Wilmot[8] too.
    Then turns repentant, and his God adores
    With the same spirit that he drinks and whores;
    Enough if all around him but admire, 190
    And now the punk applaud, and now the friar.
    Thus with each gift of nature and of art,
    And wanting nothing but an honest heart;
    Grown all to all, from no one vice exempt;
    And most contemptible, to shun contempt;
    His passion still to covet general praise,
    His life, to forfeit it a thousand ways;
    A constant bounty which no friend has made;
    An angel tongue, which no man can persuade;
    A fool, with more of wit than half mankind, 200
    Too rash for thought, for action too refined;
    A tyrant to the wife his heart approves;
    A rebel to the very king he loves;
    He dies, sad outcast of each church and state,
    And, harder still! flagitious, yet not great.
    Ask you why Wharton broke through every rule
    'Twas all for fear the knaves should call him fool.


    Nature well known, no prodigies remain,
    Comets are regular, and Wharton plain.


    Yet, in this search, the wisest may mistake, 210
    If second qualities for first they take.
    When Catiline by rapine swell'd his store;
    When Caesar made a noble dame a whore;[9]
    In this the lust, in that the avarice
    Were means, not ends; ambition was the vice.
    That very Caesar, born in Scipio's days,
    Had aim'd, like him, by chastity at praise.
    Lucullus, when frugality could charm,
    Had roasted turnips in the Sabine farm.
    In vain the observer eyes the builder's toil, 220
    But quite mistakes the scaffold for the pile.


    In this one passion man can strength enjoy,
    As fits give vigour, just when they destroy.
    Time, that on all things lays his lenient hand,
    Yet tames not this; it sticks to our last sand.
    Consistent in our follies and our sins,
    Here honest Nature ends as she begins.


    Old politicians chew on wisdom past,
    And totter on in business to the last;
    As weak, as earnest, and as gravely out, 230
    As sober Lanesborough[10] dancing in the gout.


    Behold a reverend sire, whom want of grace
    Has made the father of a nameless race,
    Shoved from the wall perhaps, or rudely press'd
    By his own son, that passes by unbless'd:
    Still to his wench he crawls on knocking knees,
    And envies every sparrow that he sees.


    A salmon's belly, Helluo, was thy fate;
    The doctor call'd, declares all help too late:
    'Mercy!' cries Helluo, 'mercy on my soul! 240
    Is there no hope? Alas! then bring the jowl.'


    The frugal crone, whom praying priests attend,
    Still tries to save the hallow'd taper's end,
    Collects her breath, as ebbing life retires,
    For one puff more, and in that puff expires.


    'Odious! in woollen! 'twould a saint provoke,'
    (Were the last words that poor Narcissa[11] spoke),
    'No, let a charming chintz and Brussels lace
    Wrap my cold limbs, and shade my lifeless face:
    One would not, sure, be frightful when one's dead— 250
    And, Betty, give this cheek a little red.'


    The courtier smooth, who forty years had shined
    An humble servant to all human kind,
    Just brought out this, when scarce his tongue could stir,
    'If—where I'm going—I could serve you, sir?'


    'I give and I devise' (old Euclio said,
    And sigh'd) 'my lands and tenements to Ned.'
    'Your money, sir?' 'My money, sir, what! all?
    Why—if I must'—(then wept)—'I give it Paul.'
    'The manor, sir?'—'The manor! hold,' (he cried), 260
    'Not that—I cannot part with that'—and died.


    And you, brave Cobham! to the latest breath
    Shall feel your ruling passion strong in death:
    Such in those moments as in all the past,


    'Oh, save my country, Heaven!' shall be your last.



    VARIATIONS.


    After VER. 86, in the former editions—


    Triumphant leaders, at an army's head,
    Hemm'd round with glories, pilfer cloth or bread:
    As meanly plunder as they bravely fought,
    Now save a people, and now save a groat.


    VER. 129, in the former editions—


    Ask why from Britain Caesar made retreat?
    Caesar himself would tell you he was beat.
    The mighty Czar what moved to wed a punk?
    The mighty Czar would tell you he was drunk.


    In the former editions, VER. 208—


    Nature well known, no miracles remain.





    EPISTLE II.—TO A LADY.


    OF THE CHARACTERS OF WOMEN.


    Nothing so true as what you once let fall—
    'Most women have no characters at all.'
    Matter too soft a lasting mark to bear,
    And best distinguish'd by black, brown, or fair.


    How many pictures of one nymph we view,
    All how unlike each other, all how true!
    Arcadia's Countess, here, in ermined pride,
    Is there, Pastora by a fountain side.
    Here Fannia, leering on her own good man,
    And there, a naked Leda with a swan. 10
    Let then the fair one beautifully cry,
    In Magdalen's loose hair and lifted eye,
    Or dress'd in smiles of sweet Cecilia shine,
    With simpering angels, palms, and harps divine;
    Whether the charmer sinner it or saint it,
    If folly grow romantic, I must paint it.


    Come then, the colours and the ground prepare!
    Dip in the rainbow, trick her off in air;
    Choose a firm cloud, before it fall, and in it
    Catch, ere she change, the Cynthia of this minute. 20


    Rufa, whose eye quick glancing o'er the park,
    Attracts each light gay meteor of a spark,
    Agrees as ill with Rufa studying Locke,
    As Sappho's[12] diamonds with her dirty smock;
    Or Sappho at her toilet's greasy task,
    With Sappho fragrant at an evening mask:
    So morning insects that in muck begun,
    Shine, buzz, and fly-blow in the setting sun.


    How soft is Silia! fearful to offend;
    The frail one's advocate, the weak one's friend: 30
    To her, Calista proved her conduct nice;
    And good Simplicius asks of her advice.
    Sudden, she storms! she raves! You tip the wink,
    But spare your censure—Silia does not drink.
    All eyes may see from what the change arose,
    All eyes may see—a pimple on her nose.


    Papillia, wedded to her amorous spark,
    Sighs for the shades—'How charming is a park!'
    A park is purchased, but the fair he sees
    All bathed in tears—'Oh odious, odious trees!' 40


    Ladies, like variegated tulips, show,
    'Tis to their changes half their charms we owe;
    Fine by defect, and delicately weak,
    Their happy spots the nice admirer take.
    'Twas thus Calypso once each heart alarm'd,
    Awed without virtue, without beauty charm'd;
    Her tongue bewitch'd as oddly as her eyes,
    Less wit than mimic, more a wit than wise;
    Strange graces still, and stranger flights she had,
    Was just not ugly, and was just not mad; 50
    Yet ne'er so sure our passion to create,
    As when she touch'd the brink of all we hate.


    Narcissa's[13] nature, tolerably mild,
    To make a wash, would hardly stew a child;
    Has even been proved to grant a lover's prayer,
    And paid a tradesman once, to make him stare;
    Gave alms at Easter, in a Christian trim,
    And made a widow happy, for a whim.
    Why then declare good-nature is her scorn,
    When 'tis by that alone she can be borne 60
    Why pique all mortals, yet affect a name?
    A fool to pleasure, yet a slave to fame:
    Now deep in Taylor and the Book of Martyrs,
    Now drinking citron with his Grace and Chartres:
    Now conscience chills her, and now passion burns;
    And atheism and religion take their turns;
    A very heathen in the carnal part,
    Yet still a sad, good Christian at her heart.


    See Sin in state, majestically drunk;
    Proud as a peeress, prouder as a punk; 70
    Chaste to her husband, frank to all beside,
    A teeming mistress, but a barren bride.
    What then? let blood and body bear the fault,
    Her head's untouch'd, that noble seat of thought:
    Such this day's doctrine—in another fit
    She sins with poets through pure love of wit.
    What has not fired her bosom or her brain—
    Caesar and Tall-boy, Charles and Charlemagne?
    As Helluo, late dictator of the feast,
    The nose of haut gout, and the tip of taste, 80
    Critiqued your wine, and analysed your meat,
    Yet on plain pudding deign'd at home to eat;
    So Philomede,[14] lecturing all mankind
    On the soft passion and the taste refined,
    The address, the delicacy—stoops at once,
    And makes her hearty meal upon a dunce.


    Flavia's a wit, has too much sense to pray;
    To toast our wants and wishes, is her way;
    Nor asks of God, but of her stars, to give
    The mighty blessing, 'While we live, to live.' 90
    Then all for death, that opiate of the soul!
    Lucretia's dagger, Rosamonda's bowl.
    Say, what can cause such impotence of mind?
    A spark too fickle, or a spouse too kind.


    Wise wretch! with pleasures too refined to please;
    With too much spirit to be e'er at ease;
    With too much quickness ever to be taught;
    With too much thinking to have common thought:
    You purchase pain with all that joy can give,
    And die of nothing, but a rage to live. 100


    Turn then from wits; and look on Simo's mate,
    No ass so meek, no ass so obstinate.
    Or her, that owns her faults, but never mends,
    Because she's honest, and the best of friends.
    Or her, whose life the church and scandal share,
    For ever in a passion or a prayer.
    Or her, who laughs at hell, but (like her Grace[15])
    Cries, 'Ah! how charming, if there's no such place!'
    Or who in sweet vicissitude appears
    Of mirth and opium, ratafia and tears, 110
    The daily anodyne, and nightly draught,
    To kill those foes to fair ones—time and thought.
    Woman and fool are two hard things to hit;
    For true no-meaning puzzles more than wit.


    But what are these to great Atossa's[16] mind?
    Scarce once herself, by turns all womankind!
    Who, with herself, or others, from her birth
    Finds all her life one warfare upon earth:
    Shines, in exposing knaves, and painting fools,
    Yet is whate'er she hates and ridicules. 120
    No thought advances, but her eddy brain
    Whisks it about, and down it goes again.
    Full sixty years the world has been her trade,
    The wisest fool much time has ever made.
    From loveless youth to uninspected age,
    No passion gratified, except her rage.
    So much the fury still outran the wit,
    The pleasure miss'd her, and the scandal hit.
    Who breaks with her, provokes revenge from hell,
    But he's a bolder man who dares be well. 130
    Her every turn with violence pursued,
    Nor more a storm her hate than gratitude:
    To that each passion turns, or soon or late;
    Love, if it makes her yield, must make her hate:
    Superiors? death! and equals? what a curse!
    But an inferior not dependent? worse!
    Offend her, and she knows not to forgive:
    Oblige her, and she'll hate you while you live:
    But die, and she'll adore you—then the bust
    And temple rise—then fall again to dust. 140
    Last night, her lord was all that's good and great:
    A knave this morning, and his will a cheat.
    Strange! by the means defeated of the ends,
    By spirit robb'd of power, by warmth of friends,
    By wealth of followers! without one distress,
    Sick of herself through very selfishness!
    Atossa, cursed with every granted prayer,
    Childless with all her children, wants an heir.
    To heirs unknown descends the unguarded store,
    Or wanders, Heaven-directed, to the poor. 150


    Pictures like these, dear Madam, to design,
    Asks no firm hand, and no unerring line;
    Some wandering touches, some reflected light,
    Some flying stroke alone can hit 'em right:
    For how should equal colours do the knack?
    Chameleons who can paint in white and black?


    'Yet Chloe, sure, was form'd without a spot'—
    Nature in her then err'd not, but forgot.
    'With every pleasing, every prudent part,
    Say, what can Chloe[17] want?'—She wants a heart. 160
    She speaks, behaves, and acts just as she ought;
    But never, never reach'd one generous thought.
    Virtue she finds too painful an endeavour,
    Content to dwell in decencies for ever.
    So very reasonable, so unmoved,
    As never yet to love, or to be loved.
    She, while her lover pants upon her breast,
    Can mark the figures on an Indian chest;
    And when she sees her friend in deep despair,
    Observes how much a chintz exceeds mohair. 170
    Forbid it, Heaven! a favour or a debt
    She e'er should cancel—but she may forget.
    Safe is your secret still in Chloe's ear;
    But none of Chloe's shall you ever hear.
    Of all her dears she never slander'd one,
    But cares not if a thousand are undone.
    Would Chloe know if you're alive or dead?
    She bids her footman put it in her head.
    Chloe is prudent—would you, too, be wise?
    Then never break your heart when Chloe dies. 180


    One certain portrait may (I grant) be seen,
    Which Heaven has varnish'd out, and made a queen:
    The same for ever! and described by all
    With truth and goodness, as with crown and ball.
    Poets heap virtues, painters gems at will,
    And show their zeal, and hide their want of skill.
    'Tis well—but, artists! who can paint or write,
    To draw the naked is your true delight.
    That robe of quality so struts and swells,
    None see what parts of nature it conceals: 190
    The exactest traits of body or of mind,
    We owe to models of an humble kind.
    If Queensberry to strip there's no compelling,
    'Tis from a handmaid we must take an Helen
    From peer or bishop 'tis no easy thing
    To draw the man who loves his God, or king:
    Alas! I copy (or my draught would fail)
    From honest Mahomet[18], or plain Parson Hale.[19]


    But grant, in public men sometimes are shown,
    A woman's seen in private life alone: 200
    Our bolder talents in full light display'd;
    Your virtues open fairest in the shade.
    Bred to disguise, in public 'tis you hide;
    There, none distinguish 'twixt your shame or pride,
    Weakness or delicacy; all so nice,
    That each may seem a virtue, or a vice.


    In men, we various ruling passions find;
    In women, two almost divide the kind;
    Those, only fix'd, they first or last obey,
    The love of pleasure, and the love of sway. 210


    That, Nature gives; and where the lesson taught
    Is but to please, can pleasure seem a fault?
    Experience, this; by man's oppression curst,
    They seek the second not to lose the first.


    Men, some to business, some to pleasure take;
    But every woman is at heart a rake:
    Men, some to quiet, some to public strife;
    But every lady would be queen for life.


    Yet mark the fate of a whole sex of queens!
    Power all their end, but beauty all the means: 220
    In youth they conquer, with so wild a rage,
    As leaves them scarce a subject in their age:
    For foreign glory, foreign joy, they roam;
    No thought of peace or happiness at home.
    But wisdom's triumph is well-timed retreat,
    As hard a science to the fair as great!
    Beauties, like tyrants, old and friendless grown,
    Yet hate repose, and dread to be alone,
    Worn out in public, weary every eye,
    Nor leave one sigh behind them when they die. 230


    Pleasure the sex, as children birds, pursue,
    Still out of reach, yet never out of view;
    Sure, if they catch, to spoil the toy at most,
    To covet flying, and regret when lost:
    At last, to follies youth could scarce defend,
    It grows their age's prudence to pretend;
    Ashamed to own they gave delight before,
    Reduced to feign it, when they give no more:
    As hags hold Sabbaths, less for joy than spite,
    So these their merry, miserable night; 240
    Still round and round the ghosts of beauty glide,
    And haunt the places where their honour died.


    See how the world its veterans rewards!
    A youth of frolics, an old age of cards;
    Fair to no purpose, artful to no end,
    Young without lovers, old without a friend;
    A fop their passion, but their prize a sot,
    Alive, ridiculous; and dead, forgot!


    Ah, friend! to dazzle let the vain design;
    To raise the thought, and touch the heart, be thine! 250
    That charm shall grow, while what fatigues the ring,
    Flaunts and goes down, an unregarded thing:
    So when the sun's broad beam has tired the sight,
    All mild ascends the moon's more sober light,
    Serene in virgin modesty she shines,
    And unobserved the glaring orb declines.


    Oh! bless'd with temper, whose unclouded ray
    Can make to-morrow cheerful as to-day;
    She, who can love a sister's charms, or hear
    Sighs for a daughter with unwounded ear; 260
    She, who ne'er answers till a husband cools,
    Or, if she rales him, never shows she rules;
    Charms by accepting, by submitting sways,
    Yet has her humour most when she obeys;
    Let fops or fortune fly which way they will;
    Disdains all loss of tickets, or codille;
    Spleen, vapours, or small-pox, above them all,
    And mistress of herself though China fall.


    And yet, believe me, good as well as ill,
    Woman's at best a contradiction still. 270
    Heaven, when it strives to polish all it can
    Its last, best work, but forms a softer man;
    Picks from each sex, to make the favourite blest,
    Your love of pleasure or desire of rest:
    Blends, in exception to all general rules,
    Your taste of follies, with our scorn of fools:
    Reserve with frankness, art with truth allied,
    Courage with softness, modesty with pride;
    Fix'd principles, with fancy ever new;
    Shakes all together, and produces—you. 280


    Be this a woman's fame: with this unbless'd,
    Toasts live a scorn, and queens may die a jest.
    This Phoebus promised (I forget the year)
    When those blue eyes first open'd on the sphere;
    Ascendant Phoebus watch'd that hour with care,
    Averted half your parents' simple prayer;
    And gave you beauty, but denied the pelf
    That buys your sex a tyrant o'er itself.
    The generous god, who wit and gold refines,
    And ripens spirits as he ripens mines, 290
    Kept dross for duchesses, the world shall know it,
    To you gave sense, good-humour, and a poet.



    VARIATIONS.


    VER. 77 in the MS.—


    In whose mad brain the mix'd ideas roll
    Of Tall-toy's breeches, and of Caesar's soul.


    After VER. 122 in the MS.—


    Oppress'd with wealth and wit, abundance sad!
    One makes her poor, the other makes her mad.


    After VER. 148 in the MS.—


    This Death decides, nor lets the blessing fall
    On any one she hates, but on them all.
    Cursed chance! this only could afflict her more,
    If any part should wander to the poor.


    After VER. 198 in the MS.—


    Fain I'd in Fulvia spy the tender wife;
    I cannot prove it on her, for my life:
    And, for a noble pride, I blush no less,
    Instead of Berenice, to think on Bess.
    Thus while immortal Gibber only sings
    (As ——-and H—-y preach) for queens and kings,
    The nymph that ne'er read Milton's mighty line,
    May, if she love, and merit verse, have mine


    VER. 207 in the first edition—


    In several men we several passions find;
    In women, two almost divide the kind.



    EPISTLE III.[20]—TO ALLEN LORD BATHURST.


    ARGUMENT.


    OF THE USE OF RICHES.


    That it is known to few, most falling into one of the extremes, avarice
    or profusion, ver. 1., &c. The point discussed, whether the invention of
    money has been more commodious, or pernicious to mankind, ver. 21 to 77.
    That riches, either to the avaricious or the prodigal, cannot afford
    happiness, scarcely necessaries, ver. 89 to 160. That avarice is an
    absolute frenzy, without an end or purpose, ver. 113 to 152. Conjectures
    about the motives of avaricious men, ver. 121 to 153. That the conduct
    of men, with respect to riches, can only be accounted for by the order
    of Providence, which works the general good out of extremes, and brings
    all to its great end by perpetual revolutions, ver. 161 to 178. How a
    miser acts upon principles which appear to him reasonable, ver. 179. How
    a prodigal does the same, ver. l99. The due medium, and true use of
    riches, ver. 219. The Man of Ross, ver. 250. The fate of the profuse and
    the covetous, in two examples; both miserable in life and in death, ver.
    300, &c. The story of Sir Balaam, ver. 339 to the end.


    P. Who shall decide, when doctors disagree,
    And soundest casuists doubt, like you and me?
    You hold the word, from Jove to Momus given,
    That man was made the standing jest of Heaven;
    And gold but sent to keep the fools in play,
    For some to heap, and some to throw away.


    But I, who think more highly of our kind,
    (And, surely, Heaven and I are of a mind)
    Opine, that Nature, as in duty bound,
    Deep hid the shining mischief under ground: 10
    But when, by man's audacious labour won,
    Flamed forth this rival to its sire, the Sun,
    Then careful Heaven supplied two sorts of men,
    To squander these, and those to hide again.


    Like doctors thus, when much dispute has pass'd,
    We find our tenets just the same at last.
    Both fairly owning, riches, in effect,
    No grace of Heaven or token of the elect;
    Given to the fool, the mad, the vain, the evil,
    To Ward,[21] to Waters, Chartres,[22] and the devil. 20


    B. What nature wants, commodious gold bestows,
    'Tis thus we eat the bread another sows.


    P. But how unequal it bestows, observe,
    Tis thus we riot, while who sow it starve:
    What nature wants (a phrase I much distrust)
    Extends to luxury, extends to lust:
    Useful, I grant, it serves what life requires,
    But dreadful too, the dark assassin hires:


    B. Trade it may help, society extend.


    P. But lures the pirate, and corrupts the friend. 30


    B. It raises armies in a nation's aid.


    P. But bribes a senate, and the land's betray'd.
    In vain may heroes fight, and patriots rave;
    If secret gold sap on from knave to knave.
    Once, we confess, beneath the patriot's cloak,[23]
    From the crack'd bag the dropping guinea spoke,
    And jingling down the back-stairs, told the crew,
    'Old Cato is as great a rogue as you.'
    Blest paper-credit! last and best supply!
    That lends corruption lighter wings to fly! 40
    Gold imp'd by thee, can compass hardest things,
    Can pocket states, can fetch or carry kings;
    A single leaf shall waft an army o'er,
    Or ship off senates[24] to a distant shore;
    A leaf, like Sibyl's, scatter to and fro
    Our fates and fortunes, as the winds shall blow:
    Pregnant with thousands flits the scrap unseen,
    And silent sells a king, or buys a queen,


    Oh! that such bulky bribes as all might see,
    Still, as of old, encumber'd villainy! 50
    Could France or Rome divert our brave designs,
    With all their brandies, or with all their wines?
    What could they more than knights and squires confound,
    Or water all the quorum ten miles round?
    A statesman's slumbers how this speech would spoil!
    'Sir, Spain has sent a thousand jars of oil;
    Huge bales of British cloth blockade the door;
    A hundred oxen at your levee roar.'


    Poor avarice one torment more would find;
    Nor could profusion squander all in kind. 60
    Astride his cheese, Sir Morgan might we meet;
    And Worldly crying coals[25] from street to street,
    Whom, with a wig so wild, and mien so mazed,
    Pity mistakes for some poor tradesman crazed.
    Had Colepepper's[26] whole wealth been hops and hogs,
    Could he himself have sent it to the dogs?
    His Grace will game: to White's a bull be led,
    With spurning heels, and with a butting head:
    To White's be carried, as to ancient games,
    Fair coursers, vases, and alluring dames. 70
    Shall then Uxorio, if the stakes he sweep,
    Bear home six whores and make his lady weep?
    Or soft Adonis, so perfumed and fine,
    Drive to St James's a whole herd of swine?
    Oh filthy check on all industrious skill,
    To spoil the nation's last great trade—quadrille?
    Since then, my lord, on such a world we fall,
    What say you?


    B. Say! Why, take it, gold and all.


    P. What riches give us, let us then inquire:
    Meat, fire, and clothes.


    B. What more?


    P. Meat, clothes, and fire. 80
    Is this too little? would you more than live?
    Alas! 'tis more than Turner[27] finds they give.
    Alas! 'tis more than (all his visions past)
    Unhappy Wharton, waking, found at last!
    What can they give? to dying Hopkins,[28] heirs;
    To Chartres, vigour; Japhet,[29] nose and ears?
    Can they in gems bid pallid Hippia glow,
    In Fulvia's buckle ease the throbs below;
    Or heal, old Narses, thy obscener ail,
    With all the embroidery plaster'd at thy tail? 90
    They might (were Harpax not too wise to spend)
    Give Harpax' self the blessing of a friend;
    Or find some doctor that would save the life
    Of wretched Shylock, spite of Shylock's wife:
    But thousands die, without or this or that,
    Die, and endow a college, or a cat.[30]
    To some, indeed, Heaven grants the happier fate,
    T' enrich a bastard, or a son they hate.


    Perhaps you think the poor might have their part?
    Bond[31] damns the poor, and hates them from his heart: 100
    The grave Sir Gilbert holds it for a rule,
    That 'every man in want is knave or fool:'
    'God cannot love' (says Blunt, with tearless eyes)
    'The wretch he starves'—and piously denies:
    But the good bishop, with a meeker air,
    Admits, and leaves them, Providence's care.


    Yet, to be just to these poor men of pelf,
    Each does but hate his neighbour as himself:
    Damn'd to the mines, an equal fate betides
    The slave that digs it, and the slave that hides. 110


    B. Who suffer thus, mere charity should own,
    Must act on motives powerful, though unknown.


    P. Some war, some plague, or famine, they foresee,
    Some revelation hid from you and me.
    Why Shylock wants a meal, the cause is found,
    He thinks a loaf will rise to fifty pound.
    What made directors cheat in South-sea year?
    To live on venison[32] when it sold so dear.
    Ask you why Phryne the whole auction buys?
    Phryne foresees a general excise.[33] 120
    Why she and Sappho raise that monstrous sum?
    Alas! they fear a man will cost a plum.


    Wise Peter[34] sees the world's respect for gold,
    And therefore hopes this nation may be sold:
    Glorious ambition! Peter, swell thy store,
    And be what Rome's great Didius[35] was before.


    The crown of Poland, venal twice an age,
    To just three millions stinted modest Gage.
    But nobler scenes Maria's dreams unfold,
    Hereditary realms, and worlds of gold. 130
    Congenial souls! whose life one avarice joins,
    And one fate buries in the Asturian mines.


    Much-injured Blunt![36] why bears he Britain's hate?
    A wizard told him in these words our fate:
    'At length corruption, like a general flood,
    (So long by watchful ministers withstood)
    Shall deluge all; and avarice creeping on,
    Spread like a low-born mist, and blot the sun,
    Statesman and patriot ply alike the stocks,
    Peeress and butler share alike the box, 140
    And judges job, and bishops bite the town,
    And mighty dukes pack cards for half-a-crown.
    See Britain sunk in lucre's sordid charms,
    And France revenged of Anne's and Edward's arms!'
    'Twas no court-badge, great scrivener! fired thy brain,
    Nor lordly luxury, nor city gain:
    No, 'twas thy righteous end, ashamed to see
    Senates degenerate, patriots disagree,
    And nobly wishing party-rage to cease,
    To buy both sides, and give thy country peace. 150


    'All this is madness,' cries a sober sage:
    But who, my friend, has reason in his rage?
    'The ruling passion, be it what it will,
    The ruling passion conquers reason still.'
    Less mad the wildest whimsy we can frame,
    Than even that passion, if it has no aim;
    For though such motives folly you may call,
    The folly's greater to have none at all.


    Hear, then, the truth: ''Tis Heaven each passion sends,
    And different men directs to different ends. 160
    Extremes in Nature equal good produce,
    Extremes in man concur to general use.'
    Ask we what makes one keep, and one bestow?
    That Power who bids the ocean ebb and flow,
    Bids seed-time, harvest, equal course maintain,
    Through reconciled extremes of drought and rain.
    Builds life on death, on change duration founds,
    And gives the eternal wheels to know their rounds.


    Riches, like insects, when conceal'd they lie,
    Wait but for wings, and in their season fly. 170
    Who sees pale Mammon pine amidst his store,
    Sees but a backward steward for the poor;
    This year a reservoir, to keep and spare;
    The next a fountain, spouting through his heir,
    In lavish streams to quench a country's thirst,
    And men and dogs shall drink him till they burst.


    Old Cotta shamed his fortune and his birth,
    Yet was not Cotta void of wit or worth:
    What though (the use of barbarous spits forgot)
    His kitchen vied in coolness with his grot? 180
    His court with nettles, moats with cresses stored,
    With soups unbought and salads bless'd his board?
    If Cotta lived on pulse, it was no more
    Than Brahmins, saints, and sages did before;
    To cram the rich was prodigal expense,
    And who would take the poor from Providence?
    Like some lone Chartreux stands the good old Hall,
    Silence without, and fasts within the wall;
    No rafter'd roofs with dance and tabor sound,
    No noontide-bell invites the country round: 190
    Tenants with sighs the smokeless towers survey,
    And turn the unwilling steeds another way:
    Benighted wanderers, the forest o'er,
    Curse the saved candle, and unopening door;
    While the gaunt mastiff growling at the gate,
    Affrights the beggar whom he longs to eat.


    Not so his son; he mark'd this oversight,
    And then mistook reverse of wrong for right.
    (For what to shun will no great knowledge need,
    But what to follow, is a task indeed). 200
    Yet sure, of qualities deserving praise,
    More go to ruin fortunes, than to raise.
    What slaughter'd hecatombs, what floods of wine,
    Fill the capacious squire, and deep divine!
    Yet no mean motive this profusion draws,
    His oxen perish in his country's cause;
    'Tis George and Liberty that crowns the cup,
    And zeal for that great house which eats him up.
    The woods recede around the naked seat,
    The silvans groan—no matter—for the fleet; 210
    Next goes his wool—to clothe our valiant bands,
    Last, for his country's love, he sells his lands.
    To town he comes, completes the nation's hope,
    And heads the bold train-bands, and burns a pope.
    And shall not Britain now reward his toils,
    Britain, that pays her patriots with her spoils?
    In vain at court the bankrupt pleads his cause,
    His thankless country leaves him to her laws.


    The sense to value riches, with the art
    To enjoy them, and the virtue to impart, 220
    Not meanly, nor ambitiously pursued,
    Not sunk by sloth, nor raised by servitude:
    To balance fortune by a just expense,
    Join with economy, magnificence;
    With splendour, charity; with plenty, health;
    Oh teach us, Bathurst! yet unspoil'd by wealth!
    That secret rare, between the extremes to move
    Of mad good-nature and of mean self-love.


    B. To worth or want well-weigh'd, be bounty given,
    And ease, or emulate, the care of Heaven; 230
    (Whose measure full o'erflows on human race)
    Mend Fortune's fault, and justify her grace.
    Wealth in the gross is death, but life, diffused;
    As poison heals, in just proportion used:
    In heaps, like ambergris, a stink it lies,
    But well-dispersed, is incense to the skies.


    P. Who starves by nobles, or with nobles eats?
    The wretch that trusts them, and the rogue that cheats.
    Is there a lord, who knows a cheerful noon
    Without a fiddler, flatterer, or buffoon? 240
    Whose table, wit, or modest merit share,
    Unelbow'd by a gamester, pimp, or player?
    Who copies yours, or Oxford's better part,[37]
    To ease the oppress'd, and raise the sinking heart?
    Where'er he shines, O Fortune! gild the scene,
    And angels guard him in the golden mean!
    There, English bounty yet awhile may stand,
    And honour linger ere it leaves the land.


    But all our praises why should lords engross?
    Rise, honest Muse! and sing the Man of Ross:[38] 250
    Pleased Vaga echoes through her winding bounds,
    And rapid Severn hoarse applause resounds.
    Who hung with woods yon mountain's sultry brow?
    From the dry rock who bade the waters flow?
    Not to the skies in useless columns toss'd,
    Or in proud falls magnificently lost,
    But clear and artless pouring through the plain
    Health to the sick, and solace to the swain.
    Whose causeway parts the vale with shady rows?
    Whose seats the weary traveller repose? 260
    Who taught that heaven-directed spire to rise?
    'The Man of Ross,' each lisping babe replies.
    Behold the market-place with poor o'erspread!
    The Man of Ross divides the weekly bread:
    He feeds yon alms-house, neat, but void of state,
    Where Age and Want sit smiling at the gate:
    Him portion'd maids, apprenticed orphans bless'd,
    The young who labour, and the old who rest.
    Is any sick? the Man of Ross relieves,
    Prescribes, attends, the medicine makes, and gives. 270
    Is there a variance? enter but his door,
    Balk'd are the courts, and contest is no more.
    Despairing quacks with curses fled the place,
    And vile attorneys, now a useless race.


    B. Thrice happy man! enabled to pursue
    What all so wish, but want the power to do!
    Oh say, what sums that generous hand supply?
    What mines, to swell that boundless charity?


    P. Of debts and taxes, wife and children clear,
    This man possess'd—five hundred pounds a-year. 280
    Blush, Grandeur, blush! proud courts, withdraw your blaze!
    Ye little stars, hide your diminish'd rays!


    B. And what? no monument, inscription, stone?
    His race, his form, his name almost unknown?


    P. Who builds a church to God, and not to fame,
    Will never mark the marble with his name:
    Go, search it there,[39] where to be born and die,
    Of rich and poor makes all the history;
    Enough, that virtue fill'd the space between;
    Proved, by the ends of being, to have been. 290
    When Hopkins dies, a thousand lights attend
    The wretch who, living, saved a candle's end:
    Shouldering God's altar a vile image stands,
    Belies his features, nay, extends his hands;
    That live-long wig which Gorgon's self might own,
    Eternal buckle takes in Parian stone.[40]
    Behold what blessings wealth to life can lend!
    And see what comfort it affords our end!


    In the worst inn's worst room, with mat half-hung,
    The floors of plaster, and the walls of dung, 300
    On once a flock-bed, but repair'd with straw,
    With tape-tied curtains, never meant to draw,
    The George and Garter dangling from that bed
    Where tawdry yellow strove with dirty red,
    Great Villiers[41] lies—alas! how changed from him,
    That life of pleasure, and that soul of whim!
    Gallant and gay, in Cliveden's proud alcove,
    The bower of wanton Shrewsbury,[42] and love;
    Or just as gay, at council, in a ring
    Of mimick'd statesmen, and their merry king. 310
    No wit to flatter, left of all his store;
    No fool to laugh at, which he valued more.
    There, victor of his health, of fortune, friends,
    And fame, this lord of useless thousands ends.


    His Grace's fate sage Cutler[43] could foresee,
    And well (he thought) advised him, 'Live like me.'
    As well his Grace replied, 'Like you, Sir John?
    That I can do, when all I have is gone.'
    Resolve me, Reason, which of these is worse,
    Want with a full, or with an empty purse? 320
    Thy life more wretched, Cutler, was confess'd,
    Arise, and tell me, was thy death more bless'd?
    Cutler saw tenants break, and houses fall;
    For very want he could not build a wall.
    His only daughter in a stranger's power;
    For very want he could not pay a dower.
    A few gray hairs his reverend temples crown'd,
    'Twas very want that sold them for two pound.
    What even denied a cordial at his end,
    Banish'd the doctor, and expell'd the friend? 330
    What but a want, which you perhaps think mad,
    Yet numbers feel—the want of what he had!
    Cutler and Brutus, dying, both exclaim,
    'Virtue! and Wealth! what are ye but a name!'


    Say, for such worth are other worlds prepared
    Or are they both in this their own reward?
    A knotty point! to which we now proceed.
    But you are tired—I'll tell a tale—


    B. Agreed.


    P. Where London's column,[44] pointing at the skies
    Like a tall bully, lifts the head, and lies; 340
    There dwelt a citizen of sober fame,
    A plain good man, and Balaam was his name;
    Religious, punctual, frugal, and so forth;
    His word would pass for more than he was worth.
    One solid dish his week-day meal affords,
    An added pudding solemnised the Lord's:
    Constant at church, and 'Change; his gains were sure,
    His givings rare, save farthings to the poor.


    The devil was piqued such saintship to behold,
    And long'd to tempt him like good Job of old: 350
    But Satan now is wiser than of yore,
    And tempts by making rich, not making poor.


    Roused by the Prince of Air, the whirlwinds sweep
    The surge, and plunge his father in the deep;
    Then lull against his Cornish lands they roar,
    And two rich shipwrecks bless the lucky shore.


    Sir Balaam now, he lives like other folks,
    He takes his chirping pint, and cracks his jokes:
    'Live like yourself,' was soon my Lady's word;
    And, lo! two puddings smoked upon the board. 360


    Asleep and naked as an Indian lay,
    An honest factor stole a gem away:
    He pledged it to the knight; the knight had wit,
    So kept the diamond, and the rogue was bit.
    Some scruple rose, but thus he eased his thought—
    'I'll now give sixpence where I gave a groat;
    Where once I went to church, I'll now go twice—
    And am so clear, too, of all other vice.'


    The Tempter saw his time; the work he plied;
    Stocks and subscriptions pour on every side, 370
    Till all the demon makes his full descent
    In one abundant shower of cent, per cent.;
    Sinks deep within him, and possesses whole,
    Then dubs director, and secures his soul.


    Behold Sir Balaam, now a man of spirit,
    Ascribes his gettings to his parts and merit;
    What late he call'd a blessing, now was wit,
    And God's good providence, a lucky hit.
    Things change their titles, as our manners turn:
    His counting-house employ'd the Sunday-morn; 380
    Seldom at church ('twas such a busy life)
    But duly sent his family and wife.
    There (so the devil ordain'd) one Christmas-tide,
    My good old lady catch'd a cold, and died.


    A nymph of quality admires our knight;
    He marries, bows at court, and grows polite:
    Leaves the dull cits, and joins (to please the fair)
    The well-bred cuckolds in St James's air:
    First, for his son a gay commission buys,
    Who drinks, whores, fights, and in a duel dies: 390
    His daughter flaunts a viscount's tawdry wife;
    She bears a coronet and pox for life.
    In Britain's senate he a seat obtains,
    And one more pensioner St Stephen gains.
    My lady falls to play; so bad her chance,
    He must repair it; takes a bribe from France;
    The House impeach him; Coningsby harangues;
    The court forsake him—and Sir Balaam hangs:
    Wife, son, and daughter, Satan! are thy own,
    His wealth, yet dearer, forfeit to the crown: 400
    The devil and the king divide the prize,
    And sad Sir Balaam curses God, and dies.



    VARIATIONS.


    After VER. 50, in the MS.—


    To break a trust were Peter bribed with wine,
    Peter! 'twould pose as wise a head as thine.


    VER. 77, in the former edition—


    Well then, since with the world we stand or fall,
    Come, take it as we find it, gold and all.


    After VER. 218 in the MS.—


    Where one lean herring furnish'd Cotta's board,
    And nettles grew, fit porridge for their lord;
    Where mad good-nature, bounty misapplied,
    In lavish Curio blazed awhile and died;
    There Providence once more shall shift the scene,
    And showing H——y, teach the golden mean.


    After VER. 226, in the MS.—


    That secret rare with affluence hardly join'd,
    Which W——n lost, yet B——y ne'er could find;
    Still miss'd by vice, and scarce by virtue hit,
    By G——'s goodness, or by S——'s wit.


    After VER. 250 in the MS—


    Trace humble worth beyond Sabrina's shore,
    Who sings not him, oh, may he sing no more!


    VER. 287, thus in the MS.—


    The register enrolls him with his poor,
    Tells he was born and died, and tells no more.
    Just as he ought, he fill'd the space between;
    Then stole to rest, unheeded and unseen.


    VER. 337, in the former editions—


    That knotty point, my lord, shall I discuss
    Or tell a tale!—A tale.—It follows thus.



    EPISTLE IV.—TO RICHARD BOYLE, EARL OF BURLINGTON.


    ARGUMENT.


    OF THE USE OF RICHES.


    The vanity of expense in people of wealth and quality. The abuse of the
    word 'taste,' ver. 13. That the first principle and foundation, in this
    as in every thing else, is good sense, ver. 40. The chief proof of it is
    to follow nature, even in works of mere luxury and elegance. Instanced
    in architecture and gardening, where all must be adapted to the genius
    and use of the place, and the beauties not forced into it, but resulting
    from it, ver. 50. How men are disappointed in their most expensive
    undertakings, for want of this true foundation, without which nothing
    can please long, if at all; and the best examples and rules will but be
    perverted into something burdensome or ridiculous, ver. 65 to 92. A
    description of the false taste of magnificence; the first grand error of
    which is to imagine that greatness consists in the size and dimension,
    instead of the proportion and harmony of the whole, ver. 97; and the
    second, either in joining together parts incoherent, or too minutely
    resembling, or in the repetition of the same too frequently, ver. 105,
    &c. A word or two of false taste in books, in music, in painting, even
    in preaching and prayer, and lastly in entertainments, ver. 133, &c. Yet
    Providence is justified in giving wealth to be squandered in this
    manner, since it is dispersed to the poor and laborious part of mankind,
    ver. 169 [recurring to what is laid down in the 'Essay on Man,' ep. ii.
    and in the epistle preceding this, ver. 159, &c.] What are the proper
    objects of magnificence, and a proper field for the expense of great
    men, ver. 177, &c.; and finally, the great and public works which become
    a prince, ver. 191, to the end.



    'Tis strange, the miser should his cares employ
    To gain those riches he can ne'er enjoy:
    Is it less strange, the prodigal should waste
    His wealth, to purchase what he ne'er can taste?
    Not for himself he sees, or hears, or eats;
    Artists must choose his pictures, music, meats;
    He buys for Topham[45] drawings and designs,
    For Pembroke statues, dirty gods, and coins;
    Rare monkish manuscripts for Hearne[46] alone,
    And books for Mead, and butterflies for Sloane. 10
    Think we all these are for himself? no more
    Than his fine wife, alas! or finer whore.


    For what has Virro painted, built, and planted?
    Only to show how many tastes he wanted.
    What brought Sir Visto's ill-got wealth to waste?
    Some demon whisper'd, 'Visto! have a taste.'
    Heaven visits with a taste the wealthy fool,
    And needs no rod but Ripley[47] with a rule.
    See! sportive fate, to punish awkward pride,
    Bids Bubo[48] build, and sends him such a guide: 20
    A standing sermon, at each year's expense,
    That never coxcomb reach'd magnificence!


    You show us, Rome was glorious, not profuse,
    And pompous buildings once were things of use.
    Yet shall (my lord) your just, your noble rules
    Fill half the land with imitating fools,
    Who random drawings from your sheets shall take,
    And of one beauty many blunders make;
    Load some vain church with old theatric state,
    Turn arcs of triumph to a garden-gate; 30
    Reverse your ornaments, and hang them all
    On some patch'd dog-hole eked with ends of wall;
    Then clap four slices of pilaster on't,
    That, laced with bits of rustic, makes a front.
    Shall call the winds through long arcades to roar,
    Proud to catch cold at a Venetian door;
    Conscious they act a true Palladian part.
    And if they starve, they starve by rules of art.


    Oft have you hinted to your brother peer,
    A certain truth, which many buy too dear: 40
    Something there is more needful than expense,
    And something previous even to taste—'tis sense:
    Good sense, which only is the gift of Heaven,
    And though no science, fairly worth the seven:
    A light, which in yourself you must perceive;
    Jones and Le Notre have it not to give.


    To build, to plant, whatever you intend,
    To rear the column, or the arch to bend,
    To swell the terrace, or to sink the grot;
    In all, let Nature never be forgot. 50
    But treat the goddess like a modest fair,
    Nor overdress, nor leave her wholly bare;
    Let not each beauty everywhere be spied,
    Where half the skill is decently to hide.
    He gains all points, who pleasingly confounds,
    Surprises, varies, and conceals the bounds.


    Consult the genius of the place in all;
    That tells the waters or to rise, or fall;
    Or helps the ambitious hill the heavens to scale,
    Or scoops in circling theatres the vale; 60
    Calls in the country, catches opening glades,
    Joins willing woods, and varies shades from shades;
    Now breaks, or now directs, the intending lines;
    Paints as you plant, and, as you work, designs.


    Still follow sense, of every art the soul,
    Parts answering parts shall slide into a whole,
    Spontaneous beauties all around advance,
    Start even from difficulty, strike from chance;
    Nature shall join you; time shall make it grow
    A work to wonder at—perhaps a Stowe. 70


    Without it, proud Versailles! thy glory falls;
    And Nero's terraces desert their walls:
    The vast parterres a thousand hands shall make,
    Lo! Cobham comes, and floats them with a lake:
    Or cut wide views through mountains to the plain,
    You'll wish your hill or shelter'd seat again.
    Even in an ornament its place remark,
    Nor in an hermitage set Dr Clarke.[49]
    Behold Villario's ten years' toil complete;
    His quincunx darkens, his espaliers meet; 80
    The wood supports the plain, the parts unite,
    And strength of shade contends with strength of light;
    A waving glow the blooming beds display,
    Blushing in bright diversities of day,
    With silver-quivering rills meander'd o'er—
    Enjoy them, you! Villario can no more;
    Tired of the scene parterres and fountains yield,
    He finds at last he better likes a field.


    Through his young woods how pleased Sabinus stray'd,
    Or sat delighted in the thickening shade, 90
    With annual joy the reddening shoots to greet,
    Or see the stretching branches long to meet!
    His son's fine taste an opener vista loves,
    Foe to the Dryads of his father's groves;
    One boundless green, or flourish'd carpet views,
    With all the mournful family of yews;
    The thriving plants, ignoble broomsticks made,
    Now sweep those alleys they were born to shade.


    At Timon's villa[50] let us pass a day,
    Where all cry out, 'What sums are thrown away!' 100
    So proud, so grand; of that stupendous air,
    Soft and agreeable come never there.
    Greatness, with Timon, dwells in such a draught
    As brings all Brobdignag before your thought.
    To compass this, his building is a town,
    His pond an ocean, his parterre a down:
    Who but must laugh, the master when he sees,
    A puny insect, shivering at a breeze!
    Lo, what huge heaps of littleness around!
    The whole a labour'd quarry above ground; 110
    Two Cupids squirt before: a lake behind
    Improves the keenness of the northern wind.
    His gardens next your admiration call,
    On every side you look, behold the wall!
    No pleasing intricacies intervene,
    No artful wildness to perplex the scene;
    Grove nods at grove, each alley has a brother,
    And half the platform just reflects the other.
    The suffering eye inverted nature sees,
    Trees cut to statues, statues thick as trees; 120
    With here a fountain, never to be play'd;
    And there a summer-house, that knows no shade;
    Here Amphitrite sails through myrtle bowers;
    There gladiators fight, or die in flowers;
    Unwater'd see the drooping sea-horse mourn,
    And swallows roost in Nilus' dusty urn.


    My lord advances with majestic mien,
    Smit with the mighty pleasure, to be seen:
    But soft—by regular approach—not yet—
    First through the length of yon hot terrace sweat; 130
    And when up ten steep slopes you've dragg'd your thighs,
    Just at his study-door he'll bless your eyes.


    His study! with what authors is it stored?
    In books, not authors, curious is my lord;
    To all their dated backs he turns you round:
    These Aldus printed, those Du Sueil has bound.
    Lo! some are vellum, and the rest as good
    For all his lordship knows, but they are wood.
    For Locke or Milton 'tis in vain to look, 140
    These shelves admit not any modern book.


    And now the chapel's silver bell you hear,
    That summons you to all the pride of prayer:
    Light quirks of music, broken and uneven,
    Make the soul dance upon a jig to heaven.
    On painted ceilings you devoutly stare,
    Where sprawl the saints of Verrio or Laguerre,[51]
    On gilded clouds in fair expansion lie,
    And bring all Paradise before your eye.
    To rest, the cushion and soft dean invite,
    Who never mentions hell[51] to ears polite. 150


    But hark! the chiming clocks to dinner call;
    A hundred footsteps scrape the marble hall:
    The rich buffet well-colour'd serpents grace,
    And gaping Tritons spew to wash your face.
    Is this a dinner? this a genial room?
    No, 'tis a temple, and a hecatomb.
    A solemn sacrifice, perform'd in state,
    You drink by measure, and to minutes eat.
    So quick retires each flying course, you'd swear
    Sancho's dread doctor[53] and his wand were there. 160
    Between each act the trembling salvers ring,
    From soup to sweet-vine, and God bless the king.
    In plenty starving, tantalised in state,
    And complaisantly help'd to all I hate,
    Treated, caress'd, and tired, I take my leave,
    Sick of his civil pride from morn to eve;
    I curse such lavish cost, and little skill,
    And swear no day was ever pass'd so ill.


    Yet hence the poor are clothed, the hungry fed;
    Health to himself, and to his infants bread 170
    The labourer bears: what his hard heart denies,
    His charitable vanity supplies.


    Another age shall see the golden ear
    Imbrown the slope, and nod on the parterre,
    Deep harvests bury all his pride has plann'd,
    And laughing Ceres reassume the land.


    Who then shall grace, or who improve the soil?—
    Who plants like Bathurst, or who builds like Boyle.
    'Tis use alone that sanctifies expense,
    And splendour borrows all her rays from sense. 180


    His father's acres who enjoys in peace,
    Or makes his neighbours glad, if he increase:
    Whose cheerful tenants bless their yearly toil,
    Yet to their lord owe more than to the soil;
    Whose ample lawns are not ashamed to feed
    The milky heifer and deserving steed;
    Whose rising forests, not for pride or show,
    But future buildings, future navies, grow:
    Let his plantations stretch from down to down,
    First shade a country, and then raise a town. 190


    You, too, proceed! make falling arts your care,
    Erect new wonders, and the old repair;
    Jones and Palladio to themselves restore,
    And be whate'er Vitruvius was before:
    Till kings call forth the ideas of your mind,
    (Proud to accomplish what such hands design'd.)
    Bid harbours open, public ways extend,
    Bid temples, worthier of the god, ascend;
    Bid the broad arch the dangerous flood contain,
    The mole projected break the roaring main; 200
    Back to his bonds their subject sea command,
    And roll obedient rivers through the land;
    These honours, peace to happy Britain brings,
    These are imperial works, and worthy kings.



    VARIATION.


    After VER. 22 in the MS.—


    Must bishops, lawyers, statesmen have the skill
    To build, to plant, judge paintings, what you will?
    Then why not Kent as well our treaties draw,
    Bridginan explain the gospel, Gibs the law?



    EPISTLE V. TO MR ADDISON.


    OCCASIONED BY HIS DIALOGUES ON MEDALS.[54]


    See the wild waste of all-devouring years!
    How Rome her own sad sepulchre appears,
    With nodding arches, broken temples spread!
    The very tombs now vanish'd, like their dead!
    Imperial wonders raised on nations spoil'd
    Where mix'd with slaves the groaning martyr toil'd:
    Huge theatres, that now unpeopled woods,
    Now drain'd a distant country of her floods:
    Fanes, which admiring gods with pride survey,
    Statues of men, scarce less alive than they! 10
    Some felt the silent stroke of mouldering age,
    Some hostile fury, some religious rage,
    Barbarian blindness, Christian zeal conspire,
    And Papal piety, and Gothic fire.
    Perhaps, by its own ruins saved from flame,
    Some buried marble half-preserves a name;
    That name the learn'd with fierce disputes pursue,
    And give to Titus old Vespasian's due.


    Ambition sigh'd: she found it vain to trust
    The faithless column, and the crumbling bust: 20
    Huge moles, whose shadow stretch'd from shore to shore,
    Their ruins perish'd, and their place no more!
    Convinced, she now contracts her vast design,
    And all her triumphs shrink into a coin.
    A narrow orb each crowded conquest keeps,
    Beneath her palm, here sad Judaea weeps.
    Now scantier limits the proud arch confine,
    And scarce are seen the prostrate Nile or Rhine;
    A small Euphrates through the piece is roll'd,
    And little eagles wave their wings in gold. 30


    The medal, faithful to its charge of fame,
    Through climes and ages bears each form and name:
    In one short view subjected to our eye
    Gods, emperors, heroes, sages, beauties, lie.
    With sharpen'd sight, pale antiquaries pore,
    The inscription value, but the rust adore.
    This the blue varnish, that the green endears,
    The sacred rust of twice ten hundred years!
    To gain Pescennius one employs his schemes,
    One grasps a Cecrops in ecstatic dreams. 40
    Poor Vadius,[55] long with learned spleen devour'd.
    Can taste no pleasure since his shield was scour'd:
    And Curio, restless by the fair one's side,
    Sighs for an Otho, and neglects his bride.


    Theirs is the vanity, the learning thine:
    Touch'd by thy hand, again Rome's glories shine;
    Her gods, and god-like heroes rise to view,
    And all her faded garlands bloom anew.
    Nor blush, these studies thy regard engage;
    These pleased the fathers of poetic rage; 50
    The verse and sculpture bore an equal part,
    And Art reflected images to Art.


    Oh! when shall Britain, conscious of her claim,
    Stand emulous of Greek and Roman fame?
    In living medals see her wars enroll'd,
    And vanquish'd realms supply recording gold?
    Here, rising bold, the patriot's honest face;
    There, warriors frowning in historic brass:
    Then future ages with delight shall see
    How Plato's, Bacon's, Newton's looks agree; 60
    Or in fair series laurell'd bards be shown,
    A Virgil there, and here an Addison.
    Then shall thy Craggs (and let me call him mine)
    On the cast ore, another Pollio, shine;
    With aspect open, shall erect his head,
    And round the orb in lasting notes be read,
    'Statesman, yet friend to truth! of soul sincere,
    In action faithful, and in honour clear;
    Who broke no promise, served no private end,
    Who gain'd no title, and who lost no friend; 70
    Ennobled by himself, by all approved,
    And praised, unenvied, by the Muse he loved.'






    TRANSLATIONS AND IMITATIONS.


    SAPPHO TO PHAON.


    FROM THE FIFTEENTH OF OVID'S EPISTLES.


    Say, lovely youth, that dost my heart command,
    Can Phaon's eyes forget his Sappho's hand?
    Must then her name the wretched writer prove,
    To thy remembrance lost, as to thy love?
    Ask not the cause that I new numbers choose,
    The lute neglected and the lyric Muse;
    Love taught my tears in sadder notes to flow,
    And tuned my heart to elegies of woe,
    I burn, I burn, as when through ripen'd corn
    By driving winds the spreading flames are borne! 10
    Phaon to AEtna's scorching fields retires,
    While I consume with more than AEtna's fires!
    No more my soul a charm in music finds;
    Music has charms alone for peaceful minds.
    Soft scenes of solitude no more can please;
    Love enters there, and I'm my own disease.
    No more the Lesbian dames my passion move,
    Once the dear objects of my guilty love;
    All other loves are lost in only thine,
    Ah, youth ungrateful to a flame like mine! 20
    Whom would not all those blooming charms surprise,
    Those heavenly looks, and dear deluding eyes!
    The harp and bow would you like Phoebus bear,
    A brighter Phoebus Phaon might appear;
    Would you with ivy wreath your flowing hair,
    Not Bacchus' self with Phaon could compare:
    Yet Phoebus loved, and Bacchus felt the flame,
    One Daphne warm'd, and one the Cretan dame;
    Nymphs that in verse no more could rival me,
    Than e'en those gods contend in charms with thee. 30
    The Muses teach me all their softest lays,
    And the wide world resounds with Sappho's praise.
    Though great Alcaeus more sublimely sings,
    And strikes with bolder rage the sounding strings,
    No less renown attends the moving lyre,
    Which Venus tunes, and all her loves inspire.
    To me what nature has in charms denied,
    Is well by wit's more lasting flames supplied.
    Though short my stature, yet my name extends
    To heaven itself, and earth's remotest ends. 40
    Brown as I am, an Ethiopian dame
    Inspired young Perseus with a generous flame;
    Turtles and doves of different hues unite,
    And glossy jet is pair'd with shining white.
    If to no charms thou wilt thy heart resign,
    But such as merit, such as equal thine,
    By none, alas! by none thou canst be moved,
    Phaon alone by Phaon must be loved!
    Yet once thy Sappho could thy cares employ,
    Once in her arms you centred all your joy: 50
    No time the dear remembrance can remove,
    For, oh! how vast a memory has love!
    My music, then, you could for ever hear,
    And all my words were music to your ear.
    You stopp'd with kisses my enchanting tongue,
    And found my kisses sweeter than my song,
    In all I pleased, but most in what was best;
    And the last joy was dearer than the rest.
    Then with each word, each glance, each motion fired,
    You still enjoy'd, and yet you still desired, 60
    Till, all dissolving, in the trance we lay,
    And in tumultuous raptures died away.
    The fair Sicilians now thy soul inflame;
    Why was I born, ye gods, a Lesbian dame?
    But ah, beware, Sicilian nymphs! nor boast
    That wandering heart which I so lately lost;
    Nor be with all those tempting words abused,
    Those tempting words were all to Sappho used.
    And you that rule Sicilia's happy plains,
    Have pity, Venus, on your poet's pains! 70
    Shall fortune still in one sad tenor run,
    And still increase the woes so soon begun?
    Inured to sorrow from my tender years,
    My parents' ashes drank my early tears:
    My brother next, neglecting wealth and fame,
    Ignobly burn'd in a destructive flame:
    An infant daughter late my griefs increased,
    And all a mother's cares distract my breast,
    Alas! what more could Fate itself impose,
    But thee, the last, and greatest of my woes? 80
    No more my robes in waving purple flow,
    Nor on my hand the sparkling diamonds glow;
    No more my locks in ringlets curl'd diffuse
    The costly sweetness of Arabian dews,
    Nor braids of gold the varied tresses bind,
    That fly disorder'd with the wanton wind:
    For whom should Sappho use such arts as these?
    He's gone, whom only she desired to please!
    Cupid's light darts my tender bosom move;
    Still is there cause for Sappho still to love: 90
    So from my birth the Sisters fix'd my doom,
    And gave to Venus all my life to come;
    Or, while my Muse in melting notes complains,
    My yielding heart keeps measure to my strains.
    By charms like thine, which all my soul have won,
    Who might not—ah! who would not be undone?
    For those Aurora Cephalus might scorn,
    And with fresh blushes paint the conscious morn.
    For those might Cynthia lengthen Phaon's sleep;
    And bid Endymion nightly tend his sheep; 100
    Venus for those had rapt thee to the skies;
    But Mars on thee might look with Venus' eyes.
    Oh scarce a youth, yet scarce a tender boy!
    Oh useful time for lovers to employ!
    Pride of thy age, and glory of thy race,
    Come to these arms, and melt in this embrace!
    The vows you never will return, receive;
    And take, at least, the love you will not give.
    See, while I write, my words are lost in tears!
    The less my sense, the more my love appears. 110
    Sure 'twas not much to bid one kind adieu,
    (At least to feign was never hard to you)
    'Farewell, my Lesbian love,' you might have said;
    Or coldly thus, 'Farewell, O Lesbian maid!'
    No tear did you, no parting kiss receive,
    Nor knew I then how much I was to grieve.
    No lover's gift your Sappho could confer,
    And wrongs and woes were all you left with her.
    No charge I gave you, and no charge could give,
    But this, 'Be mindful of our loves, and live.' 120
    Now by the Nine, those powers adored by me,
    And Love, the god that ever waits on thee,
    When first I heard (from whom I hardly knew)
    That you were fled, and all my joys with you,
    Like some sad statue, speechless, pale, I stood,
    Grief chill'd my breast, and stopp'd my freezing blood;
    No sigh to rise, no tear had power to flow,
    Fix'd in a stupid lethargy of woe:
    But when its way the impetuous passion found,
    I rend my tresses, and my breast I wound: 130
    I rave, then weep; I curse, and then complain;
    Now swell to rage, now melt in tears again.
    Not fiercer pangs distract the mournful dame,
    Whose first-born infant feeds the funeral flame.
    My scornful brother with a smile appears,
    Insults my woes, and triumphs in my tears;
    His hated image ever haunts my eyes;
    'And why this grief? thy daughter lives!' he cries.
    Stung with my love, and furious with despair,
    All torn my garments, and my bosom bare, 140
    My woes, thy crimes, I to the world proclaim;
    Such inconsistent things are love and shame!
    'Tis thou art all my care and my delight,
    My daily longing, and my dream by night;
    Oh night more pleasing than the brightest day,
    When fancy gives what absence takes away,
    And, dress'd in all its visionary charms,
    Restores my fair deserter to my arms!
    Then round your neck in wanton wreaths I twine,
    Then you, methinks, as fondly circle mine: 150
    A thousand tender words I hear and speak;
    A thousand melting kisses give and take:
    Then fiercer joys, I blush to mention these,
    Yet, while I blush, confess how much they please.
    But when, with day, the sweet delusions fly,
    And all things wake to life and joy but I,
    As if once more forsaken, I complain,
    And close my eyes to dream of you again:
    Then frantic rise, and like some Fury rove
    Through lonely plains, and through the silent grove; 160
    As if the silent grove, and lonely plains,
    That knew my pleasures, could relieve my pains.
    I view the grotto, once the scene of love,
    The rocks around, the hanging roofs above,
    That charm'd me more, with native moss o'ergrown,
    Than Phrygian marble, or the Parian stone;
    I find the shades that veil'd our joys before;
    But, Phaon gone, those shades delight no more.
    Here the press'd herbs with bending tops betray
    Where oft entwined in amorous folds we lay; 170
    I kiss that earth which once was press'd by you,
    And all with tears the withering herbs bedew.
    For thee the fading trees appear to mourn,
    And birds defer their songs till thy return:
    Night shades the groves, and all in silence lie,
    All but the mournful Philomel and I:
    With mournful Philomel I join my strain,
    Of Tereus she, of Phaon I complain.


    A spring there is, whose silver waters show,
    Clear as a glass, the shining sands below: 180
    A flowery lotus spreads its arms above,
    Shades all the banks, and seems itself a grove;
    Eternal greens the mossy margin grace,
    Watch'd by the sylvan genius of the place.
    Here as I lay, and swell'd with tears the flood,
    Before my sight a watery virgin stood:
    She stood and cried, 'O you that love in vain!
    Fly hence, and seek the fair Leucadian main;
    There stands a rock, from whose impending steep
    Apollo's fane surveys the rolling deep; 190
    There injured lovers, leaping from above,
    Their flames extinguish, and forget to love.
    Deucalion once with hopeless fury burn'd,
    In vain he loved, relentless Pyrrha scorn'd:
    But when from hence he plunged into the main,
    Deucalion scorn'd, and Pyrrha loved in vain.
    Haste, Sappho, haste, from high Leucadia throw
    Thy wretched weight, nor dread the deeps below!'
    She spoke, and vanish'd with the voice—I rise,
    And silent tears fall trickling from my eyes. 200
    I go, ye nymphs! those rocks and seas to prove;
    How much I fear, but ah, how much I love!
    I go, ye nymphs! where furious love inspires:
    Let female fears submit to female fires.
    To rocks and seas I fly from Phaon's hate,
    And hope from seas and rocks a milder fate.
    Ye gentle gales, beneath my body blow,
    And softly lay me on the waves below!
    And thou, kind Love, my sinking limbs sustain,
    Spread thy soft wings, and waft me o'er the main, 210
    Nor let a lover's death the guiltless flood profane!
    On Phoebus' shrine my harp I'll then bestow,
    And this inscription shall be placed below:
    'Here she who sung, to him that did inspire,
    Sappho to Phoebus consecrates her lyre;
    What suits with Sappho, Phoebus, suits with thee:
    The gift, the giver, and the god agree.'


    But why, alas! relentless youth, ah, why
    To distant seas must tender Sappho fly?
    Thy charms than those may far more powerful be, 220
    And Phoebus' self is less a god to me.
    Ah! canst thou doom me to the rocks and sea,
    Oh far more faithless and more hard than they?
    Ah! canst thou rather see this tender breast
    Dash'd on these rocks than to thy bosom press'd?
    This breast which once, in vain, you liked so well;
    Where the Loves play'd, and where the Muses dwell.
    Alas! the Muses now no more inspire;
    Untuned my lute, and silent is my lyre.
    My languid numbers have forgot to flow, 230
    And fancy sinks beneath a weight of woe.
    Ye Lesbian virgins, and ye Lesbian dames,
    Themes of my verse, and objects of my flames,
    No more your groves with my glad songs shall ring,
    No more these hands shall touch the trembling string:
    My Phaon's fled, and I those arts resign;
    (Wretch that I am, to call that Phaon mine!)
    Return, fair youth! return, and bring along
    Joy to my soul, and vigour to my song:
    Absent from thee, the poet's flame expires; 240
    But ah! how fiercely burn the lover's fires?
    Gods! can no prayers, no sighs, no numbers move
    One savage heart, or teach it how to love?
    The winds my prayers, my sighs, my numbers bear,
    The flying winds have lost them all in air!
    Oh when, alas! shall more auspicious gales
    To these fond eyes restore thy welcome sails?
    If you return—ah, why these long delays?
    Poor Sappho dies while careless Phaon stays.
    Oh launch thy bark, nor fear the watery plain; 250
    Venus for thee shall smooth her native main.
    Oh launch thy bark, secure of prosperous gales;
    Cupid for thee shall spread the swelling sails.
    If you will fly—(yet ah! what cause can be,
    Too cruel youth, that you should fly from me?)
    If not from Phaon I must hope for ease,
    Ah, let me seek it from the raging seas:
    To raging seas unpitied I'll remove,
    And either cease to live, or cease to love!

    THE FABLE OF DRYOPE.[56]


    FROM THE NINTH BOOK OF OVID'S METAMORPHOSES.


    She said, and for her lost Galanthis sighs;
    When the fair consort of her son replies:
    'Since you a servant's ravish'd form bemoan,
    And kindly sigh for sorrows not your own,
    Let me (if tears and grief permit) relate
    A nearer woe, a sister's stranger fate.
    No nymph of all Oechalia could compare
    For beauteous form with Dryope the fair,
    Her tender mother's only hope and pride,
    (Myself the offspring of a second bride). 10
    This nymph, compress'd by him who rules the day,
    Whom Delphi and the Delian isle obey,
    Andraemon loved; and, bless'd in all those charms
    That pleased a god, succeeded to her arms.


    'A lake there was with shelving banks around,
    Whose verdant summit fragrant myrtles crown'd.
    These shades, unknowing of the fates, she sought,
    And to the Naiads flowery garlands brought:
    Her smiling babe (a pleasing charge) she press'd
    Within her arms, and nourish'd at her breast. 20
    Not distant far, a watery lotus grows;
    The spring was new, and all the verdant boughs,
    Adorn'd with blossoms, promised fruits that vie
    In glowing colours with the Tyrian dye:
    Of these she cropp'd, to please her infant son,
    And I myself the same rash act had done:
    But, lo! I saw (as near her side I stood)
    The violated blossoms drop with blood;
    Upon the tree I cast a frightful look;
    The trembling tree with sudden horror shook. 30
    Lotis the nymph (if rural tales be true)
    As from Priapus' lawless lust she flew,
    Forsook her form, and, fixing here, became
    A flowery plant, which still preserves her name.


    'This change unknown, astonish'd at the sight,
    My trembling sister strove to urge her flight;
    And first the pardon of the nymphs implored,
    And those offended sylvan powers adored:
    But when she backward would have fled, she found
    Her stiffening feet were rooted in the ground: 40
    In vain to free her fasten'd feet she strove,
    And as she struggles only moves above;
    She feels th' encroaching bark around her grow
    By quick degrees, and cover all below:
    Surprised at this, her trembling hand she heaves
    To rend her hair; her hand is fill'd with leaves:
    Where late was hair, the shooting leaves are seen
    To rise, and shade her with a sudden green.
    The child Amphissus, to her bosom press'd,
    Perceived a colder and a harder breast, 50
    And found the springs, that ne'er till then denied
    Their milky moisture, on a sudden dried.
    I saw, unhappy! what I now relate,
    And stood the helpless witness of thy fate;
    Embraced thy boughs, thy rising bark delay'd,
    There wish'd to grow, and mingle shade with shade.


    'Behold Andraemon and th' unhappy sire
    Appear, and for their Dryope inquire:
    A springing tree for Dryope they find,
    And print warm kisses on the panting rind, 60
    Prostrate, with tears their kindred plant bedew,
    And close embrace as to the roots they grew.
    The face was all that now remain'd of thee,
    No more a woman, nor yet quite a tree;
    Thy branches hung with humid pearls appear,
    From every leaf distils a trickling tear;
    And straight a voice, while yet a voice remains,
    Thus through the trembling boughs in sighs complains:


    '“If to the wretched any faith be given,
    I swear by all th' unpitying powers of Heaven, 70
    No wilful crime this heavy vengeance bred;
    In mutual innocence our lives we led:
    If this be false, let these new greens decay,
    Let sounding axes lop my limbs away,
    And crackling flames on all my honours prey.
    But from my branching arms this infant bear,
    Let some kind nurse supply a mother's care:
    And to his mother let him oft be led,
    Sport in her shades, and in her shades be fed:
    Teach him, when first his infant voice shall frame 80
    Imperfect words, and lisp his mother's name,
    To hail this tree, and say, with weeping eyes,
    'Within this plant my hapless parent lies:'
    And when in youth he seeks the shady woods,
    Oh! let him fly the crystal lakes and floods,
    Nor touch the fatal flowers; but, warn'd by me,
    Believe a goddess shrined in every tree.
    My sire, my sister, and my spouse, farewell!
    If in your breasts or love or pity dwell,
    Protect your plant, nor let my branches feel 90
    The browsing cattle or the piercing steel.
    Farewell! and since I cannot bend to join
    My lips to yours, advance at least to mine.
    My son, thy mother's parting kiss receive,
    While yet thy mother has a kiss to give.
    I can no more; the creeping rind invades
    My closing lips, and hides my head in shades:
    Remove your hands, the bark shall soon suffice
    Without their aid to seal these dying eyes.”


    'She ceased at once to speak and ceased to be, 100
    And all the nymph was lost within the tree;
    Yet latent life through her new branches reign'd,
    And long the plant a human heat retain'd.'

    VERTUMNUS AND POMONA,


    FROM THE FOURTEENTH BOOK OF OVID'S METAMORPHOSES.


    The fair Pomona flourish'd in his reign;
    Of all the virgins of the sylvan train
    None taught the trees a nobler race to bear,
    Or more improved the vegetable care.
    To her the shady grove, the flowery field,
    The streams and fountains no delights could yield:
    'Twas all her joy the ripening fruits to tend,
    And see the boughs with happy burdens bend.
    The hook she bore instead of Cynthia's spear,
    To lop the growth of the luxuriant year, 10
    To decent forms the lawless shoots to bring,
    And teach th' obedient branches where to spring.
    Now the cleft rind inserted grafts receives,
    And yields an offspring more than nature gives;
    Now sliding streams the thirsty plants renew,
    And feed their fibres with reviving dew.


    These cares alone her virgin breast employ,
    Averse from Venus and the nuptial joy.
    Her private orchards, wall'd on every side,
    To lawless sylvans all access denied. 20
    How oft the satyrs and the wanton fauns,
    Who haunt the forests or frequent the lawns,
    The god whose ensign scares the birds of prey,
    And old Silenus, youthful in decay,
    Employ'd their wiles and unavailing care
    To pass the fences, and surprise the fair!
    Like these, Vertumnus own'd his faithful flame,
    Like these, rejected by the scornful dame.
    To gain her sight a thousand forms he wears;
    And first a reaper from the field appears: 30
    Sweating he walks, while loads of golden grain
    O'ercharge the shoulders of the seeming swain:
    Oft o'er his back a crooked scythe is laid,
    And wreaths of hay his sunburnt temples shade:
    Oft in his harden'd hand a goad he bears,
    Like one who late unyoked the sweating steers:
    Sometimes his pruning-hook corrects the vines,
    And the loose stragglers to their ranks confines:
    Now gathering what the bounteous year allows,
    He pulls ripe apples from the bending boughs: 40
    A soldier now, he with his sword appears;
    A fisher next, his trembling angle bears:
    Each shape he varies, and each art he tries,
    On her bright charms to feast his longing eyes.


    A female form at last Vertumnus wears,
    With all the marks of reverend age appears,
    His temples thinly spread with silver hairs:
    Propp'd on his staff, and stooping as he goes,
    A painted mitre shades his furrow'd brows.
    The god in this decrepid form array'd 50
    The gardens enter'd, and the fruit survey'd;
    And, 'Happy you!' he thus address'd the maid,
    'Whose charms as far all other nymphs outshine,
    As other gardens are excell'd by thine!'
    Then kiss'd the fair; (his kisses warmer grow
    Than such as women on their sex bestow)
    Then, placed beside her on the flowery ground,
    Beheld the trees with autumn's bounty crown'd.
    An elm was near, to whose embraces led,
    The curling vine her swelling clusters spread: 60
    He view'd her twining branches with delight,
    And praised the beauty of the pleasing sight.


    'Yet this tall elm, but for this vine,' he said,
    'Had stood neglected, and a barren shade;
    And this fair vine, but that her arms surround
    Her married elm, had crept along the ground.
    Ah, beauteous maid! let this example move
    Your mind, averse from all the joys of love.
    Deign to be loved, and every heart subdue!
    What nymph could e'er attract such crowds as you? 70
    Not she whose beauty urged the Centaur's arms,
    Ulysses' queen, nor Helen's fatal charms.
    Ev'n now, when silent scorn is all they gain,
    A thousand court you, though they court in vain—
    A thousand sylvans, demigods, and gods,
    That haunt our mountains and our Alban woods.
    But if you'll prosper, mark what I advise,
    Whom age and long experience render wise,
    And one whose tender care is far above
    All that these lovers ever felt of love, 80
    (Far more than e'er can by yourself be guess'd)
    Fix on Vertumnus, and reject the rest:
    For his firm faith I dare engage my own:
    Scarce to himself, himself is better known.
    To distant lands Vertumnus never roves;
    Like you, contented with his native groves;
    Nor at first sight, like most, admires the fair:
    For you he lives; and you alone shall share
    His last affection, as his early care.
    Besides, he's lovely far above the rest, 90
    With youth immortal, and with beauty bless'd.
    Add, that he varies every shape with ease,
    And tries all forms that may Pomona please.
    But what should most excite a mutual flame,
    Your rural cares and pleasures are the same.
    To him your orchard's early fruits are due;
    (A pleasing offering when 'tis made by you)
    He values these; but yet, alas! complains
    That still the best and dearest gift remains.
    Not the fair fruit that on yon branches glows 100
    With that ripe red th' autumnal sun bestows;
    Nor tasteful herbs that in these gardens rise,
    Which the kind soil with milky sap supplies;
    You, only you, can move the god's desire:
    Oh crown so constant and so pure a fire!
    Let soft compassion touch your gentle mind:
    Think, 'tis Vertumnus begs you to be kind:
    So may no frost, when early buds appear,
    Destroy the promise of the youthful year;
    Nor winds, when first your florid orchard blows, 110
    Shake the light blossoms from their blasted boughs!'


    This, when the various god had urged in vain,
    He straight assumed his native form again:
    Such, and so bright an aspect now he bears,
    As when through clouds th' emerging sun appears,
    And thence exerting his refulgent ray,
    Dispels the darkness, and reveals the day.
    Force he prepared, but check'd the rash design;
    For when, appearing in a form divine,
    The nymph surveys him, and beholds the grace 120
    Of charming features and a youthful face,
    In her soft breast consenting passions move,
    And the warm maid confess'd a mutual love.

    THE FIRST BOOK OF STATIUS'S THEBAIS.


    TRANSLATED IN THE YEAR 1703.


    ARGUMENT.


    Oedipus, King of Thebes, having, by mistake, slain his father Laius, and
    married his mother Jocasta, put out his own eyes, and resigned his realm
    to his sons Eteocles and Polynices. Being neglected by them, he makes
    his prayer to the fury Tisiphone, to sow debate betwixt the brothers.
    They agree at last to reign singly, each a year by turns, and the first
    lot is obtained by Eteocles. Jupiter, in a council of the gods, declares
    his resolution of punishing the Thebans, and Argives also, by means of a
    marriage betwixt Polynices and one of the daughters of Adrastus, King of
    Argos. Juno opposes, but to no effect; and Mercury is sent on a message
    to the shades, to the ghost of Laius, who is to appear to Eteocles, and
    provoke him to break the agreement. Polynices, in the meantime, departs
    from Thebes by night, is overtaken by a storm, and arrives at Argos,
    where he meets with Tydeus, who had fled from Calydon, having killed his
    brother. Adrastus entertains them, having received an oracle from Apollo
    that his daughters should be married to a boar and a lion, which he
    understands to be meant by these strangers, by whom the hides of those
    beasts were worn, and who arrived at the time when he kept an annual
    feast in honour of that god. The rise of this solemnity, he relates to
    his guests; the loves of Phoebus and Psamathe, and the story of
    Choroebus. He inquires, and is made acquainted with their descent and
    quality. The sacrifice is renewed, and the book concludes with a hymn to
    Apollo.—P.



    Fraternal rage, the guilty Thebes' alarms,
    Th' alternate reign destroy'd by impious arms,
    Demand our song; a sacred fury fires
    My ravish'd breast, and all the Muse inspires.
    O goddess! say, shall I deduce my rhymes
    From the dire nation in its early times,
    Europa's rape, Agenor's stern decree,
    And Cadmus searching round the spacious sea?
    How with the serpent's teeth he sow'd the soil,
    And reap'd an iron harvest of his toil? 10
    Or how from joining stones the city sprung,
    While to his harp divine Amphion sung?
    Or shall I Juno's hate to Thebes resound,
    Whose fatal rage th' unhappy monarch found?
    The sire against the son his arrows drew,
    O'er the wide fields the furious mother flew,
    And while her arms a second hope contain,
    Sprung from the rocks, and plunged into the main.


    But wave whate'er to Cadmus may belong,
    And fix, O Muse! the barrier of thy song 20
    At Oedipus—from his disasters trace
    The long confusions of his guilty race:
    Nor yet attempt to stretch thy bolder wing,
    And mighty Caesar's conquering eagles sing;
    How twice he tamed proud Ister's rapid flood,
    While Dacian mountains stream'd with barbarous blood;
    Twice taught the Rhine beneath his laws to roll,
    And stretch'd his empire to the frozen pole;
    Or, long before, with early valour strove
    In youthful arms t' assert the cause of Jove. 30
    And thou, great heir of all thy father's fame,
    Increase of glory to the Latian name!
    Oh! bless thy Rome with an eternal reign,
    Nor let desiring worlds entreat in vain.
    What though the stars contract their heavenly space,
    And crowd their shining ranks to yield thee place;
    Though all the skies, ambitious of thy sway,
    Conspire to court thee from our world away;
    Though Phoebus longs to mix his rays with thine,
    And in thy glories more serenely shine; 40
    Though Jove himself no less content would be
    To part his throne, and share his heaven with thee:
    Yet stay, great Caesar! and vouchsafe to reign
    O'er the wide earth, and o'er the watery main;
    Resign to Jove his empire of the skies,
    And people heaven with Roman deities.


    The time will come when a diviner flame
    Shall warm my breast to sing of Caesar's fame;
    Meanwhile, permit that my preluding Muse
    In Theban wars an humbler theme may choose: 50
    Of furious hate surviving death she sings,
    A fatal throne to two contending kings,
    And funeral flames, that, parting wide in air,
    Express the discord of the souls they bear:
    Of towns dispeopled, and the wandering ghosts
    Of kings unburied in the wasted coasts;
    When Dirce's fountain blush'd with Grecian blood,
    And Thetis, near Ismenos' swelling flood,
    With dread beheld the rolling surges sweep
    In heaps his slaughter'd sons into the deep. 60


    What hero, Clio! wilt thou first relate?
    The rage of Tydeus, or the prophet's fate?
    Or how, with hills of slain on every side,
    Hippomedon repell'd the hostile tide?
    Or how the youth, with every grace adorn'd,
    Untimely fell, to be for ever mourn'd?
    Then to fierce Capaneus thy verse extend,
    And sing with horror his prodigious end.


    Now wretched Oedipus, deprived of sight,
    Led a long death in everlasting night; 70
    But while he dwells where not a cheerful ray
    Can pierce the darkness, and abhors the day,
    The clear reflecting mind presents his sin
    In frightful views, and makes it day within;
    Returning thoughts in endless circles roll,
    And thousand Furies haunt his guilty soul:
    The wretch then lifted to th' unpitying skies
    Those empty orbs from whence he tore his eyes,
    Whose wounds, yet fresh, with bloody hands he strook,
    While from his breast these dreadful accents broke: 80


    'Ye gods! that o'er the gloomy regions reign,
    Where guilty spirits feel eternal pain;
    Thou, sable Styx! whose livid streams are roll'd
    Through dreary coasts, which I though blind behold;
    Tisiphone! that oft hast heard my prayer,
    Assist, if Oedipus deserve thy care.
    If you received me from Jocasta's womb,
    And nursed the hope of mischiefs yet to come;
    If, leaving Polybus, I took my way
    To Cyrrha's temple, on that fatal day 90
    When by the son the trembling father died,
    Where the three roads the Phocian fields divide;
    If I the Sphynx's riddles durst explain,
    Taught by thyself to win the promised reign;
    If wretched I, by baleful Furies led,
    With monstrous mixture stain'd my mother's bed,
    For hell and thee begot an impious brood,
    And with full lust those horrid joys renew'd;
    Then, self-condemn'd to shades of endless night,
    Forced from these orbs the bleeding balls of sight; 100
    Oh, hear! and aid the vengeance I require,
    If worthy thee, and what thou might'st inspire!
    My sons their old, unhappy sire despise,
    Spoil'd of his kingdom, and deprived of eyes;
    Guideless I wander, unregarded mourn,
    Whilst these exalt their sceptres o'er my urn:
    These sons, ye gods! who with flagitious pride
    Insult my darkness and my groans deride.
    Art thou a father, unregarding Jove!
    And sleeps thy thunder in the realms above? 110
    Thou Fury! then some lasting curse entail,
    Which o'er their children's children shall prevail;
    Place on their heads that crown, distain'd with gore,
    Which these dire hands from my slain father tore;
    Go! and a parent's heavy curses bear;
    Break all the bonds of nature, and prepare
    Their kindred souls to mutual hate and war.
    Give them to dare, what I might wish to see,
    Blind as I am, some glorious villany!
    Soon shalt thou find, if thou but arm their hands, 120
    Their ready guilt preventing thy commands:
    Couldst thou some great proportion'd mischief frame,
    They'd prove the father from whose loins they came.'


    The Fury heard, while on Cocytus' brink
    Her snakes, untied, sulphureous waters drink;
    But at the summons roll'd her eyes around,
    And snatch'd the starting serpents from the ground.
    Not half so swiftly shoots along in air
    The gliding lightning or descending star;
    Through crowds of airy shades she wing'd her flight, 130
    And dark dominions of the silent night;
    Swift as she pass'd the flitting ghosts withdrew,
    And the pale spectres trembled at her view:
    To th' iron gates of Tenarus she flies,
    There spreads her dusky pinions to the skies.
    The day beheld, and, sickening at the sight,
    Veil'd her fair glories in the shades of night.
    Affrighted Atlas on the distant shore
    Trembled, and shook the heavens and gods he bore.
    Now from beneath Malea's airy height 140
    Aloft she sprung, and steer'd to Thebes her flight;
    With eager speed the well-known journey took,
    Nor here regrets the hell she late forsook.
    A hundred snakes her gloomy visage shade,
    A hundred serpents guard her horrid head;
    In her sunk eyeballs dreadful meteors glow:
    Such rays from Phoebe's bloody circle flow,
    When, labouring with strong charms, she shoots from high
    A fiery gleam, and reddens all the sky.
    Blood stain'd her cheeks, and from her mouth there came 150
    Blue steaming poisons, and a length of flame.
    From every blast of her contagious breath
    Famine and drought proceed, and plagues and death.
    A robe obscene was o'er her shoulders thrown,
    A dress by Fates and Furies worn alone.
    She toss'd her meagre arms; her better hand
    In waving circles whirl'd a funeral brand:
    A serpent from her left was seen to rear
    His flaming crest, and lash the yielding air.
    But when the Fury took her stand on high, 160
    Where vast Cithaeron's top salutes the sky,
    A hiss from all the snaky tire went round:
    The dreadful signal all the rocks rebound,
    And through th' Achaian cities send the sound.
    Oete, with high Parnassus, heard the voice;
    Eurotas' banks remurmur'd to the noise;
    Again Leucothoe shook at these alarms,
    And press'd Palaermon closer in her arms.
    Headlong from thence the glowing Fury springs,
    And o'er the Theban palace spreads her wings, 170
    Once more invades the guilty dome, and shrouds
    Its bright pavilions in a veil of clouds.
    Straight with the rage of all their race possess'd,
    Stung to the soul, the brothers start from rest,
    And all their Furies wake within their breast:
    Their tortured minds repining Envy tears,
    And Hate, engender'd by suspicious fears:
    And sacred thirst of sway, and all the ties
    Of nature broke; and royal perjuries;
    And impotent desire to reign alone, 180
    That scorns the dull reversion of a throne:
    Each would the sweets of sovereign rule devour,
    While Discord waits upon divided power.


    As stubborn steers, by brawny ploughmen broke,
    And join'd reluctant to the galling yoke,
    Alike disdain with servile necks to bear
    Th' unwonted weight, or drag the crooked share,
    But rend the reins, and bound a different way,
    And all the furrows in confusion lay:
    Such was the discord of the royal pair 190
    Whom fury drove precipitate to war.
    In vain the chiefs contrived a specious way
    To govern Thebes by their alternate sway:
    Unjust decree! while this enjoys the state,
    That mourns in exile his unequal fate,
    And the short monarch of a hasty year
    Foresees with anguish his returning heir.
    Thus did the league their impious arms restrain,
    But scarce subsisted to the second reign.


    Yet then no proud aspiring piles were raised, 200
    No fretted roofs with polish'd metals blazed;
    No labour'd columns in long order placed,
    No Grecian stone the pompous arches graced:
    No nightly bands in glittering armour wait
    Before the sleepless tyrant's guarded gate;
    No chargers then were wrought in burnish'd gold,
    Nor silver vases took the forming mould;
    Nor gems on bowls emboss'd were seen to shine,
    Blaze on the brims, and sparkle in the wine—
    Say, wretched rivals! what provokes your rage? 210
    Say, to what end your impious arms engage?
    Not all bright Phoebus views in early morn,
    Or when his evening beams the west adorn,
    When the south glows with his meridian ray,
    And the cold north receives a fainter day;
    For crimes like these, not all those realms suffice,
    Were all those realms the guilty victor's prize!


    But Fortune now (the lots of empire thrown)
    Decrees to proud Eteocles the crown:
    What joys, O tyrant! swell'd thy soul that day, 220
    When all were slaves thou couldst around survey,
    Pleased to behold unbounded power thy own,
    And singly fill a fear'd and envied throne!


    But the vile vulgar, ever discontent,
    Their growing fears in secret murmurs vent;
    Still prone to change, though still the slaves of state,
    And sure the monarch whom they have, to hate;
    New lords they madly make, then tamely bear,
    And softly curse the tyrants whom they fear.
    And one of those who groan beneath the sway 230
    Of kings imposed, and grudgingly obey,
    (Whom envy to the great, and vulgar spite,
    With scandal arm'd, th' ignoble mind's delight)
    Exclaim'd—'O Thebes! for thee what fates remain,
    What woes attend this inauspicious reign?
    Must we, alas! our doubtful necks prepare
    Each haughty master's yoke by turns to bear,
    And still to change whom changed we still must fear?
    These now control a wretched people's fate
    These can divide, and these reverse the state: 240
    E'en fortune rules no more—O servile land,
    Where exiled tyrants still by turns command!
    Thou sire of gods and men, imperial Jove!
    Is this th' eternal doom decreed above?
    On thy own offspring hast thou fix'd this fate
    From the first birth of our unhappy state,
    When banish'd Cadmus, wandering o'er the main,
    For lost Europa search'd the world in vain,
    And, fated in Boeotian fields to found,
    A rising empire on a foreign ground, 250
    First raised our walls on that ill omen'd plain
    Where earth-born brothers were by brothers slain?
    What lofty looks th' unrivall'd monarch bears!
    How all the tyrant in his face appears!
    What sullen fury clouds his scornful brow!
    Gods! how his eyes with threatening ardour glow!
    Can this imperious lord forget to reign,
    Quit all his state, descend, and serve again?
    Yet who, before, more popularly bow'd?
    Who more propitious to the suppliant crowd? 260
    Patient of right, familiar in the throne,
    What wonder then? he was not then alone.
    Oh wretched we! a vile, submissive train,
    Fortune's tame fools, and slaves in every reign!


    'As when two winds with rival force contend,
    This way and that the wavering sails they bend,
    While freezing Boreas and black Eurus blow,
    Now here, now there, the reeling vessel throw;
    Thus on each side, alas! our tottering state
    Feels all the fury of resistless fate, 270
    And doubtful still, and still distracted stands,
    While that prince threatens, and while this commands.'


    And now th' almighty Father of the gods
    Convenes a council in the bless'd abodes.
    Far in the bright recesses of the skies,
    High o'er the rolling heavens, a mansion lies,
    Whence, far below, the gods at once survey
    The realms of rising and declining day,
    And all th' extended space of earth, and air, and sea.
    Full in the midst, and on a starry throne, 280
    The Majesty of heaven superior shone:
    Serene he look'd, and gave an awful nod,
    And all the trembling spheres confess'd the god.
    At Jove's assent the deities around
    In solemn state the consistory crown'd.
    Next a long order of inferior powers
    Ascend from hills, and plains, and shady bowers;
    Those from whose urns the rolling rivers flow,
    And those that give the wandering winds to blow:
    Here all their rage and ev'n their murmurs cease, 290
    And sacred silence reigns, and universal peace.
    A shining synod of majestic gods
    Gilds with new lustre the divine abodes:
    Heaven seems improved with a superior ray,
    And the bright arch reflects a double day.
    The monarch then his solemn silence broke,
    The still creation listen'd while he spoke;
    Each sacred accent bears eternal weight,
    And each irrevocable word is fate.


    'How long shall man the wrath of Heaven defy, 300
    And force unwilling vengeance from the sky?
    O race confederate into crimes, that prove
    Triumphant o'er th' eluded rage of Jove!
    This wearied arm can scarce the bolt sustain,
    And unregarded thunder rolls in vain:
    Th' o'erlabour'd Cyclops from his task retires,
    Th' AEolian forge exhausted of its fires.
    For this, I suffer'd Phoebus' steeds to stray,
    And the mad ruler to misguide the day,
    When the wide earth to heaps of ashes turn'd, 310
    And Heaven itself the wandering chariot burn'd:
    For this my brother of the watery reign
    Released the impetuous sluices of the main;
    But flames consumed, and billows raged in vain.
    Two races now, allied to Jove, offend;
    To punish these, see Jove himself descend.
    The Theban kings their line from Cadmus trace,
    From godlike Perseus those of Argive race.
    Unhappy Cadmus' fate who does not know,
    And the long series of succeeding woe? 320
    How oft the Furies, from the deeps of night,
    Arose, and mix'd with men in mortal fight;
    Th' exulting mother stain'd with filial blood,
    The savage hunter and the haunted wood?
    The direful banquet why should I proclaim,
    And crimes that grieve the trembling gods to name?
    Ere I recount the sins of these profane,
    The sun would sink into the western main,
    And, rising, gild the radiant east again.
    Have we not seen (the blood of Laius shed) 330
    The murdering son ascend his parent's bed,
    Through violated nature force his way,
    And stain the sacred womb where once he lay?
    Yet now in darkness and despair he groans,
    And for the crimes of guilty fate atones;
    His sons with scorn their eyeless father view,
    Insult his wounds, and make them bleed anew.
    Thy curse, O OEdipus! just Heaven alarms,
    And sets th' avenging Thunderer in arms.
    I from the root thy guilty race will tear, 340
    And give the nations to the waste of war.
    Adrastus soon, with gods averse, shall join
    In dire alliance with the Theban line;
    Hence strife shall rise, and mortal war succeed;
    The guilty realms of Tantalus shall bleed:
    Fix'd is their doom. This all-remembering breast
    Yet harbours vengeance for the tyrant's feast.'


    He said; and thus the queen of heaven return'd:
    (With sudden grief her labouring bosom burn'd)
    'Must I, whose cares Phoroneus' towers defend, 350
    Must I, O Jove! in bloody wars contend?
    Thou know'st those regions my protection claim,
    Glorious in arms, in riches, and in fame:
    Though there the fair Egyptian heifer fed,
    And there deluded Argus slept and bled:
    Though there the brazen tower was storm'd of old,
    When Jove descended in almighty gold!
    Yet I can pardon those obscurer rapes,
    Those bashful crimes disguised in borrow'd shapes;
    But Thebes, where, shining in celestial charms, 360
    Thou cam'st triumphant to a mortal's arms,
    When all my glories o'er her limbs were spread,
    And blazing lightnings danced around her bed;
    Cursed Thebes the vengeance it deserves may prove—
    Ah! why should Argos feel the rage of Jove?
    Yet since thou wilt thy sister-queen control,
    Since still the lust of discord fires thy soul,
    Go, raze my Samos, let Mycene fall,
    And level with the dust the Spartan wall;
    No more let mortals Juno's power invoke, 370
    Her fanes no more with Eastern incense smoke,
    Nor victims sink beneath the sacred stroke!
    But to your Isis all my rights transfer,
    Let altars blaze and temples smoke for her;
    For her, through Egypt's fruitful clime renown'd,
    Let weeping Nilus hear the timbrel sound.
    But if thou must reform the stubborn times,
    Avenging on the sons the fathers' crimes,
    And from the long records of distant age
    Derive incitements to renew thy rage; 380
    Say, from what period then has Jove design'd
    To date his vengeance? to what bounds confined?
    Begin from thence, where first Alpheus hides
    His wandering stream, and through the briny tides
    Unmix'd to his Sicilian river glides.
    Thy own Arcadians there the thunder claim,
    Whose impious rites disgrace thy mighty name;
    Who raise thy temples where the chariot stood
    Of fierce Oenomaues, defiled with blood;
    Where once his steeds their savage banquet found, 390
    And human bones yet whiten all the ground.
    Say, can those honours please? and canst thou love
    Presumptuous Crete, that boasts the tomb of Jove?
    And shall not Tantalus's kingdoms share
    Thy wife and sister's tutelary care?
    Reverse, O Jove! thy too severe decree,
    Nor doom to war a race derived from thee;
    On impious realms and barbarous kings impose
    Thy plagues, and curse them with such sons[57] as those.'


    Thus in reproach and prayer the queen express'd 400
    The rage and grief contending in her breast;
    Unmoved remain'd the ruler of the sky,
    And from his throne return'd this stern reply:
    ''Twas thus I deem'd thy haughty soul would bear
    The dire, though just revenge which I prepare
    Against a nation thy peculiar care:
    No less Dione might for Thebes contend.
    Nor Bacchus less his native town defend;
    Yet these in silence see the Fates fulfil
    Their work, and reverence our superior will: 410
    For by the black infernal Styx I swear,
    (That dreadful oath which binds the Thunderer)
    'Tis fix'd, th' irrevocable doom of Jove;
    No force can bend me, no persuasion more.
    Haste then, Cyllenius, through the liquid air;
    Go, mount the winds, and to the shades repair;
    Bid hell's black monarch my commands obey,
    And give up Laius to the realms of day,
    Whose ghost yet shivering on Cocytus' sand
    Expects its passage to the further strand: 420
    Let the pale sire revisit Thebes, and bear
    These pleasing orders to the tyrant's ear;
    That, from his exiled brother, swell'd with pride
    Of foreign forces and his Argive bride,
    Almighty Jove commands him to detain
    The promised empire, and alternate reign:
    Be this the cause of more than mortal hate;
    The rest, succeeding times shall ripen into fate.'


    The god obeys, and to his feet applies
    Those golden wings that cut the yielding skies; 430
    His ample hat his beamy locks o'erspread,
    And veil'd the starry glories of his head.
    He seized the wand that causes sleep to fly,
    Or in soft slumbers seals the wakeful eye;
    That drives the dead to dark Tartarean coasts,
    Or back to life compels the wandering ghosts.
    Thus through the parting clouds the son of May
    Wings on the whistling winds his rapid way;
    Now smoothly steers through air his equal flight,
    Now springs aloft, and towers th' ethereal height: 440
    Then wheeling down the steep of heaven he flies,
    And draws a radiant circle o'er the skies.


    Meantime the banish'd Polynices roves
    (His Thebes abandon'd) through the Aonian groves,
    While future realms his wandering thoughts delight,
    His daily vision, and his dream by night;
    Forbidden Thebes appears before his eye,
    From whence he sees his absent brother fly,
    With transport views the airy rule his own,
    And swells on an imaginary throne. 450
    Fain would he cast a tedious age away,
    And live out all in one triumphant day.
    He chides the lazy progress of the sun,
    And bids the year with swifter motion run:
    With anxious hopes his craving mind is toss'd
    And all his joys in length of wishes lost.


    The hero then resolves his course to bend
    Where ancient Danaus' fruitful fields extend;
    And famed Mycene's lofty towers ascend;
    (Where late the sun did Atreus' crimes detest, 460
    And disappear'd in horror of the feast).
    And now by chance, by fate, or furies led,
    From Bacchus' consecrated caves he fled,
    Where the shrill cries of frantic matrons sound,
    And Pentheus' blood enrich'd the rising ground;
    Then sees Cithaeron towering o'er the plain,
    And thence declining gently to the main;
    Next to the bounds of Nisus' realm repairs,
    Where treacherous Scylla cut the purple hairs;
    The hanging cliffs of Scyron's rock explores, 470
    And hears the murmurs of the different shores;
    Passes the strait that parts the foaming seas,
    And stately Corinth's pleasing site surveys.


    'Twas now the time when Phoebus yields to night,
    And rising Cynthia sheds her silver light;
    Wide o'er the world in solemn pomp she drew
    Her airy chariot, hung with pearly dew:
    All birds and beasts lie hush'd; sleep steals away
    The wild desires of men, and toils of day,
    And brings, descending through the silent air, 480
    A sweet forgetfulness of human care.
    Yet no red clouds, with golden borders gay,
    Promise the skies the bright return of day;
    No faint reflections of the distant light
    Streak with long gleams the scattering shades of night:
    From the damp earth impervious vapours rise,
    Increase the darkness, and involve the skies.
    At once the rushing winds with roaring sound
    Burst from th' AEolian caves, and rend the ground;
    With equal rage their airy quarrel try, 490
    And win by turns the kingdom of the sky;
    But with a thicker night black Auster shrouds
    The heavens, and drives on heaps the rolling clouds,
    From whose dark womb a rattling tempest pours,
    Which the cold north congeals to haily showers.
    From pole to pole the thunder roars aloud,
    And broken lightnings flash from every cloud.
    Now smokes with showers the misty mountain-ground,
    And floated fields lie undistinguish'd round;
    Th' Inachian streams with headlong fury run, 500
    And Erasinus rolls a deluge on;
    The foaming Lerna swells above its bounds,
    And spreads its ancient poisons o'er the grounds:
    Where late was dust, now rapid torrents play,
    Rush through the mounds, and bear the dams away:
    Old limbs of trees, from crackling forests torn,
    Are whirl'd in air, and on the winds are borne:
    The storm the dark Lycaean groves display'd,
    And first to light exposed the sacred shade.
    Th' intrepid Theban hears the bursting sky,
    Sees yawning rocks in massy fragments fly,
    And views astonish'd, from the hills afar,
    The floods descending, and the watery war, 510
    That, driven by storms, and pouring o'er the plain,
    Swept herds, and hinds, and houses to the main.
    Through the brown horrors of the night he fled,
    Nor knows, amazed, what doubtful path to tread;
    His brother's image to his mind appears,
    Inflames his heart with rage, and wings his feet with fears.


    So fares the sailor on the stormy main, 520
    When clouds conceal Bootes' golden wain,
    When not a star its friendly lustre keeps,
    Nor trembling Cynthia glimmers on the deeps;
    He dreads the rocks, and shoals, and seas, and skies,
    While thunder roars, and lightning round him flies.


    Thus strove the chief, on every side distress'd;
    Thus still his courage with his toils increased:
    With his broad shield opposed, he forced his way
    Through thickest woods, and roused the beasts of prey
    Till he beheld, where from Larissa's height, 530
    The shelving walls reflect a glancing light:
    Thither with haste the Theban hero flies;
    On this side Lerna's poisonous water lies,
    On that Prosymna's grove and temple rise:
    He pass'd the gates which then unguarded lay,
    And to the regal palace bent his way;
    On the cold marble, spent with toil, he lies,
    And waits till pleasing slumbers seal his eyes.


    Adrastus here his happy people sways,
    Bless'd with calm peace in his declining days; 540
    By both his parents of descent divine,
    Great Jove and Phoebus graced his noble line:
    Heaven had not crown'd his wishes with a son,
    But two fair daughters heir'd his state and throne.
    To him Apollo (wondrous to relate!
    But who can pierce into the depths of fate?)
    Had sung—'Expect thy sons on Argos' shore,
    A yellow lion and a bristly boar.'
    This, long revolved in his paternal breast,
    Sat heavy on his heart, and broke his rest; 550
    This, great Amphiaraus! lay hid from thee,
    Though skill'd in fate and dark futurity.
    The father's care and prophet's art were vain,
    For thus did the predicting god ordain.


    Lo, hapless Tydeus, whose ill-fated hand
    Had slain his brother, leaves his native land,
    And, seized with horror, in the shades of night,
    Through the thick deserts headlong urged his flight:
    Now by the fury of the tempest driven,
    He seeks a shelter from th' inclement heaven, 560
    Till, led by fate, the Theban's steps he treads,
    And to fair Argos' open court succeeds.


    When thus the chiefs from different lands resort
    To Adrastus' realms and hospitable court,
    The king surveys his guests with curious eyes,
    And views their arms and habit with surprise.
    A lion's yellow skin the Theban wears,
    Horrid his mane, and rough with curling hairs:
    Such once employ'd Alcides' youthful toils,
    Ere yet adorn'd with Nemea's dreadful spoils. 570
    A boar's stiff hide, of Calydonian breed,
    Oenides' manly shoulders overspread;
    Oblique his tusks, erect his bristles stood,
    Alive, the pride and terror of the wood.


    Struck with the sight, and fix'd in deep amaze,
    The king th' accomplish'd oracle surveys,
    Reveres Apollo's vocal caves, and owns
    The guiding godhead, and his future sons.
    O'er all his bosom secret transports reign,
    And a glad horror shoots through every vein: 580
    To heaven he lifts his hands, erects his sight,
    And thus invokes the silent queen of night:


    'Goddess of shades! beneath whose gloomy reign
    Yon spangled arch glows with the starry train;
    You who the cares of heaven and earth allay
    Till nature, quicken'd by th' inspiring ray,
    Wakes to new vigour with the rising day:
    O thou who freest me from my doubtful state,
    Long lost and wilder'd in the maze of fate,
    Be present still, O goddess! in our aid; 590
    Proceed, and firm those omens thou hast made.
    We to thy name our annual rites will pay,
    And on thy altars sacrifices lay;
    The sable flock shall fall beneath the stroke,
    And fill thy temples with a grateful smoke.
    Hail, faithful Tripos! hail, ye dark abodes
    Of awful Phoebus; I confess the gods!'


    Thus, seized with sacred fear, the monarch pray'd;
    Then to his inner court the guests convey'd,
    Where yet thin fumes from dying sparks arise, 600
    And dust yet white upon each altar lies,
    The relics of a former sacrifice.
    The king once more the solemn rites requires,
    And bids renew the feasts and wake the fires.
    His train obey; while all the courts around
    With noisy care and various tumult sound.
    Embroider'd purple clothes the golden beds;
    This slave the floor, and that the table spreads;
    A third dispels the darkness of the night,
    And fills depending lamps with beams of light; 610
    Here loaves in canisters are piled on high,
    And there in flames the slaughter'd victims fly.
    Sublime in regal state Adrastus shone,
    Stretch'd on rich carpets on his ivory throne;
    A lofty couch receives each princely guest;
    Around, at awful distance, wait the rest.


    And now the king, his royal feast to grace,
    Acestis calls, the guardian of his race,
    Who first their youth in arts of virtue train'd,
    And their ripe years in modest grace maintain'd; 620
    Then softly whisper'd in her faithful ear,
    And bade his daughters at the rites appear.
    When from the close apartments of the night
    The royal nymphs approach, divinely bright,
    Such was Diana's, such Minerva's face;
    Nor shine their beauties with superior grace,
    But that in these a milder charm endears,
    And less of terror in their looks appears.
    As on the heroes first they cast their eyes,
    O'er their fair cheeks the glowing blushes rise; 630
    Their downcast looks a decent shame confess'd,
    Then on their father's reverend features rest.


    The banquet done, the monarch gives the sign
    To fill the goblet high with sparkling wine,
    Which Danaus used in sacred rites of old,
    With sculpture graced, and rough with rising gold:
    Here to the clouds victorious Perseus flies,
    Medusa seems to move her languid eyes,
    And, e'en in gold, turns paler as she dies:
    There from the chase Jove's towering eagle bears, 640
    On golden wings, the Phrygian to the stars;
    Still as he rises in th' ethereal height,
    His native mountains lessen to his sight,
    While all his sad companions upward gaze,
    Fix'd on the glorious scene in wild amaze;
    And the swift hounds, affrighted as he flies,
    Run to the shade, and bark against the skies.


    This golden bowl with generous juice was crown'd,
    The first libation sprinkled on the ground;
    By turns on each celestial power they call; 650
    With Phoebus' name resounds the vaulted hall.
    The courtly train, the strangers, and the rest,
    Crown'd with chaste laurel, and with garlands dress'd,
    While with rich gums the fuming altars blaze,
    Salute the god in numerous hymns of praise.


    Then thus the king: 'Perhaps, my noble guests,
    These honour'd altars, and these annual feasts
    To bright Apollo's awful name design'd,
    Unknown, with wonder may perplex your mind.
    Great was the cause: our old solemnities 660
    From no blind zeal or fond tradition rise;
    But saved from death, our Argives yearly pay
    These grateful honours to the god of day.


    'When by a thousand darts the Python slain,
    With orbs unroll'd lay covering all the plain,
    (Transfix'd as o'er Castalia's streams he hung,
    And suck'd new poisons with his triple tongue),
    To Argos' realms the victor god resorts,
    And enters old Crotopus' humble courts.
    This rural prince one only daughter bless'd, 670
    That all the charms of blooming youth possess'd;
    Pair was her face, and spotless was her mind,
    Where filial love with virgin sweetness join'd:
    Happy! and happy still she might have proved,
    Were she less beautiful, or less beloved!
    But Phoebus loved, and on the flowery side
    Of Nemea's stream the yielding fair enjoy'd.
    Now, ere ten moons their orb with light adorn,
    Th' illustrious offspring of the god was born;
    The nymph, her father's anger to evade, 680
    Retires from Argos to the sylvan shade;
    To woods and wilds the pleasing burden bears,
    And trusts her infant to a shepherd's cares.


    'How mean a fate, unhappy child! is thine!
    Ah! how unworthy those of race divine!
    On flowery herbs in some green covert laid,
    His bed the ground, his canopy the shade,
    He mixes with the bleating lambs his cries,
    While the rude swain his rural music tries,
    To call soft slumbers on his infant eyes. 690
    Yet ev'n in those obscure abodes to live
    Was more, alas! than cruel fate would give;
    For on the grassy verdure as he lay,
    And breathed the freshness of the early day,
    Devouring dogs the helpless infant tore,
    Fed on his trembling limbs, and lapp'd the gore.
    Th' astonish'd mother, when the rumour came,
    Forgets her father, and neglects her fame;
    With loud complaints she fills the yielding air,
    And beats her breast, and rends her flowing hair; 700
    Then, wild with anguish, to her sire she flies,
    Demands the sentence, and contented dies.


    'But, touch'd with sorrow for the deed too late,
    The raging god prepares t' avenge her fate.
    He sends a monster horrible and fell,
    Begot by Furies in the depths of hell.
    The pest a virgin's face and bosom bears;
    High on her crown a rising snake appears,
    Guards her black front, and hisses in her hairs:
    About the realm she walks her dreadful round, 710
    When Night with sable wings o'erspreads the ground,
    Devours young babes before their parents' eyes,
    And feeds and thrives on public miseries.


    'But generous rage the bold Choroebus warms,
    Choroebus, famed for virtue as for arms.
    Some few like him, inspired with martial flame,
    Thought a short life well lost for endless fame.
    These, where two ways in equal parts divide,
    The direful monster from afar descried,
    Two bleeding babes depending at her side, 720
    Whose panting vitals, warm with life, she draws,
    And in their hearts imbrues her cruel claws.
    The youths surround her with extended spears;
    But brave Choroebus in the front appears;
    Deep in her breast he plunged his shining sword,
    And hell's dire monster back to hell restored.
    Th' Inachians view the slain with vast surprise,
    Her twisting volumes, and her rolling eyes,
    Her spotted breast, and gaping womb, imbrued
    With livid poison and our children's blood. 730
    The crowd in stupid wonder fix'd appear,
    Pale ev'n in joy, nor yet forget to fear.
    Some with vast beams the squalid corse engage,
    And weary all the wild efforts of rage.
    The birds obscene, that nightly flock'd to taste,
    With hollow screeches fled the dire repast;
    And ravenous dogs, allured by scented blood,
    And starving wolves, ran howling to the wood.


    'But fired with rage, from cleft Parnassus' brow
    Avenging Phoebus bent his deadly bow, 740
    And hissing flew the feather'd fates below:
    A night of sultry clouds involved around
    The towers, the fields, and the devoted ground:
    And now a thousand lives together fled;
    Death with his scythe cut off the fatal thread,
    And a whole province in his triumph led.


    'But Phoebus, ask'd why noxious fires appear,
    And raging Sirius blasts the sickly year,
    Demands their lives by whom his monster fell,
    And dooms a dreadful sacrifice to hell. 750


    'Bless'd be thy dust, and let eternal fame
    Attend thy manes, and preserve thy name,
    Undaunted hero! who, divinely brave,
    In such a cause disdained thy life to save,
    But view'd the shrine with a superior look,
    And its upbraided godhead thus bespoke:
    “With piety, the soul's securest guard,
    And conscious virtue, still its own reward,
    Willing I come, unknowing how to fear,
    Nor shalt thou, Phoebus, find a suppliant here: 760
    Thy monster's death to me was owed alone,
    And 'tis a deed too glorious to disown.
    Behold him here, for whom, so many days,
    Impervious clouds conceal'd thy sullen rays;
    For whom, as man no longer claim'd thy care,
    Such numbers fell by pestilential air!
    But if th' abandon'd race of human kind
    From gods above no more compassion find;
    If such inclemency in heaven can dwell,
    Yet why must unoffending Argos feel 770
    The vengeance due to this unlucky steel?
    On me, on me, let all thy fury fall,
    Nor err from me, since I deserve it all:
    Unless our desert cities please thy sight,
    Or funeral flames reflect a grateful light.
    Discharge thy shafts, this ready bosom rend,
    And to the shades a ghost triumphant send;
    But for my country let my fate atone;
    Be mine the vengeance, as the crime my own!”


    'Merit distress'd, impartial heaven relieves: 780
    Unwelcome life relenting Phoebus gives;
    For not the vengeful power, that glow'd with rage,
    With such amazing virtue durst engage.
    The clouds dispersed, Apollo's wrath expired,
    And from the wondering god th' unwilling youth retired.
    Thence we these altars in his temple raise,
    And offer annual honours, feasts, and praise;
    These solemn feasts propitious Phoebus please;
    These honours, still renew'd, his ancient wrath appease.


    'But say, illustrious guest, (adjoin'd the king) 790
    What name you bear, from what high race you spring?
    The noble Tydeus stands confess'd, and known
    Our neighbour prince, and heir of Calydon:
    Relate your fortunes, while the friendly night
    And silent hours to various talk invite.'


    The Theban bends on earth his gloomy eyes,
    Confused, and sadly thus at length replies:—
    'Before these altars how shall I proclaim
    (O generous prince!) my nation or my name,
    Or through what veins our ancient blood has roll'd? 800
    Let the sad tale for ever rest untold!
    Yet if, propitious to a wretch unknown,
    You seek to share in sorrows not your own,
    Know then from Cadmus I derive my race,
    Jocasta's son, and Thebes my native place.'


    To whom the king (who felt his generous breast
    Touch'd with concern for his unhappy guest)
    Replies—'Ah! why forbears the son to name
    His wretched father, known too well by fame?
    Fame, that delights around the world to stray, 810
    Scorns not to take our Argos in her way.
    Ev'n those who dwell where suns at distance roll,
    In northern wilds, and freeze beneath the pole,
    And those who tread the burning Libyan lands,
    The faithless Syrtes, and the moving sands;
    Who view the western sea's extremest bounds,
    Or drink of Ganges in their eastern grounds;
    All these the woes of Oedipus have known,
    Your fates, your furies, and your haunted town.
    If on the sons the parents' crimes descend, 820
    What prince from those his lineage can defend?
    Be this thy comfort, that 'tis thine t' efface,
    With virtuous acts, thy ancestors' disgrace,
    And be thyself the honour of thy race.
    But see! the stars begin to steal away,
    And shine more faintly at approaching day;
    Now pour the wine; and in your tuneful lays
    Once more resound the great Apollo's praise.'


    'O father Phoebus! whether Lycia's coast
    And snowy mountains thy bright presence boast: 830
    Whether to sweet Castalia thou repair,
    And bathe in silver dews thy yellow hair;
    Or pleased to find fair Delos float no more,
    Delight in Cynthus and the shady shore;
    Or choose thy seat in Ilion's proud abodes,
    The shining structures raised by labouring gods:
    By thee the bow and mortal shafts are borne;
    Eternal charms thy blooming youth adorn:
    Skill'd in the laws of secret fate above,
    And the dark counsels of almighty Jove, 840
    'Tis thine the seeds of future war to know,
    The change of sceptres and impending woe,
    When direful meteors spread through glowing air
    Long trails of light and shake their blazing hair.
    Thy rage the Phrygian felt, who durst aspire
    T' excel the music of thy heavenly lyre;
    Thy shafts avenged lewd Tityus' guilty flame,
    Th' immortal victim of thy mother's fame;
    Thy hand slew Python, and the dame who lost
    Her numerous offspring for a fatal boast. 850
    In Phlegyas' doom thy just revenge appears,
    Condemn'd to Furies and eternal fears;
    He views his food, but dreads, with lifted eye,
    The mouldering rock that trembles from on high.


    'Propitious hear our prayer, O power divine!
    And on thy hospitable Argos shine;
    Whether the style of Titan please thee more,
    Whose purple rays th' Achaemenes adore:
    Or great Osiris, who first taught the swain
    In Pharian fields to sow the golden grain; 860
    Or Mithra, to whose beams the Persian bows,
    And pays, in hollow rocks, his awful vows;
    Mithra! whose head the blaze of light adorns,
    Who grasps the struggling heifer's lunar horns.'



           * * * * *



    JANUARY AND MAY.


    FROM CHAUCER.[58]


    There lived in Lombardy, as authors write,
    In days of old, a wise and worthy knight;
    Of gentle manners, as of generous race,
    Bless'd with much sense, more riches, and some grace:
    Yet, led astray by Venus' soft delights,
    He scarce could rule some idle appetites:
    For long ago, let priests say what they could,
    Weak sinful laymen were but flesh and blood.


    But in due time, when sixty years were o'er,
    He vow'd to lead this vicious life no more; 10
    Whether pure holiness inspired his mind,
    Or dotage turn'd his brain, is hard to find;
    But his high courage prick'd him forth to wed,
    And try the pleasures of a lawful bed.
    This was his nightly dream, his daily care,
    And to the heavenly powers his constant prayer,
    Once, ere he died, to taste the blissful life
    Of a kind husband and a loving wife.


    These thoughts he fortified with reasons still
    (For none want reasons to confirm their will). 20
    Grave authors say, and witty poets sing,
    That honest wedlock is a glorious thing:
    But depth of judgment most in him appears
    Who wisely weds in his maturer years.
    Then let him choose a damsel young and fair,
    To bless his age, and bring a worthy heir;
    To soothe his cares, and, free from noise and strife,
    Conduct him gently to the verge of life.
    Let sinful bachelors their woes deplore,
    Full well they merit all they feel, and more: 30
    Unawed by precepts, human or divine,
    Like birds and beasts, promiscuously they join;
    Nor know to make the present blessing last,
    To hope the future, or esteem the past:
    But vainly boast the joys they never tried,
    And find divulged the secrets they would hide.
    The married man may bear his yoke with ease,
    Secure at once himself and Heaven to please;
    And pass his inoffensive hours away,
    In bliss all night, and innocence all day: 40
    Though fortune change, his constant spouse remains,
    Augments his joys, or mitigates his pains.


    But what so pure which envious tongues will spare?
    Some wicked wits have libell'd all the fair.
    With matchless impudence they style a wife
    The dear-bought curse, and lawful plague of life;
    A bosom serpent, a domestic evil,
    A night invasion, and a midday devil.
    Let not the wise these slanderous words regard,
    But curse the bones of every lying bard. 50
    All other goods by fortune's hand are given,
    A wife is the peculiar gift of Heaven.
    Vain fortune's favours, never at a stay,
    Like empty shadows, pass, and glide away;
    One solid comfort, our eternal wife,
    Abundantly supplies us all our life:
    This blessing lasts (if those who try say true)
    As long as heart can wish—and longer too.


    Our grandsire Adam, ere of Eve possess'd,
    Alone, and e'en in Paradise unbless'd, 60
    With mournful looks the blissful scenes survey'd,
    And wander'd in the solitary shade.
    The Maker saw, took pity, and bestow'd
    Woman, the last, the best reserved of God.


    A wife! ah, gentle deities! can he
    That has a wife e'er feel adversity?
    Would men but follow what the sex advise,
    All things would prosper, all the world grow wise.
    Twas by Rebecca's aid that Jacob won
    His father's blessing from an elder son: 70
    Abusive Nabal owed his forfeit life
    To the wise conduct of a prudent wife:
    Heroic Judith, as old Hebrews show,
    Preserved the Jews, and slew th' Assyrian foe:
    At Hester's suit, the persecuting sword
    Was sheath'd, and Israel lived to bless the Lord.


    These weighty motives January the sage
    Maturely ponder'd in his riper age;
    And, charm'd with virtuous joys, and sober life,
    Would try that Christian comfort, call'd a wife. 80
    His friends were summon'd on a point so nice
    To pass their judgment, and to give advice;
    But fix'd before, and well resolved was he;
    (As men that ask advice are wont to be).


    'My friends,' he cried (and cast a mournful look
    Around the room, and sigh'd before he spoke),
    'Beneath the weight of threescore years I bend,
    And, worn with cares, am hastening to my end:
    How I have lived, alas! you know too well,
    In worldly follies which I blush to tell, 90
    But gracious Heaven has oped my eyes at last,
    With due regret I view my vices past,
    And, as the precept of the church decrees,
    Will take a wife, and live in holy ease:
    But since by counsel all things should be done,
    And many heads are wiser still than one;
    Choose you for me, who best shall be content
    When my desire's approved by your consent.


    'One caution yet is needful to be told,
    To guide your choice: this wife must not be old: 100
    There goes a saying, and 'twas shrewdly said,
    Old fish at table, but young flesh in bed.
    My soul abhors the tasteless dry embrace
    Of a stale virgin with a winter face:
    In that cold season Love but treats his guest
    With beanstraw, and tough forage at the best.
    No crafty widows shall approach my bed;
    Those are too wise for bachelors to wed.
    As subtle clerks by many schools are made,
    Twice-married dames are mistresses o' th' trade: 110
    But young and tender virgins, ruled with ease,
    We form like wax, and mould them as we please.


    'Conceive me, sirs, nor take my sense amiss;
    'Tis what concerns my soul's eternal bliss;
    Since, if I found no pleasure in my spouse,
    As flesh is frail, and who (God help me) knows?
    Then should I live in lewd adultery,
    And sink downright to Satan when I die:
    Or were I cursed with an unfruitful bed,
    The righteous end were lost for which I wed; 120
    To raise up seed to bless the powers above,
    And not for pleasure only, or for love.
    Think not I dote; 'tis time to take a wife,
    When vigorous blood forbids a chaster life:
    Those that are bless'd with store of grace divine,
    May live like saints, by Heaven's consent and mine!


    'And since I speak of wedlock, let me say
    (As, thank my stars, in modest truth I may),
    My limbs are active, still I'm sound at heart,
    And a new vigour springs in every part. 130
    Think not my virtue lost, though time has shed
    These reverend honours on my hoary head:
    Thus trees are crown'd with blossoms white as snow,
    The vital sap then rising from below.
    Old as I am, my lusty limbs appear
    Like winter greens, that flourish all the year.
    Now, sirs, you know to what I stand inclined,
    Let every friend with freedom speak his mind.'


    He said; the rest in different parts divide;
    The knotty point was urged on either side: 140
    Marriage, the theme on which they all declaim'd,
    Some praised with wit, and some with reason blamed.
    Till, what with proofs, objections, and replies,
    Each wondrous positive and wondrous wise,
    There fell between his brothers a debate:
    Placebo this was call'd, and Justin that.


    First to the knight Placebo thus begun,
    (Mild were his looks, and pleasing was his tone):
    'Such prudence, sir, in all your words appears,
    As plainly proves experience dwells with years! 150
    Yet you pursue sage Solomon's advice,
    To work by counsel when affairs are nice:
    But, with the wise man's leave, I must protest,
    So may my soul arrive at ease and rest,
    As still I hold your own advice the best.


    'Sir, I have lived a courtier all my days,
    And studied men, their manners, and their ways;
    And have observed this useful maxim still.
    To let my betters always have their will.
    Nay, if my lord affirm'd that black was white, 160
    My word was this, “Your honour's in the right.”
    Th' assuming wit, who deems himself so wise
    As his mistaken patron to advise,
    Let him not dare to vent his dangerous thought;
    A noble fool was never in a fault.
    This, sir, affects not you, whose every word
    Is weigh'd with judgment, and befits a lord:
    Your will is mine: and is (I will maintain)
    Pleasing to God, and should be so to man;
    At least your courage all the world must praise, 170
    Who dare to wed in your declining days.
    Indulge the vigour of your mounting blood,
    And let gray fools be indolently good,
    Who, past all pleasure, damn the joys of sense,
    With reverend dulness and grave impotence.'


    Justin, who silent sate, and heard the man,
    Thus with a philosophic frown began:


    'A heathen author, of the first degree,
    (Who, though not faith, had sense as well as we),
    Bids us be certain our concerns to trust 180
    To those of generous principles and just.
    The venture's greater, I'll presume to say,
    To give your person, than your goods away:
    And therefore, sir, as you regard your rest,
    First learn your lady's qualities at least:
    Whether she's chaste or rampant, proud or civil,
    Meek as a saint, or haughty as the devil;
    Whether an easy, fond, familiar fool,
    Or such a wit as no man e'er can rule.
    'Tis true, perfection none must hope to find 190
    In all this world, much less in womankind:
    But if her virtues prove the larger share,
    Bless the kind fates, and think your fortune rare.
    Ah, gentle sir, take warning of a friend,
    Who knows too well the state you thus commend;
    And, spite of all his praises, must declare,
    All he can find is bondage, cost, and care.
    Heaven knows I shed full many a private tear,
    And sigh in silence, lest the world should hear;
    While all my friends applaud my blissful life, 200
    And swear no mortal's happier in a wife;
    Demure and chaste as any vestal nun,
    The meekest creature that beholds the sun!
    But, by th' immortal powers, I feel the pain,
    And he that smarts has reason to complain.
    Do what you list, for me; you must be sage,
    And cautious sure; for wisdom is in age:
    But at these years to venture on the fair!
    By Him who made the ocean, earth, and air,
    To please a wife, when her occasions call, 210
    Would busy the most vigorous of us all.
    And trust me, sir, the chastest you can choose,
    Will ask observance, and exact her dues.
    If what I speak my noble lord offend,
    My tedious sermon here is at an end.'


    ''Tis well, 'tis wondrous well,' the knight replies,
    'Most worthy kinsman, faith, you're mighty wise!
    We, sirs, are fools; and must resign the cause
    To heathenish authors, proverbs, and old saws.'
    He spoke with scorn, and turn'd another way: 220
    'What does my friend, my dear Placebo, say?'


    'I say,' quoth he, 'by Heaven, the man's to blame,
    To slander wives, and wedlock's holy name.'


    At this the council rose without delay;
    Each, in his own opinion, went his way;
    With full consent, that, all disputes appeased,
    The knight should marry when and where he pleased.


    Who now but January exults with joy?
    The charms of wedlock all his soul employ:
    Each nymph by turns his wavering mind possess'd, 230
    And reign'd the short-lived tyrant of his breast;
    Whilst fancy pictured every lively part,
    And each bright image wander'd o'er his heart.
    Thus, in some public forum fix'd on high,
    A mirror shows the figures moving by;
    Still one by one, in swift succession, pass
    The gliding shadows o'er the polish'd glass.
    This lady's charms the nicest could not blame,
    But vile suspicions had aspersed her fame;
    That was with sense, but not with virtue bless'd; 240
    And one had grace that wanted all the rest.
    Thus doubting long what nymph he should obey
    He fix'd at last upon the youthful May.
    Her faults he knew not, love is always blind,
    But every charm revolved within his mind:
    Her tender age, her form divinely fair,
    Her easy motion, her attractive air,
    Her sweet behaviour, her enchanting face,
    Her moving softness, and majestic grace.
    Much in his prudence did our knight rejoice, 250
    And thought no mortal could dispute his choice:
    Once more in haste he summon'd every friend,
    And told them all their pains were at an end.
    'Heaven, that (said he) inspired me first to wed,
    Provides a consort worthy of my bed:
    Let none oppose th' election, since on this
    Depends my quiet and my future bliss.


    'A dame there is, the darling of my eyes,
    Young, beauteous, artless, innocent, and wise;
    Chaste, though not rich; and, though not nobly born, 260
    Of honest parents, and may serve my turn.
    Her will I wed, if gracious Heaven so please,
    To pass my age in sanctity and ease;
    And, thank the powers, I may possess alone
    The lovely prize, and share my bliss with none!
    If you, my friends, this virgin can procure,
    My joys are full, my happiness is sure.


    'One only doubt remains: full oft, I've heard
    By casuists grave, and deep divines averr'd,
    That 'tis too much for human race to know 270
    The bliss of heaven above and earth below;
    Now, should the nuptial pleasures prove so great,
    To match the blessings of the future state,
    Those endless joys were ill exchanged for these;
    Then clear this doubt, and set my mind at ease.'


    This Justin heard, nor could his spleen control,
    Touch'd to the quick, and tickled at the soul.
    'Sir knight,' he cried, 'if this be all you dread,
    Heaven put it past your doubt whene'er you wed:
    And to my fervent prayers so far consent, 280
    That, ere the rites are o'er, you may repent!
    Good Heaven, no doubt, the nuptial state approves,
    Since it chastises still what best it loves.
    Then be not, sir, abandoned to despair:
    Seek, and perhaps you'll find among the fair
    One that may do your business to a hair;
    Not e'en in wish your happiness delay,
    But prove the scourge to lash you on your way:
    Then to the skies your mounting soul shall go,
    Swift as an arrow soaring from the bow! 290
    Provided still, you moderate your joy,
    Nor in your pleasures all your might employ;
    Let reason's rule your strong desires abate,
    Nor please too lavishly your gentle mate
    Old wives there are, of judgment most acute,
    Who solve these questions beyond all dispute;
    Consult with those, and be of better cheer;
    Marry, do penance, and dismiss your fear.'


    So said, they rose, nor more the work delay'd
    The match was offer'd, the proposals made. 300
    The parents, you may think, would soon comply
    The old have interest ever in their eye.
    Nor was it hard to move the lady's mind;
    When fortune favours, still the fair are kind.


    I pass each previous settlement and deed,
    Too long for me to write, or you to read;
    Nor will with quaint impertinence display
    The pomp, the pageantry, the proud array.
    The time approach'd; to church the parties went,
    At once with carnal and devout intent: 310
    Forth came the priest, and bade the obedient wife
    Like Sarah or Rebecca lead her life;
    Then pray'd the powers the fruitful bed to bless,
    And made all sure enough with holiness.


    And now the palace gates are open'd wide,
    The guests appear in order, side by side,
    And, placed in state, the bridegroom and the bride.
    The breathing flute's soft notes are heard around,
    And the shrill trumpets mix their silver sound;
    The vaulted roofs with echoing music ring, 320
    These touch the vocal stops, and those the trembling string.
    Not thus Amphion tuned the warbling lyre,
    Nor Joab the sounding clarion could inspire,
    Nor fierce Theodamas, whose sprightly strain
    Could swell the soul to rage, and fire the martial train.


    Bacchus himself, the nuptial feast to grace,
    (So poets sing) was present on the place:
    And lovely Venus, goddess of delight,
    Shook high her flaming torch in open sight,
    And danced around, and smiled on every knight: 330
    Pleased her best servant would his courage try,
    No less in wedlock than in liberty.
    Full many an age old Hymen had not spied
    So kind a bridegroom, or so bright a bride.
    Ye bards! renown'd among the tuneful throng
    For gentle lays, and joyous nuptial song,
    Think not your softest numbers can display
    The matchless glories of this blissful day;
    The joys are such as far transcend your rage,
    When tender youth has wedded stooping age. 340


    The beauteous dame sat smiling at the board,
    And darted amorous glances at her lord.
    Not Hester's self, whose charms the Hebrews sing,
    E'er look'd so lovely on her Persian king:
    Bright as the rising sun in summer's day,
    And fresh and blooming as the month of May!
    The joyful knight survey'd her by his side,
    Nor envied Paris with his Spartan bride:
    Still as his mind revolved with vast delight
    Th' entrancing raptures of th' approaching night, 350
    Restless he sat, invoking every power
    To speed his bliss, and haste the happy hour.
    Meantime the vigorous dancers beat the ground,
    And songs were sung, and flowing bowls went round.
    With odorous spices they perfumed the place,
    And mirth and pleasure shone in every face.


    Damian alone, of all the menial train,
    Sad in the midst of triumphs, sigh'd for pain;
    Damian alone, the knight's obsequious squire,
    Consumed at heart, and fed a secret fire. 360
    His lovely mistress all his soul possess'd,
    He look'd, he languish'd, and could take no rest:
    His task perform'd, he sadly went his way,
    Fell on his bed, and loath'd the light of day:
    There let him lie; till his relenting dame
    Weep in her turn, and waste in equal flame.


    The weary sun, as learned poets write,
    Forsook th' horizon, and roll'd down the light;
    While glittering stars his absent beams supply.
    And night's dark mantle overspread the sky. 370
    Then rose the guests, and, as the time required,
    Each paid his thanks, and decently retired.


    The foe once gone, our knight prepared t' undress,
    So keen he was, and eager to possess;
    But first thought fit th' assistance to receive,
    Which grave physicians scruple not to give:
    Satyrion near, with hot eringoes stood,
    Cantharides, to fire the lazy blood,
    Whose use old bards describe in luscious rhymes,
    And critics learn'd explain to modern times. 380


    By this the sheets were spread, the bride undress'd,
    The room was sprinkled, and the bed was bless'd.
    What next ensued beseems not me to say;
    'Tis sung, he labour'd till the dawning day,
    Then briskly sprung from bed, with heart so light,
    As all were nothing he had done by night,
    And sipp'd his cordial as he sat upright.
    He kiss'd his balmy spouse with wanton play,
    And feebly sung a lusty roundelay:
    Then on the couch his weary limbs he cast; 390
    For every labour must have rest at last.


    But anxious cares the pensive squire oppress'd,
    Sleep fled his eyes, and peace forsook his breast;
    The raging flames that in his bosom dwell,
    He wanted art to hide, and means to tell:
    Yet hoping time th' occasion might betray,
    Composed a sonnet to the lovely May;
    Which, writ and folded with the nicest art,
    He wrapp'd in silk, and laid upon his heart.


    When now the fourth revolving day was run, 400
    ('Twas June, and Cancer had received the sun),
    Forth from her chamber came the beauteous bride;
    The good old knight moved slowly by her side.
    High mass was sung; they feasted in the hall;
    The servants round stood ready at their call
    The squire alone was absent from the board,
    And much his sickness grieved his worthy lord,
    Who pray'd his spouse, attended with her train,
    To visit Damian, and divert his pain.
    Th' obliging dames obey'd with one consent: 410
    They left the hall, and to his lodging went.
    The female tribe surround him as he lay,
    And close beside him sat the gentle May:
    Where, as she tried his pulse, he softly drew
    A heaving sigh, and cast a mournful view!
    Then gave his bill, and bribed the Powers divine
    With secret vows, to favour his design.


    Who studies now but discontented May?
    On her soft couch uneasily she lay: 420
    The lumpish husband snored away the night,
    Till coughs awaked him near the morning light.
    What then he did, I'll not presume to tell,
    Nor if she thought herself in heaven or hell:
    Honest and dull in nuptial bed they lay,
    Till the bell toll'd, and all arose to pray.


    Were it by forceful destiny decreed,
    Or did from chance, or nature's power proceed;
    Or that some star, with aspect kind to love,
    Shed its selectest influence from above;
    Whatever was the cause, the tender dame 430
    Felt the first motions of an infant flame;
    Received th' impressions of the love-sick squire,
    And wasted in the soft infectious fire.


    Ye fair, draw near, let May's example move
    Your gentle minds to pity those who love!
    Had some fierce tyrant in her stead been found,
    The poor adorer sure had hang'd or drown'd;
    But she, your sex's mirror, free from pride,
    Was much too meek to prove a homicide.


    But to my tale:—Some sages have defined 440
    Pleasure the sovereign bliss of humankind:
    Our knight (who studied much, we may suppose)
    Derived his high philosophy from those;
    For, like a prince, he bore the vast expense
    Of lavish pomp, and proud magnificence:
    His house was stately, his retinue gay,
    Large was his train, and gorgeous his array.
    His spacious garden, made to yield to none,
    Was compass'd round with walls of solid stone;
    Priapus could not half describe the grace 450
    (Though god of gardens) of this charming place:
    A place to tire the rambling wits of France
    In long descriptions, and exceed romance:
    Enough to shame the gentlest bard that sings
    Of painted meadows, and of purling springs.


    Full in the centre of the flowery ground
    A crystal fountain spread its streams around,
    The fruitful banks with verdant laurels crown'd.
    About this spring (if ancient fame say true)
    The dapper elves their moonlight sports pursue: 460
    Their pigmy king, and little fairy queen,
    In circling dances gamboll'd on the green,
    While tuneful sprites a merry concert made,
    And airy music warbled through the shade.


    Hither the noble knight would oft repair,
    (His scene of pleasure, and peculiar care):
    For this he held it dear, and always bore
    The silver key that lock'd the garden door.
    To this sweet place, in summer's sultry heat,
    He used from noise and business to retreat: 470
    And here in dalliance spend the livelong day,
    Solus cum sola, with his sprightly May:
    For whate'er work was undischarged abed,
    The duteous knight in this fair garden sped.


    But ah! what mortal lives of bliss secure?
    How short a space our worldly joys endure!
    O Fortune! fair, like all thy treacherous kind,
    But faithless still, and wavering as the wind!
    O painted monster, form'd mankind to cheat
    With pleasing poison, and with soft deceit! 480
    This rich, this amorous, venerable knight,
    Amidst his ease, his solace, and delight,
    Struck blind by thee, resigns his days to grief,
    And calls on death, the wretch's last relief.


    The rage of jealousy then seized his mind,
    For much he fear'd the faith of womankind.
    His wife, not suffer'd from his side to stray,
    Was captive kept; he watch'd her night and day,
    Abridged her pleasures, and confined her sway.
    Full oft in tears did hapless May complain, 490
    And sigh'd full oft; but sigh'd and wept in vain:
    She look'd on Damian with a lover's eye;
    For oh, 'twas fix'd; she must possess or die!
    Nor less impatience vex'd her amorous squire,
    Wild with delay, and burning with desire.
    Watch'd as she was, yet could he not refrain
    By secret writing to disclose his pain;
    The dame by signs reveal'd her kind intent,
    Till both were conscious what each other meant.


    Ah! gentle knight, what would thy eyes avail, 500
    Though they could see as far as ships can sail?
    'Tis better, sure, when blind, deceived to be,
    Than be deluded when a man can see!


    Argus himself, so cautious and so wise,
    Was overwatch'd, for all his hundred eyes:
    So many an honest husband may, 'tis known,
    Who, wisely, never thinks the case his own.


    The dame at last, by diligence and care,
    Procured the key her knight was wont to bear;
    She took the wards in wax before the fire, 510
    And gave th' impression to the trusty squire.
    By means of this some wonder shall appear,
    Which, in due place and season, you may hear.
    Well sung sweet Ovid, in the days of yore,
    What slight is that which love will not explore?
    And Pyramus and Thisbe plainly show
    The feats true lovers, when they list, can do:
    Though watch'd and captive, yet in spite of all,
    They found the art of kissing through a wall.


    But now no longer from our tale to stray; 520
    It happ'd, that once, upon a summer's day,
    Our reverend knight was urged to amorous play;
    He raised his spouse ere matin-bell was rung,
    And thus his morning canticle he sung:


    'Awake, my love, disclose thy radiant eyes!
    Arise, my wife, my beauteous lady, rise!
    Hear how the doves with pensive notes complain,
    And in soft murmurs tell the trees their pain:
    The winter's past; the clouds and tempests fly;
    The sun adorns the fields, and brightens all the sky. 530
    Fair without spot, whose every charming part
    My bosom wounds, and captivates my heart!
    Come, and in mutual pleasures let's engage,
    Joy of my life, and comfort of my age!'


    This heard, to Damian straight a sign she made
    To haste before; the gentle squire obey'd:
    Secret and undescried he took his way,
    And, ambush'd close, behind an arbour lay.


    It was not long ere January came,
    And hand in hand with him his lovely dame; 540
    Blind as he was, not doubting all was sure,
    He turn'd the key, and made the gate secure.


    'Here let us walk,' he said, 'observed by none,
    Conscious of pleasures to the world unknown:
    So may my soul have joy, as thou, my wife,
    Art far the dearest solace of my life;
    And rather would I choose, by heaven above!
    To die this instant, than to lose thy love.
    Reflect what truth was in my passion shown,
    When, unendow'd, I took thee for my own, 550
    And sought no treasure but thy heart alone.
    Old as I am, and now deprived of sight,
    Whilst thou art faithful to thy own true knight,
    Nor age, nor blindness rob me of delight.
    Each other loss with patience I can bear,
    The loss of thee is what I only fear.


    'Consider then, my lady, and my wife,
    The solid comforts of a virtuous life.
    As, first, the love of Christ himself you gain;
    Next, your own honour undefiled maintain; 560
    And, lastly, that which sure your mind must move,
    My whole estate shall gratify your love:
    Make your own terms, and ere to-morrow's sun
    Displays his light, by heaven, it shall be done!
    I seal the contract with a holy kiss,
    And will perform, by this—my dear, and this—
    Have comfort, spouse, nor think thy lord unkind;
    'Tis love, not jealousy, that fires my mind!
    For when thy charms my sober thoughts engage,
    And join'd to them my own unequal age, 570
    From thy dear side I have no power to part,
    Such secret transports warm my melting heart.
    For who that once possess'd those heavenly charms,
    Could live one moment absent from thy arms?'


    He ceased, and May with modest grace replied,
    (Weak was her voice, as while she spoke she cried):
    'Heaven knows (with that a tender sigh she drew)
    I have a soul to save as well as you;
    And, what no less you to my charge commend,
    My dearest honour will to death defend. 580
    To you in holy church I gave my hand,
    And join'd my heart in wedlock's sacred band:
    Yet after this, if you distrust my care,
    Then hear, my lord, and witness what I swear:


    'First may the yawning earth her bosom rend,
    And let me hence to hell alive descend;
    Or die the death I dread no less than hell,
    Sew'd in a sack, and plunged into a well,
    Ere I my fame by one lewd act disgrace,
    Or once renounce the honour of my race. 590
    For know, sir knight, of gentle blood I came;
    I loathe a whore, and startle at the name.
    But jealous men on their own crimes reflect,
    And learn from thence their ladies to suspect:
    Else why these heedless cautions, sir, to me
    These doubts and fears of female constancy
    This chime still rings in every lady's ear,
    The only strain a wife must hope to hear.'


    Thus while she spoke a sidelong glance she cast,
    Where Damian, kneeling, worshipp'd as she pass'd. 600
    She saw him watch the motions of her eye,
    And singled out a pear-tree planted nigh:
    'Twas charged with fruit that made a goodly show,
    And hung with dangling pears was every bough.
    Thither th' obsequious squire address'd his pace,
    And, climbing, in the summit took his place;
    The knight and lady walk'd beneath in view,
    Where let us leave them and our tale pursue.


    'Twas now the season when the glorious sun
    His heavenly progress through the Twins had run; 610
    And Jove, exalted, his mild influence yields,
    To glad the glebe, and paint the flowery fields:
    Clear was the day, and Phoebus, rising bright,
    Had streak'd the azure firmament with light;
    He pierced the glittering clouds with golden streams,
    And warm'd the womb of earth with genial beams.


    It so befell, in that fair morning tide,
    The fairies sported on the garden side,
    And in the midst their monarch and his bride.
    So featly tripp'd the light-foot ladies round, 620
    The knights so nimbly o'er the greensward bound,
    That scarce they bent the flowers or touch'd the ground.
    The dances ended, all the fairy train
    For pinks and daisies search'd the flowery plain;
    While on a bank reclined of rising green,
    Thus, with a frown, the king bespoke his queen:


    ''Tis too apparent, argue what you can,
    The treachery you women use to man:
    A thousand authors have this truth made out,
    And sad experience leaves no room for doubt. 630


    'Heaven rest thy spirit, noble Solomon!
    A wiser monarch never saw the sun:
    All wealth, all honours, the supreme degree
    Of earthly bliss, was well bestow'd on thee!
    For sagely hast thou said, Of all mankind,
    One only just, and righteous, hope to find:
    But shouldst thou search the spacious world around,
    Yet one good woman is not to be found.


    'Thus says the king, who knew your wickedness;
    The son of Sirach testifies no less. 640
    So may some wild-fire on your bodies fall,
    Or some devouring plague consume you all;
    As well you view the lecher in the tree,
    And well this honourable knight you see:
    But, since he's blind and old (a helpless case),
    His squire shall cuckold him before your face.


    'Now by my own dread majesty I swear,
    And by this awful sceptre which I bear,
    No impious wretch shall 'scape unpunish'd long,
    That in my presence offers such a wrong. 650
    I will this instant undeceive the knight,
    And in the very act restore his sight:
    And set the strumpet here in open view,
    A warning to these ladies, and to you,
    And all the faithless sex, for ever to be true.'


    'And will you so,' replied the queen, 'indeed?
    Now, by my mother's soul, it is decreed,
    She shall not want an answer at her need.
    For her, and for her daughters, I'll engage,
    And all the sex in each succeeding age; 660
    Art shall be theirs to varnish an offence,
    And fortify their crimes with confidence.
    Nay, were they taken in a strict embrace,
    Seen with both eyes, and pinion'd on the place;
    All they shall need is to protest and swear,
    Breathe a soft sigh, and drop a tender tear;
    Till their wise husbands, gull'd by arts like these,
    Grow gentle, tractable, and tame as geese.


    'What though this slanderous Jew, this Solomon,
    Call'd women fools, and knew full many a one; 670
    The wiser wits of later times declare
    How constant, chaste, and virtuous women are:
    Witness the martyrs who resign'd their breath,
    Serene in torments, unconcern'd in death;
    And witness next what Roman authors tell,
    How Arria, Portia, and Lucretia fell.


    'But since the sacred leaves to all are free,
    And men interpret texts, why should not we?
    By this no more was meant than to have shown
    That sovereign goodness dwells in Him alone, 680
    Who only Is, and is but only One.
    But grant the worst; shall women then be weigh'd
    By every word that Solomon hath said
    What though this king (as ancient story boasts)
    Built a fair temple to the Lord of Hosts;
    He ceased at last his Maker to adore,
    And did as much for idol gods, or more.
    Beware what lavish praises you confer
    On a rank lecher and idolater;
    Whose reign indulgent God, says Holy Writ, 690
    Did but for David's righteous sake permit;
    David the monarch after Heaven's own mind,
    Who loved our sex, and honour'd all our kind.


    'Well, I'm a woman, and as such must speak;
    Silence would swell me, and my heart would break.
    Know, then, I scorn your dull authorities,
    Your idle wits, and all their learned lies:
    By heaven, those authors are our sex's foes,
    Whom, in our right, I must and will oppose!'


    'Nay,' quoth the king, 'dear madam, be not wroth; 700
    I yield it up; but since I gave my oath,
    That this much-injured knight again should see;
    It must be done—I am a king,' said he,
    'And one whose faith has ever sacred been—'


    'And so has mine' (she said)—'I am a queen:
    Her answer she shall have, I undertake;
    And thus an end of all dispute I make.
    Try when you list; and you shall find, my lord,
    It is not in our sex to break our word.'


    We leave them here in this heroic strain, 710
    And to the knight our story turns again;
    Who in the garden, with his lovely May,
    Sung merrier than the cuckoo or the jay:
    This was his song, 'Oh kind and constant be;
    Constant and kind I'll ever prove to thee.'


    Thus singing as he went, at last he drew
    By easy steps to where the pear-tree grew:
    The longing dame look'd up, and spied her love
    Full fairly perch'd among the boughs above.
    She stopp'd, and sighing, 'O good gods!' she cried, 720
    'What pangs, what sudden shoots distend my side
    Oh for that tempting fruit, so fresh, so green;
    Help, for the love of heaven's immortal queen!
    Help, dearest lord, and save at once the life
    Of thy poor infant, and thy longing wife!'


    Sore sigh'd the knight to hear his lady's cry,
    But could not climb, and had no servant nigh:
    Old as he was, and void of eyesight too,
    What could, alas! a helpless husband do?
    'And must I languish, then, (she said), and die, 730
    Yet view the lovely fruit before my eye?
    At least, kind sir, for charity's sweet sake,
    Vouchsafe the trunk between your arms to take;
    Then from your back I might ascend the tree;
    Do you but stoop, and leave the rest to me.'


    'With all my soul,' he thus replied again,
    'I'd spend my dearest blood to ease thy pain.'
    With that his back against the trunk he bent;
    She seized a twig, and up the tree she went.


    Now prove your patience, gentle ladies all! 740
    Nor let on me your heavy anger fall:
    'Tis truth I tell, though not in phrase refined;
    Though blunt my tale, yet honest is my mind.
    What feats the lady in the tree might do,
    I pass, as gambols never known to you;
    But sure it was a merrier fit, she swore,
    Than in her life she ever felt before.


    In that nice moment, lo! the wondering knight
    Look'd out, and stood restored to sudden sight.
    Straight on the tree his eager eyes he bent, 750
    As one whose thoughts were on his spouse intent;
    But when he saw his bosom-wife so dress'd,
    His rage was such as cannot be express'd:
    Not frantic mothers, when their infants die,
    With louder clamours rend the vaulted sky:
    He cried, he roar'd, he storm'd, he tore his hair:
    'Death! hell! and furies! what dost thou do there?'


    'What ails my lord?' the trembling dame replied,
    'I thought your patience had been better tried:
    Is this your love, ungrateful and unkind, 760
    This my reward for having cured the blind?
    Why was I taught to make my husband see,
    By struggling with a man upon a tree
    Did I for this the power of magic prove?
    Unhappy wife, whose crime was too much love!'


    'If this be struggling, by this holy light,
    'Tis struggling with a vengeance (quoth the knight):
    So Heaven preserve the sight it has restored,
    As with these eyes I plainly saw thee whored;
    Whored by my slave—perfidious wretch! may hell 770
    As surely seize thee, as I saw too well.'


    'Guard me, good angels!' cried the gentle May,
    'Pray heaven this magic work the proper way!
    Alas, my love! 'tis certain, could you see,
    You ne'er had used these killing words to me:
    So help me, Fates! as 'tis no perfect sight,
    But some faint glimmering of a doubtful light.'


    'What I have said (quoth he) I must maintain,
    For by th' immortal powers it seem'd too plain—'


    'By all those powers, some frenzy seized your mind 780
    (Replied the dame), are these the thanks I find?
    Wretch that I am, that e'er I was so kind!'
    She said; a rising sigh express'd her woe,
    The ready tears apace began to flow,
    And, as they fell, she wiped from either eye
    The drops (for women, when they list, can cry).


    The knight was touch'd; and in his looks appear'd
    Signs of remorse, while thus his spouse he cheer'd:
    'Madam, 'tis past, and my short anger o'er!
    Come down, and vex your tender heart no more: 790
    Excuse me, dear, if aught amiss was said,
    For, on my soul, amends shall soon be made:
    Let my repentance your forgiveness draw;
    By heaven, I swore but what I thought I saw.'


    'Ah, my loved lord! 'twas much unkind (she cried)
    On bare suspicion thus to treat your bride.
    But, till your sight's establish'd, for a while,
    Imperfect objects may your sense beguile.
    Thus, when from sleep we first our eyes display,
    The balls are wounded with the piercing ray, 800
    And dusky vapours rise and intercept the day;
    So, just recovering from the shades of night,
    Your swimming eyes are drunk with sudden light,
    Strange phantoms dance around, and skim before your sight.
    Then, sir, be cautious, nor too rashly deem;
    Heaven knows how seldom things are what they seem!
    Consult your reason, and you soon shall find
    'Twas you were jealous, not your wife unkind:
    Jove ne'er spoke oracle more true than this,
    None judge so wrong as those who think amiss.' 810


    With that she leap'd into her lord's embrace,
    With well-dissembled virtue in her face.
    He hugg'd her close, and kiss'd her o'er and o'er,
    Disturb'd with doubts and jealousies no more:
    Both, pleased and bless'd, renew'd their mutual vows:
    A fruitful wife, and a believing spouse.


    Thus ends our tale, whose moral next to make,
    Let all wise husbands hence example take;
    And pray, to crown the pleasure of their lives,
    To be so well deluded by their wives. 820






    THE WIFE OF BATH, HER PROLOGUE.


    FROM CHAUCER.


    Behold the woes of matrimonial life,
    And hear with reverence an experienced wife!
    To dear-bought wisdom give the credit due,
    And think, for once, a woman tells you true.
    In all these trials I have borne a part:
    I was myself the scourge that caused the smart;
    For, since fifteen, in triumph have I led
    Five captive husbands from the church to bed.


    Christ saw a wedding once, the Scripture says,
    And saw but one, 'tis thought, in all his days; 10
    Whence some infer, whose conscience is too nice,
    No pious Christian ought to marry twice.


    But let them read, and solve me if they can,
    The words address'd to the Samaritan;
    Five times in lawful wedlock she was join'd,
    And sure the certain stint was ne'er defined.


    'Increase and multiply' was Heaven's command,
    And that's a text I clearly understand:
    This, too, 'Let men their sires and mothers leave,
    And to their dearer wives for ever cleave.' 20
    More wives than one by Solomon were tried,
    Or else the wisest of mankind's belied.
    I've had myself full many a merry fit,
    And trust in heaven I may have many yet;
    For when my transitory spouse, unkind,
    Shall die and leave his woful wife behind,
    I'll take the next good Christian I can find.


    Paul, knowing one could never serve our turn,
    Declared 'twas better far to wed than burn.
    There's danger in assembling fire and tow; 30
    I grant 'em that; and what it means you know.
    The same apostle, too, has elsewhere own'd
    No precept for virginity he found:
    'Tis but a counsel—and we women still
    Take which we like, the counsel or our will.


    I envy not their bliss, if he or she
    Think fit to live in perfect chastity:
    Pure let them be, and free from taint or vice;
    I for a few slight spots am not so nice.
    Heaven calls us different ways; on these bestows 40
    One proper gift, another grants to those;
    Not every man's obliged to sell his store,
    And give up all his substance to the poor:
    Such as are perfect may, I can't deny;
    But, by your leaves, divines! so am not I.


    Full many a saint, since first the world began,
    Lived an unspotted maid in spite of man:
    Let such (a God's name) with fine wheat be fed,
    And let us honest wives eat barley bread.
    For me, I'll keep the post assign'd by heaven, 50
    And use the copious talent it has given:
    Let my good spouse pay tribute, do me right,
    And keep an equal reckoning every night;
    His proper body is not his, but mine;
    For so said Paul, and Paul's a sound divine.


    Know then, of those five husbands I have had,
    Three were just tolerable, two were bad.
    The three were old, but rich and fond beside,
    And toil'd most piteously to please their bride;
    But since their wealth (the best they had) was mine, 60
    The rest, without much loss, I could resign:
    Sure to be loved, I took no pains to please,
    Yet had more pleasure far than they had ease.


    Presents flow'd in apace: with showers of gold
    They made their court, like Jupiter of old:
    If I but smiled, a sudden youth they found,
    And a new palsy seized them when I frown'd.
    Ye sovereign wives! give ear, and understand:
    Thus shall ye speak, and exercise command;
    For never was it given to mortal man 70
    To lie so boldly as we women can:
    Forswear the fact, though seen with both his eyes,
    And call your maids to witness how he lies.


    Hark, old Sir Paul! ('twas thus I used to say)
    Whence is our neighbour's wife so rich and gay
    Treated, caress'd, where'er she's pleased to roam—
    I sit in tatters, and immured at home.
    Why to her house dost thou so oft repair?
    Art thou so amorous? and is she so fair?
    If I but see a cousin or a friend, 80
    Lord! how you swell and rage, like any fiend!
    But you reel home, a drunken beastly bear,
    Then preach till midnight in your easy chair;
    Cry, Wives are false, and every woman evil,
    And give up all that's female to the devil.
    If poor (you say), she drains her husband's purse;
    If rich, she keeps her priest, or something worse;
    If highly born, intolerably vain,
    Vapours and pride by turns possess her brain;
    Now gaily mad, now sourly splenetic, 90
    Freakish when well, and fretful when she's sick:
    If fair, then chaste she cannot long abide,
    By pressing youth attack'd on every side;
    If foul, her wealth the lusty lover lures,
    Or else her wit some fool-gallant procures,
    Or else she dances with becoming grace,
    Or shape excuses the defects of face.
    There swims no goose so gray, but soon or late
    She finds some honest gander for her mate.


    Horses (thou say'st) and asses men may try, 100
    And ring suspected vessels ere they buy;
    But wives, a random choice, untried they take,
    They dream in courtship, but in wedlock wake;
    Then, nor till then, the veil's removed away,
    And all the woman glares in open day.


    You tell me, to preserve your wife's good grace,
    Your eyes must always languish on my face,
    Your tongue with constant flatteries feed my ear,
    And tag each sentence with 'My life! My dear!'
    If, by strange chance, a modest blush be raised, 110
    Be sure my fine complexion must be praised.
    My garments always must be new and gay,
    And feasts still kept upon my wedding day.
    Then must my nurse be pleased, and favourite maid:
    And endless treats and endless visits paid
    To a long train of kindred, friends, allies:
    All this thou say'st, and all thou say'st are lies.


    On Jenkin, too, you cast a squinting eye:
    What! can your 'prentice raise your jealousy?
    Fresh are his ruddy cheeks, his forehead fair, 120
    And like the burnish'd gold his curling hair.
    But clear thy wrinkled brow, and quit thy sorrow,
    I'd scorn your 'prentice should you die to-morrow.


    Why are thy chests all lock'd? on what design?
    Are not thy worldly goods and treasures mine?
    Sir, I'm no fool; nor shall you, by St John,
    Have goods and body to yourself alone.
    One you shall quit, in spite of both your eyes—
    I heed not, I, the bolts, the locks, the spies.
    If you had wit, you'd say, 'Go where you will, 130
    Dear spouse! I credit not the tales they tell:
    Take all the freedoms of a married life;
    I know thee for a virtuous, faithful wife.'


    Lord! when you have enough, what need you care
    How merrily soever others fare?
    Though all the day I give and take delight,
    Doubt not, sufficient will be left at night.
    'Tis but a just and rational desire
    To light a taper at a neighbour's fire.
    There's danger too, you think, in rich array, 140
    And none can long be modest that are gay.
    The cat, if you but singe her tabby skin,
    The chimney keeps, and sits content within:
    But once grown sleek, will from her corner run,
    Sport with her tail, and wanton in the sun:
    She licks her fair round face, and frisks abroad
    To show her fur, and to be catterwaw'd.


    Lo! thus, my friends, I wrought to my desires
    These three right ancient venerable sires.
    I told 'em, Thus you say, and thus you do; 150
    And told 'em false, but Jenkin swore 'twas true.
    I, like a dog, could bite as well as whine,
    And first complain'd whene'er the guilt was mine.
    I tax'd them oft with wenching and amours,
    When their weak legs scarce dragg'd them out of doors
    And swore, the rambles that I took by night
    Were all to spy what damsels they bedight:
    That colour brought me many hours of mirth;
    For all this wit is given us from our birth.
    Heaven gave to woman the peculiar grace 160
    To spin, to weep, and cully human race.
    By this nice conduct and this prudent course,
    By murmuring, wheedling, stratagem, and force,
    I still prevail'd, and would be in the right,
    Or curtain lectures made a restless night.
    If once my husband's arm was o'er my side,
    'What! so familiar with your spouse?' I cried:
    I levied first a tax upon his need;
    Then let him—'twas a nicety indeed!
    Let all mankind this certain maxim hold; 170
    Marry who will, our sex is to be sold.
    With empty hands no tassels you can lure,
    But fulsome love for gain we can endure;
    For gold we love the impotent and old,
    And heave, and pant, and kiss, and cling, for gold.
    Yet with embraces curses oft I mix'd,
    Then kiss'd again, and chid, and rail'd betwixt.
    Well, I may make my will in peace, and die,
    For not one word in man's arrears am I.
    To drop a dear dispute I was unable, 180
    E'en though the Pope himself had sat at table:
    But when my point was gain'd, then thus I spoke:
    'Billy, my dear, how sheepishly you look!
    Approach, my spouse, and let me kiss thy cheek;
    Thou shouldst be always thus, resign'd and meek!
    Of Job's great patience since so oft you preach,
    Well should you practise who so well can teach.
    'Tis difficult to do, I must allow,
    But I, my dearest! will instruct you how.
    Great is the blessing of a prudent wife, 190
    Who puts a period to domestic strife.
    One of us two must rule, and one obey;
    And since in man right reason bears the sway,
    Let that frail thing, weak woman, have her way.
    The wives of all my family have ruled
    Their tender husbands, and their passions cool'd.
    Fye! 'tis unmanly thus to sigh and groan:
    What! would you have me to yourself alone?
    Why, take me, love! take all and every part!
    Here's your revenge! you love it at your heart. 200
    Would I vouchsafe to sell what nature gave,
    You little think what custom I could have.
    But see! I'm all your own—nay, hold—for shame!
    What means my dear?—indeed, you are to blame.'


    Thus with my first three lords I pass'd my life,
    A very woman, and a very wife.
    What sums from these old spouses I could raise,
    Procured young husbands in my riper days.
    Though past my bloom, not yet decay'd was I,
    Wanton and wild, and chatter'd like a pie. 210
    In country-dances still I bore the bell,
    And sung as sweet as evening Philomel.
    To clear my quail-pipe, and refresh my soul,
    Full oft I drain'd the spicy nut-brown bowl;
    Rich luscious wines, that youthful blood improve,
    And warm the swelling veins to feats of love:
    For 'tis as sure as cold engenders hail,
    A liquorish mouth must have a lecherous tail:
    Wine lets no lover unrewarded go,
    As all true gamesters by experience know. 220


    But oh, good gods! whene'er a thought I cast
    On all the joys of youth and beauty past,
    To find in pleasures I have had my part,
    Still warms me to the bottom of my heart.
    This wicked world was once my dear delight;
    Now, all my conquests, all my charms, good night!
    The flour consumed, the best that now I can
    Is e'en to make my market of the bran.


    My fourth dear spouse was not exceeding true;
    He kept, 'twas thought, a private miss or two: 230
    But all that score I paid—As how? you'll say,
    Not with my body, in a filthy way;
    But I so dress'd, and danced, and drank, and dined,
    And view'd a friend with eyes so very kind,
    As stung his heart, and made his marrow fry,
    With burning rage and frantic jealousy
    His soul, I hope, enjoys eternal glory,
    For here on earth I was his purgatory.
    Oft, when his shoe the most severely wrung,
    He put on careless airs, and sat and sung. 240
    How sore I gall'd him only heaven could know,
    And he that felt, and I that caused the woe:
    He died, when last from pilgrimage I came,
    With other gossips from Jerusalem,
    And now lies buried underneath a rood,
    Fair to be seen, and rear'd of honest wood:
    A tomb, indeed, with fewer sculptures graced
    Than that Mausolus' pious widow placed,
    Or where enshrined the great Darius lay;
    But cost on graves is merely thrown away. 250
    The pit fill'd up, with turf we cover'd o'er;
    So bless the good man's soul! I say no more.


    Now for my fifth loved lord, the last and best;
    (Kind heaven afford him everlasting rest!)
    Full hearty was his love, and I can show
    The tokens on my ribs in black and blue;
    Yet with a knack my heart he could have won,
    While yet the smart was shooting in the bone.
    How quaint an appetite in woman reigns!
    Free gifts we scorn, and love what costs us pains: 260
    Let men avoid us, and on them we leap;
    A glutted market makes provisions cheap.


    In pure goodwill I took this jovial spark,
    Of Oxford he, a most egregious clerk.
    He boarded with a widow in the town,
    A trusty gossip, one dame Alison;
    Full well the secrets of my soul she knew,
    Better than e'er our parish priest could do.
    To her I told whatever could befall:
    Had but my husband piss'd against a wall, 270
    Or done a thing that might have cost his life,
    She—and my niece—and one more worthy wife,
    Had known it all: what most he would conceal,
    To these I made no scruple to reveal.
    Oft has he blush'd from ear to ear for shame
    That e'er he told a secret to his dame.


    It so befell, in holy time of Lent,
    That oft a day I to this gossip went;
    (My husband, thank my stars, was out of town)
    From house to house we rambled up and down, 280
    This clerk, myself, and my good neighbour, Alse,
    To see, be seen, to tell, and gather tales.
    Visits to every church we daily paid,
    And march'd in every holy masquerade;
    The stations duly, and the vigils kept;
    Not much we fasted, but scarce ever slept.
    At sermons, too, I shone in scarlet gay:
    The wasting moth ne'er spoil'd my best array;
    The cause was this, I wore it every day.


    'Twas when fresh May her early blossoms yields, 290
    This clerk and I were walking in the fields.
    We grew so intimate, I can't tell how,
    I pawn'd my honour, and engaged my vow,
    If e'er I laid my husband in his urn,
    That he, and only he, should serve my turn.
    We straight struck hands, the bargain was agreed;
    I still have shifts against a time of need:
    The mouse that always trusts to one poor hole
    Can never be a mouse of any soul.


    I vow'd I scarce could sleep since first I knew him, 300
    And durst be sworn he had bewitch'd me to him
    If e'er I slept, I dream'd of him alone,
    And dreams foretell, as learned men have shown:
    All this I said; but dreams, sirs, I had none:
    I follow'd but my crafty crony's lore,
    Who bid me tell this lie—and twenty more.


    Thus day by day, and month by mouth we pass'd;
    It pleased the Lord to take my spouse at last.
    I tore my gown, I soil'd my locks with dust,
    And beat my breasts, as wretched widows must. 310
    Before my face my handkerchief I spread,
    To hide the flood of tears I did not shed.
    The good man's coffin to the church was borne;
    Around, the neighbours, and my clerk, too, mourn:
    But as he march'd, good gods! he show'd a pair
    Of legs and feet so clean, so strong, so fair!
    Of twenty winters' age he seem'd to be;
    I (to say truth) was twenty more than he;
    But vigorous still, a lively buxom dame,
    And had a wondrous gift to quench a flame. 320
    A conjuror once, that deeply could divine,
    Assured me Mars in Taurus was my sign.
    As the stars order'd, such my life has been:
    Alas, alas! that ever love was sin!
    Fair Venus gave me fire and sprightly grace,
    And Mars assurance and a dauntless face.
    By virtue of this powerful constellation,
    I follow'd always my own inclination.


    But to my tale: A month scarce pass'd away,
    With dance and song we kept the nuptial day. 330
    All I possess'd I gave to his command,
    My goods and chattels, money, house, and land;
    But oft repented, and repent it still;
    He proved a rebel to my sovereign will;
    Nay, once, by heaven! he struck me on the face;
    Hear but the fact, and judge yourselves the case.


    Stubborn as any lioness was I,
    And knew full well to raise my voice on high;
    As true a rambler as I was before,
    And would be so in spite of all he swore. 340
    He against this right sagely would advise,
    And old examples set before my eyes;
    Tell how the Roman matrons led their life,
    Of Gracchus' mother, and Duilius' wife;
    And close the sermon, as beseem'd his wit,
    With some grave sentence out of Holy Writ.
    Oft would he say, 'Who builds his house on sands,
    Pricks his blind horse across the fallow lands;
    Or lets his wife abroad with pilgrims roam,
    Deserves a fool's cap and long ears at home.' 350
    All this avail'd not, for whoe'er he be
    That tells my faults, I hate him mortally!
    And so do numbers more, I'll boldly say,
    Men, women, clergy, regular, and lay.


    My spouse (who was, you know, to learning bred)
    A certain treatise oft at evening read,
    Where divers authors (whom the devil confound
    For all their lies) were in one volume bound:
    Valerius whole, and of St Jerome part;
    Chrysippus and Tertullian, Ovid's Art, 360
    Solomon's Proverbs, Eloisa's Loves,
    And many more than, sure, the Church approves.
    More legends were there here of wicked wives
    Than good in all the Bible and saints' lives.
    Who drew the lion vanquish'd? 'Twas a man:
    But could we women write as scholars can,
    Men should stand mark'd with far more wickedness
    Than all the sons of Adam could redress.
    Love seldom haunts the breast where learning lies,
    And Venus sets ere Mercury can rise. 370
    Those play the scholars who can't play the men,
    And use that weapon which they have, their pen:
    When old, and past the relish of delight,
    Then down they sit, and in their dotage write,
    That not one woman keeps her marriage-vow.
    (This by the way, but to my purpose now:)


    It chanced my husband, on a winter's night,
    Read in this book aloud with strange delight,
    How the first female (as the Scriptures show)
    Brought her own spouse and all his race to woe; 380
    How Samson fell; and he whom Dejanire
    Wrapp'd in th' envenom'd shirt, and set on fire;
    How cursed Eriphyle her lord betray'd,
    And the dire ambush Clytemnestra laid;
    But what most pleased him was the Cretan dame
    And husband-bull—Oh, monstrous! fye, for shame!


    He had by heart the whole detail of woe
    Xantippe made her good man undergo;
    How oft she scolded in a day he knew,
    How many pisspots on the sage she threw; 390
    Who took it patiently, and wiped his head:
    'Rain follows thunder,' that was all he said.


    He read how Arius to his friend complain'd
    A fatal tree was growing in his land,
    On which three wives successively had twined
    A sliding noose, and waver'd in the wind.
    'Where grows this plant,' replied the friend, 'oh! where?
    For better fruit did never orchard bear:
    Give me some slip of this most blissful tree,
    And in my garden planted it shall be!' 400


    Then how two wives their lords' destruction prove,
    Through hatred one, and one through too much love;
    That for her husband mix'd a poisonous draught,
    And this for lust an amorous philtre bought:
    The nimble juice soon seized his giddy head,
    Frantic at night, and in the morning dead.


    How some with swords their sleeping lords have slain,
    And some have hammer'd nails into their brain,
    And some have drench'd them with a deadly potion:
    All this he read, and read with great devotion. 410


    Long time I heard, and swell'd, and blush'd, and frown'd;
    But when no end of these vile tales I found,
    When still he read, and laugh'd, and read again,
    And half the night was thus consumed in vain,
    Provoked to vengeance, three large leaves I tore,
    And with one buffet fell'd him on the floor.
    With that my husband in a fury rose,
    And down he settled me with hearty blows.
    I groan'd, and lay extended on my side;
    'Oh! thou hast slain me for my wealth!' I cried, 420
    'Yet I forgive thee—take my last embrace—'
    He wept, kind soul! and stoop'd to kiss my face:
    I took him such a box as turn'd him blue,
    Then sigh'd, and cried, 'Adieu, my dear, adieu!'


    But after many a hearty struggle past,
    I condescended to be pleased at last.
    Soon as he said, 'My mistress and my wife!
    Do what you list the term of all your life,'
    I took to heart the merits of the cause,
    And stood content to rule by wholesome laws; 430
    Received the reins of absolute command,
    With all the government of house and land,
    And empire o'er his tongue and o'er his hand.
    As for the volume that reviled the dames,
    'Twas torn to fragments, and condemn'd to flames.


    Now, Heaven, on all my husbands gone bestow
    Pleasures above for tortures felt below:
    That rest they wish'd for, grant them in the grave,
    And bless those souls my conduct help'd to save!






    PROLOGUE AND EPILOGUES





    A PROLOGUE. TO A PLAY FOR MR DENNIS'S BENEFIT, IN 1733, WHEN HE WAS OLD, BLIND, AND
    IN GREAT DISTRESS, A LITTLE BEFORE HIS DEATH.


    As when that hero, who, in each campaign,
    Had braved the Goth, and many a Vandal slain,
    Lay fortune-struck, a spectacle of woe!
    Wept by each friend, forgiven by every foe:
    Was there a generous, a reflecting mind,
    But pitied Belisarius, old and blind?
    Was there a chief but melted at the sight?
    A common soldier, but who clubb'd his mite?
    Such, such emotions should in Britons rise,
    When press'd by want and weakness Dennis lies; 10
    Dennis, who long had warr'd with modern Huns,
    Their quibbles routed, and defied their puns;
    A desperate bulwark, sturdy, firm, and fierce,
    Against the Gothic sons of frozen verse:
    How changed from him who made the boxes groan,
    And shook the stage with thunders all his own!
    Stood up to dash each vain pretender's hope,
    Maul the French tyrant, or pull down the Pope!
    If there's a Briton then, true bred and born,
    Who holds dragoons and wooden shoes in scorn; 20
    If there's a critic of distinguished rage;
    If there's a senior who contemns this age:
    Let him to night his just assistance lend,
    And be the critic's, Briton's, old man's friend.

    PROLOGUE TO MR ADDISON'S 'CATO.'


    To wake the soul by tender strokes of art,
    To raise the genius, and to mend the heart;
    To make mankind, in conscious virtue bold,
    Live o'er each scene, and be what they behold:
    For this the tragic Muse first trod the stage,
    Commanding tears to stream through every age;
    Tyrants no more their savage nature kept,
    And foes to virtue wonder'd how they wept.
    Our author shuns by vulgar springs to move
    The hero's glory, or the virgin's love; 10
    In pitying love, we but our weakness show,
    And wild ambition well deserves its woe.
    Here tears shall flow from a more generous cause,
    Such tears as patriots shed for dying laws:
    He bids your breasts with ancient ardour rise,
    And calls forth Roman drops from British eyes.
    Virtue confess'd in human shape he draws,
    What Plato thought, and godlike Cato was:
    No common object to your sight displays,
    But what with pleasure Heaven itself surveys, 20
    A brave man struggling in the storms of fate,
    And greatly falling with a falling state.
    While Cato gives his little senate laws,
    What bosom beats not in his country's cause?
    Who sees him act, but envies every deed?
    Who hears him groan, and does not wish to bleed?
    E'en when proud Caesar, 'midst triumphal cars,
    The spoils of nations, and the pomp of wars,
    Ignobly vain, and impotently great,
    Show'd Rome her Cato's figure drawn in state; 30
    As her dead father's reverend image pass'd,
    The pomp was darkened, and the day o'ercast;
    The triumph ceased, tears gush'd from every eye;
    The world's great victor pass'd unheeded by;
    Her last good man dejected Rome adored,
    And honour'd Caesar's less than Cato's sword.


    Britons, attend: be worth like this approved,
    And show you have the virtue to be moved.
    With honest scorn the first famed Cato view'd
    Rome learning arts from Greece, whom she subdued: 40
    Your scene precariously subsists too long
    On French translation and Italian song.
    Dare to have sense yourselves; assert the stage,
    Be justly warm'd with your own native rage:
    Such plays alone should win a British ear,
    As Cato's self had not disdain'd to hear.

    PROLOGUE TO THOMSON'S 'SOPHONISBA.'[59]


    When Learning, after the long Gothic night,
    Fair, o'er the western world, renew'd its light,
    With arts arising, Sophonisba rose;
    The tragic Muse, returning, wept her woes.
    With her th' Italian scene first learn'd to glow,
    And the first tears for her were taught to flow:
    Her charms the Gallic Muses next inspired;
    Corneille himself saw, wonder'd, and was fired.


    What foreign theatres with pride have shown,
    Britain, by juster title, makes her own. 10
    When freedom is the cause, 'tis hers to fight,
    And hers, when freedom is the theme, to write.
    For this a British author bids again
    The heroine rise, to grace the British scene:
    Here, as in life, she breathes her genuine flame,
    She asks, What bosom has not felt the same?
    Asks of the British youth—is silence there?
    She dares to ask it of the British fair.
    To-night our homespun author would be true,
    At once to nature, history, and you. 20
    Well pleased to give our neighbours due applause,
    He owns their learning, but disdains their laws;
    Not to his patient touch, or happy flame,
    'Tis to his British heart he trusts for fame.
    If France excel him in one freeborn thought,
    The man, as well as poet, is in fault.
    Nature! informer of the poet's art,
    Whose force alone can raise or melt the heart,
    Thou art his guide; each passion, every line,
    Whate'er he draws to please, must all be thine. 30
    Be thou his judge: in every candid breast
    Thy silent whisper is the sacred test.

    PROLOGUE, DESIGNED FOR MR D'URFEY'S LAST PLAY.


    Grown old in rhyme, 'twere barbarous to discard
    Your persevering, unexhausted bard;
    Damnation follows death in other men,
    But your damn'd poet lives and writes again.
    The adventurous lover is successful still,
    Who strives to please the fair against her will:
    Be kind, and make him in his wishes easy,
    Who in your own despite has strove to please ye.
    He scorn'd to borrow from the wits of yore,
    But ever writ, as none e'er writ before. 10
    You modern wits, should each man bring his claim,
    Have desperate debentures on your fame;
    And little would be left you, I'm afraid,
    If all your debts to Greece and Rome were paid.
    From this deep fund our author largely draws,
    Nor sinks his credit lower than it was.
    Though plays for honour in old time he made,
    'Tis now for better reasons—to be paid.
    Believe him, he has known the world too long,
    And seen the death of much immortal song. 20
    He says, poor poets lost, while players won,
    As pimps grow rich, while gallants are undone.
    Though Tom the poet writ with ease and pleasure,
    The comic Tom abounds in other treasure.
    Fame is at best an unperforming cheat;
    But 'tis substantial happiness to eat.
    Let ease, his last request, be of your giving,
    Nor force him to be damn'd to get his living.

    PROLOGUE TO 'THE THREE HOURS AFTER MARRIAGE'


    Authors are judged by strange capricious rules;
    The great ones are thought mad, the small ones fools:
    Yet sure the best are most severely fated;
    For fools are only laugh'd at, wits are hated.
    Blockheads with reason men of sense abhor;
    But fool 'gainst fool, is barbarous civil war.
    Why on all authors, then, should critics fall?
    Since some have writ, and shown no wit at all.
    Condemn a play of theirs, and they evade it;
    Cry, 'Damn not us, but damn the French, who made it.' 10
    By running goods these graceless owlers gain;
    Theirs are the rules of France, the plots of Spain;
    But wit, like wine, from happier climates brought,
    Dash'd by these rogues, turns English common draught.
    They pall Moliere's and Lopez' sprightly strain,
    And teach dull harlequins to grin in vain.


    How shall our author hope a gentler fate,
    Who dares most impudently not translate?
    It had been civil, in these ticklish times,
    To fetch his fools and knaves from foreign climes; 20
    Spaniards and French abuse to the world's end,
    But spare old England, lest you hurt a friend.
    If any fool is by our satire bit,
    Let him hiss loud, to show you all he's hit.
    Poets make characters, as salesmen clothes;
    We take no measure of your fops and beaux;
    But here all sizes and all shapes you meet,
    And fit yourselves, like chaps in Monmouth Street.


    Gallants, look here! this fool's cap[60] has an air, 30
    Goodly and smart, with ears of Issachar.
    Let no one fool engross it, or confine
    A common blessing: now 'tis yours, now mine.
    But poets in all ages had the care
    To keep this cap for such as will, to wear.
    Our author has it now (for every wit
    Of course resign'd it to the next that writ)
    And thus upon the stage 'tis fairly thrown;[61]
    Let him that takes it wear it as his own.

    EPILOGUE TO MR ROWE'S 'JANE SHORE.'


    DESIGNED FOR MRS OLDFIELD.


    Prodigious this! the frail one of our play
    From her own sex should mercy find to-day!
    You might have held the pretty head aside,
    Peep'd in your fans, been serious thus, and cried—
    'The play may pass—but that strange creature, Shore,
    I can't—indeed now—I so hate a whore—'
    Just as a blockhead rubs his thoughtless skull,
    And thanks his stars he was not born a fool;
    So from a sister sinner you shall hear,
    'How strangely you expose yourself, my dear!' 10
    But let me die, all raillery apart,
    Our sex are still forgiving at their heart;
    And, did not wicked custom so contrive,
    We'd be the best good-natured things alive.


    There are, 'tis true, who tell another tale,
    That virtuous ladies envy while they rail;
    Such rage without, betrays the fire within;
    In some close corner of the soul they sin;
    Still hoarding up, most scandalously nice,
    Amidst their virtues a reserve of vice. 20
    The godly dame, who fleshly failings damns,
    Scolds with her maid, or with her chaplain crams.
    Would you enjoy soft nights and solid dinners?
    Faith, gallants, board with saints, and bed with sinners,


    Well, if our author in the wife offends,
    He has a husband that will make amends;
    He draws him gentle, tender, and forgiving;
    And sure such kind good creatures may be living.
    In days of old, they pardon'd breach of vows,
    Stern Cato's self was no relentless spouse: 30
    Plu—Plutarch, what's his name that writes his life?
    Tells us, that Cato dearly loved his wife:
    Yet if a friend, a night or so, should need her,
    He'd recommend her as a special breeder.
    To lend a wife, few here would scruple make;
    But, pray, which of you all would take her back?
    Though with the Stoic chief our stage may ring,
    The Stoic husband was the glorious thing.
    The man had courage, was a sage, 'tis true,
    And loved his country—but what's that to you? 40
    Those strange examples ne'er were made to fit ye,
    But the kind cuckold might instruct the city:
    There, many an honest man may copy Cato,
    Who ne'er saw naked sword, or look'd in Plato.


    If, after all, you think it a disgrace,
    That Edward's miss thus perks it in your face;
    To see a piece of failing flesh and blood,
    In all the rest so impudently good;
    Faith, let the modest matrons of the town
    Come here in crowds, and stare the strumpet down. 50






    MISCELLANIES





    THE BASSET-TABLE.[62]


    AN ECLOGUE.


    CARDELIA.


    The basset-table spread, the tallier come;
    Why stays Smilinda in the dressing-room?
    Rise, pensive nymph, the tallier waits for you!


    SMILINDA.


    Ah, madam, since my Sharper is untrue,
    I joyless make my once adored Alpeu.
    I saw him stand behind Ombrelia's chair,
    And whisper with that soft, deluding air,
    And those feign'd sighs which cheat the listening fair.


    CARDELIA.


    Is this the cause of your romantic strains?
    A mightier grief my heavy heart sustains. 10
    As you by love, so I by fortune cross'd,
    One, one bad deal, three Septlevas have lost.


    SMILINDA.


    Is that the grief, which you compare with mine?
    With ease, the smiles of Fortune I resign:
    Would all my gold in one bad deal were gone!
    Were lovely Sharper mine, and mine alone.


    CARDELIA.


    A lover lost, is but a common care;
    And prudent nymphs against that change prepare:
    The Knave of Clubs thrice lost! Oh! who could guess
    This fatal stroke, this unforeseen distress? 20


    SMILINDA.


    See Betty Lovet! very apropos
    She all the cares of love and play does know:
    Dear Betty shall th' important point decide;
    Betty, who oft the pain of each has tried;
    Impartial, she shall say who suffers most,
    By cards' ill usage, or by lovers lost.


    LOVET.


    Tell, tell your griefs; attentive will I stay,
    Though time is precious, and I want some tea.


    CARDELIA.


    Behold this equipage, by Mathers wrought,
    With fifty guineas (a great pen'orth) bought. 30
    See, on the tooth-pick, Mars and Cupid strive;
    And both the struggling figures seem alive.
    Upon the bottom shines the queen's bright face;
    A myrtle foliage round the thimble-case.
    Jove, Jove himself, does on the scissors shine;
    The metal, and the workmanship, divine!


    SMILINDA.


    This snuff-box,—once the pledge of Sharper's love,
    When rival beauties for the present strove;
    At Corticelli's he the raffle won;
    Then first his passion was in public shown: 40
    Hazardia blush'd, and turn'd her head aside,
    A rival's envy (all in vain) to hide.
    This snuff-box,—on the hinge see brilliants shine:
    This snuff-box will I stake; the prize is mine.


    CARDELIA.


    Alas! far lesser losses than I bear,
    Have made a soldier sigh, a lover swear.
    And oh! what makes the disappointment hard,
    'Twas my own lord that drew the fatal card.
    In complaisance, I took the Queen he gave;
    Though my own secret wish was for the Knave. 50
    The Knave won Sonica, which I had chose;
    And the next pull, my Septleva I lose.


    SMILINDA.


    But ah! what aggravates the killing smart,
    The cruel thought, that stabs me to the heart;
    This cursed Ombrelia, this undoing fair,
    By whose vile arts this heavy grief I bear;
    She, at whose name I shed these spiteful tears,
    She owes to me the very charms she wears.
    An awkward thing, when first she came to town;
    Her shape unfashion'd, and her face unknown: 60
    She was my friend; I taught her first to spread
    Upon her sallow cheeks enlivening red:
    I introduced her to the park and plays;
    And, by my interest, Cozens made her stays.
    Ungrateful wretch! with mimic airs grown pert,
    She dares to steal my favourite lover's heart.


    CARDELIA.


    Wretch that I was, how often have I swore,
    When Winnall tallied, I would punt no more?
    I know the bite, yet to my ruin run;
    And see the folly, which I cannot shun. 70


    SMILINDA.


    How many maids have Sharper's vows deceived?
    How many cursed the moment they believed?
    Yet his known falsehood could no warning prove:
    Ah! what is warning to a maid in love?


    CARDELIA.


    But of what marble must that breast be form'd,
    To gaze on basset, and remain unwarm'd?
    When Kings, Queens, Knaves, are set in decent rank;
    Exposed in glorious heaps the tempting bank,
    Guineas, half-guineas, all the shining train;
    The winner's pleasure, and the loser's pain: 80
    In bright confusion open rouleaus lie,
    They strike the soul, and glitter in the eye.
    Fired by the sight, all reason I disdain;
    My passions rise, and will not bear the rein.
    Look upon basset, you who reason boast,
    And see if reason must not there be lost.


    SMILINDA.


    What more than marble must that heart compose,
    Can hearken coldly to my Sharper's vows?
    Then, when he trembles, when his blushes rise,
    When awful love seems melting in his eyes! 90
    With eager beats his Mechlin cravat moves:
    He loves!—I whisper to myself—he loves!
    Such unfeign'd passion in his looks appears,
    I lose all memory of my former fears;
    My panting heart confesses all his charms,
    I yield at once, and sink into his arms:
    Think of that moment, you who prudence boast;
    For such a moment, prudence well were lost.


    CARDELIA.


    At the groom-porter's, batter'd bullies play,
    Some dukes at Mary-bone bowl time away. 100
    But who the bowl or rattling dice compares
    To basset's heavenly joys, and pleasing cares?


    SMILINDA.


    Soft Simplicetta dotes upon a beau;
    Prudina likes a man, and laughs at show.
    Their several graces in my Sharper meet;
    Strong as the footman, as the master sweet.


    LOVET.


    Cease your contention, which has been too long;
    I grow impatient, and the tea's too strong.
    Attend, and yield to what I now decide;
    The equipage shall grace Smilinda's side: 110
    The snuff-box to Cardelia I decree.
    Now leave complaining, and begin your tea.





    LINES


    ON RECEIVING FROM THE EIGHT HON. THE LADY FRANCES SHIRLEY[63] A STANDISH
    AND TWO PENS.


    1 Yes, I beheld the Athenian queen

         Descend in all her sober charms;

      'And take,' she said, and smiled serene,

        'Take at this hand celestial arms:


    2 'Secure the radiant weapons wield;

        This golden lance shall guard desert;

      And if a vice dares keep the field,

        This steel shall stab it to the heart.'


    3 Awed, on my bended knees I fell,

        Received the weapons of the sky;

      And dipp'd them in the sable well,

        The fount of fame or infamy.


    4 'What well? what weapon?' Flavia cries—

        'A standish, steel, and golden pen!

       It came from Bertrand's,[64] not the skies;

         I gave it you to write again.


    5 'But, friend, take heed whom you attack;

        You'll bring a house (I mean of peers)

      Red, blue, and green, nay, white and black,

        L——and all about your ears.


    6 'You'd write as smooth again on glass,

        And run, on ivory, so glib,

      As not to stick at fool or ass,[65]

        Nor stop at flattery or fib.[66]


    7 'Athenian queen! and sober charms!

        I tell ye, fool, there's nothing in't:

      'Tis Venus, Venus gives these arms;[67]

        In Dryden's Virgil see the print.[68]


    8 'Come, if you'll be a quiet soul,

        That dares tell neither truth nor lies,[69]

      I'll list you in the harmless roll

        Of those that sing of these poor eyes.'





    VERBATIM FROM BOILEAU.


    UN JOUR DIT UN AUTEUR, ETC.


    Once (says an author—where I need not say)
    Two travellers found an oyster in their way;
    Both fierce, both hungry; the dispute grew strong,
    While, scale in hand, Dame Justice pass'd along.
    Before her each with clamour pleads the laws,
    Explain'd the matter and would win the cause.
    Dame Justice, weighing long the doubtful right,
    Takes, opens, swallows it, before their sight.
    The cause of strife removed so rarely well,
    'There,—take' (says Justice) 'take ye each a shell.
    We thrive at Westminster on fools like you:
    'Twas a fat oyster—live in peace—adieu.'





    ANSWER TO THE FOLLOWING QUESTION OF MRS HOWE.


    What is prudery?


    'Tis a bledam,
    Seen with wit and beauty seldom.
    'Tis a fear that starts at shadows.
    Tis, (no, 'tisn't) like Miss Meadows.
    'Tis a virgin hard of feature,
    Old, and void of all good-nature;
    Lean and fretful; would seem wise;
    Yet plays the fool before she dies.
    'Tis an ugly, envious shrew,
    That rails at dear Lepell and you.

    OCCASIONED BY SOME VERSES OF HIS GRACE THE DUKE OF BUCKINGHAM.


    Muse, 'tis enough: at length thy labour ends,
    And thou shalt live, for Buckingham commends,
    Let crowds of critics now my verse assail,
    Let Dennis write, and nameless numbers rail:
    This more than pays whole years of thankless pain;
    Time, health, and fortune are not lost in vain,
    Sheffield approves, consenting Phoebus bends,
    And I and Malice from this hour are friends.

    MACER: A CHARACTER.


    When simple Macer, now of high renown,
    First sought a poet's fortune in the town,
    'Twas all the ambition his high soul could feel,
    To wear red stockings, and to dine with Steele.
    Some ends of verse his betters might afford,
    And gave the harmless fellow a good word.
    Set up with these, he ventured on the town,
    And with a borrow'd play, out-did poor Crowne.
    There he stopp'd short, nor since has writ a tittle,
    But has the wit to make the most of little: 10
    Like stunted, hide-bound trees that just have got
    Sufficient sap at once to bear and rot.
    Now he begs verse, and what he gets commends,
    Not of the wits, his foes, but fools, his friends.


    So some coarse country wench, almost decay'd,
    Trudges to town, and first turns chambermaid;
    Awkward and supple, each devoir to pay,
    She flatters her good lady twice a-day;
    Thought wondrous honest, though of mean degree,
    And strangely liked for her simplicity:
    In a translated suit, then tries the town,
    With borrow'd pins, and patches not her own:
    But just endured the winter she began,
    And in four months a batter'd harridan.
    Now nothing left, but wither'd, pale, and shrunk,
    To bawd for others, and go shares with punk.





    SONG, BY A PERSON OF QUALITY, WRITTEN IN THE YEAR 1733.


    1 Fluttering, spread thy purple pinions,
    Gentle Cupid, o'er my heart,
    I a slave in thy dominions;
    Nature must give way to art.


    2 Mild Arcadians, ever blooming,
    Nightly nodding o'er your flocks,
    See my weary days consuming,
    All beneath yon flowery rocks.


    3 Thus the Cyprian goddess, weeping,
    Mourn'd Adonis, darling youth:
    Him the boar, in silence creeping,
    Gored with unrelenting tooth.


    4 Cynthia, tune harmonious numbers;
    Fair Discretion, string the lyre;
    Soothe my ever-waking slumbers:
    Bright Apollo, lend thy choir.


    5 Gloomy Pluto, king of terrors,
    Arm'd in adamantine chains,
    Lead me to the crystal mirrors,
    Watering soft Elysian plains.


    6 Mournful cypress, verdant willow,
    Gilding my Aurelia's brows,
    Morpheus hovering o'er my pillow,
    Hear me pay my dying vows.


    7 Melancholy smooth Maeander,
    Swiftly purling in a round,
    On thy margin lovers wander,
    With thy flowery chaplets crown'd.


    8 Thus when Philomela, drooping,
    Softly seeks her silent mate,
    See the bird of Juno stooping;
    Melody resigns to fate.





    ON A CERTAIN LADY AT COURT.


    1 I know the thing that's most uncommon;
    (Envy be silent, and attend!)
    I know a reasonable woman,
    Handsome and witty, yet a friend.


    2 Not warp'd by passion, awed by rumour,
    Not grave through pride, or gay through folly,
    An equal mixture of good humour,
    And sensible soft melancholy.


    3 'Has she no faults, then (Envy says), sir?'
    Yes, she has one, I must aver:
    When all the world conspires to praise her,
    The woman's deaf, and does not hear.





    ON HIS GROTTO AT TWICKENHAM, COMPOSED OF MARBLES, SPARS, GEMS, ORES, AND MINERALS.


    Thou who shalt stop, where Thames' translucent wave
    Shines a broad mirror through the shadowy cave;
    Where lingering drops from mineral roofs distil,
    And pointed crystals break the sparkling rill,
    Unpolish'd gems no ray on pride bestow,
    And latent metals innocently glow:
    Approach! Great Nature studiously behold!
    And eye the mine without a wish for gold.
    Approach: but awful! lo! the Aegerian grot,[70]
    Where, nobly-pensive, St John sate and thought;
    Where British sighs from dying Wyndham stole,
    And the bright flame was shot through Marchmont's soul.
    Let such, such only, tread this sacred floor,
    Who dare to love their country, and be poor!


    VARIATIONS.


    After VER. 6, in the MS.—


    Yon see that island's wealth, where, only free,
    Earth to her entrails feels not tyranny.


    —i.e. Britain is the only place on the globe which feels not tyranny
    even to its very entrails. Alluding to the condemnation of criminals to
    the mines, one of the inflictions of civil justice in most countries—W.


    VER. 11, in MS. it was thus—


    To Wyndham's breast the patriot passions stole.





    ROXANA, OR THE DRAWING-ROOM.


    AN ECLOGUE.


    Roxana, from the Court returning late,
    Sigh'd her soft sorrow at St James's gate:
    Such heavy thoughts lay brooding in her breast,
    Not her own chairmen with more weight oppress'd:
    They curse the cruel weight they're doom'd to bear;
    She in more gentle sounds express'd her care.


    'Was it for this, that I these roses wear?
    For this, new-set the jewels for my hair?
    Ah, Princess! with what zeal have I pursued!
    Almost forgot the duty of a prude. 10
    This king I never could attend too soon;
    I miss'd my prayers, to get me dress'd by noon.
    For thee, ah! what for thee did I resign?
    My passions, pleasures, all that e'er was mine:
    I've sacrificed both modesty and ease;
    Left operas, and went to filthy plays:
    Double-entendres shock'd my tender ear;
    Yet even this, for thee, I chose to bear:
    In glowing youth, when nature bids be gay,
    And every joy of life before me lay; 20
    By honour prompted, and by pride restrain'd,
    The pleasures of the young my soul disdain'd:
    Sermons I sought, and with a mien severe
    Censured my neighbours, and said daily prayer.
    Alas, how changed! with this same sermon-mien,
    The filthy What-d'ye-call-it[71]—I have seen.
    Ah, royal Princess! for whose sake I lost
    The reputation, which so dear had cost;
    I, who avoided every public place,
    When bloom and beauty bid me show my face, 30
    Now near thee, constant, I each night abide,
    With never-failing duty, by thy side;
    Myself and daughters standing in a row,
    To all the foreigners a goodly show.
    Oft had your drawing-room been sadly thin,
    And merchants' wives close by your side had been,
    Had I not amply fill'd the empty place,
    And saved your Highness from the dire disgrace:
    Yet Cockatilla's artifice prevails,
    When all my duty and my merit fails: 40
    That Cockatilla, whose deluding airs
    Corrupts our virgins, and our youth ensnares;
    So sunk her character, and lost her fame,
    Scarce visited before your Highness came:
    Yet for the bedchamber 'tis she you choose,
    Whilst zeal, and lame, and virtue you refuse.
    Ah, worthy choice; not one of all your train
    Which censures blast not, or dishonours stain.
    I know the Court, with all its treacherous wiles,
    The false caresses, and undoing smiles. 50
    Ah, Princess! learn'd in all the courtly arts,
    To cheat our hopes, and yet to gain our hearts.'

    TO LADY MARY WORTLEY MONTAGUE.


    1 In beauty or wit,
    No mortal as yet
    To question your empire has dared;
    But men of discerning
    Have thought that in learning
    To yield to a lady was hard.


    2 Impertinent schools,
    With musty dull rules,
    Have reading to females denied:
    So Papists refuse
    The Bible to use,
    Lest flocks should be wise as their guide.


    3 'Twas a woman at first
    (Indeed she was cursed)
    In knowledge that tasted delight,
    And sages agree
    The laws should decree
    To the first possessor the right.


    4 Then bravely, fair dame,
    Resume the old claim,
    Which to your whole sex does belong;
    And let men receive,
    From a second bright Eve,
    The knowledge of right and of wrong.


    5 But if the first Eve
    Hard doom did receive,
    When only one apple had she,
    What a punishment new
    Shall be found out for you,
    Who, tasting, have robb'd the whole tree!

    EXTEMPORANEOUS LINES


    ON A PORTRAIT OF LADY MARY WORTLEY MONTAGUE, PAINTED BY KNELLER.


    The playful smiles around the dimpled mouth,
    That happy air of majesty and truth,
    So would I draw: but, oh! 'tis vain to try,
    My narrow genius does the power deny;
    The equal lustre of the heavenly mind,
    Where every grace with every virtue's join'd:
    Learning not vain, and wisdom not severe,
    With greatness easy, and with wit sincere;
    With just description show the soul divine,
    And the whole princess in my work should shine.

    LINES SUNG BY DURASTANTI,


    WHEN SHE TOOK LEAVE OF THE ENGLISH STAGE.


    1 Generous, gay, and gallant nation,
    Bold in arms, and bright in arts;
    Land secure from all invasion,
    All but Cupid's gentle darts!
    From your charms, oh! who would run?
    Who would leave you for the sun?
    Happy soil, adieu, adieu!


    2 Let old charmers yield to new;
    In arms, in arts, be still more shining:
    All your joys be still increasing;
    All your tastes be still refining;
    All your jars for ever ceasing;
    But let old charmers yield to new:
    Happy soil, adieu, adieu!

    UPON THE DUKE OF MARLBOROUGH'S HOUSE AT WOODSTOCK.


    'See, sir, here's the grand approach,
    This way is for his Grace's coach:
    There lies the bridge, and here's the clock,
    Observe the lion and the cock,
    The spacious court, the colonnade,
    And mark how wide the hall is made!
    The chimneys are so well design'd,
    They never smoke in any wind.
    This gallery's contrived for walking,
    The windows to retire and talk in;
    The council chamber for debate,
    And all the rest are rooms of state.'


    'Thanks, sir,' cried I, ''tis very fine,
    But where d'ye sleep, or where d'ye dine?
    I find by all you have been telling
    That 'tis a house, but not a dwelling.'

    VERSES LEFT BY MR POPE.


    ON HIS LYING IN THE SAME BED WHICH WILMOT, THE CELEBRATED EARL OF
    ROCHESTER, SLEPT IN AT ADDERBURY, THEN BELONGING TO THE DUKE OF ARGYLL,
    JULY 9, 1739.


    1 With no poetic ardour fired,

        I press the bed where Wilmot lay;

      That here he loved, or here expired,

        Begets no numbers, grave or gay.


    2 Beneath thy roof, Argyll, are bred

        Such thoughts as prompt the brave to lie

      Stretch'd out in honour's nobler bed,

        Beneath a nobler roof—the sky.


    3 Such flames as high in patriots burn,

        Yet stoop to bless a child or wife;

      And such as wicked kings may mourn,

        When freedom is more dear than life.

    THE CHALLENGE, A COURT BALLAD.


    TO THE TUNE OF 'TO ALL YOU LADIES NOW AT LAND.'


    1 To one fair lady out of Court,
    And two fair ladies in,
    Who think the Turk[72] and Pope[73] a sport,
    And wit and love no sin;
    Come these soft lines, with nothing stiff in,
    To Bellenden, Lepell, and Griffin.[74]
    With a fa, la, la.


    2 What passes in the dark third row,
    And what behind the scene,
    Couches and crippled chairs I know,
    And garrets hung with green;
    I know the swing of sinful hack,
    Where many damsels cry alack.
    With a fa, la, la.


    3 Then why to Courts should I repair,
    Where's such ado with Townshend?
    To hear each mortal stamp and swear,
    And every speech with 'zounds!' end;
    To hear 'em rail at honest Sunderland,
    And rashly blame the realm of Blunderland.[75]
    With a fa, la, la.


    4 Alas! like Schutz I cannot pun,
    Like Grafton court the Germans;
    Tell Pickenbourg how slim she's grown,
    Like Meadows[76] run to sermons;
    To Court ambitious men may roam,
    But I and Marlbro' stay at home.
    With a fa, la, la.


    5 In truth, by what I can discern
    Of courtiers, 'twixt you three,
    Some wit you have, and more may learn
    From Court, than Gay or me;
    Perhaps, in time, you'll leave high diet,
    To sup with us on milk and quiet.
    With a fa, la, la.


    6 At Leicester Fields, a house full high,
    With door all painted green,
    Where ribbons wave upon the tie,
    (A milliner I mean;)
    There may you meet us, three to three,
    For Gay can well make two of me.
    With a fa, la, la.


    7 But should you catch the prudish itch
    And each become a coward,
    Bring sometimes with you Lady Rich,
    And sometimes Mistress Howard;
    For virgins, to keep chaste, must go
    Abroad with such as are not so.
    With a fa, la, la.


    8 And thus, fair maids, my ballad ends;
    God send the king safe landing;[77]
    And make all honest ladies friends
    To armies that are standing;
    Preserve the limits of those nations,
    And take off ladies' limitations.
    With a fa, la, la.

    THE THREE GENTLE SHEPHERDS.


    Of gentle Philips[78] will I ever sing,
    With gentle Philips shall the valleys ring;
    My numbers, too, for ever will I vary,
    With gentle Budgell,[79] and with gentle Carey.[80]
    Or if in ranging of the names I judge ill,
    With gentle Carey, and with gentle Budgell,
    Oh! may all gentle bards together place ye,
    Men of good hearts, and men of delicacy.
    May satire ne'er befool ye, or beknave ye,
    And from all wits that have a knack, God save ye!

    EPIGRAM,


    ENGRAVED ON THE COLLAR OF A DOG WHICH I GAVE TO HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS.


    I am His Highness' dog at Kew;
    Pray tell me, sir, whose dog are you?

    THE TRANSLATOR.


    Ozell, at Sanger's call, invoked his Muse,
    For who to sing for Sanger could refuse?
    His numbers such as Sanger's self might use.
    Reviving Perrault, murdering Boileau, he
    Slander'd the ancients first, then Wycherley;
    Which yet not much that old bard's anger raised,
    Since those were slander'd most whom Ozell praised.
    Nor had the gentle satire caused complaining,
    Had not sage Rowe pronounced it entertaining;
    How great must be the judgment of that writer,
    Who the Plain Dealer damns, and prints the Biter!

    THE LOOKING-GLASS.


    ON MRS PULTENEY.[81]


    With scornful mien, and various toss of air,
    Fantastic, vain, and insolently fair,
    Grandeur intoxicates her giddy brain,
    She looks ambition, and she moves disdain.
    Far other carriage graced her virgin life,
    But charming Gumley's lost in Pulteney's wife.
    Not greater arrogance in him we find,
    And this conjunction swells at least her mind:
    Oh could the sire, renown'd in glass, produce
    One faithful mirror for his daughter's use!
    Wherein she might her haughty errors trace,
    And by reflection learn to mend her face:
    The wonted sweetness to her form restore,
    Be what she was, and charm mankind once more!

    A FAREWELL TO LONDON


    IN THE YEAR 1715.


    1 Dear, damn'd, distracting town, farewell!
    Thy fools no more I'll tease:
    This year in peace, ye critics, dwell,
    Ye harlots, sleep at ease!


    2 Soft B——s and rough C——s, adieu!
    Earl Warwick, make your moan,
    The lively H——k and you
    May knock up whores alone.


    3 To drink and droll be Rowe allow'd
    Till the third watchman's toll;
    Let Jervas gratis paint, and Frowde
    Save threepence and his soul.


    4 Farewell, Arbuthnot's raillery
    On every learned sot;
    And Garth, the best good Christian he,
    Although he knows it not.


    5 Lintot, farewell! thy bard must go;
    Farewell, unhappy Tonson!
    Heaven gives thee for thy loss of Rowe,
    Lean Philips and fat Johnson.


    6 Why should I stay? Both parties rage;
    My vixen mistress squalls;
    The wits in envious feuds engage;
    And Homer (damn him!) calls.


    7 The love of arts lies cold and dead
    In Halifax's urn;
    And not one Muse of all he fed
    Has yet the grace to mourn.


    8 My friends, by turns, my friends confound,
    Betray, and are betray'd:
    Poor Y——r's sold for fifty pounds,
    And B——ll is a jade.


    9 Why make I friendships with the great,
    When I no favour seek.
    Or follow girls seven hours in eight?—
    I need but once a week.


    10 Still idle, with a busy air,
    Deep whimsies to contrive;
    The gayest valetudinaire,
    Most thinking rake alive.


    11 Solicitous for others' ends,
    Though fond of dear repose;
    Careless or drowsy with my friends.
    And frolic with my foes.


    12 Luxurious lobster-nights, farewell,
    For sober studious days!
    And Burlington's delicious meal,
    For salads, tarts, and pease!


    13 Adieu to all but Gay alone,
    Whose soul, sincere and free,
    Loves all mankind, but flatters none,
    And so may starve with me.

    SANDYS' GHOST;[82]


    OR, A PROPER NEW BALLAD ON THE NEW OVID'S METAMORPHOSES: AS IT WAS
    INTENDED TO BE TRANSLATED BY PERSONS OF QUALITY.



    1 Ye Lords and Commons, men of wit
    And pleasure about town,
    Read this, ere you translate one bit
    Of books of high renown.


    2 Beware of Latin authors all!
    Nor think your verses sterling,
    Though with a golden pen you scrawl,
    And scribble in a berlin:


    3 For not the desk with silver nails,
    Nor bureau of expense,
    Nor standish well japann'd, avails
    To writing of good sense.


    4 Hear how a ghost in dead of night,
    With saucer eyes of fire,
    In woeful wise did sore affright
    A wit and courtly squire.


    5 Rare imp of Phoebus, hopeful youth!
    Like puppy tame that uses
    To fetch and carry, in his mouth,
    The works of all the Muses.


    6 Ah! why did he write poetry,
    That hereto was so civil;
    And sell his soul for vanity
    To rhyming and the devil?


    7 A desk he had of curious work,
    With glittering studs about;
    Within the same did Sandys lurk,
    Though Ovid lay without.


    8 Now, as he scratch'd to fetch up thought,
    Forth popp'd the sprite so thin,
    And from the keyhole bolted out,
    All upright as a pin.


    9 With whiskers, band, and pantaloon,
    And ruff composed most duly,
    This squire he dropp'd his pen full soon,
    While as the light burnt bluely.


    10 'Ho! Master Sam,' quoth Sandys' sprite,
    'Write on, nor let me scare ye!
    Forsooth, if rhymes fall not in right,
    To Budgell seek, or Carey.


    11 'I hear the beat of Jacob's[83] drums,
    Poor Ovid finds no quarter!
    See first the merry P——[84] comes
    In haste without his garter.


    12 'Then lords and lordlings, squires and knights,
    Wits, witlings, prigs, and peers:
    Garth at St James's, and at White's
    Beats up for volunteers.


    13 'What Fenton will not do, nor Gay,
    Nor Congreve, Rowe, nor Stanyan,
    Tom Burnet, or Tom D'Urfey may,
    John Dunton, Steele, or any one.


    14 'If Justice Philips' costive head
    Some frigid rhymes disburses:
    They shall like Persian tales be read,
    And glad both babes and nurses.


    15 'Let Warwick's Muse with Ashurst join,
    And Ozell's with Lord Hervey's,
    Tickell and Addison combine,
    And Pope translate with Jervas.


    16 'L——himself, that lively lord,
    Who bows to every lady,
    Shall join with F——in one accord,
    And be like Tate and Brady.


    17 'Ye ladies, too, draw forth your pen;
    I pray, where can the hurt lie?
    Since you have brains as well as men,
    As witness Lady Wortley.


    18 'Now, Tonson, list thy forces all,
    Review them, and tell noses:
    For to poor Ovid shall befall
    A strange metamorphosis;


    19 'A metamorphosis more strange
    Than all his books can vapour'—
    'To what (quoth squire) shall Ovid change?'
    Quoth Sandys, 'To waste paper.'

    UMBRA.[85]


    Close to the best known author Umbra sits,
    The constant index to old Button's wits,
    'Who's here?' cries Umbra: 'Only Johnson.'[86]—'Oh!
    Your slave,' and exit; but returns with Rowe:
    'Dear Rowe, let's sit and talk of tragedies;'
    Ere long Pope enters, and to Pope he flies.
    Then up comes Steele: he turns upon his heel,
    And in a moment fastens upon Steele;
    But cries as soon, 'Dear Dick, I must be gone,
    For, if I know his tread, here's Addison.'
    Says Addison to Steele, ''Tis time to go:'
    Pope to the closet steps aside with Rowe.
    Poor Umbra, left in this abandon'd pickle,
    E'en sits him down, and writes to honest Tickell.


    Fool! 'tis in vain from wit to wit to roam;
    Know, sense, like charity, 'begins at home.'

    SYLVIA, A FRAGMENT.


    Sylvia my heart in wondrous wise alarm'd
    Awed without sense, and without beauty charm'd:
    But some odd graces and some flights she had,
    Was just not ugly, and was just not mad:
    Her tongue still ran on credit from her eyes,
    More pert than witty, more a wit than wise:
    Good-nature, she declared it, was her scorn,
    Though 'twas by that alone she could be borne:
    Affronting all, yet fond of a good name;
    A fool to pleasure, yet a slave to fame:
    Now coy, and studious in no point to fall,
    Now all agog for D——y at a ball:
    Now deep in Taylor, and the Book of Martyrs,
    Now drinking citron with his Grace and Chartres.


    Men, some to business, some to pleasure take;
    But every woman's in her soul a rake.
    Frail, feverish sex; their fit now chills, now burns:
    Atheism and superstition rule by turns;
    And a mere heathen in the carnal part,
    Is still a sad good Christian at her heart.

    IMPROMPTU TO LADY WINCHELSEA.


    OCCASIONED BY FOUR SATIRICAL VERSES ON WOMEN WITS, IN 'THE RAPE OF THE
    LOCK.'


    In vain you boast poetic names of yore,
    And cite those Sapphos we admire no more:
    Fate doom'd the fall of every female wit;
    But doom'd it then, when first Ardelia writ.
    Of all examples by the world confess'd,
    I knew Ardelia could not quote the best;
    Who, like her mistress on Britannia's throne,
    Fights and subdues in quarrels not her own.
    To write their praise you but in vain essay;
    E'en while you write, you take that praise away:
    Light to the stars the sun does thus restore,
    But shines himself till they are seen no more.

    EPIGRAM.


    A Bishop, by his neighbours hated,
    Has cause to wish himself translated:
    But why should Hough desire translation,
    Loved and esteem'd by all the nation?
    Yet, if it be the old man's case,
    I'll lay my life I know the place:
    'Tis where God sent some that adore Him,
    And whither Enoch went before him.

    EPIGRAM ON THE FEUDS ABOUT HANDEL AND BONONCINI.


    Strange! all this difference should be
    'Twixt Tweedle-dum and Tweedle-dee!

    ON MRS TOFTS, A CELEBRATED OPERA SINGER.


    So bright is thy beauty, so charming thy song,
    As had drawn both the beasts and their Orpheus along:
    But such is thy avarice, and such is thy pride,
    That the beasts must have starved, and the poet have died.

    THE BALANCE OF EUROPE.


    Now Europe balanced, neither side prevails;
    For nothing's left in either of the scales.

    EPITAPH ON LORD CONINGSBY.


    Here lies Lord Coningsby—be civil!
    The rest God knows—perhaps the Devil.

    EPIGRAM.


    You beat your pate, and fancy wit will come;
    Knock as you please, there's nobody at home.

    EPIGRAM FROM THE FRENCH.


    Sir, I admit your general rule,
    That every poet is a fool:
    But you yourself may serve to show it,
    That every fool is not a poet.

    EPITAPH ON GAY.


    Well, then, poor G——lies under ground!

      So there's an end of honest Jack.
    So little justice here he found,

      'Tis ten to one he'll ne'er come back.

    EPIGRAM ON THE TOASTS OF THE KIT-CAT CLUB, ANNO 1716.


    1 Whence deathless 'Kit-cat' took its name,

        Few critics can unriddle:

      Some say from 'pastrycook' it came,

        And some, from 'cat' and 'fiddle.'


    2 From no trim beaux its name it boasts,

        Gray statesmen, or green wits;

      But from this pell-mell pack of toasts

        Of old 'cats' and young 'kits.'

    TO A LADY, WITH THE 'TEMPLE OF FAME.'


    What's fame with men, by custom of the nation,
    Is call'd, in women, only reputation:
    About them both why keep we such a pother?
    Part you with one, and I'll renounce the other.

    ON THE COUNTESS OF BURLINGTON CUTTING PAPER.


    1 Pallas grew vapourish once, and odd;

        She would not do the least right thing,

      Either for goddess or for god,

        Nor work, nor play, nor paint, nor sing.


    2 Jove frown'd, and 'Use (he cried) those eyes

        So skilful, and those hands so taper;

      Do something exquisite and wise—'

        She bow'd, obey'd him, and cut paper.


    3 This vexing him who gave her birth,

        Thought by all heaven a burning shame;

      What does she next, but bids, on earth,

        Her Burlington do just the same.


    4 Pallas, you give yourself strange airs;

        But sure you'll find it hard to spoil

      The sense and taste of one that bears

        The name of Saville and of Boyle.


    5 Alas! one bad example shown,

        How quickly all the sex pursue!

      See, madam, see the arts o'erthrown

        Between John Overton and you!

    ON DRAWINGS OF THE STATUES OF APOLLO, VENUS, AND HERCULES,


    MADE FOR POPE BY SIR GODFREY KNELLER.


    What god, what genius did the pencil move,

      When Kneller painted these?
    'Twas friendship, warm as Phoebus, kind as Love,

      And strong as Hercules.

    ON BENTLEY'S 'MILTON.'


    Did Milton's prose, O Charles! thy death defend?
    A furious foe unconscious proves a friend.
    On Milton's verse did Bentley comment? Know,
    A weak officious friend becomes a foe.
    While he but sought his author's fame to further,
    The murderous critic has avenged thy murther.

    LINES


    WRITTEN IN WINDSOR FOREST.


    All hail, once pleasing, once inspiring shade,

      Scene of my youthful loves, and happier hours!
    Where the kind Muses met me as I stray'd,

      And gently press'd my hand, and said, 'Be ours!—
    Take all thou e'er shalt have, a constant Muse:

      At Court thou mayst be liked, but nothing gain;
    Stocks thou mayst buy and sell, but always lose;

      And love the brightest eyes, but love in vain.'

    TO ERINNA.


    Though sprightly Sappho force our love and praise,
    A softer wonder my pleased soul surveys,
    The mild Erinna, blushing in her bays.
    So, while the sun's broad beam yet strikes the sight,
    All mild appears the moon's more sober light;
    Serene, in virgin majesty she shines,
    And, unobserved, the glaring sun declines.

    A DIALOGUE.


    POPE.
    Since my old friend is grown so great,
    As to be Minister of State,
    I'm told, but 'tis not true, I hope,
    That Craggs will be ashamed of Pope.


    CRAGGS.
    Alas! if I am such a creature,
    To grow the worse for growing greater;
    Why, faith, in spite of all my brags,
    'Tis Pope must be ashamed of Craggs.

    ODE TO QUINBUS FLESTRIN,


    THE MAN MOUNTAIN,[87] BY TITTY TIT, POET-LAUREATE TO HIS MAJESTY OF
    LILLIPUT. TRANSLATED INTO ENGLISH.


      In amaze

      Lost I gaze!

      Can our eyes

      Reach thy size!

      May my lays

      Swell with praise,

      Worthy thee!

      Worthy me!

      Muse, inspire

      All thy fire! 10

      Bards of old

      Of him told.

      When they said

      Atlas' head

      Propp'd the skies:
    See! and believe your eyes!


      See him stride

      Valleys wide,

      Over woods,

      Over floods! 20

      When he treads,

      Mountains' heads

      Groan and shake:

      Armies quake:

      Lest his spurn

      Overturn

      Man and steed,

      Troops, take heed!

      Left and right,

      Speed your flight! 30

      Lest an host
    Beneath his foot be lost!


      Turn'd aside

      From his hide

      Safe from wound,

      Darts rebound.

      From his nose

      Clouds he blows:

      When he speaks,

      Thunder breaks! 40

      When he eats,

      Famine threats!

      When he drinks,

      Neptune shrinks!

      Nigh thy ear

      In mid air,

      On thy hand

      Let me stand;

      So shall I,
    Lofty poet! touch the sky. 50

    THE LAMENTATION OF GLUMDALCLITCH FOR THE LOSS OF GRILDRIG.


    A PASTORAL.


    Soon as Glumdalclitch miss'd her pleasing care,
    She wept, she blubber'd, and she tore her hair:
    No British miss sincerer grief has known,
    Her squirrel missing, or her sparrow flown.
    She furl'd her sampler, and haul'd in her thread,
    And stuck her needle into Grildrig's bed;
    Then spread her hands, and with a bounce let fall
    Her baby, like the giant in Guildhall.
    In peals of thunder now she roars, and now
    She gently whimpers like a lowing cow: 10
    Yet lovely in her sorrow still appears:
    Her locks dishevell'd, and her flood of tears,
    Seem like the lofty barn of some rich swain,
    When from the thatch drips fast a shower of rain.


    In vain she search'd each cranny of the house,
    Each gaping chink impervious to a mouse.
    'Was it for this (she cried) with daily care
    Within thy reach I set the vinegar,
    And fill'd the cruet with the acid tide,
    While pepper-water worms thy bait supplied; 20
    Where twined the silver eel around thy hook,
    And all the little monsters of the brook?
    Sure in that lake he dropp'd; my Grilly's drown'd.'
    She dragg'd the cruet, but no Grildrig found.


    'Vain is thy courage, Grilly, vain thy boast!
    But little creatures enterprise the most.
    Trembling, I've seen thee dare the kitten's paw,
    Nay, mix with children as they play'd at taw,
    Nor fear the marbles as they bounding flew;
    Marbles to them, but rolling rocks to you! 30


    'Why did I trust thee with that giddy youth?
    Who from a page can ever learn the truth?
    Versed in Court tricks, that money-loving boy
    To some lord's daughter sold the living toy;
    Or rent him limb from limb in cruel play,
    As children tear the wings of flies away.
    From place to place o'er Brobdignag I'll roam,
    And never will return, or bring thee home.
    But who hath eyes to trace the passing wind?
    How then thy fairy footsteps can I find? 40
    Dost thou bewilder'd wander all alone
    In the green thicket of a mossy stone;
    Or, tumbled from the toadstool's slippery round,
    Perhaps all maim'd, lie grovelling on the ground?
    Dost thou, embosom'd in the lovely rose,
    Or, sunk within the peach's down, repose?
    Within the kingcup if thy limbs are spread,
    Or in the golden cowslip's velvet head,
    Oh show me, Flora, 'midst those sweets, the flower
    Where sleeps my Grildrig in the fragrant bower! 50


    'But ah! I fear thy little fancy roves
    On little females, and on little loves;
    Thy pigmy children, and thy tiny spouse,
    The baby playthings that adorn thy house,
    Doors, windows, chimneys, and the spacious rooms,
    Equal in size to cells of honeycombs:
    Hast thou for these now ventured from the shore,
    Thy bark a bean-shell, and a straw thy oar?
    Or in thy box, now bounding on the main,
    Shall I ne'er bear thyself and house again? 60
    And shall I set thee on my hand no more,
    To see thee leap the lines, and traverse o'er
    My spacious palm? Of stature scarce a span,
    Mimic the actions of a real man?
    No more behold thee turn my watch's key,
    As seamen at a capstan anchors weigh?
    How wert thou wont to walk with cautious tread,
    A dish of tea, like milkpail, on thy head!
    How chase the mite that bore thy cheese away,
    And keep the rolling maggot at a bay!' 70


    She spoke; but broken accents stopp'd her voice,
    Soft as the speaking-trumpet's mellow noise:
    She sobb'd a storm, and wiped her flowing eyes,
    Which seem'd like two broad suns in misty skies.
    Oh, squander not thy grief; those tears command
    To weep upon our cod in Newfoundland:
    The plenteous pickle shall preserve the fish,
    And Europe taste thy sorrows in a dish.

    TO MR LEMUEL GULLIVER,


    THE GRATEFUL ADDRESS OF THE UNHAPPY HOUYHNHNMS, NOW IN SLAVERY AND
    BONDAGE IN ENGLAND.


    To thee, we wretches of the Houyhnhnm band,
    Condemn'd to labour in a barbarous land,
    Return our thanks. Accept our humble lays,
    And let each grateful Houyhnhnm neigh thy praise.


    O happy Yahoo! purged from human crimes,
    By thy sweet sojourn in those virtuous climes,
    Where reign our sires; there, to thy country's shame,
    Reason, you found, and virtue were the same.
    Their precepts razed the prejudice of youth,
    And even a Yahoo learn'd the love of truth. 10


    Art thou the first who did the coast explore?
    Did never Yahoo tread that ground before?
    Yes, thousands! But in pity to their kind,
    Or sway'd by envy, or through pride of mind,
    They hid their knowledge of a nobler race,
    Which own'd, would all their sires and sons disgrace.


    You, like the Samian, visit lands unknown,
    And by their wiser morals mend your own.
    Thus Orpheus travell'd to reform his kind,
    Came back, and tamed the brutes he left behind. 20


    You went, you saw, you heard; with virtue fought,
    Then spread those morals which the Houyhnhnms taught.
    Our labours here must touch thy generous heart,
    To see us strain before the coach and cart;
    Compell'd to run each knavish jockey's heat!
    Subservient to Newmarket's annual cheat!
    With what reluctance do we lawyers bear,
    To fleece their country clients twice a year!
    Or managed in your schools, for fops to ride,
    How foam, how fret beneath a load of pride! 30
    Yes, we are slaves—but yet, by reason's force,
    Have learn'd to bear misfortune, like a horse.


    Oh would the stars, to ease my bonds, ordain,
    That gentle Gulliver might guide my rein!
    Safe would I bear him to his journey's end,
    For 'tis a pleasure to support a friend.
    But if my life be doom'd to serve the bad,
    Oh! mayst thou never want an easy pad!


    HOUYHNHNM.

    MARY GULLIVER TO CAPTAIN LEMUEL GULLIVER.


    AN EPISTLE.


    The captain, some time after his return, being retired to Mr Sympson's
    in the country, Mrs Gulliver, apprehending from his late behaviour some
    estrangement of his affections, writes him the following expostulatory,
    soothing, and tenderly complaining epistle:—


    Welcome, thrice welcome, to thy native place!—
    What, touch me not? what, shun a wife's embrace?
    Have I for this thy tedious absence borne,
    And waked, and wish'd whole nights for thy return?
    In five long years I took no second spouse;
    What Redriff wife so long hath kept her vows?
    Your eyes, your nose, inconstancy betray;
    Your nose you stop, your eyes you turn away.
    'Tis said, that thou shouldst 'cleave unto thy wife;'
    Once thou didst cleave, and I could cleave for life. 10
    Hear, and relent! hark how thy children moan!
    Be kind at least to these; they are thy own:
    Behold, and count them all; secure to find
    The honest number that you left behind.
    See how they pat thee with their pretty paws:
    Why start you? are they snakes? or have they claws?
    Thy Christian seed, our mutual flesh and bone:
    Be kind at least to these; they are thy own.


    Biddel,[88] like thee, might farthest India rove;
    He changed his country, but retain'd his love. 20
    There's Captain Pannel,[89] absent half his life,
    Comes back, and is the kinder to his wife;
    Yet Pannel's wife is brown compared to me,
    And Mrs Biddel sure is fifty-three.


    Not touch me! never neighbour call'd me slut:
    Was Flimnap's dame more sweet in Lilliput?
    I've no red hair to breathe an odious fume;
    At least thy consort's cleaner than thy groom.
    Why then that dirty stable-boy thy care?
    What mean those visits to the sorrel mare? 30
    Say, by what witchcraft, or what demon led,
    Preferr'st thou litter to the marriage-bed?


    Some say the devil himself is in that mare:
    If so, our Dean shall drive him forth by prayer.
    Some think you mad, some think you are possess'd,
    That Bedlam and clean straw will suit you best.
    Vain means, alas, this frenzy to appease!
    That straw, that straw, would heighten the disease.


    My bed (the scene of all our former joys,
    Witness two lovely girls, two lovely boys), 40
    Alone I press: in dreams I call my dear,
    I stretch my hand; no Gulliver is there!
    I wake, I rise, and, shivering with the frost,
    Search all the house; my Gulliver is lost!
    Forth in the street I rush with frantic cries;
    The windows open, all the neighbours rise:
    'Where sleeps my Gulliver? Oh tell me where!'
    The neighbours answer, 'With the sorrel mare!'


    At early morn I to the market haste 50
    (Studious in everything to please thy taste);
    A curious fowl and 'sparagus I chose
    (For I remember'd you were fond of those);
    Three shillings cost the first, the last seven groats;
    Sullen you turn from both, and call for oats.
    Others bring goods and treasure to their houses,
    Something to deck their pretty babes and spouses:
    My only token was a cup-like horn,
    That's made of nothing but a lady's corn.
    'Tis not for that I grieve; oh, 'tis to see
    The groom and sorrel mare preferr'd to me! 60


    These, for some moments when you deign to quit,
    And at due distance sweet discourse admit,
    'Tis all my pleasure thy past toil to know;
    For pleased remembrance builds delight on woe.
    At every danger pants thy consort's breast,
    And gaping infants squall to hear the rest.
    How did I tremble, when, by thousands bound,
    I saw thee stretch'd on Lilliputian ground!
    When scaling armies climb'd up every part,
    Each step they trod I felt upon my heart. 70
    But when thy torrent quench'd the dreadful blaze,
    King, queen, and nation staring with amaze,
    Full in my view how all my husband came,
    And what extinguished theirs increased my flame.
    Those spectacles, ordain'd thine eyes to save,
    Were once my present; love that armour gave.
    How did I mourn at Bolgolam's decree!
    For when he sign'd thy death, he sentenced me.
    When folks might see thee all the country round
    For sixpence, I'd have given a thousand pound. 80
    Lord! when the giant babe that head of thine
    Got in his mouth, my heart was up in mine!
    When in the marrow-bone I see thee ramm'd,
    Or on the house-top by the monkey cramm'd,
    The piteous images renew my pain,
    And all thy dangers I weep o'er again.
    But on the maiden's nipple when you rid,
    Pray Heaven, 'twas all a wanton maiden did!
    Glumdalclitch, too! with thee I mourn her case:
    Heaven guard the gentle girl from all disgrace! 90
    Oh may the king that one neglect forgive,
    And pardon her the fault by which I live!
    Was there no other way to set him free?
    My life, alas! I fear, proved death to thee.


    Oh teach me, dear, new words to speak my flame!
    Teach me to woo thee by thy best loved name!
    Whether the style of Grildrig please thee most,
    So call'd on Brobdignag's stupendous coast,
    When on the monarch's ample hand you sate,
    And halloo'd in his ear intrigues of state; 100
    Or Quinbus Flestrin more endearment brings,
    When like a mountain you look'd down on kings:
    If ducal Nardac, Lilliputian peer,
    Or Glumglum's humbler title soothe thy ear:
    Nay, would kind Jove my organs so dispose,
    To hymn harmonious Houyhnhnm through the nose,
    I'd call thee Houyhnhnm, that high-sounding name;
    Thy children's noses all should twang the same;
    So might I find my loving spouse of course
    Endued with all the virtues of a horse. 110

    1740.


    A FRAGMENT OF A POEM.


    O Wretched B——,[90] jealous now of all,
    What god, what mortal shall prevent thy fall?
    Turn, turn thy eyes from wicked men in place,
    And see what succour from the patriot race.
    C——,[91] his own proud dupe, thinks monarchs things
    Made just for him, as other fools for kings;
    Controls, decides, insults thee every hour,
    And antedates the hatred due to power.


    Through clouds of passion P——'s[92] views are clear;
    He foams a patriot to subside a peer; 10
    Impatient sees his country bought and sold,
    And damns the market where he takes no gold.


    Grave, righteous S——[93] jogs on till, past belief,
    He finds himself companion with a thief.


    To purge and let thee blood with fire and sword,
    Is all the help stern S——[94] would afford.


    That those who bind and rob thee would not kill,
    Good C——[95] hopes, and candidly sits still.


    Of Ch—-s W——[96] who speaks at all,
    No more than of Sir Har—y or Sir P——.[97] 20
    Whose names once up, they thought it was not wrong
    To lie in bed, but sure they lay too long.


    G—-r, C—-m, B—-t,[98] pay thee due regards,
    Unless the ladies bid them mind their cards.

           with wit that must
    And C—-d[99] who speaks so well and writes,
    Whom (saving W.) every S. harper bites,

            must needs,
    Whose wit and ... equally provoke one,
    Finds thee, at best, the butt to crack his joke on.


    As for the rest, each winter up they run,
    And all are clear, and something must be done. 30
    Then urged by C—-t,[100] or by C—-t stopp'd,
    Inflamed by P——,[101] and by P——dropp'd;
    They follow reverently each wondrous wight,
    Amazed that one can read, that one can write:
    So geese to gander prone obedience keep,
    Hiss, if he hiss, and if he slumber, sleep.
    Till having done whate'er was fit or fine,
    Utter'd a speech, and ask'd their friends to dine;
    Each hurries back to his paternal ground,
    Content but for five shillings in the pound, 40
    Yearly defeated, yearly hopes they give,
    And all agree Sir Robert cannot live.


    Rise, rise, great W——,[102] fated to appear,
    Spite of thyself a glorious minister!
    Speak the loud language princes ...
    And treat with half the ...
    At length to B——kind as to thy ...
    Espouse the nation, you ...


    What can thy H—-[103] ...
    Dress in Dutch ... 50


    Though still he travels on no bad pretence,
    To shew ...


    Or those foul copies of thy face and tongue,
    Veracious W——[104] and frontless Young;[105]
    Sagacious Bub,[106] so late a friend, and there
    So late a foe, yet more sagacious H——?[107]
    Hervey and Hervey's school, F——, H—-y,[108] H—-n[109]
    Yea, moral Ebor,[110] or religious Winton.
    How! what can O—-w,[111] what can D——,
    The wisdom of the one and other chair, 60
    N——[112] laugh, or D—-s[113] sager,
    Or thy dread truncheon M——'s[114] mighty peer?
    What help from J——'s[115] opiates canst thou draw,
    Or H—-k's[116] quibbles voted into law?


    C——,[117] that Roman in his nose alone,
    Who hears all causes, B——,[118] but thy own,
    Or those proud fools whom nature, rank, and fate
    Made fit companions for the sword of state.


    Can the light packhorse, or the heavy steer,
    The sowzing prelate, or the sweating peer, 70
    Drag out, with all its dirt and all its weight,
    The lumbering carriage of thy broken state?
    Alas! the people curse, the carman swears,
    The drivers quarrel, and the master stares.


    The plague is on thee, Britain, and who tries
    To save thee, in the infectious office dies.
    The first firm P—-y soon resign'd his breath,
    Brave S—-w[119] loved thee, and was lied to death.
    Good M-m-t's[120] fate tore P—-th[121] from thy side,
    And thy last sigh was heard when W—-m[122] died. 80


    Thy nobles sl—-s,[123] thy se—-s[124] bought with gold
    Thy clergy perjured, thy whole people sold.
    An atheist [symbol] a [symbol]'s ad ... [125]
    Blotch thee all o'er, and sink ...


    Alas! on one alone our all relies,
    Let him be honest, and he must be wise,
    Let him no trifler from his school,
    Nor like his ... still a ...
    Be but a man! unminister'd, alone,
    And free at once the senate and the throne; 90
    Esteem the public love his best supply,
    A [symbol]'s[126] true glory his integrity:
    Rich with his ... in his ... strong,
    Affect no conquest, but endure no wrong.
    Whatever his religion[127] or his blood,
    His public virtue makes his title good.
    Europe's just balance and our own may stand,
    And one man's honesty redeem the land.

    THE FOURTH EPISTLE OF THE FIRST BOOK OF HORACE.[128]


    Say, St John, who alone peruse
    With candid eye the mimic Muse,
    What schemes of politics, or laws,
    In Gallic lands the patriot draws!
    Is then a greater work in hand,
    Than all the tomes of Haines's band?
    'Or shoots he folly as it flies?
    Or catches manners as they rise?'
    Or urged by unquench'd native heat,
    Does St John Greenwich sports repeat? 10
    Where (emulous of Chartres' fame)
    E'en Chartres' self is scarce a name.


    To you (the all-envied gift of heaven)
    The indulgent gods, unask'd, have given
    A form complete in every part,
    And, to enjoy that gift, the art.


    What could a tender mother's care
    Wish better, to her favourite heir,
    Than wit, and fame, and lucky hours,
    A stock of health, and golden showers, 20
    And graceful fluency of speech,
    Precepts before unknown to teach?


    Amidst thy various ebbs of fear,
    And gleaming hope, and black despair,
    Yet let thy friend this truth impart,
    A truth I tell with bleeding heart,
    (In justice for your labours past)
    That every day shall be your last;
    That every hour you life renew
    Is to your injured country due. 30


    In spite of fears, of mercy spite,
    My genius still must rail, and write.
    Haste to thy Twickenham's safe retreat,
    And mingle with the grumbling great;
    There, half-devoured by spleen, you'll find
    The rhyming bubbler of mankind;
    There (objects of our mutual hate)
    We'll ridicule both church and state.

    EPIGRAM


    ON ONE WHO MADE LONG EPITAPHS.[129]


    Friend, for your epitaphs I'm grieved,
    Where still so much is said;
    One half will never be believed,
    The other never read.

    ON AN OLD GATE.


    ERECTED IN CHISWICK GARDENS.


    O gate, how cam'st thou here?
    Gate. I was brought from Chelsea last year,
    Batter'd with wind and weather.
    Inigo Jones put me together;
    Sir Hans Sloane
    Let me alone:
    Burlington brought me hither.

    A FRAGMENT.


    What are the falling rills, the pendant shades,
    The morning bowers, the evening colonnades,
    But soft recesses for th' uneasy mind
    To sigh unheard in, to the passing wind!
    So the struck deer, in some sequester'd part,
    Lies down to die (the arrow in his heart);
    There hid in shades, and wasting day by day,
    Inly he bleeds, and pants his soul away.

    TO MR GAY,


    WHO HAD CONGRATULATED POPE ON FINISHING HIS HOUSE AND GARDENS.


    'Ah, friend! 'tis true—this truth you lovers know—
    In vain my structures rise, my gardens grow,
    In vain fair Thames reflects the double scenes
    Of hanging mountains, and of sloping greens:
    Joy lives not here, to happier seats it flies,
    And only dwells where Wortley casts her eyes.


    'What are the gay parterre, the chequer'd shade,
    The morning bower, the evening colonnade,
    But soft recesses of uneasy minds,
    To sigh unheard in, to the passing winds?
    So the struck deer in some sequester'd part
    Lies down to die, the arrow at his heart,
    He, stretch'd unseen in coverts hid from day,
    Bleeds drop by drop, and pants his life away.'

    ARGUS.


    When wise Ulysses, from his native coast
    Long kept by wars, and long by tempests toss'd,
    Arrived at last, poor, old, disguised, alone,
    To all his friends, and even his queen unknown:
    Changed as he was with age, and toils, and cares,
    Furrow'd his reverend face, and white his hairs,
    In his own palace forced to ask his bread,
    Scorn'd by those slaves his former bounty fed,
    Forgot of all his own domestic crew;
    The faithful dog alone his rightful master knew:
    Unfed, unhoused, neglected, on the clay,
    Like an old servant now cashier'd, he lay;
    Touch'd with resentment of ungrateful man,
    And longing to behold his ancient lord again.
    Him when he saw he rose, and crawl'd to meet,
    ('Twas all he could) and fawn'd and kiss'd his feet,
    Seized with dumb joy: then falling by his side,
    Own'd his returning lord, look'd up, and died!

    PRAYER OF BRUTUS.


    FROM GEOFFREY OF MONMOUTH.


    Goddess of woods, tremendous in the chase,
    To mountain wolves and all the savage race,
    Wide o'er th' aerial vault extend thy sway,
    And o'er th' infernal regions void of day.
    On thy third reign look down; disclose our fate,
    In what new station shall we fix our seat?
    When shall we next thy hallow'd altars raise,
    And choirs of virgins celebrate thy praise?

    LINES ON A GROTTO, AT CRUX-EASTON, HANTS.


    Here shunning idleness at once and praise,
    This radiant pile nine rural sisters[130] raise;
    The glittering emblem of each spotless dame,
    Clear as her soul, and shining as her frame;
    Beauty which nature only can impart,
    And such a polish as disgraces art;
    But Fate disposed them in this humble sort,
    And hid in deserts what would charm a court.






    THE UNIVERSAL PRAYER


    DEO OPT. MAX.



    1 Father of all! in every age,

        In every clime adored,

      By saint, by savage, and by sage,

        Jehovah, Jove, or Lord!


    2 Thou great First Cause, least understood:

        Who all my sense confined

      To know but this, that Thou art good,

        And that myself am blind;


    3 Yet gave me, in this dark estate,

        To see the good from ill;

      And, binding nature fast in fate,

        Left free the human will.[131]


    4 What conscience dictates to be done,

        Or warns me not to do,

      This, teach me more than hell to shun,

        That, more than heaven pursue.


    5 What blessings thy free bounty gives,

        Let me not cast away;

      For God is paid when man receives;

        T' enjoy is to obey.


    6 Yet not to earth's contracted span

        Thy goodness let me bound,

      Or think Thee Lord alone of man,

        When thousand worlds are round:


    7 Let not this weak, unknowing hand

        Presume Thy bolts to throw,

      And deal damnation round the land,

        On each I judge Thy foe.


    8 If I am right, Thy grace impart,

        Still in the right to stay;

      If I am wrong, oh teach my heart

        To find that better way!


    9 Save me alike from foolish pride,

        Or impious discontent,

      At ought Thy wisdom has denied.

        Or ought Thy goodness lent.[132]


    10 Teach me to feel another's woe,

        To hide the fault I see;

      That mercy I to others show,

        That mercy show to me.


    11 Mean though I am, not wholly so,

        Since quicken'd by Thy breath;

      Oh, lead me, wheresoe'er I go,

        Through this day's life or death!


    12 This day, be bread and peace my lot:

        All else beneath the sun,

      Thou know'st if best bestow'd or not,

        And let Thy will be done.


    13 To Thee, whose temple is all space,

        Whose altar, earth, sea, skies!

      One chorus let all being raise!

        All Nature's incense rise!






    THE DUNCIAD.


    IN FOUR BOOKS.



    A LETTER TO THE PUBLISHER, OCCASIONED BY THE FIRST CORRECT EDITION OF THE DUNCIAD.



    It is with pleasure I hear that you have procured a correct copy of 'The
    Dunciad,' which the many surreptitious ones have rendered so necessary;
    and it is yet with more, that I am informed it will be attended with a
    commentary; a work so requisite, that I cannot think the author himself
    would have omitted it, had he approved of the first appearance of this
    poem.


    Such notes as have occurred to me I herewith send you: you will oblige
    me by inserting them amongst those which are, or will be, transmitted to
    you by others; since not only the author's friends but even strangers
    appear engaged by humanity, to take some care of an orphan of so much
    genius and spirit, which its parent seems to have abandoned from the
    very beginning, and suffered to step into the world naked, unguarded,
    and unattended.


    It was upon reading some of the abusive papers lately published, that my
    great regard to a person, whose friendship I esteem as one of the chief
    honours of my life, and a much greater respect to truth, than to him or
    any man living, engaged me in inquiries, of which the enclosed notes are
    the fruit.


    I perceived that most of these authors had been (doubtless very wisely)
    the first aggressors. They had tried till they were weary, what was to
    be got by railing at each other; nobody was either concerned or
    surprised, if this or that scribbler was proved a dunce. But every one
    was curious to read what could be said to prove Mr Pope one, and was
    ready to pay something for such a discovery; a stratagem which, would
    they fairly own it, might not only reconcile them to me, but screen them
    from the resentment of their lawful superiors, whom they daily abuse,
    only (as I charitably hope) to get that by them, which they cannot get
    from them.


    I found this was not all. Ill success in that had transported them to
    personal abuse, either of himself, or (what I think he could less
    forgive) of his friends. They had called men of virtue and honour bad
    men, long before he had either leisure or inclination to call them bad
    writers; and some had been such old offenders, that he had quite
    forgotten their persons as well as their slanders, till they were
    pleased to revive them.


    Now what had Mr Pope done before to incense them? He had published those
    works which are in the hands of everybody, in which not the least
    mention is made of any of them. And what has he done since? He has
    laughed, and written 'The Dunciad.' What has that said of them? A very
    serious truth, which the public had said before, that they were dull;
    and what it had no sooner said, but they themselves were at great pains
    to procure, or even purchase, room in the prints to testify under their
    hands to the truth of it.


    I should still have been silent, if either I had seen any inclination in
    my friend to be serious with such accusers, or if they had only meddled
    with his writings; since whoever publishes, puts himself on his trial by
    his country. But when his moral character was attacked, and in a manner
    from which neither truth nor virtue can secure the most innocent; in a
    manner which, though it annihilates the credit of the accusation with
    the just and impartial, yet aggravates very much the guilt of the
    accusers; I mean by authors without names; then I thought, since the
    danger was common to all, the concern ought to be so; and that it was an
    act of justice to detect the authors, not only on this account, but as
    many of them are the same who, for several years past, have made free
    with the greatest names in Church and State, exposed to the world the
    private misfortunes of families, abused all, even to women, and whose
    prostituted papers (for one or other party, in the unhappy divisions of
    their country) have insulted the fallen, the friendless, the exiled, and
    the dead.


    Besides this, which I take to be a public concern, I have already
    confessed I had a private one. I am one of that number who have long
    loved and esteemed Mr Pope; and had often declared it was not his
    capacity or writings (which we ever thought the least valuable part of
    his character), but the honest, open, and beneficent man, that we most
    esteemed, and loved in him. Now if what these people say were believed,
    I must appear to all my friends either a fool, or a knave; either
    imposed on myself, or imposing on them; so that I am as much interested
    in the confutation of these calumnies as he is himself.


    I am no author, and consequently not to be suspected either of jealousy
    or resentment against any of the men, of whom scarce one is known to me
    by sight; and as for their writings, I have sought them (on this one
    occasion) in vain, in the closets and libraries of all my acquaintance.
    I had still been in the dark if a gentleman had not procured me (I
    suppose from some of themselves, for they are generally much more
    dangerous friends than enemies) the passages I send you. I solemnly
    protest I have added nothing to the malice or absurdity of them; which
    it behoves me to declare, since the vouchers themselves will be so soon
    and so irrecoverably lost. You may in some measure prevent it, by
    preserving at least their titles, and discovering (as far as you can
    depend on the truth of your information) the names of the concealed
    authors.


    The first objection I have heard made to the poem is, that the persons
    are too obscure for satire. The persons themselves, rather than allow
    the objection, would forgive the satire; and if one could be tempted to
    afford it a serious answer, were not all assassinates, popular
    insurrections, the insolence of the rabble without doors, and of
    domestics within, most wrongfully chastised, if the meanness of
    offenders indemnified them from punishment? On the contrary, obscurity
    renders them more dangerous, as less thought of: law can pronounce
    judgment only on open facts; morality alone can pass censure on
    intentions of mischief; so that for secret calumny, or the arrow flying
    in the dark, there is no public punishment left, but what a good writer
    inflicts.


    The next objection is, that these sort of authors are poor. That might
    be pleaded as an excuse at the Old Bailey for lesser crimes than
    defamation (for 'tis the case of almost all who are tried there), but
    sure it can be none: for who will pretend that the robbing another of
    his reputation supplies the want of it in himself? I question not but
    such authors are poor, and heartily wish the objection were removed by
    any honest livelihood. But poverty is here the accident, not the
    subject: he who describes malice and villany to be pale and meagre,
    expresses not the least anger against paleness or leanness, but against
    malice and villany. The apothecary in Romeo and Juliet is poor; but is
    he therefore justified in vending poison? Not but poverty itself becomes
    a just subject of satire, when it is the consequence of vice,
    prodigality, or neglect of one's lawful calling; for then it increases
    the public burden, fills the streets and highways with robbers, and the
    garrets with clippers, coiners, and weekly journalists.


    But admitting that two or three of these offend less in their morals
    than in their writings, must poverty make nonsense sacred? If so, the
    fame of bad authors would be much better consulted than that of all the
    good ones in the world; and not one of a hundred had ever been called by
    his right name.


    They mistake the whole matter: it is not charity to encourage them in
    the way they follow, but to get them out of it; for men are not bunglers
    because they are poor, but they are poor because they are bunglers.


    Is it not pleasant enough to hear our authors crying out on the one
    hand, as if their persons and characters were too sacred for satire; and
    the public objecting on the other, that they are too mean even for
    ridicule? But whether bread or fame be their end, it must be allowed,
    our author, by and in this poem, has mercifully given them a little of
    both.


    There are two or three who, by their rank and fortune, have no benefit
    from the former objections, supposing them good; and these I was sorry
    to see in such company. But if, without any provocation, two or three
    gentlemen will fall upon one, in an affair wherein his interest and
    reputation are equally embarked, they cannot, certainly, after they have
    been content to print themselves his enemies, complain of being put into
    the number of them.


    Others, I am told, pretend to have been once his friends. Surely they
    are their enemies who say so, since nothing can be more odious than to
    treat a friend as they have done. But of this I cannot persuade myself,
    when I consider the constant and eternal aversion of all bad writers to
    a good one.


    Such as claim a merit from being his admirers, I would gladly ask, if it
    lays him under a personal obligation? At that rate, he would be the most
    obliged humble servant in the world. I dare swear for these in
    particular, he never desired them to be his admirers, nor promised in
    return to be theirs: that had truly been a sign he was of their
    acquaintance; but would not the malicious world have suspected such an
    approbation of some motive worse than ignorance in the author of the
    Essay on Criticism? Be it as it will, the reasons of their admiration
    and of his contempt are equally subsisting, for his works and theirs are
    the very same that they were.


    One, therefore, of their assertions I believe may be true—'That he has
    a contempt for their writings.' And there is another, which would
    probably be sooner allowed by himself than by any good judge beside—
    'That his own have found too much success with the public.' But as it
    cannot consist with his modesty to claim this as justice, it lies not on
    him, but entirely on the public, to defend its own judgment.


    There remains what in my opinion might seem a better plea for these
    people than any they have made use of. If obscurity or poverty were to
    exempt a man from satire, much more should folly or dulness, which are
    still more involuntary; nay, as much so as personal deformity. But even
    this will not help them: deformity becomes an object of ridicule when a
    man sets up for being handsome; and so must dulness when he sets up for
    a wit. They are not ridiculed because ridicule in itself is, or ought to
    be, a pleasure, but because it is just to undeceive and vindicate the
    honest and unpretending part of mankind from imposition, because
    particular interest ought to yield to general, and a great number who
    are not naturally fools ought never to be made so, in complaisance to a
    few who are. Accordingly we find that in all ages, all vain pretenders,
    were they ever so poor or ever so dull, have been constantly the topics
    of the most candid satirists, from the Codrus of Juvenal to the Damon of
    Boileau.


    Having mentioned Boileau, the greatest poet and most judicious critic of
    his age and country, admirable for his talents, and yet perhaps more
    admirable for his judgment in the proper application of them, I cannot
    help remarking the resemblance betwixt him and our author, in qualities,
    fame, and fortune, in the distinctions shown them by their superiors, in
    the general esteem of their equals, and in their extended reputation
    amongst foreigners; in the latter of which ours has met with the better
    fate, as he has had for his translators persons of the most eminent rank
    and abilities in their respective nations. But the resemblance holds in
    nothing more than in their being equally abused by the ignorant
    pretenders to poetry of their times, of which not the least memory will
    remain but in their own writings, and in the notes made upon them. What
    Boileau has done in almost all his poems, our author has only in this: I
    dare answer for him he will do it in no more; and on this principle, of
    attacking few but who had slandered him, he could not have done it at
    all, had he been confined from censuring obscure and worthless persons,
    for scarce any other were his enemies. However, as the parity is so
    remarkable, I hope it will continue to the last; and if ever he shall
    give us an edition of this poem himself, I may see some of them treated
    as gently, on their repentance or better merit, as Perrault and Quinault
    were at last by Boileau.


    In one point I must be allowed to think the character of our English
    poet the more amiable. He has not been a follower of fortune or success;
    he has lived with the great without flattery—been a friend to men in
    power, without pensions, from whom, as he asked, so he received no
    favour but what was done him in his friends. As his satires were the
    more just for being delayed, so were his panegyrics; bestowed only on
    such persons as he had familiarly known, only for such virtues as he had
    long observed in them, and only at such times as others cease to praise,
    if not begin to calumniate them—I mean, when out of power or out of
    fashion. A satire, therefore, on writers so notorious for the contrary
    practice, became no man so well as himself; as none, it is plain, was so
    little in their friendships, or so much in that of those whom they had
    most abused—namely, the greatest and best of all parties. Let me add a
    further reason, that, though engaged in their friendships, he never
    espoused their animosities; and can almost singly challenge this honour,
    not to have written a line of any man, which, through guilt, through
    shame, or through fear, through variety of fortune, or change of
    interests, he was ever unwilling to own.


    I shall conclude with remarking, what a pleasure it must be to every
    reader of humanity to see all along, that our author in his very
    laughter is not indulging his own ill-nature, but only punishing that of
    others. As to his poem, those alone are capable of doing it justice,
    who, to use the words of a great writer, know how hard it is (with
    regard both to his subject and his manner) vetustis dare novitatem,
    obsoletis nitorem, obscuris lucem, fastiditis gratiam
    .—I am


    Your most humble servant,


    WILLIAM CLELAND.[133]
    ST JAMES'S, Dec. 22, 1728.





    MARTINUS SCRIBLERUS HIS PROLEGOMENA AND ILLUSTRATIONS TO THE DUNCIAD:


    WITH THE HYPERCRITICS OF ARISTARCHUS.



    DENNIS, REMARKS ON PR. ARTHUR.


    I cannot but think it the most reasonable thing in the world to
    distinguish good writers, by discouraging the bad. Nor is it an
    ill-natured thing, in relation even to the very persons upon whom the
    reflections are made. It is true, it may deprive them, a little the
    sooner, of a short profit and a transitory reputation; but then it may
    have a good effect, and oblige them (before it be too late) to decline
    that for which they are so very unfit, and to have recourse to something
    in which they may be more successful.


    CHARACTER OF MR P., 1716.


    The persons whom Boileau has attacked in his writings have been for the
    most part authors, and most of those authors, poets: and the censures he
    hath passed upon them have been confirmed by all Europe.


    GILDON, PREF. TO HIS NEW REHEARSAL.


    It is the common cry of the poetasters of the town, and their fautors,
    that it is an ill-natured thing to expose the pretenders to wit and
    poetry. The judges and magistrates may, with full as good reason, be
    reproached with ill-nature for putting the laws in execution against a
    thief or impostor. The same will hold in the republic of letters, if the
    critics and judges will let every ignorant pretender to scribbling pass
    on the world.


    THEOBALD, LETTER TO MIST, JUNE 22, 1728.


    Attacks may be levelled either against failures in genius, or against
    the pretensions of writing without one.


    CONCANEN, DED. TO THE AUTHOR OF THE DUNCIAD.


    A satire upon dulness is a thing that has been used and allowed in all
    ages.


    Out of thine own mouth will I judge thee, wicked scribbler.





    TESTIMONIES OF AUTHORS


    CONCERNING OUR POET AND HIS WORKS.



    M. SCRIBLERUS LECTORI S.


    Before we present thee with our exercitations on this most delectable
    poem (drawn from the many volumes of our Adversaria on modern authors)
    we shall here, according to the laudable usage of editors, collect the
    various judgments of the learned concerning our Poet: various indeed,
    not only of different authors, but of the same author at different
    seasons. Nor shall we gather only the testimonies of such eminent wits
    as would of course descend to posterity, and consequently be read
    without our collection; but we shall likewise, with incredible labour,
    seek out for divers others, which, but for this our diligence, could
    never, at the distance of a few months, appear to the eye of the most
    curious. Hereby thou may'st not only receive the delectation of variety,
    but also arrive at a more certain judgment, by a grave and circumspect
    comparison of the witnesses with each other, or of each with himself.
    Hence also, thou wilt be enabled to draw reflections, not only of a
    critical, but a moral nature, by being let into many particulars of the
    person as well as genius, and of the fortune as well as merit, of our
    author: in which, if I relate some things of little concern peradventure
    to thee, and some of as little even to him, I entreat thee to consider
    how minutely all true critics and commentators are wont to insist upon
    such, and how material they seem to themselves, if to none other.
    Forgive me, gentle reader, if (following learned example) I ever and
    anon become tedious: allow me to take the same pains to find whether my
    author were good or bad, well or ill-natured, modest or arrogant; as
    another, whether his author was fair or brown, short or tall, or whether
    he wore a coat or a cassock.


    We purposed to begin with his life, parentage, and education: but as to
    these, even his cotemporaries do exceedingly differ. One saith,[134] he
    was educated at home; another,[135] that he was bred at St Omer's by
    Jesuits; a third,[136] not at St Omer's, but at Oxford; a fourth,[137]
    that he had no University education at all. Those who allow him to be
    bred at home differ as much concerning his tutor: one saith,[138] he was
    kept by his father on purpose; a second,[139] that he was an itinerant
    priest; a third,[140] that he was a parson; one[141] calleth him a
    secular clergyman of the Church of Rome; another,[142] a monk. As little
    do they agree about his father, whom one[143] supposeth, like the father
    of Hesiod, a tradesman or merchant; another,[144] a husbandman;
    another,[145] a hatter, &c. Nor has an author been wanting to give our
    Poet such a father as Apuleius hath to Plato, Jamblichus to Pythagoras,
    and divers to Homer, namely, a demon: For thus Mr Gildon[146]: 'Certain
    it is, that his original is not from Adam, but the Devil; and that he
    wanteth nothing but horns and tail to be the exact resemblance of his
    infernal Father.' Finding, therefore, such contrariety of opinions, and
    (whatever be ours of this sort of generation) not being fond to enter
    into controversy, we shall defer writing the life of our Poet, till
    authors can determine among themselves what parents or education he had,
    or whether he had any education or parents at all.


    Proceed we to what is more certain, his Works, though not less uncertain
    the judgments concerning them; beginning with his Essay on Criticism, of
    which hear first the most ancient of critics—


    MR JOHN DENNIS.


    'His precepts are false or trivial, or both; his thoughts are crude and
    abortive, his expressions absurd, his numbers harsh and unmusical, his
    rhymes trivial and common:—instead of majesty, we have something that
    is very mean; instead of gravity, something that is very boyish; and
    instead of perspicuity and lucid order, we have but too often obscurity
    and confusion.' And in another place: 'What rare numbers are here! Would
    not one swear that this youngster had espoused some antiquated Muse, who
    had sued out a divorce from some superannuated sinner, upon account of
    impotence, and who, being poxed by her former spouse, has got the gout
    in her decrepid age, which makes her hobble so damnably.'[147]


    No less peremptory is the censure of our hypercritical historian,


    MR OLDMIXON.


    'I dare not say anything of the Essay on Criticism in verse; but if any
    more curious reader has discovered in it something new which is not in
    Dryden's prefaces, dedications, and his Essay on Dramatic Poetry, not to
    mention the French critics, I should be very glad to have the benefit of
    the discovery.'[148]


    He is followed (as in fame, so in judgment) by the modest and
    simple-minded


    MR LEONARD WELSTED,


    who, out of great respect to our poet not naming him, doth yet glance at
    his essay, together with the Duke of Buckingham's, and the criticisms of
    Dryden, and of Horace, which he more openly taxeth: 'As to the numerous
    treatises, essays, arts, &c., both in verse and prose, that have been
    written by the moderns on this ground-work, they do but hackney the same
    thoughts over again, making them still more trite. Most of their pieces
    are nothing but a pert, insipid heap of common-place. Horace has even,
    in his Art of Poetry, thrown out several things which plainly shew he
    thought an Art of Poetry was of no use, even while he was writing
    one.'[149]


    To all which great authorities, we can only oppose that of


    MR ADDISON.


    'The Art of Criticism (saith he), which was published some months since,
    is a master-piece in its kind. The observations follow one another, like
    those in Horace's Art of Poetry, without that methodical regularity
    which would have been requisite in a prose writer. They are some of them
    uncommon, but such as the reader must assent to, when he sees them
    explained with that ease and perspicuity in which they are delivered. As
    for those which are the most known and the most received, they are
    placed in so beautiful a light, and illustrated with such apt allusions,
    that they have in them all the graces of novelty, and make the reader,
    who was before acquainted with them, still more convinced of their truth
    and solidity. And here give me leave to mention what Monsieur Boileau
    has so well enlarged upon in the preface to his works—that wit and fine
    writing doth not consist so much in advancing things that are new, as in
    giving things that are known an agreeable turn. It is impossible for us,
    who live in the latter ages of the world, to make observations in
    criticism, morality, or any art or science, which have not been touched
    upon by others; we have little else left us but to represent the common
    sense of mankind in more strong, more beautiful, or more uncommon
    lights. If a reader examines Horace's Art of Poetry, he will find but
    few precepts in it which he may not meet with in Aristotle, and which
    were not commonly known by all the poets of the Augustan age. His way of
    expressing and applying them, not his invention of them, is what we are
    chiefly to admire.'


    'Longinus, in his Reflections, has given us the same kind of sublime
    which he observes in the several passages that occasioned them: I cannot
    but take notice that our English author has, after the same manner,
    exemplified several of the precepts in the very precepts themselves.' He
    then produces some instances of a particular beauty in the numbers, and
    concludes with saying, 'that there are three poems in our tongue of the
    same nature, and each a master-piece in its kind—the Essay on
    Translated Verse, the Essay on the Art of Poetry, and the Essay on
    Criticism.'[150]


    Of WINDSOR FOREST, positive is the judgment of the affirmative


    MR JOHN DENNIS,


    'That it is a wretched rhapsody, impudently writ in emulation of the
    Cooper's Hill of Sir John Denham.[151] The author of it is obscure, is
    ambiguous, is affected, is temerarious, is barbarous.'[152]


    But the author of the Dispensary,


    DR GARTH,


    in the preface to his poem of Claremont, differs from this opinion:
    'Those who have seen these two excellent poems of Cooper's Hill and
    Windsor Forest—the one written by Sir John Denham, the other by Mr
    Pope—will shew a great deal of candour if they approve of this.'


    Of the Epistle of ELOISA, we are told by the obscure writer of a poem
    called Sawney, 'That because Prior's Henry and Emma charmed the finest
    tastes, our author writ his Eloise in opposition to it, but forgot
    innocence and virtue: if you take away her tender thoughts and her
    fierce desires, all the rest is of no value.' In which, methinks, his
    judgment resembleth that of a French tailor on a villa and gardens by
    the Thames: 'All this is very fine, but take away the river and it is
    good for nothing.'


    But very contrary hereunto was the opinion of


    MR PRIOR


    himself, saying in his Alma—


    'O Abelard! ill-fated youth,
    Thy tale will justify this truth.
    But well I weet thy cruel wrong
    Adorns a nobler poet's song:
    Dan Pope, for thy misfortune grieved,
    With kind concern and skill has weaved
    A silken web; and ne'er shall fade
    Its colours: gently has he laid
    The mantle o'er thy sad distress,
    And Venus shall the texture bless,'[153] &c.


    Come we now to his translation of the ILIAD, celebrated by numerous
    pens, yet shall it suffice to mention the indefatigable


    SIR RICHARD BLACKMORE, KT.,


    who (though otherwise a severe censurer of our author) yet styleth this
    a 'laudable translation.'[154] That ready writer,


    MR OLDMIXON,


    in his forementioned essay, frequently commends the same. And the
    painful


    MR LEWIS THEOBALD


    thus extols it: 'The spirit of Homer breathes all through this
    translation.—I am in doubt whether I should most admire the justness to
    the original, or the force and beauty of the language, or the sounding
    variety of the numbers: but when I find all these meet, it puts me in
    mind of what the poet says of one of his heroes, that he alone raised
    and flung with ease a weighty stone, that two common men could not lift
    from the ground; just so, one single person has performed in this
    translation what I once despaired to have seen done by the force of
    several masterly hands.'[155] Indeed, the same gentleman appears to have
    changed his sentiment in his Essay on the Art of Sinking in Reputation
    (printed in Mist's Journal, March 30, 1728,) where he says thus:—'In
    order to sink in reputation, let him take into his head to descend into
    Homer (let the world wonder, as it will, how the devil he got there),
    and pretend to do him into English, so his version denote his neglect of
    the manner how.' Strange variation! We are told in


    MIST'S JOURNAL, JUNE 8,


    'That this translation of the Iliad was not in all respects conformable
    to the fine taste of his friend, Mr Addison; insomuch that he employed a
    younger Muse in an undertaking of this kind, which he supervised
    himself.' Whether Mr Addison did find it conformable to his taste or
    not, best appears from his own testimony the year following its
    publication, in these words:


    MR ADDISON, FREEHOLDER, NO. 40.


    'When I consider myself as a British freeholder, I am in a particular
    manner pleased with the labours of those who have improved our language
    with the translations of old Greek and Latin authors.—We have already
    most of their historians in our own tongue, and what is more for the
    honour of our language, it has been taught to express with elegance the
    greatest of their poets in each nation. The illiterate among our own
    countrymen may learn to judge from Dryden's Virgil of the most perfect
    epic performance. And those parts of Homer which have been published
    already by Mr Pope, give us reason to think that the Iliad will appear
    in English with as little disadvantage to that immortal poem.'


    As to the rest, there is a slight mistake, for this younger Muse was an
    elder: nor was the gentleman (who is a friend of our author) employed by
    Mr Addison to translate it after him, since he saith himself that he did
    it before.[156] Contrariwise that Mr Addison engaged our author in this
    work appeareth by declaration thereof in the preface to the Iliad,
    printed some time before his death, and by his own letters of October
    26, and November 2, 1713, where he declares it his opinion that no other
    person was equal to it.


    Next comes his Shakspeare on the stage: 'Let him (quoth one, whom I take
    to be


    MR THEOBALD, MIST'S JOURNAL, JUNE 8, 1728,)


    publish such an author as he has least studied, and forget to discharge
    even the dull duty of an editor. In this project let him lend the
    bookseller his name (for a competent sum of money) to promote the credit
    of an exorbitant subscription.' Gentle reader, be pleased to cast thine
    eye on the proposal below quoted, and on what follows (some months after
    the former assertion) in the same journalist of June 8. 'The bookseller
    proposed the book by subscription, and raised some thousands of pounds
    for the same: I believe the gentleman did not share in the profits of
    this extravagant subscription.


    'After the Iliad, he undertook (saith


    MIST'S JOURNAL, JUNE 8, 1728,)


    the sequel of that work, the Odyssey; and having secured the success by
    a numerous subscription, he employed some underlings to perform what,
    according to his proposals, should come from his own hands.' To which
    heavy charge we can in truth oppose nothing but the words of


    MR POPE'S PROPOSAL FOR THE ODYSSEY, (PRINTED BY J. WATTS, JAN. 10,
    1724.)


    'I take this occasion to declare that the subscription for Shakspeare
    belongs wholly to Mr Tonson: And that the benefit of this proposal is
    not solely for my own use, but for that of two of my friends, who have
    assisted me in this work.' But these very gentlemen are extolled above
    our poet himself in another of Mist's Journals, March 30, 1728, saying,
    'That he would not advise Mr Pope to try the experiment again of getting
    a great part of a book done by assistants, lest those extraneous parts
    should unhappily ascend to the sublime, and retard the declension of the
    whole.' Behold! these underlings are become good writers!


    If any say, that before the said proposals were printed, the
    subscription was begun without declaration of such assistance, verily
    those who set it on foot, or (as their term is) secured it, to wit, the
    Right Honourable the Lord Viscount Harcourt, were he living, would
    testify, and the Right Honourable the Lord Bathurst, now living, doth
    testify the same is a falsehood.


    Sorry I am, that persons professing to be learned, or of whatever rank
    of authors, should either falsely tax, or be falsely taxed. Yet let us,
    who are only reporters, be impartial in our citations, and proceed.


    MIST'S JOURNAL, JUNE 8, 1728.


    'Mr Addison raised this author from obscurity, obtained him the
    acquaintance and friendship of the whole body of our nobility, and
    transferred his powerful interests with those great men to this rising
    bard, who frequently levied by that means unusual contributions on the
    public.' Which surely cannot be, if, as the author of The Dunciad
    Dissected reporteth, 'Mr Wycherley had before introduced him into a
    familiar acquaintance with the greatest peers and brightest wits then
    living.'


    'No sooner (saith the same journalist) was his body lifeless, but this
    author, reviving his resentment, libelled the memory of his departed
    friend; and, what was still more heinous, made the scandal public.'
    Grievous the accusation! unknown the accuser! the person accused no
    witness in his own cause; the person, in whose regard accused, dead! But
    if there be living any one nobleman whose friendship, yea, any one
    gentleman whose subscription Mr Addison procured to our author, let him
    stand forth that truth may appear! Amicus Plato, amicus Socrates, sed
    magis amica veritas
    . In verity, the whole story of the libel is a lie.
    Witness those persons of integrity, who, several years before Mr
    Addison's decease, did see and approve of the said verses, in nowise a
    libel but a friendly rebuke sent privately in our author's own hand to
    Mr Addison himself, and never made public, till after their own journals
    and Curll had printed the same. One name alone, which I am here
    authorised to declare, will sufficiently evince this truth, that of the
    Eight Honourable the Earl of Burlington.


    Next is he taxed with a crime (in the opinion of some authors, I doubt,
    more heinous than any in morality) to wit, plagiarism, from the
    inventive and quaint-conceited


    JAMES MOORE SMITH, GENT.


    'Upon reading the third volume of Pope's Miscellanies, I found five
    lines which I thought excellent; and happening to praise them, a
    gentleman produced a modern comedy (the Rival Modes) published last
    year, where were the same verses to a tittle. These gentlemen are
    undoubtedly the first plagiaries that pretend to make a reputation by
    stealing from a man's works in his own life-time, and out of a public
    print.'[157] Let us join to this what is written by the author of the
    Rival Modes, the said Mr James Moore Smith, in a letter to our author
    himself, who had informed him, a month before that play was acted, Jan.
    27, 1726-7, that 'these verses, which he had before given him leave to
    insert in it, would be known for his, some copies being got abroad. He
    desires, nevertheless, that since the lines had been read in his comedy
    to several, Mr P. would not deprive it of them,' &c. Surely if we add
    the testimonies of the Lord Bolingbroke, of the lady to whom the said
    verses were originally addressed, of Hugh Bethel, Esq., and others, who
    knew them as our author's, long before the said gentleman composed his
    play, it is hoped the ingenuous that affect not error will rectify their
    opinion by the suffrage of so honourable personages.


    And yet followeth another charge, insinuating no less than his enmity
    both to Church and State, which could come from no other informer than
    the said


    MR JAMES MOORE SMITH.


    'The Memoirs of a Parish Clerk was a very dull and unjust abuse of a
    person who wrote in defence of our religion and constitution, and who
    has been dead many years.'[158] This seemeth also most untrue, it being
    known to divers that these memoirs were written at the seat of the Lord
    Harcourt in Oxfordshire, before that excellent person (Bishop Burnet's)
    death, and many years before the appearance of that history of which
    they are pretended to be an abuse. Most true it is that Mr Moore had
    such a design, and was himself the man who pressed Dr Arbuthnot and Mr
    Pope to assist him therein; and that he borrowed those memoirs of our
    author, when that history came forth, with intent to turn them to such
    abuse. But being able to obtain from our author but one single hint, and
    either changing his mind, or having more mind than ability, he contented
    himself to keep the said memoirs, and read them as his own to all his
    acquaintance. A noble person there is, into whose company Mr Pope once
    chanced to introduce him, who well remembereth the conversation of Mr
    Moore to have turned upon the 'contempt he had for the work of that
    reverend prelate, and how full he was of a design he declared himself to
    have of exposing it.' This noble person is the Earl of Peterborough.


    Here in truth should we crave pardon of all the foresaid right
    honourable and worthy personages, for having mentioned them in the same
    page with such weekly riff-raff railers and rhymers, but that we had
    their ever-honoured commands for the same; and that they are introduced
    not as witnesses in the controversy, but as witnesses that cannot be
    controverted; not to dispute, but to decide.


    Certain it is, that dividing our writers into two classes, of such who
    were acquaintance, and of such who were strangers to our author; the
    former are those who speak well, and the other those who speak evil of
    him. Of the first class, the most noble


    JOHN DUKE OF BUCKINGHAM


    sums up his character in these lines:


    'And yet so wondrous, so sublime a thing,
    As the great Iliad, scarce could make me sing,
    Unless I justly could at once commend
    A good companion, and as firm a friend;
    One moral, or a mere well-natured deed,
    Can all desert in sciences exceed.'[159]


    So also is he deciphered by the honourable


    SIMON HARCOURT.


    'Say, wondrous youth, what column wilt thou choose,
    What laurell'd arch, for thy triumphant Muse?
    Though each great ancient court thee to his shrine,
    Though every laurel through the dome be thine.
    Go to the good and just, an awful train!
    Thy soul's delight.'[160]


    Recorded in like manner for his virtuous disposition and gentle bearing,
    by the ingenious


    MR WALTER HART,


    in this apostrophe:


    'Oh! ever worthy, ever crown'd with praise!
    Bless'd in thy life, and bless'd in all thy lays.
    Add, that the Sisters every thought refine,
    And even thy life be faultless as thy line.
    Yet Envy still with fiercer rage pursues,
    Obscures the virtue, and defames the Muse.
    A soul like thine, in pain, in grief, resign'd,
    Views with just scorn the malice of mankind.'[161]


    The witty and moral satirist,


    DR EDWARD YOUNG,


    wishing some check to the corruption and evil manners of the times,
    calleth out upon our poet to undertake a task so worthy of his virtue:


    'Why slumbers Pope, who leads the Muses' train,
    Nor hears that Virtue, which he loves, complain?'[162]


    MR MALLET,


    in his epistle on Verbal Criticism:


    'Whose life, severely scann'd, transcends his lays;
    For wit supreme is but his second praise.'


    MR HAMMOND,


    that delicate and correct imitator of Tibullus, in his Love Elegies,
    Elegy xiv.:


    'Now, fired by Pope and Virtue, leave the age,
    In low pursuit of self-undoing wrong,
    And trace the author through his moral page,
    Whose blameless life still answers to his song.'


    MR THOMSON,


    in his elegant and philosophical poem of the Seasons:


    'Although not sweeter his own Homer sings,
    Yet is his life the more endearing song.'


    To the same tune also singeth that learned clerk of Suffolk,


    MR WILLIAM BROOME.


    'Thus, nobly rising in fair Virtue's cause,
    From thy own life transcribe the unerring laws.'[163]


    And to close all, hear the reverend Dean of St Patrick's:


    'A soul with every virtue fraught,
    By patriots, priests, and poets taught.
    Whose filial piety excels
    Whatever Grecian story tells.
    A genius for each business fit,
    Whose meanest talent is his wit,' &c.


    Let us now recreate thee by turning to the other side, and showing his
    character drawn by those with whom he never conversed, and whose
    countenances he could not know, though turned against him: first again,
    commencing with the high-voiced and never-enough quoted


    MR JOHN DENNIS,


    who, in his 'Reflections on the Essay on Criticism,' thus describeth
    him, 'A little affected hypocrite, who has nothing in his mouth but
    candour, truth, friendship, good-nature, humanity, and magnanimity. He
    is so great a lover of falsehood, that, whenever he has a mind to
    calumniate his cotemporaries, he brands them with some defect which is
    just contrary to some good quality for which all their friends and their
    acquaintance commend them. He seems to have a particular pique to people
    of quality, and authors of that rank. He must derive his religion from
    St Omer's.' But in the character of Mr P. and his writings (printed by
    S. Popping, 1716), he saith, 'Though he is a professor of the worst
    religion, yet he laughs at it;' but that 'nevertheless he is a virulent
    Papist; and yet a pillar for the Church of England.'


    Of both which opinions


    MR LEWIS THEOBALD


    seems also to be; declaring, in Mist's Journal of June 22, 1718—'That,
    if he is not shrewdly abused, he made it his practice to cackle to both
    parties in their own sentiments.' But, as to his pique against people of
    quality, the same journalist doth not agree, but saith (May 8, 1728)—
    'He had, by some means or other, the acquaintance and friendship of the
    whole body of our nobility.'


    However contradictory this may appear, Mr Dennis and Gildon, in the
    character last cited, make it all plain, by assuring us, 'That he is a
    creature that reconciles all contradictions; he is a beast, and a man; a
    Whig, and a Tory; a writer (at one and the same time) of Guardians and
    Examiners;[164] an assertor of liberty, and of the dispensing power of
    kings; a Jesuitical professor of truth, a base and a foul pretender to
    candour.' So that, upon the whole account, we must conclude him either
    to have been a great hypocrite, or a very honest man; a terrible imposer
    upon both parties, or very moderate to either.


    Be it as to the judicious reader shall seem good. Sure it is, he is
    little favoured of certain authors, whose wrath is perilous: for one
    declares he ought to have a price set on his head, and to be hunted down
    as a wild beast.[165] Another protests that he does not know what may
    happen; advises him to insure his person; says he has bitter enemies,
    and expressly declares it will be well if he escapes with his life.[166]
    One desires he would cut his own throat, or hang himself.[167]


    But Pasquin seemed rather inclined it should be done by the Government,
    representing him engaged in grievous designs with a lord of Parliament,
    then under prosecution.[168] Mr Dennis himself hath written to a
    minister, that he is one of the most dangerous persons in this
    kingdom;[169] and assureth the public, that he is an open and mortal
    enemy to his country; a monster, that will, one day, shew as daring a
    soul as a mad Indian, who runs a-muck to kill the first Christian he
    meets.[170] Another gives information of treason discovered in his
    poem.[171] Mr Curll boldly supplies an imperfect verse with kings and
    princesses.[172] And one Matthew Concanen, yet more impudent, publishes
    at length the two most sacred names in this nation, as members of the
    Dunciad.[173]


    This is prodigious! yet it is almost as strange, that in the midst of
    these invectives his greatest enemies have (I know not how) borne
    testimony to some merit in him.


    MR THEOBALD,


    in censuring his Shakspeare, declares, 'He has so great an esteem for Mr
    Pope, and so high an opinion of his genius and excellencies, that,
    notwithstanding he professes a veneration almost rising to idolatry for
    the writings of this inimitable poet, he would be very both even to do
    him justice, at the expense of that other gentleman's character.'[174]


    MR CHARLES GILDON,


    after having violently attacked him in many pieces, at last came to wish
    from his heart, 'That Mr Pope would be prevailed upon to give us Ovid's
    Epistles by his hand, for it is certain we see the original of Sappho to
    Pliaon with much more life and likeness in his version, than in that of
    Sir Car Scrope. And this,' he adds, 'is the more to be wished, because
    in the English tongue we have scarce anything truly and naturally
    written upon love.'[175] He also, in taxing Sir Richard Blackmore for
    his heterodox opinions of Homer, challengeth him to answer what Mr Pope
    hath said in his preface to that poet.


    MR OLDMIXON


    calls him a great master of our tongue; declares 'the purity and
    perfection of the English language to be found in his Homer; and, saying
    there are more good verses in Dryden's Virgil than in any other work,
    excepts this of our author only.'[176]


    THE AUTHOR OF A LETTER TO MR CIBBER


    says, 'Pope was so good a versifier [once], that, his predecessor, Mr
    Dryden, and his cotemporary, Mr Prior, excepted, the harmony of his
    numbers is equal to anybody's. And that he had all the merit that a man
    can have that way.'[177] And


    MR THOMAS COOKE,


    after much blemishing our author's Homer, crieth out—


    'But in his other works what beauties shine,
    While sweetest music dwells in every line!
    These he admired—on these he stamp'd his praise,
    And bade them live to brighten future days.'[178]


    So also one who takes the name of


    H. STANHOPE,


    the maker of certain verses to Duncan Campbell,[179] in that poem, which
    is wholly a satire on Mr Pope, confesseth—


    ''Tis true, if finest notes alone could show
    (Tuned justly high, or regularly low)
    That we should fame to these mere vocals give,
    Pope more than we can offer should receive:
    For when some gliding river is his theme,
    His lines run smoother than the smoothest stream,' &c.


    MIST'S JOURNAL, JUNE 8, 1728.


    Although he says, 'The smooth numbers of the Dunciad are all that
    recommend it, nor has it any other merit,' yet that same paper hath
    these words: 'The author is allowed to be a perfect master of an easy
    and elegant versification. In all his works we find the most happy turns
    and natural similes, wonderfully short and thick sown.'


    The Essay on the Dunciad also owns (p. 25) it is very full of beautiful
    images. But the panegyric which crowns all that can be said on this poem
    is bestowed by our laureate,


    MR COLLEY CIBBER,


    who 'grants it to be a better poem of its kind than ever was writ:' but
    adds, 'it was a victory over a parcel of poor wretches, whom it was
    almost cowardice to conquer.—A man might as well triumph for having
    killed so many silly flies that offended him. Could he have let them
    alone, by this time, poor souls! they had all been buried in
    oblivion.'[180] Here we see our excellent laureate allows the justice of
    the satire on every man in it but himself, as the great Mr Dennis did
    before him.


    The said


    MR DENNIS AND MR GILDON,


    in the most furious of all their works (the forecited Character, p. 5),
    do in concert confess, 'That some men of good understanding value him
    for his rhymes.' And (p. 17), 'That he has got, like Mr Bayes in the
    Rehearsal (that is, like Mr Dryden), a notable knack at rhyming, and
    writing smooth verse.'


    Of his Essay on Man, numerous were the praises bestowed by his avowed
    enemies, in the imagination that the same was not written by him, as it
    was printed anonymously.


    Thus sang of it even


    BEZALEEL MORRIS.


    'Auspicious bard! while all admire thy strain,
    All but the selfish, ignorant, and vain;
    I, whom no bribe to servile flattery drew,
    Must pay the tribute to thy merit due:
    Thy Muse, sublime, significant, and clear,
    Alike informs the soul, and charms the ear,' &c.


    And


    MR LEONARD WELSTED


    thus wrote[181] to the unknown author, on the first publication of the
    said Essay:—'I must own, after the reception which the vilest and most
    immoral ribaldry hath lately met with, I was surprised to see what I had
    long despaired—a performance deserving the name of a poet. Such, sir,
    is your work. It is, indeed, above all commendation, and ought to have
    been published in an age and country more worthy of it. If my testimony
    be of weight anywhere, you are sure to have it in the amplest manner,'
    &c.


    Thus we see every one of his works hath been extolled by one or other of
    his most inveterate enemies; and to the success of them all, they do
    unanimously give testimony. But it is sufficient, instar omnium, to
    behold the great critic, Mr Dennis, sorely lamenting it, even from the
    Essay on Criticism to this day of the Dunciad! 'A most notorious
    instance,' quoth he, 'of the depravity of genius and taste, the
    approbation this essay meets with.'[182] 'I can safely affirm, that I
    never attacked any of these writings, unless they had success infinitely
    beyond their merit. This, though an empty, has been a popular scribbler.
    The epidemic madness of the times has given him reputation.'[183] 'If,
    after the cruel treatment so many extraordinary men (Spencer, Lord
    Bacon, Ben. Jonson, Milton, Butler, Otway, and others) have received
    from this country, for these last hundred years, I should shift the
    scene, and show all that penury changed at once to riot and profuseness,
    and more squandered away upon one object than would have satisfied the
    greater part of those extraordinary men, the reader to whom this one
    creature should be unknown would fancy him a prodigy of art and nature,
    would believe that all the great qualities of these persons were centred
    in him alone. But if I should venture to assure him that the people of
    England had made such a choice, the reader would either believe me a
    malicious enemy and slanderer, or that the reign of the last (Queen
    Anne's) ministry was designed by fate to encourage fools.'[184]


    But it happens that this our poet never had any place, pension, or
    gratuity, in any shape, from the said glorious queen, or any of her
    ministers. All he owed, in the whole course of his life, to any court,
    was a subscription, for his Homer, of L200 from King George I., and L100
    from the Prince and Princess.


    However, lest we imagine our author's success was constant and
    universal, they acquaint us of certain works in a less degree of repute,
    whereof, although owned by others, yet do they assure us he is the
    writer. Of this sort Mr Dennis[185] ascribes to him two farces, whose
    names he does not tell, but assures us that there is not one jest in
    them; and an imitation of Horace, whose title he does not mention, but
    assures us it is much more execrable than all his works.[186] The Daily
    Journal, May 11, 1728, assures us 'He is below Tom D'Urfey in the drama,
    because (as that writer thinks) the Marriage-Hater Matched, and the
    Boarding School, are better than the What-d'-ye-call-it,' which is not
    Mr P.'s, but Mr Gay's. Mr Gildon assures us, in his New Rehearsal, p.
    48, 'That he was writing a play of the Lady Jane Grey;' but it
    afterwards proved to be Mr Howe's. We are assured by another, 'He wrote
    a pamphlet called Dr Andrew Tripe,'[187] which proved to be one Dr
    Wagstaff's. Mr Theobald assures us in Mist of the 27th April, 'That the
    Treatise of the Pro-found is very dull, and that Mr Pope is the author
    of it.' The writer of Gulliveriana is of another opinion, and says, 'The
    whole, or greatest part, of the merit of this treatise must and can only
    be ascribed to Gulliver.'[188] (Here, gentle reader! cannot I but smile
    at the strange blindness and positiveness of men, knowing the said
    treatise to appertain to none other but to me, Martinus Scriblerus.) We
    are assured, in Mist of June 8, 'That his own plays and farces would
    better have adorned the Dunciad than those of Mr Theobald, for he had
    neither genius for tragedy nor comedy;' which, whether true or not, is
    not easy to judge, inasmuch as he hath attempted neither—unless we will
    take it for granted, with Mr Cibber, that his being once very angry at
    hearing a friend's play abused was an infallible proof the play was his
    own, the said Mr Cibber thinking it impossible for a man to be much
    concerned for any but himself: 'Now let any man judge,' saith he, 'by
    this concern, who was the true mother of the child?'[189]


    But from all that hath been said, the discerning reader will collect,
    that it little availed our author to have any candour, since, when he
    declared he did not write for others, it was not credited; as little to
    have any modesty, since, when he declined writing in any way himself,
    the presumption of others was imputed to him. If he singly enterprised
    one great work, he was taxed of boldness and madness to a prodigy;[190]
    if he took assistants in another, it was complained of, and represented
    as a great injury to the public.[191] The loftiest heroics, the lowest
    ballads, treatises against the State or Church, satires on lords and
    ladies, raillery on wits and authors, squabbles with booksellers, or
    even full and true accounts of monsters, poisons, and murders; of any
    hereof was there nothing so good, nothing so bad, which hath not at one
    or other season been to him ascribed. If it bore no author's name, then
    lay he concealed; if it did, he fathered it upon that author to be yet
    better concealed: if it resembled any of his styles, then was it
    evident; if it did not, then disguised he it on set purpose. Yea, even
    direct oppositions in religion, principles, and politics, have equally
    been supposed in him inherent. Surely a most rare and singular
    character! Of which, let the reader make what he can.


    Doubtless most commentators would hence take occasion to turn all to
    their author's advantage; and, from the testimony of his very enemies,
    would affirm that his capacity was boundless, as well as his
    imagination; that he was a perfect master of all styles, and all
    arguments; and that there was in those times no other writer, in any
    kind, of any degree of excellence, save he himself. But as this is not
    our own sentiment, we shall determine on nothing, but leave thee, gentle
    reader, to steer thy judgment equally between various opinions, and to
    choose whether thou wilt incline to the testimonies of authors avowed,
    or of authors concealed—of those who knew him, or of those who knew him
    not.


    P.


           * * * * *


    MARTINUS SCRIBLERUS OF THE POEM.


    This poem, as it celebrateth the most grave and ancient of things,
    Chaos, Night, and Dulness; so is it of the most grave and ancient kind.
    Homer (saith Aristotle) was the first who gave the form, and (saith
    Horace) who adapted the measure, to heroic poesy. But even before this,
    may be rationally presumed from what the ancients have left written, was
    a piece by Homer, composed of like nature and matter with this of our
    poet. For of epic sort it appeareth to have been, yet of matter surely
    not unpleasant, witness what is reported of it by the learned Archbishop
    Eustathius, in Odyss. x., and accordingly Aristotle, in his Poetic,
    chap, iv., does further set forth, that as the Iliad and Odyssey gave
    example to tragedy, so did this poem to comedy its first idea.


    From these authors also it should seem that the hero or chief personage
    of it was no less obscure, and his understanding and sentiments no less
    quaint and strange (if indeed not more so), than any of the actors of
    our poem. Margites was the name of this personage, whom antiquity
    recordeth to have been Dunce the first; and surely, from what we hear of
    him, not unworthy to be the root of so spreading a tree and so numerous
    a posterity. The poem therefore celebrating him was properly and
    absolutely a Dunciad; which, though now unhappily lost, yet is its
    nature sufficiently known by the infallible tokens aforesaid. And thus
    it doth appear that the first Dunciad was the first epic poem, written
    by Homer himself, and anterior even to the Iliad or Odyssey.


    Now, forasmuch as our poet had translated those two famous works of
    Homer which are yet left, he did conceive it in some sort his duty to
    imitate that also which was lost; and was therefore induced to bestow on
    it the same form which Homer's is reported to have had, namely, that of
    epic poem; with a title also framed after the ancient Greek manner, to
    wit, that of Dunciad.


    Wonderful it is that so few of the moderns have been stimulated to
    attempt some Dunciad! since, in the opinion of the multitude, it might
    cost less pain and oil than an imitation of the greater epic. But
    possible it is also, that, on due reflection, the maker might find it
    easier to paint a Charlemagne, a Brute, or a Godfrey, with just pomp and
    dignity heroic, than a Margites, a Codrus, or a Flecknoe.


    We shall next declare the occasion and the cause which moved our poet to
    this particular work. He lived in those days, when (after Providence had
    permitted the invention of printing as a scourge for the sins of the
    learned) paper also became so cheap, and printers so numerous, that a
    deluge of authors covered the land; whereby not only the peace of the
    honest unwriting subject was daily molested, but unmerciful demands were
    made of his applause, yea of his money, by such as would neither earn
    the one nor deserve the other. At the same time, the licence of the
    press was such, that it grew dangerous to refuse them either: for they
    would forthwith publish slanders unpunished, the authors being
    anonymous, and skulking under the wings of publishers, a set of men who
    never scrupled to vend either calumny or blasphemy, as long as the town
    would call for it.


    Now our author,[192] living in those times, did conceive it an endeavour
    well worthy an honest satirist to dissuade the dull and punish the
    wicked, the only way that was left. In that public-spirited view he laid
    the plan of this poem, as the greatest service he was capable (without
    much hurt, or being slain) to render his dear country. First, taking
    things from their original, he considereth the causes creative of such
    authors—namely, dulness and poverty; the one born with them, the other
    contracted by neglect of their proper talents, through self-conceit of
    greater abilities. This truth he wrappeth in an allegory[193] (as the
    construction of epic poesy requireth), and feigns that one of these
    goddesses had taken up her abode with the other, and that they jointly
    inspired all such writers and such works. He proceedeth to show the
    qualities they bestow on these authors,[194] and the effects they
    produce;[195] then the materials, or stock, with which they furnish
    them;[196] and (above all) that self-opinion[197] which causeth it to
    seem to themselves vastly greater than it is, and is the prime motive of
    their setting up in this sad and sorry merchandise. The great power of
    these goddesses acting in alliance (whereof as the one is the mother of
    industry, so is the other of plodding) was to be exemplified in some one
    great and remarkable action:[198] and none could be more so than that
    which our poet hath chosen, viz., the restoration of the reign of Chaos
    and Night, by the ministry of Dulness their daughter, in the removal of
    her imperial seat from the city to the polite world; as the action of
    the AEneid is the restoration of the empire of Troy, by the removal of
    the race from thence to Latium. But as Homer singing only the wrath of
    Achilles, yet includes in his poem the whole history of the Trojan war;
    in like manner our author hath drawn into this single action the whole
    history of Dulness and her children.


    A person must next be fixed upon to support this action. This phantom in
    the poet's mind must have a name:[199] He finds it to be ——; and he
    becomes, of course, the hero of the poem.


    The fable being thus, according to the best example, one and entire, as
    contained in the proposition, the machinery is a continued chain of
    allegories, setting forth the whole power, ministry, and empire of
    Dulness, extended through her subordinate instruments, in all her
    various operations.


    This is branched into episodes, each of which hath its moral apart,
    though all conducive to the main end. The crowd assembled in the second
    book demonstrates the design to be more extensive than to bad poets
    only, and that we may expect other episodes of the patrons, encouragers,
    or paymasters of such authors, as occasion shall bring them forth. And
    the third book, if well considered, seemeth to embrace the whole world.
    Each of the games relateth to some or other vile class of writers: the
    first concerneth the Plagiary, to whom he giveth the name of More; the
    second the libellous Novelist, whom he styleth Eliza; the third, the
    flattering Dedicator; the fourth, the bawling Critic, or noisy Poet; the
    fifth, the dark and dirty Party-writer; and so of the rest; assigning to
    each some proper name or other, such as he could find.


    As for the characters, the public hath already acknowledged how justly
    they are drawn: the manners are so depicted, and the sentiments so
    peculiar to those to whom applied, that surely to transfer them to any
    other or wiser personages would be exceeding difficult: and certain it
    is, that every person concerned, being consulted apart, hath readily
    owned the resemblance of every portrait, his own excepted. So Mr Cibber
    calls them 'a parcel of poor wretches, so many silly flies;' but adds,
    'our author's wit is remarkably more bare and barren whenever it would
    fall foul on Cibber, than upon any other person whatever.'[200]


    The descriptions are singular, the comparisons very quaint, the
    narration various, yet of one colour. The purity and chastity of diction
    is so preserved, that in the places most suspicious, not the words but
    only the images have been censured, and yet are those images no other
    than have been sanctified by ancient and classical authority (though, as
    was the manner of those good times, not so curiously wrapped up), yea,
    and commented upon by the most grave doctors and approved critics.


    As it beareth the name of Epic, it is thereby subjected to such severe
    indispensable rules as are laid on all neoterics—a strict imitation of
    the ancients; insomuch that any deviation, accompanied with whatever
    poetic beauties, hath always been censured by the sound critic. How
    exact that imitation hath been in this piece, appeareth not only by its
    general structure, but by particular allusions infinite, many whereof
    have escaped both the commentator and poet himself; yea, divers by his
    exceeding diligence are so altered and interwoven with the rest, that
    several have already been, and more will be, by the ignorant abused, as
    altogether and originally his own.


    In a word, the whole poem proveth itself to be the work of our author
    when his faculties were in full vigour and perfection, at that exact
    time when years have ripened the judgment without diminishing the
    imagination; which by good critics is held to be punctually at forty.
    For at that season it was that Virgil finished his Georgics; and Sir
    Richard Blackmore at the like age composing his Arthurs, declared the
    same to be the very acme and pitch of life for epic poesy—though
    since he hath altered it to sixty, the year in which he published his
    Alfred.[201] True it is, that the talents for criticism—namely,
    smartness, quick censure, vivacity of remark, certainty of asseveration,
    indeed all but acerbity—seem rather the gifts of youth than of riper
    age. But it is far otherwise in poetry; witness the works of Mr Rymer
    and Mr Dennis, who, beginning with criticism, became afterwards such
    poets as no age hath paralleled. With good reason, therefore, did our
    author choose to write his essay on that subject at twenty, and reserve
    for his maturer years this great and wonderful work of the Dunciad.


    P.



    RICARDUS ARISTARCHUS OF THE HERO OF THE POEM.


    Of the nature of Dunciad in general, whence derived, and on what
    authority founded, as well as of the art and conduct of this our poem in
    particular, the learned and laborious Scriblerus hath, according to his
    manner, and with tolerable share of judgment, dissertated. But when he
    cometh to speak of the person of the hero fitted for such poem, in truth
    he miserably halts and hallucinates. For, misled by one Monsieur Bossu,
    a Gallic critic, he prateth of I cannot tell what phantom of a hero,
    only raised up to support the fable. A putrid conceit! As if Homer and
    Virgil, like modern undertakers, who first build their house, and then
    seek out for a tenant, had contrived the story of a war and a wandering,
    before they once thought either of Achilles or AEneas. We shall therefore
    set our good brother and the world also right in this particular, by
    assuring them, that, in the greater epic, the prime intention of the
    Muse is to exalt heroic virtue, in order to propagate the love of it
    among the children of men; and, consequently, that the poet's first
    thought must needs be turned upon a real subject meet for laud and
    celebration; not one whom he is to make, but one whom he may find, truly
    illustrious. This is the primum mobile of his poetic world, whence
    everything is to receive life and motion. For this subject being found,
    he is immediately ordained, or rather acknowledged, a hero, and put upon
    such action as befitteth the dignity of his character.


    But the Muse ceaseth not here her eagle-flight. For sometimes, satiated
    with the contemplation of these suns of glory, she turneth downward on
    her wing, and darts with Jove's lightning on the goose and serpent kind.
    For we may apply to the Muse, in her various moods, what an ancient
    master of wisdom affirmeth of the gods in general: 'Si Dii non
    irascuntur impiis et injustis, nec pios utique justosque diligunt. In
    rebusenim diversis, aut in utramque partem moveri necesse est, aut in
    neutram. Itaque qui bonos diligit, et malos odit; et qui malos non odit,
    nec bonos diligit. Quia et diligere bonos ex odio malorum venit; et
    malos odisse ex bonorum caritate descendit.' Which, in our vernacular
    idiom, may be thus interpreted: 'If the gods be not provoked at evil
    men, neither are they delighted with the good and just. For contrary
    objects must either excite contrary affections, or no affections at all.
    So that he who loveth good men must at the same time hate the bad; and
    he who hateth not bad men cannot love the good; because to love good men
    proceedeth from an aversion to evil, and to hate evil men from a
    tenderness to the good.' From this delicacy of the Muse arose the little
    epic, (more lively and choleric than her elder sister, whose bulk and
    complexion incline her to the phlegmatic), and for this some notorious
    vehicle of vice and folly was sought out, to make thereof an example. An
    early instance of which (nor could it escape the accurate Scriblerus)
    the father of epic poem himself affordeth us. From him the practice
    descended to the Greek dramatic poets, his offspring, who, in the
    composition of their tetralogy, or set of four pieces, were wont to make
    the last a satiric tragedy. Happily one of these ancient Dunciads (as we
    may well term it) is come down unto us amongst the tragedies of the poet
    Euripides. And what doth the reader suppose may be the subject thereof?
    Why, in truth, and it is worthy observation, the unequal contention of
    an old, dull, debauched buffoon Cyclops, with the heaven-directed
    favourite of Minerva; who, after having quietly borne all the monster's
    obscene and impious ribaldry, endeth the farce in punishing him with the
    mark of an indelible brand in his forehead. May we not then be excused,
    if for the future we consider the epics of Homer, Virgil, and Milton,
    together with this our poem, as a complete tetralogy, in which the last
    worthily holdeth the place or station of the satiric piece?


    Proceed we therefore in our subject. It hath been long, and, alas for
    pity! still remaineth a question, whether the hero of the greater epic
    should be an honest man? or, as the French critics express it, un
    honnete homme
    :[202] but it never admitted of any doubt, but that the
    hero of the little epic should be just the contrary. Hence, to the
    advantage of our Dunciad, we may observe how much juster the moral of
    that poem must needs be, where so important a question is previously
    decided.


    But then it is not every knave, nor (let me add) every fool, that is a
    fit subject for a Dunciad. There must still exist some analogy, if not
    resemblance of qualities, between the heroes of the two poems, and this
    in order to admit what neoteric critics call the parody, one of the
    liveliest graces of the little epic. Thus, it being agreed that the
    constituent qualities of the greater epic hero are wisdom, bravery, and
    love, from whence springeth heroic virtue; it followeth that those of
    the lesser epic hero should be vanity, impudence, and debauchery, from
    which happy assemblage resulteth heroic dulness, the never-dying subject
    of this our poem.


    This being confessed, come we now to particulars. It is the character of
    true wisdom to seek its chief support and confidence within itself, and
    to place that support in the resources which proceed from a conscious
    rectitude of will. And are the advantages of vanity, when arising to the
    heroic standard, at all short of this self-complacence? Nay, are they
    not, in the opinion of the enamoured owner, far beyond it? 'Let the
    world (will such an one say) impute to me what folly or weakness they
    please; but till wisdom can give me something that will make me more
    heartily happy, I am content to be gazed at.'[203] This, we see, is
    vanity according to the heroic gauge or measure; not that low and
    ignoble species which pretendeth to virtues we have not, but the
    laudable ambition of being gazed at for glorying in those vices which
    everybody knows we have. 'The world may ask (says he) why I make my
    follies public? Why not? I have passed my time very pleasantly with
    them.'[204] In short, there is no sort of vanity such a hero would
    scruple, but that which might go near to degrade him from his high
    station in this our Dunciad—namely, 'Whether it would not be vanity in
    him to take shame to himself for not being a wise man?'[205]


    Bravery, the second attribute of the true hero, is courage manifesting
    itself in every limb; while its correspondent virtue in the mock hero is
    that same courage all collected into the face. And as power when drawn
    together must needs have more force and spirit than when dispersed, we
    generally find this kind of courage in so high and heroic a degree, that
    it insults not only men, but gods. Mezentius is, without doubt, the
    bravest character in all the AEneis. But how? His bravery, we know, was a
    high courage of blasphemy. And can we say less of this brave man's, who,
    having told us that he placed 'his summum bonum in those follies,
    which he was not content barely to possess, but would likewise glory
    in,' adds, 'If I am misguided, 'tis nature's fault, and I follow
    her.'[206] Nor can we be mistaken in making this happy quality a species
    of courage, when we consider those illustrious marks of it which made
    his face 'more known (as he justly boasteth) than most in the kingdom,'
    and his language to consist of what we must allow to be the most daring
    figure of speech, that which is taken from the name of God.


    Gentle love, the next ingredient in the true hero's composition, is a
    mere bird of passage, or (as Shakspeare calls it) summer-teeming lust,
    and evaporates in the heat of youth; doubtless, by that refinement, it
    suffers in passing through those certain strainers which our poet
    somewhere speaketh of. But when it is let alone to work upon the lees,
    it acquireth strength by old age, and becometh a lasting ornament to the
    little epic. It is true, indeed, there is one objection to its fitness
    for such a use: for not only the ignorant may think it common, but it is
    admitted to be so, even by him who best knoweth its value. 'Don't you
    think,' argueth he, 'to say only a man has his whore,[207] ought to go
    for little or nothing? Because defendit numerus; take the first ten
    thousand men you meet, and I believe you would be no loser if you betted
    ten to one that every single sinner of them, one with another, had been
    guilty of the same frailty.'[208] But here he seemeth not to have done
    justice to himself: the man is sure enough a hero who hath his lady at
    fourscore. How doth his modesty herein lessen the merit of a whole
    well-spent life: not taking to himself the commendation (which Horace
    accounted the greatest in a theatrical character) of continuing to the
    very dregs the same he was from the beginning,


    ... 'Servetur ad imum
    Qualis ab incepto processerat' ...


    But here, in justice both to the poet and the hero, let us further
    remark, that the calling her his whore implieth she was his own, and not
    his neighbour's. Truly a commendable continence! and such as Scipio
    himself must have applauded. For how much self-denial was exerted not to
    covet his neighbour's whore? and what disorders must the coveting her
    have occasioned in that society where (according to this political
    calculator) nine in ten of all ages have their concubines!


    We have now, as briefly as we could devise, gone through the three
    constituent qualities of either hero. But it is not in any, or in all of
    these, that heroism properly or essentially resideth. It is a lucky
    result rather from the collision of these lively qualities against one
    another. Thus, as from wisdom, bravery, and love, ariseth magnanimity,
    the object of admiration, which is the aim of the greater epic; so from
    vanity, impudence, and debauchery, springeth buffoonery, the source of
    ridicule, that 'laughing ornament,' as he well termeth it,[209] of the
    little epic.


    He is not ashamed (God forbid he ever should be ashamed!) of this
    character, who deemeth that not reason, but risibility, distinguisheth
    the human species from the brutal. 'As nature,' saith this profound
    philosopher, 'distinguished our species from the mute creation by our
    risibility, her design must have been by that faculty as evidently to
    raise our happiness, as by our os sublime (our erected faces) to lift
    the dignity of our form above them.'[210] All this considered, how
    complete a hero must he be, as well as how happy a man, whose risibility
    lieth not barely in his muscles, as in the common sort, but (as himself
    informeth us) in his very spirits! and whose os sublime is not simply
    an erect face, but a brazen head, as should seem by his preferring it to
    one of iron, said to belong to the late king of Sweden![211]


    But whatever personal qualities a hero may have, the examples of
    Achilles and Aeneas show us, that all those are of small avail without
    the constant assistance of the gods—for the subversion and erection of
    empires have never been adjudged the work of man. How greatly soever,
    then, we may esteem of his high talents, we can hardly conceive his
    personal prowess alone sufficient to restore the decayed empire of
    Dulness. So weighty an achievement must require the particular favour
    and protection of the great—who, being the natural patrons and
    supporters of letters, as the ancient gods were of Troy, must first be
    drawn off and engaged in another interest, before the total subversion
    of them can be accomplished. To surmount, therefore, this last and
    greatest difficulty, we have, in this excellent man, a professed
    favourite and intimado of the great. And look, of what force ancient
    piety was to draw the gods into the party of Aeneas, that, and much
    stronger, is modern incense, to engage the great in the party of
    Dulness.


    Thus have we essayed to portray or shadow out this noble imp of fame.
    But now the impatient reader will be apt to say, if so many and various
    graces go to the making up a hero, what mortal shall suffice to bear his
    character? Ill hath he read who seeth not, in every trace of this
    picture, that individual, all-accomplished person, in whom these rare
    virtues and lucky circumstances have agreed to meet and concentre with
    the strongest lustre and fullest harmony.


    The good Scriblerus indeed—nay, the world itself—might be imposed on,
    in the late spurious editions, by I can't tell what sham hero or
    phantom; but it was not so easy to impose on him whom this egregious
    error most of all concerned. For no sooner had the fourth book laid open
    the high and swelling scene, but he recognised his own heroic acts; and
    when he came to the words—


    'Soft on her lap her laureate son reclines,'


    (though laureate imply no more than one crowned with laurel, as
    befitteth any associate or consort in empire), he loudly resented this
    indignity to violated majesty—indeed, not without cause, he being there
    represented as fast asleep; so misbeseeming the eye of empire, which,
    like that of Providence, should never doze nor slumber. 'Hah!' saith he,
    'fast asleep, it seems! that's a little too strong. Pert and dull at
    least you might have allowed me, but as seldom asleep as any fool.'[212]
    However, the injured hero may comfort himself with this reflection, that
    though it be a sleep, yet it is not the sleep of death, but of
    immortality. Here he will live[213] at least, though not awake; and in
    no worse condition than many an enchanted warrior before him. The famous
    Durandarte, for instance, was, like him, cast into a long slumber by
    Merlin, the British bard and necromancer; and his example, for
    submitting to it with a good grace, might be of use to our hero. For
    that disastrous knight being sorely pressed or driven to make his answer
    by several persons of quality, only replied with a sigh—'Patience, and
    shuffle the cards.'[214]


    But now, as nothing in this world, no, not the most sacred or perfect
    things either of religion or government, can escape the sting of envy,
    methinks I already hear these carpers objecting to the clearness of our
    hero's title.


    It would never (say they) have been esteemed sufficient to make an hero
    for the Iliad or Aeneis, that Achilles was brave enough to overturn one
    empire, or Aeneas pious enough to raise another, had they not been
    goddess-born, and princes bred. What, then, did this author mean by
    erecting a player instead of one of his patrons (a person 'never a hero
    even on the stage,'[215]) to this dignity of colleague in the empire of
    Dulness, and achiever of a work that neither old Omar, Attila, nor John
    of Leyden could entirely bring to pass?


    To all this we have, as we conceive, a sufficient answer from the Roman
    historian, Fabrum esse suae quemque fortunae: That every man is the
    smith of his own fortune. The politic Florentine, Nicholas Machiavel,
    goeth still further, and affirmeth that a man needeth but to believe
    himself a hero to be one of the worthiest. 'Let him (saith he) but fancy
    himself capable of the highest things, and he will of course be able to
    achieve them.' From this principle it follows, that nothing can exceed
    our hero's prowess; as nothing ever equalled the greatness of his
    conceptions. Hear how he constantly paragons himself; at one time to
    Alexander the Great and Charles XII of Sweden, for the excess and
    delicacy of his ambition;[216] to Henry IV of France for honest
    policy;[217] to the first Brutus, for love of liberty;[218] and to Sir
    Robert Walpole, for good government while in power.[219] At another
    time, to the godlike Socrates, for his diversions and amusements;[220]
    to Horace, Montaigne, and Sir William Temple for an elegant vanity that
    maketh them for ever read and admired;[221] to two Lord Chancellors, for
    law, from whom, when confederate against him at the bar, he carried away
    the prize of eloquence;[222] and, to say all in a word, to the right
    reverend the Lord Bishop of London himself, in the art of writing
    pastoral letters.[223]


    Nor did his actions fall short of the sublimity of his conceit. In his
    early youth he met the Revolution[224] face to face in Nottingham, at a
    time when his betters contented themselves with following her. It was
    here he got acquainted with old Battle-array, of whom he hath made so
    honourable mention in one of his immortal odes. But he shone in courts
    as well as camps. He was called up when the nation fell in labour of
    this Revolution;[225] and was a gossip at her christening, with the
    bishop and the ladies.[226]


    As to his birth, it is true he pretended no relation either to heathen
    god or goddess; but, what is as good, he was descended from a maker of
    both.[227] And that he did not pass himself on the world for a hero as
    well by birth as education was his own fault: for his lineage he
    bringeth into his life as an anecdote, and is sensible he had it in his
    power to be thought he was nobody's son at all:[228] And what is that
    but coming into the world a hero?


    But be it (the punctilious laws of epic poesy so requiring) that a hero
    of more than mortal birth must needs be had, even for this we have a
    remedy. We can easily derive our hero's pedigree from a goddess of no
    small power and authority amongst men, and legitimate and install him
    after the right classical and authentic fashion: for like as the ancient
    sages found a son of Mars in a mighty warrior, a son of Neptune in a
    skilful seaman, a son of Phoebus in a harmonious poet, so have we here,
    if need be, a son of Fortune in an artful gamester. And who fitter than
    the offspring of Chance to assist in restoring the empire of Night and
    Chaos?


    There is, in truth, another objection, of greater weight, namely, 'That
    this hero still existeth, and hath not yet finished his earthly course.
    For if Solon said well, that no man could be called happy till his
    death, surely much less can any one, till then, be pronounced a hero,
    this species of men being far more subject than others to the caprices
    of fortune and humour.' But to this also we have an answer, that will
    (we hope) be deemed decisive. It cometh from himself, who, to cut this
    matter short, hath solemnly protested that he will never change or
    amend.


    With regard to his vanity, he declareth that nothing shall ever part
    them. 'Nature (saith he) hath amply supplied me in vanity—a pleasure
    which neither the pertness of wit nor the gravity of wisdom will ever
    persuade me to part with.'[229] Our poet had charitably endeavoured to
    administer a cure to it: but he telleth us plainly, 'My superiors
    perhaps may be mended by him; but for my part I own myself incorrigible.
    I look upon my follies as the best part of my fortune.'[230] And with
    good reason: we see to what they have brought him!


    Secondly, as to buffoonery, 'Is it (saith he) a time of day for me to
    leave off these fooleries, and set up a new character? I can no more put
    off my follies than my skin; I have often tried, but they stick too
    close to me; nor am I sure my friends are displeased with them, for in
    this light I afford them frequent matter of mirth, &c., &c.'[231] Having
    then so publicly declared himself incorrigible, he is become dead in law
    (I mean the law Epopoeian), and devolveth upon the poet as his property,
    who may take him and deal with him as if he had been dead as long as an
    old Egyptian hero; that is to say, embowel and embalm him for posterity.


    Nothing therefore (we conceive) remaineth to hinder his own prophecy of
    himself from taking immediate effect. A rare felicity! and what few
    prophets have had the satisfaction to see alive! Nor can we conclude
    better than with that extraordinary one of his, which is conceived in
    these oraculous words, 'My dulness will find somebody to do it
    right.'[232]


    'Tandem Phoebus adest, morsusque inferre parantem
    Congelat, et patulos, ut erant, indurat hiatus.'[233]



    BY AUTHORITY.


    By virtue of the Authority in Us vested by the Act for subjecting poets
    to the power of a licenser, we have revised this piece; where finding
    the style and appellation of King to have been given to a certain
    pretender, pseudo-poet, or phantom, of the name of Tibbald; and
    apprehending the same may be deemed in some sort a reflection on
    Majesty, or at least an insult on that Legal Authority which has
    bestowed on another person the crown of poesy: We have ordered the said
    pretender, pseudo-poet, or phantom, utterly to vanish and evaporate out
    of this work: And do declare the said Throne of Poesy from henceforth to
    be abdicated and vacant, unless duly and lawfully supplied by the
    Laureate himself. And it is hereby enacted, that no other person do
    presume to fill the same.





    THE DUNCIAD:[234]


    BOOK THE FIRST.


    TO DR JONATHAN SWIFT.



    ARGUMENT.


    The proposition, the invocation, and the inscription. Then the original
    of the great empire of Dulness, and cause of the continuance thereof.
    The college of the goddess in the city, with her private academy for
    poets in particular; the governors of it, and the four cardinal virtues.
    Then the poem hastes into the midst of things, presenting her, on the
    evening of a Lord Mayor's day, revolving the long succession of her
    sons, and the glories past and to come. She fixes her eye on Bayes to be
    the instrument of that great event which is the subject of the poem. He
    is described pensive among his books, giving up the cause, and
    apprehending the period of her empire: after debating whether to betake
    himself to the Church, or to gaming, or to party-writing, he raises an
    altar of proper books, and (making first his solemn prayer and
    declaration) purposes thereon to sacrifice all his unsuccessful
    writings. As the pile is kindled, the goddess, beholding the flame from
    her seat, flies and puts it out by casting upon it the poem of Thule.
    She forthwith reveals herself to him, transports him to her temple,
    unfolds her arts, and initiates him into her mysteries; then announcing
    the death of Eusden the poet laureate, anoints him, carries him to
    court, and proclaims him successor.



    The mighty mother, and her son, who brings[235]
    The Smithfield Muses[236] to the ear of kings,
    I sing. Say you, her instruments, the great!
    Called to this work by Dulness, Jove, and Fate;[237]
    You by whose care, in vain decried and cursed,
    Still Dunce the second reigns like Dunce the first:
    Say, how the goddess[238] bade Britannia sleep,
    And pour'd her spirit o'er the land and deep.


    In eldest time, ere mortals writ or read,
    Ere Pallas issued from the Thunderer's head, 10
    Dulness o'er all possess'd her ancient right,
    Daughter of Chaos[239] and Eternal Night:
    Fate in their dotage this fair idiot gave,
    Gross as her sire, and as her mother grave,
    Laborious, heavy, busy, bold, and blind,[240]
    She ruled, in native anarchy, the mind.


    Still her old empire[241] to restore she tries,
    For, born a goddess, Dulness never dies.
    O thou! whatever title please thine ear,
    Dean, Drapier, Bickerstaff, or Gulliver![242] 20
    Whether thou choose Cervantes' serious air,
    Or laugh and shake in Rabelais' easy-chair,
    Or praise the court, or magnify mankind,[243]
    Or thy grieved country's copper chains unbind;
    From thy Boeotia though her power retires,
    Mourn not, my Swift, at ought our realm acquires.
    Here pleased behold her mighty wings outspread
    To hatch a new Saturnian age of lead.


    Close to those walls where Folly holds her throne,
    And laughs to think Monro would take her down, 30
    Where o'er the gates, by his famed father's hand,[244]
    Great Cibber's brazen, brainless brothers stand,
    One cell there is, conceal'd from vulgar eye,
    The cave of Poverty and Poetry.
    Keen, hollow winds howl through the bleak recess,
    Emblem of music caused by emptiness.
    Hence bards, like Proteus long in vain tied down,
    Escape in monsters, and amaze the town.
    Hence Miscellanies spring, the weekly boast
    Of Curll's chaste press, and Lintot's rubric post:[247] 40
    Hence hymning Tyburn's elegiac lines,[248]
    Hence Journals, Medleys, Merc'ries, Magazines:
    Sepulchral lies,[249] our holy walls to grace,
    And new-year odes,[250] and all the Grub Street race.


    In clouded majesty here Dulness shone;
    Four guardian Virtues, round, support her throne:
    Fierce champion Fortitude, that knows no fears
    Of hisses, blows, or want, or loss of ears:
    Calm Temperance, whose blessings those partake
    Who hunger and who thirst for scribbling sake: 50
    Prudence, whose glass presents the approaching jail:
    Poetic Justice, with her lifted scale,
    Where, in nice balance, truth with gold she weighs,
    And solid pudding against empty praise.


    Here she beholds the chaos dark and deep,
    Where nameless somethings in their causes sleep,
    'Till genial Jacob,[251] or a warm third day,
    Call forth each mass, a poem, or a play;
    How hints, like spawn, scarce quick in embryo lie,
    How new-born nonsense first is taught to cry, 60
    Maggots half-form'd in rhyme exactly meet,
    And learn to crawl upon poetic feet.
    Here one poor word an hundred clenches makes,
    And ductile Dulness new meanders takes;
    There motley images her fancy strike,
    Figures ill pair'd, and similes unlike.
    She sees a mob of metaphors advance,
    Pleased with the madness of the mazy dance;
    How Tragedy and Comedy embrace;
    How Farce and Epic[252] get a jumbled race; 70
    How Time himself stands still at her command,
    Realms shift their place, and ocean turns to land.
    Here gay Description Egypt glads with showers,
    Or gives to Zembla fruits, to Barca flowers;
    Glittering with ice here hoary hills are seen,
    There painted valleys of eternal green;
    In cold December fragrant chaplets blow,
    And heavy harvests nod beneath the snow.


    All these, and more, the cloud-compelling queen
    Beholds through fogs that magnify the scene. 80
    She, tinsell'd o'er in robes of varying hues,
    With self-applause her wild creation views;
    Sees momentary monsters rise and fall,
    And with her own fools-colours gilds them all.


    'Twas on the day,[253] when Thorold rich and grave,
    Like Cimon, triumphed both on land and wave:
    (Pomps without guilt, of bloodless swords and maces,
    Glad chains,[254] warm furs, broad banners, and broad faces.)
    Now night descending, the proud scene was o'er,
    But lived, in Settle's numbers, one day more.[255] 90
    Now mayors and shrieves all hushed and satiate lay,
    Yet eat, in dreams, the custard of the day;
    While pensive poets painful vigils keep,
    Sleepless themselves, to give their readers sleep.
    Much to the mindful queen the feast recalls
    What city swans once sung within the walls;
    Much she revolves their arts, their ancient praise,
    And sure succession down from Heywood's[256] days.
    She saw, with joy, the line immortal run,
    Each sire impress'd and glaring in his son: 100
    So watchful Bruin forms, with plastic care,
    Each growing lump, and brings it to a bear.
    She saw old Pryn in restless Daniel[257] shine,
    And Eusden[258] eke out Blackmore's endless line;
    She saw slow Philips creep like Tate's[259] poor page,
    And all the mighty mad in Dennis rage.[260]


    In each she marks her image full express'd,
    But chief in Bayes's monster-breeding breast;
    Bayes formed by nature stage and town to bless,
    And act, and be, a coxcomb with success. 110
    Dulness with transport eyes the lively dunce,
    Remembering she herself was pertness once.
    Now (shame to Fortune![261]) an ill run at play
    Blank'd his bold visage, and a thin third day;
    Swearing and supperless the hero sate,
    Blasphemed his gods, the dice, and damn'd his fate.
    Then gnaw'd his pen, then dash'd it on the ground,
    Sinking from thought to thought, a vast profound!
    Plunged for his sense, but found no bottom there,
    Yet wrote and floundered on, in mere despair. 120
    Round him much embryo, much abortion lay,
    Much future ode, and abdicated play;
    Nonsense precipitate, like running lead,
    That slipp'd through cracks and zig-zags of the head;
    All that on Folly Frenzy could beget,
    Fruits of dull heat, and sooterkins of wit.
    Next, o'er his books his eyes began to roll,
    In pleasing memory of all he stole,
    How here he sipp'd, how there he plunder'd snug,
    And suck'd all o'er, like an industrious bug. 130
    Here lay poor Fletcher's half-eat scenes,[262] and here
    The frippery of crucified Moliere;
    There hapless Shakspeare, yet of Tibbald[263] sore,
    Wish'd he had blotted[264] for himself before.
    The rest on outside merit but presume,
    Or serve (like other fools) to fill a room;
    Such with their shelves as due proportion hold,
    Or their fond parents dress'd in red and gold;
    Or where the pictures for the page atone,
    And Quarles is saved by beauties not his own. 140
    Here swells the shelf with Ogilby the great;[265]
    There, stamp'd with arms, Newcastle shines complete:[266]
    Here all his suffering brotherhood retire,
    And 'scape the martyrdom of Jakes and fire:
    A Gothic library! of Greece and Rome
    Well purged, and worthy Settle, Banks, and Broome.[267]


    But, high above, more solid learning shone,
    The classics of an age that heard of none;
    There Caxton[268] slept, with Wynkyn at his side,
    One clasp'd in wood, and one in strong cow-hide; 150
    There, saved by spice, like mummies, many a year,
    Dry bodies of divinity appear:
    De Lyra[269] there a dreadful front extends,
    And here the groaning shelves Philemon[270] bends.


    Of these, twelve volumes, twelve of amplest size,
    Redeem'd from tapers and defrauded pies,
    Inspired he seizes: these an altar raise:
    An hecatomb of pure, unsullied lays
    That altar crowns: a folio common-place
    Founds the whole pile, of all his works the base: 160
    Quartos, octavos, shape the lessening pyre:
    A twisted birth-day ode completes the spire.


    Then he: Great tamer of all human art!
    First in my care, and ever at my heart;
    Dulness! whose good old cause I yet defend,
    With whom my Muse began, with whom shall end,
    E'er since Sir Fopling's periwig[271] was praise,
    To the last honours of the butt and bays:
    O thou! of business the directing soul;
    To this our head, like bias to the bowl, 170
    Which, as more ponderous, made its aim more true,
    Obliquely waddling to the mark in view;
    Oh, ever gracious to perplexed mankind,
    Still spread a healing mist before the mind;
    And, lest we err by wit's wild dancing light,
    Secure us kindly in our native night.
    Or, if to wit a coxcomb make pretence,
    Guard the sure barrier between that and sense;
    Or quite unravel all the reasoning thread,
    And hang some curious cobweb in its stead! 180
    As, forced from wind-guns, lead itself can fly,
    And ponderous slugs cut swiftly through the sky;
    As clocks to weight their nimble motion owe,
    The wheels above urged by the load below:
    Me Emptiness and Dulness could inspire,
    And were my elasticity and fire.
    Some demon stole my pen (forgive the offence)
    And once betrayed me into common sense:
    Else all my prose and verse were much the same;
    This, prose on stilts; that, poetry fallen lame. 190
    Did on the stage my fops appear confined?
    My life gave ampler lessons to mankind.
    Did the dead letter unsuccessful prove?
    The brisk example never fail'd to move.
    Yet sure, had Heaven decreed to save the state,
    Heaven had decreed these works a longer date.
    Could Troy be saved by any single hand,
    This gray-goose weapon must have made her stand.
    What can I now my Fletcher cast aside,
    Take up the Bible, once my better guide? 200
    Or tread the path by venturous heroes trod,
    This box my thunder, this right hand my god?
    Or chair'd at White's amidst the doctors sit,
    Teach oaths to gamesters, and to nobles wit?
    Or bidst thou rather party to embrace?
    (A friend to party thou, and all her race;
    'Tis the same rope at different ends they twist;
    To Dulness Ridpath is as dear as Mist.[272])
    Shall I, like Curtins, desperate in my zeal,
    O'er head and ears plunge for the common weal? 210
    Or rob Rome's ancient geese[273] of all their glories,
    And, cackling, save the monarchy of Tories?
    Hold—to the minister I more incline;
    To serve his cause, O queen! is serving thine.
    And see! thy very gazetteers give o'er,
    Ev'n Ralph repents, and Henley writes no more.
    What then remains? Ourself. Still, still remain
    Cibberian forehead, and Cibberian brain.
    This brazen brightness, to the squire so dear;
    This polish'd hardness, that reflects the peer: 220
    This arch absurd, that wit and fool delights;
    This mess, tossed up of Hockley-hole and White's;
    Where dukes and butchers join to wreathe my crown,
    At once the bear and fiddle[274] of the town.


    O born in sin, and forth in folly brought!
    Works damn'd, or to be damn'd (your father's fault)!
    Go, purified by flames, ascend the sky,
    My better and more Christian progeny!
    Unstain'd, untouch'd, and yet in maiden sheets;
    While all your smutty sisters walk the streets. 230
    Ye shall not beg, like gratis-given Bland,[275]
    Sent with a pass, and vagrant through the land;
    Nor sail with Ward[276] to ape-and-monkey climes,
    Where vile Mundungus trucks for viler rhymes:
    Not sulphur-tipp'd, emblaze an ale-house fire;
    Not wrap up oranges, to pelt your sire!
    Oh, pass more innocent, in infant state,
    To the mild limbo of our father Tate:[277]
    Or peaceably forgot, at once be blest
    In Shadwell's bosom with eternal rest! 240
    Soon to that mass of nonsense to return,
    Where things destroyed are swept to things unborn.


    With that, a tear (portentous sign of grace!)
    Stole from the master of the sevenfold face:
    And thrice he lifted high the birth-day brand,
    And thrice he dropp'd it from his quivering hand;
    Then lights the structure with averted eyes:
    The rolling smoke involves the sacrifice.
    The opening clouds disclose each work by turns,
    Now flames the Cid, and now Perolla burns; 250
    Great Caesar roars, and hisses in the fires;
    King John in silence modestly expires:
    No merit now the dear Nonjuror claims,
    Moliere's[278] old stubble in a moment flames.
    Tears gush'd again, as from pale Priam's eyes
    When the last blaze sent Ilion to the skies.


    Roused by the light, old Dulness heaved the head,
    Then snatch'd a sheet of Thule[279] from her bed,
    Sudden she flies, and whelms it o'er the pyre;
    Down sink the flames, and with a hiss expire. 260


    Her ample presence fills up all the place;
    A veil of fogs dilates her awful face:
    Great in her charms! as when on shrieves and mayors
    She looks, and breathes herself into their airs.
    She bids him wait her to her sacred dome:
    Well pleased he enter'd, and confessed his home.
    So, spirits ending their terrestrial race,
    Ascend, and recognise their native place.
    This the great mother dearer held than all
    The clubs of quidnuncs, or her own Guildhall: 270
    Here stood her opium, here she nursed her owls,
    And here she plann'd the imperial seat of fools.


    Here to her chosen all her works she shows;
    Prose swell'd to verse, verse loitering into prose:
    How random thoughts now meaning chance to find,
    Now leave all memory of sense behind:
    How prologues into prefaces decay,
    And these to notes are fritter'd quite away:
    How index-learning turns no student pale,
    Yet holds the eel of science by the tail: 280
    How, with less reading than makes felons 'scape,
    Less human genius than God gives an ape,
    Small thanks to France, and none to Rome or Greece,
    A past, vamp'd, future, old, revived, new piece,
    'Twixt Plautus, Fletcher, Shakspeare, and Corneille,
    Can make a Cibber, Tibbald,[280] or Ozell.[281]


    The goddess then o'er his anointed head,
    With mystic words, the sacred opium shed.
    And, lo! her bird (a monster of a fowl,
    Something betwixt a Heidegger[282] and owl,) 290
    Perch'd on his crown. 'All hail! and hail again,
    My son! the promised land expects thy reign.
    Know, Eusden thirsts no more for sack or praise;
    He sleeps among the dull of ancient days;
    Safe, where no critics damn, no duns molest,
    Where wretched Withers, Ward, and Gildon[283] rest,
    And high-born Howard,[284] more majestic sire,
    With fool of quality completes the quire,
    Thou, Cibber! thou, his laurel shalt support,
    Folly, my son, has still a friend at Court. 300
    Lift up your gates, ye princes, see him come!
    Sound, sound, ye viols, be the cat-call dumb!
    Bring, bring the madding bay, the drunken vine;
    The creeping, dirty, courtly ivy join.
    And thou! his aide-de-camp, lead on my sons,
    Light-arm'd with points, antitheses, and puns.
    Let Bawdry, Billingsgate, my daughters dear,
    Support his front, and Oaths bring up the rear:
    And under his, and under Archer's wing,
    Gaming[285] and Grub Street, skulk behind the king. 310
    Oh! when shall rise a monarch all our own,
    And I, a nursing mother, rock the throne;
    'Twixt prince and people close the curtain draw,
    Shade him from light, and cover him from law;
    Fatten the courtier, starve the learned band,
    And suckle armies, and dry-nurse the land:
    Till senates nod to lullabies divine,
    And all be sleep, as at an ode of thine.'


    She ceased. Then swells the chapel-royal[286] throat:
    God save King Cibber! mounts in every note. 320
    Familiar White's, God save King Colley! cries;
    God save King Colley! Drury lane replies:
    To Needham's quick the voice triumphal rode,
    But pious Needham[287] dropp'd the name of God;
    Back to the Devil[288] the last echoes roll,
    And Coll! each butcher roars at Hockley-hole.


    So when Jove's block descended from on high
    (As sings thy great forefather Ogilby[289]),
    Loud thunder to its bottom shook the bog,
    And the hoarse nation croak'd, God save King Log!



    VARIATIONS.


    VER. 1. The mighty mother, &c. In the first edition it was thus—


    Books and the man I sing, the first who brings
    The Smithfield muses to the ear of kings.
    Say, great patricians! since yourselves inspire
    These wondrous works (so Jove and Fate require)
    Say, for what cause, in vain decried and cursed,
    Still—-


    After VER. 22, in the MS.—


    Or in the graver gown instruct mankind,
    Or silent let thy morals tell thy mind.


    But this was to be understood, as the poet says, ironice, like the 23d
    verse.


    VER. 29. Close to those walls, &c. In the former edition thus—


    Where wave the tatter'd ensigns of Rag-fair,[245]
    A yawning ruin hangs and nods in air;[246]
    Keen hollow winds howl through the bleak recess,
    Emblem of music caused by emptiness;
    Here in one bed two shivering sisters lie,
    The cave of Poverty and Poetry.


    VER. 41 in the former lines—


    Hence hymning Tyburn's elegiac lay,
    Hence the soft sing-song on Cecilia's day.


    VER. 42 alludes to the annual songs composed to music on St Cecilia's
    Feast.


    VER. 85 in the former editions—


    'Twas on the day—when Thorald,[290] rich and grave.


    VER. 108. But chief in Bayes's, In the former edition thus—


    But chief, in Tibbald's monster-breeding breast;
    Sees gods with demons in strange league engage,
    And earth, and heaven, and hell her battles wage.
    She eyed the bard, where supperless he sate,
    And pined, unconscious of his rising fate;
    Studious he sate, with all his books around,
    Sinking from thought to thought, &c—


    VER. 121. Round him much embryo, &c. In the former editions thus—


    He roll'd his eyes, that witness'd huge dismay,
    Where yet unpawn'd much learned lumber lay;
    Volumes whose size the space exactly fill'd,
    Or which fond authors were so good to gild,
    Or where, by sculpture made for ever known,
    The page admires new beauties not its own.
    Here swells the shelf, &c.—


    VER. 146. In the first edition it was—


    Well-purged, and worthy W—y, W—s, and Bl—-.


    VER. 162. A twisted, &c. In the former edition—


    And last, a little Ajax[291] tips the spire.


    VER. 177. Or, if to wit, &c. In the former edition—


    Ah! still o'er Britain stretch that peaceful wand,
    Which lulls th' Helvetian and Batavian land;
    Where rebel to thy throne if science rise,
    She does but show her coward face, and dies:
    There thy good scholiasts with unwearied pains
    Make Horace flat, and humble Maro's strains:
    Here studious I unlucky moderns save,
    Nor sleeps one error in its father's grave,
    Old puns restore, lost blunders nicely seek,
    And crucify poor Shakspeare once a week.
    For thee supplying, in the worst of days.
    Notes to dull books, and prologues to dull plays;
    Not that my quill to critics was confined,
    My verse gave ampler lessons to mankind;
    So gravest precepts may successless prove.
    But sad examples never fail to move.
    As, forced from wind-guns, &c.


    VER. 195. Yet sure had Heaven, &c. In the former edition—


    Had Heaven decreed such works a longer date,
    Heaven had decreed to spare the Grub Street state.
    But see great Settle to the dust descend,
    And all thy cause and empire at an end!
    Could Troy be saved, &c.—


    VER. 213. Hold—to the minister. In the former edition—


    Yes, to my country I my pen consign
    Yes, from this moment, mighty Mist! am thine.


    VER. 225. O born in sin, &c. In the former edition—


    Adieu, my children! better thus expire
    Unstall'd, unsold; thus glorious mount in fire,
    Fair without spot; than greased by grocer's hands,
    Or shipp'd with Ward to ape-and-monkey lands,
    Or wafting ginger, round the streets to run,
    And visit ale-house, where ye first begun,
    With that he lifted thrice the sparkling brand,
    And thrice he dropp'd it, &c.—


    VER. 250. Now flames the Cid, &c. In the former edition—


    Now flames old Memnon, now Rodrigo burns,
    In one quick flash see Proserpine expire,
    And last, his own cold Aeschylus took fire.
    Then gushed the tears, as from the Trojan's eyes,
    When the last blaze, &c.


    After VER. 268, in the former edition, followed these two lines—


    Raptured, he gazes round the dear retreat,
    And in sweet numbers celebrates the seat.


    VER. 293. Know, Eusden, &c. In the former edition—


    Know, Settle, cloy'd with custard and with praise,
    Is gather'd to the dull of ancient days,
    Safe where no critics damn, no duns molest,
    Where Gildon, Banks, and high-born Howard rest.
    I see a king! who leads my chosen sons
    To lands that flow with clenches and with puns:
    Till each famed theatre my empire own;
    Till Albion, as Hibernia, bless my throne!
    I see! I see!—Then rapt she spoke no more.
    God save King Tibbald! Grub Street alleys roar.
    So when Jove's block, &c.



    BOOK THE SECOND.


    ARGUMENT.


    The king being proclaimed, the solemnity is graced with public games and
    sports of various kinds; not instituted by the hero, as by Aeneas in
    Virgil, but for greater honour by the goddess in person (in like manner
    as the games Pythia, Isthmia, &c., were anciently said to be ordained by
    the gods, and as Thetis herself appearing, according to Homer, Odyss.
    xxiv., proposed the prizes in honour of her son Achilles). Hither flock
    the poets and critics, attended, as is but just, with their patrons and
    booksellers. The goddess is first pleased, for her disport, to propose
    games to the booksellers, and setteth up the phantom of a poet, which
    they contend to overtake. The races described, with their divers
    accidents. Next, the game for a poetess. Then follow the exercises for
    the poets, of tickling, vociferating, diving: The first holds forth the
    arts and practices of dedicators; the second of disputants and fustian
    poets; the third of profound, dark, and dirty party-writers. Lastly, for
    the critics, the goddess proposes (with great propriety) an exercise,
    not of their parts, but their patience, in hearing the works of two
    voluminous authors, one in verse, and the other in prose, deliberately
    read, without sleeping: the various effects of which, with the several
    degrees and manners of their operation, are here set forth; till the
    whole number, not of critics only, but of spectators, actors, and all
    present, fall fast asleep; which naturally and necessarily ends the
    games.


    High on a gorgeous seat, that far out-shone
    Henley's gilt tub,[292] or Flecknoe's Irish throne,[293]
    Or that where on her Curlls the public pours,[294]
    All-bounteous, fragrant grains and golden showers,
    Great Cibber sate: the proud Parnassian sneer,
    The conscious simper, and the jealous leer,
    Mix on his look: all eyes direct their rays
    On him, and crowds turn coxcombs as they gaze.
    His peers shine round him with reflected grace,
    New edge their dulness, and new bronze their face. 10
    So from the sun's broad beam, in shallow urns
    Heaven's twinkling sparks draw light, and point their horns.


    Not with more glee, by hands Pontific crown'd,
    With scarlet hats wide-waving circled round,
    Rome in her Capitol saw Querno sit,[295]
    Throned on seven hills, the Antichrist of wit.


    And now the queen, to glad her sons, proclaims
    By herald hawkers, high heroic games.
    They summon all her race: an endless band
    Pours forth, and leaves unpeopled half the land. 20
    A motley mixture! in long wigs, in bags,
    In silks, in crapes, in garters, and in rags,
    From drawing-rooms, from colleges, from garrets,
    On horse, on foot, in hacks, and gilded chariots:
    All who true dunces in her cause appear'd,
    And all who knew those dunces to reward.


    Amid that area wide they took their stand,
    Where the tall maypole once o'er-looked the Strand,
    But now (so Anne and piety ordain)
    A church collects the saints of Drury Lane. 30


    With authors, stationers obey'd the call,
    (The field of glory is a field for all).
    Glory and gain the industrious tribe provoke;
    And gentle Dulness ever loves a joke.
    A poet's form she placed before their eyes,
    And bade the nimblest racer seize the prize;
    No meagre, muse-rid mope, adust and thin,
    In a dun night-gown of his own loose skin;
    But such a bulk as no twelve bards could raise,
    Twelve starveling bards of these degenerate days. 40
    All as a partridge plump, full-fed, and fair,
    She form'd this image of well-bodied air;
    With pert flat eyes she window'd well its head;
    A brain of feathers, and a heart of lead;
    And empty words she gave, and sounding strain,
    But senseless, lifeless! idol void and vain!
    Never was dash'd out, at one lucky hit,[297]
    A fool, so just a copy of a wit;
    So like, that critics said, and courtiers swore,
    A wit it was, and call'd the phantom More.[298] 50


    All gaze with ardour: some a poet's name,
    Others a sword-knot and laced suit inflame.
    But lofty Lintot[299] in the circle rose:
    'This prize is mine; who tempt it are my foes;
    With me began this genius, and shall end.'
    He spoke: and who with Lintot shall contend?
    Fear held them mute. Alone, untaught to fear,
    Stood dauntless Curll:[300] 'Behold that rival here!
    The race by vigour, not by vaunts is won;
    So take the hindmost Hell.' He said, and run. 60
    Swift as a bard the bailiff leaves behind,
    He left huge Lintot, and out-stripp'd the wind.
    As when a dab-chick waddles through the copse
    On feet and wings, and flies, and wades, and hops:
    So labouring on, with shoulders, hands, and head,
    Wide as a wind-mill all his figure spread,
    With arms expanded Bernard rows his state,
    And left-legg'd Jacob[301] seems to emulate.
    Full in the middle way there stood a lake,
    Which Curll's Corinna[302] chanced that morn to make: 70
    (Such was her wont, at early dawn to drop
    Her evening cates before his neighbour's shop,)
    Here fortuned Curll to slide; loud shout the band,
    And Bernard! Bernard! rings through all the Strand.
    Obscene with filth the miscreant lies bewray'd,
    Fallen in the plash his wickedness had laid:
    Then first (if poets aught of truth declare)
    The caitiff vaticide conceived a prayer:
    'Hear, Jove! whose name my bards and I adore,
    As much at least as any god's, or more; 80
    And him and his if more devotion warms,
    Down with the Bible, up with the Pope's arms.'[303]


    A place there is, betwixt earth, air, and seas,[304]
    Where, from Ambrosia, Jove retires for ease.
    There in his seat two spacious vents appear,
    On this he sits, to that he leans his ear,
    And hears the various vows of fond mankind;
    Some beg an eastern, some a western wind:
    All vain petitions, mounting to the sky,
    With reams abundant this abode supply; 90
    Amused he reads, and then returns the bills
    Sign'd with that ichor which from gods distils.


    In office here fair Cloacina stands,
    And ministers to Jove with purest hands.
    Forth from the heap she pick'd her votary's prayer,
    And placed it next him, a distinction rare!
    Oft had the goddess heard her servant's call,
    From her black grottos near the Temple-wall,
    Listening delighted to the jest unclean
    Of link-boys vile, and watermen obscene; 100
    Where as he fish'd her nether realms for wit,
    She oft had favour'd him, and favours yet.
    Renew'd by ordure's sympathetic force,
    As oil'd with magic juices for the course,
    Vigorous he rises; from the effluvia strong
    Imbibes new life, and scours and stinks along;
    Repasses Lintot, vindicates the race,
    Nor heeds the brown dishonours of his face.


    And now the victor stretch'd his eager hand
    Where the tall Nothing stood, or seem'd to stand; 110
    A shapeless shade, it melted from his sight,
    Like forms in clouds, or visions of the night.
    To seize his papers, Curll, was next thy care;
    His papers light, fly diverse, toss'd in air;
    Songs, sonnets, epigrams the winds uplift,
    And whisk them back to Evans, Young, and Swift.[305]
    The embroider'd suit at least he deem'd his prey,
    That suit an unpaid tailor snatch'd away.
    No rag, no scrap, of all the beau, or wit,
    That once so flutter'd, and that once so writ. 120


    Heaven rings with laughter: of the laughter vain,
    Dulness, good queen, repeats the jest again.
    Three wicked imps, of her own Grub Street choir,
    She deck'd like Congreve, Addison, and Prior;
    Mears, Warner, Wilkins run: delusive thought!
    Breval, Bond, Bezaleel,[306] the varlets caught.
    Curll stretches after Gay, but Gay is gone,
    He grasps an empty Joseph[307] for a John:
    So Proteus, hunted in a nobler shape,
    Became, when seized, a puppy, or an ape. 130


    To him the goddess: 'Son! thy grief lay down,
    And turn this whole illusion on the town:[308]
    As the sage dame, experienced in her trade,
    By names of toasts retails each batter'd jade;
    (Whence hapless Monsieur much complains at Paris
    Of wrongs from duchesses and Lady Maries;)
    Be thine, my stationer! this magic gift;
    Cook shall be Prior,[309] and Concanen, Swift:
    So shall each hostile name become our own,
    And we too boast our Garth and Addison.' 140


    With that she gave him (piteous of his case,
    Yet smiling at his rueful length of face[310])
    A shaggy tapestry, worthy to be spread
    On Codrus' old, or Dunton's modern bed;[311]
    Instructive work! whose wry-mouth'd portraiture
    Display'd the fates her confessors endure.
    Earless on high, stood unabash'd Defoe,
    And Tutchin flagrant from the scourge below.[312]
    There Ridpath, Roper,[313] cudgell'd might ye view,
    The very worsted still look'd black and blue. 150
    Himself among the storied chiefs he spies,[314]
    As, from the blanket, high in air he flies,
    And oh! (he cried) what street, what lane but knows
    Our purgings, pumpings, blanketings, and blows?
    In every loom our labours shall be seen,
    And the fresh vomit run for ever green!


    See in the circle next, Eliza[315] placed,
    Two babes of love close clinging to her waist;
    Fair as before her works she stands confess'd, 159
    In flowers and pearls by bounteous Kirkall[316] dress'd.
    The goddess then: 'Who best can send on high
    The salient spout, far-streaming to the sky;
    His be yon Juno of majestic size,
    With cow-like udders, and with ox-like eyes.
    This China Jordan let the chief o'ercome
    Replenish, not ingloriously, at home.'


    Osborne[317] and Curll accept the glorious strife,
    (Though this his son dissuades, and that his wife;)
    One on his manly confidence relies,
    One on his vigour and superior size. 170
    First Osborne lean'd against his letter'd post;
    It rose, and labour'd to a curve at most.
    So Jove's bright bow displays its watery round
    (Sure sign, that no spectator shall be drown'd),
    A second effort brought but new disgrace,
    The wild meander wash'd the artist's face:
    Thus the small jet, which hasty hands unlock,
    Spurts in the gardener's eyes who turns the cock.
    Not so from shameless Curll; impetuous spread
    The stream, and smoking flourish'd o'er his head. 180
    So (famed like thee for turbulence and horns)
    Eridanus his humble fountain scorns;
    Through half the heavens he pours the exalted urn;
    His rapid waters in their passage burn.


    Swift as it mounts, all follow with their eyes:
    Still happy impudence obtains the prize.
    Thou triumph'st, victor of the high-wrought day,
    And the pleased dame, soft-smiling, lead'st away.
    Osborne, through perfect modesty o'ercome,
    Crown'd with the Jordan, walks contented home. 190


    But now for authors nobler palms remain;
    Room for my lord! three jockeys in his train;
    Six huntsmen with a shout precede his chair:
    He grins, and looks broad nonsense with a stare.
    His honour's meaning Dulness thus express'd,
    'He wins this patron, who can tickle best.'


    He chinks his purse, and takes his seat of state:
    With ready quills the dedicators wait;
    Now at his head the dext'rous task commence,
    And, instant, fancy feels the imputed sense; 200
    Now gentle touches wanton o'er his face,
    He struts Adonis, and affects grimace:
    Rolli[318] the feather to his ear conveys,
    Then his nice taste directs our operas:
    Bentley[319] his mouth with classic flattery opes,
    And the puff'd orator bursts out in tropes.
    But Welsted[320] most the poet's healing balm
    Strives to extract from his soft, giving palm;
    Unlucky Welsted! thy unfeeling master,
    The more thou ticklest, gripes his fist the faster. 210


    While thus each hand promotes the pleasing pain,
    And quick sensations skip from vein to vein;
    A youth unknown to Phoebus, in despair,
    Puts his last refuge all in Heaven and prayer.
    What force have pious vows! The Queen of Love
    Her sister sends, her votaress, from above.
    As taught by Venus, Paris learn'd the art
    To touch Achilles' only tender part;
    Secure, through her, the noble prize to carry,
    He marches off, his Grace's secretary. 220


    'Now turn to different sports (the goddess cries),
    And learn, my sons, the wondrous power of noise.
    To move, to raise, to ravish every heart,
    With Shakspeare's nature, or with Jonson's art,
    Let others aim: 'tis yours to shake the soul
    With thunder rumbling from the mustard bowl,[321]
    With horns and trumpets now to madness swell,
    Now sink in sorrows with a tolling bell;
    Such happy arts attention can command,
    When fancy flags, and sense is at a stand. 230
    Improve we these. Three cat-calls be the bribe
    Of him whose chattering shames the monkey tribe:
    And his this drum whose hoarse heroic bass
    Drowns the loud clarion of the braying ass.'


    Now thousand tongues are heard in one loud din:
    The monkey-mimics rush discordant in;
    'Twas chattering, grinning, mouthing, jabbering all,
    And noise and Norton, brangling and Breval,[322]
    Dennis and dissonance, and captious art,
    And snip-snap short, and interruption smart, 240
    And demonstration thin, and theses thick,
    And major, minor, and conclusion quick.
    'Hold' (cried the queen) 'a cat-call each shall win;
    Equal your merits! equal is your din!
    But that this well-disputed game may end,
    Sound forth, nay brayers, and the welkin rend.'


    As when the long-ear'd milky mothers wait
    At some sick miser's triple-bolted gate,
    For their defrauded, absent foals they make
    A moan so loud, that all the guild awake; 250
    Sore sighs Sir Gilbert, starting at the bray,
    From dreams of millions, and three groats to pay.
    So swells each windpipe; ass intones to ass,
    Harmonic twang! of leather, horn, and brass;
    Such as from labouring lungs the enthusiast blows,
    High sound, attemper'd to the vocal nose,
    Or such as bellow from the deep divine;
    There, Webster![323] peal'd thy voice, and, Whitfield![324] thine.
    But far o'er all, sonorous Blackmore's strain;
    Walls, steeples, skies, bray back to him again. 260
    In Tottenham fields, the brethren, with amaze,
    Prick all their ears up, and forget to graze;
    'Long Chancery Lane retentive rolls the sound,
    And courts to courts return it round and round;
    Thames wafts it thence to Rufus' roaring hall,
    And Hungerford re-echoes bawl for bawl.
    All hail him victor in both gifts of song,
    Who sings so loudly, and who sings so long.


    This labour past, by Bridewell all descend,
    (As morning prayer, and flagellation end)[325] 270
    To where Fleet-ditch with disemboguing streams
    Rolls the large tribute of dead dogs to Thames,
    The king of dikes! than whom no sluice of mud
    With deeper sable blots the silver flood.
    'Here strip, my children! here at once leap in,
    Here prove who best can dash through thick and thin,[326]
    And who the most in love of dirt excel,
    Or dark dexterity of groping well.
    Who flings most filth, and wide pollutes around
    The stream, be his the weekly journals[327] bound; 280
    A pig of lead to him who dives the best;
    A peck of coals a-piece[328] shall glad the rest.'


    In naked majesty Oldmixon stands,[329]
    And, Milo-like, surveys his arms and hands;
    Then sighing, thus, 'And am I now threescore?
    Ah why, ye gods! should two and two make four?'
    He said, and climb'd a stranded lighter's height,
    Shot to the black abyss, and plunged downright.
    The senior's judgment all the crowd admire,
    Who but to sink the deeper, rose the higher. 290


    Next Smedley dived;[330] slow circles dimpled o'er
    The quaking mud, that closed, and oped no more.
    All look, all sigh, and call on Smedley lost;
    'Smedley!' in vain, resounds through all the coast.


    Then Hill[331] essay'd; scarce vanish'd out of sight,
    He buoys up instant, and returns to light:
    He bears no token of the sable streams,
    And mounts far off among the swans of Thames.


    True to the bottom, see Concanen creep,
    A cold, long-winded, native of the deep: 300
    If perseverance gain the diver's prize,
    Not everlasting Blackmore this denies:
    No noise, no stir, no motion can'st thou make,
    The unconscious stream sleeps o'er thee like a lake.


    Next plunged a feeble, but a desperate pack,
    With each a sickly brother at his back:[332]
    Sons of a day! just buoyant on the flood,
    Then number'd with the puppies in the mud.
    Ask ye their names? I could as soon disclose
    The names of these blind puppies as of those. 310
    Fast by, like Niobe (her children gone)
    Sits Mother Osborne,[333] stupified to stone!
    And monumental brass this record bears,
    'These are,—ah no! these were, the gazetteers!'[334]


    Not so bold Arnall;[335] with a weight of skull,
    Furious he dives, precipitately dull.
    Whirlpools and storms his circling arm invest,
    With all the might of gravitation bless'd.
    No crab more active in the dirty dance,
    Downward to climb, and backward to advance. 320
    He brings up half the bottom on his head,
    And loudly claims the journals and the lead.


    The plunging Prelate,[336] and his ponderous Grace,
    With holy envy gave one layman place.
    When, lo! a burst of thunder shook the flood,
    Slow rose a form, in majesty of mud:
    Shaking the horrors of his sable brows,
    And each ferocious feature grim with ooze.
    Greater he looks, and more than mortal stares:
    Then thus the wonders of the deep declares. 330


    First he relates, how sinking to the chin,
    Smit with his mien, the mud-nymphs suck'd him in:
    How young Lutetia, softer than the down,
    Nigrina black, and Merdamante brown,
    Vied for his love in jetty bowers below,
    As Hylas fair was ravish'd long ago.
    Then sung, how, shown him by the nut-brown maids;
    A branch of Styx here rises from the shades,
    That, tinctured as it runs with Lethe's streams,
    And wafting vapours from the land of dreams, 340
    (As under seas Alpheus' secret sluice
    Bears Pisa's offerings to his Arethuse,)
    Pours into Thames: and hence the mingled wave
    Intoxicates the pert, and lulls the grave:
    Here brisker vapours o'er the Temple creep,
    There, all from Paul's to Aldgate drink and sleep.


    Thence to the banks where reverend bards repose,
    They led him soft; each reverend bard arose;
    And Milbourn[337] chief, deputed by the rest,
    Gave him the cassock, surcingle, and vest. 350
    'Receive (he said) these robes which once were mine,
    Dulness is sacred in a sound divine.'


    He ceased, and spread the robe; the crowd confess
    The reverend Flamen in his lengthen'd dress.
    Around him wide a sable army stand,
    A low-born, cell-bred, selfish, servile band,
    Prompt or to guard or stab, to saint or damn,
    Heaven's Swiss, who fight for any god, or man.
    Through Lud's famed gates,[338] along the well-known Fleet
    Rolls the black troop, and overshades the street, 360
    Till showers of sermons, characters, essays,
    In circling fleeces whiten all the ways:
    So clouds replenish'd from some bog below,
    Mount in dark volumes, and descend in snow.
    Here stopp'd the goddess; and in pomp proclaims
    A gentler exercise to close the games.


    'Ye critics! in whose heads, as equal scales,
    I weigh what author's heaviness prevails,
    Which most conduce to soothe the soul in slumbers,
    My Henley's periods, or my Blackmore's numbers, 370
    Attend the trial we propose to make:
    If there be man, who o'er such works can wake,
    Sleep's all-subduing charms who dares defy,
    And boasts Ulysses' ear with Argus' eye;
    To him we grant our amplest powers to sit
    Judge of all present, past, and future wit;
    To cavil, censure, dictate, right or wrong,
    Full and eternal privilege of tongue.'


    Three college Sophs, and three pert Templars came,
    The same their talents, and their tastes the same; 380
    Each prompt to query, answer, and debate,
    And smit with love of poesy and prate.
    The ponderous books two gentle readers bring;
    The heroes sit, the vulgar form a ring.
    The clamorous crowd is hush'd with mugs of mum,
    Till all, tuned equal, send a general hum.
    Then mount the clerks, and in one lazy tone
    Through the long, heavy, painful page drawl on;
    Soft creeping, words on words, the sense compose,
    At every line they stretch, they yawn, they doze. 390
    As to soft gales top-heavy pines bow low
    Their heads, and lift them as they cease to blow,
    Thus oft they rear, and oft the head decline,
    As breathe, or pause, by fits, the airs divine;
    And now to this side, now to that they nod,
    As verse or prose infuse the drowsy god.
    Thrice Budgell aim'd to speak,[339] but thrice suppress'd
    By potent Arthur, knock'd his chin and breast.
    Toland and Tindal,[340] prompt at priests to jeer,
    Yet silent bow'd to Christ's no kingdom here.[341] 400
    Who sate the nearest, by the words o'ercome,
    Slept first; the distant nodded to the hum.
    Then down are roll'd the books; stretch'd o'er 'em lies
    Each gentle clerk, and, muttering, seals his eyes,
    As what a Dutchman plumps into the lakes,
    One circle first, and then a second makes;
    What Dulness dropp'd among her sons impress'd
    Like motion from one circle to the rest;
    So from the midmost the nutation spreads
    Round and more round, o'er all the sea of heads. 410
    At last Centlivre[342] felt her voice to fail,
    Motteux[343] himself unfinished left his tale,
    Boyer the state, and Law the stage gave o'er,[344]
    Morgan[345] and Mandeville[346] could prate no more;
    Norton,[347] from Daniel and Ostroea sprung,
    Bless'd with his father's front and mother's tongue,
    Hung silent down his never-blushing head;
    And all was hush'd, as Polly's self lay dead.


    Thus the soft gifts of sleep conclude the day,
    And stretch'd on bulks, as usual, poets lay. 420
    Why should I sing what bards the nightly Muse
    Did slumbering visit, and convey to stews;
    Who prouder march'd, with magistrates in state,
    To some famed round-house, ever open gate!
    How Henley lay inspired beside a sink,
    And to mere mortals seem'd a priest in drink;
    While others, timely, to the neighbouring Fleet
    (Haunt of the Muses!) made their safe retreat?



    VARIATIONS.


    VER. 207 in the first edition—


    But Oldmixon the poet's healing balm, &c.


    After VER. 298 in the first edition, followed these—


    Far worse unhappy D—-r succeeds,
    He searched for coral, but he gather'd weeds.


    VER. 399. In the first edition it was—


    Collins and Tindal, prompt at priests to jeer.


    VER. 413. In the first edition it was—


    T—-s and T——the Church and State gave o'er,
    Nor ——talk'd nor S——whisper'd more.



    BOOK THE THIRD.


    ARGUMENT.


    After the other persons are disposed in their proper places of rest, the
    goddess transports the king to her temple, and there lays him to slumber
    with his head on her lap; a position of marvellous virtue, which causes
    all the visions of wild enthusiasts, projectors, politicians,
    inamoratos, castle-builders, chemists, and poets. He is immediately
    carried on the wings of Fancy, and led by a mad poetical Sibyl, to the
    Elysian shade; where, on the banks of Lethe, the souls of the dull are
    dipped by Bavius, before their entrance into this world. There he is met
    by the ghost of Settle, and by him made acquainted with the wonders of
    the place, and with those which he himself is destined to perform. He
    takes him to a mount of vision, from whence he shows him the past
    triumphs of the empire of Dulness, then the present, and lastly the
    future: how small a part of the world was ever conquered by science, how
    soon those conquests were stopped, and those very nations again reduced
    to her dominion: then distinguishing the island of Great Britain, shows
    by what aids, by what persons, and by what degrees it shall be brought
    to her empire. Some of the persons he causes to pass in review before
    his eyes, describing each by his proper figure, character, and
    qualifications. On a sudden the scene shifts, and a vast number of
    miracles and prodigies appear, utterly surprising and unknown to the
    king himself, till they are explained to be the wonders of his own reign
    now commencing. On this subject Settle breaks into a congratulation, yet
    not unmixed with concern, that his own times were but the types of
    these. He prophesies how first the nation shall be overrun with farces,
    operas, and shows; how the throne of Dulness shall be advanced over the
    theatres, and set up even at Court; then how her sons shall preside in
    the seats of arts and sciences; giving a glimpse, or Pisgah-sight, of
    the future fulness of her glory, the accomplishment whereof is the
    subject of the fourth and last book.


    But in her temple's last recess enclosed,
    On Dulness' lap the anointed head reposed.
    Him close the curtains round with vapours blue,
    And soft besprinkles with Cimmerian dew.
    Then raptures high the seat of sense o'erflow,
    Which only heads refined from reason know.
    Hence, from the straw where Bedlam's prophet nods,
    He hears loud oracles, and talks with gods:
    Hence the fool's Paradise, the statesman's scheme,
    The air-built castle, and the golden dream, 10
    The maid's romantic wish, the chemist's flame,
    And poet's vision of eternal fame.


    And now, on Fancy's easy wing convey'd,
    The king descending, views the Elysian shade,
    A slip-shod sibyl led his steps along,
    In lofty madness meditating song;
    Her tresses staring from poetic dreams,
    And never wash'd, but in Castalia's streams.
    Taylor,[348] their better Charon, lends an oar,
    (Once swan of Thames, though now he sings no more.) 20
    Benlowes,[349] propitious still to blockheads, bows;
    And Shadwell nods the poppy[350] on his brows.
    Here, in a dusky vale where Lethe rolls,
    Old Bavius sits,[351] to dip poetic souls,
    And blunt the sense, and fit it for a skull
    Of solid proof, impenetrably dull:
    Instant, when dipp'd, away they wing their flight,
    Where Brown and Mears[352] unbar the gates of light,
    Demand new bodies, and in calf's array
    Rush to the world, impatient for the day. 30
    Millions and millions on these banks he views,
    Thick as the stars of night, or morning dews,
    As thick as bees o'er vernal blossoms fly,
    As thick as eggs at Ward in pillory.[353]


    Wond'ring he gazed: when, lo! a sage appears,
    By his broad shoulders known, and length of ears,
    Known by the band and suit which Settle[354] wore
    (His only suit) for twice three years before:
    All as the vest appear'd the wearer's frame,
    Old in new state—another, yet the same. 40
    Bland and familiar as in life, begun
    Thus the great father to the greater son:


    'Oh born to see what none can see awake!
    Behold the wonders of the oblivious lake.
    Thou, yet unborn, hast touch'd this sacred shore;
    The hand of Bavius drench'd thee o'er and o'er.
    But blind to former as to future fate,
    What mortal knows his pre-existent state?
    Who knows how long thy transmigrating soul
    Might from Boeotian to Boeotian roll? 50
    How many Dutchmen she vouchsafed to thrid?
    How many stages through old monks she rid?
    And all who since, in mild benighted days,
    Mix'd the owl's ivy with the poet's bays.
    As man's meanders to the vital spring
    Roll all their tides, then back their circles bring;
    Or whirligigs, twirl'd round by skilful swain,
    Suck the thread in, then yield it out again:
    All nonsense thus, of old or modern date,
    Shall in thee centre, from thee circulate. 60
    For this our queen unfolds to vision true
    Thy mental eye, for thou hast much to view:
    Old scenes of glory, times long cast behind,
    Shall, first recall'd, rush forward to thy mind:
    Then stretch thy sight o'er all thy rising reign,
    And let the past and future fire thy brain.


    'Ascend this hill, whose cloudy point commands
    Her boundless empire over seas and lands.
    See, round the poles where keener spangles shine,
    Where spices smoke beneath the burning line, 70
    (Earth's wide extremes), her sable flag display'd,
    And all the nations cover'd in her shade!


    'Far eastward cast thine eye, from whence the sun
    And orient science their bright course begun;
    One god-like monarch[355] all that pride confounds,
    He whose long wall the wandering Tartar bounds;
    Heavens! what a pile! whole ages perish there,
    And one bright blaze turns learning into air.


    'Thence to the south extend thy gladden'd eyes;
    There rival flames with equal glory rise, 80
    From shelves to shelves see greedy Vulcan roll,
    And lick up all their physic of the soul.[356]


    'How little, mark! that portion of the ball,
    Where, faint at best, the beams of science fall:
    Soon as they dawn, from Hyperborean skies
    Embodied dark, what clouds of Vandals rise!
    Lo! where Maeotis sleeps, and hardly flows
    The freezing Tanais through a waste of snows,
    The North by myriads pours her mighty sons,
    Great nurse of Goths, of Alans, and of Huns! 90
    See Alaric's stern port! the martial frame
    Of Genseric! and Attila's dread name!
    See the bold Ostrogoths on Latium fall;
    See the fierce Visigoths on Spain and Gaul!
    See, where the morning gilds the palmy shore,
    (The soil that arts and infant letters bore,)
    His conquering tribes the Arabian prophet draws,
    And saving ignorance enthrones by laws.
    See Christians, Jews, one heavy sabbath keep,
    And all the western world believe and sleep. 100


    'Lo! Rome herself, proud mistress now no more
    Of arts, but thundering against heathen lore;
    Her gray-hair'd synods damning books unread,
    And Bacon trembling for his brazen head.
    Padua, with sighs, beholds her Livy burn,
    And ev'n the Antipodes Virgilius mourn.
    See, the cirque falls, the unpillar'd temple nods,
    Streets paved with heroes, Tiber choked with gods:
    Till Peter's keys some christen'd Jove adorn,
    And Pan to Moses lends his pagan horn; 110
    See graceless Venus to a virgin turn'd,
    Or Phidias broken, and Apelles burn'd.


    'Behold yon isle, by palmers, pilgrims trod,
    Men bearded, bald, cowl'd, uncowl'd, shod, unshod,
    Peel'd, patch'd, and piebald, linsey-woolsey brothers,
    Grave mummers! sleeveless some, and shirtless others.
    That once was Britain—happy! had she seen
    No fiercer sons, had Easter never been.[357]
    In peace, great goddess, ever be adored;
    How keen the war, if Dulness draw the sword! 120
    Thus visit not thy own! on this bless'd age
    Oh spread thy influence, but restrain thy rage.


    'And see, my son! the hour is on its way
    That lifts our goddess to imperial sway;
    This favourite isle, long sever'd from her reign,
    Dove-like she gathers to her wings again.
    Now look through Fate! behold the scene she draws!
    What aids, what armies to assert her cause!
    See all her progeny, illustrious sight!
    Behold, and count them, as they rise to light. 130
    As Berecynthia, while her offspring vie
    In homage to the mother of the sky,
    Surveys around her, in the bless'd abode,
    An hundred sons, and every son a god;
    Not with less glory mighty Dulness crown'd,
    Shall take through Grub Street her triumphant round;
    And her Parnassus glancing o'er at once,
    Behold an hundred sons, and each a dunce.


    'Mark first that youth who takes the foremost place,
    And thrusts his person full into your face. 140
    With all thy father's virtues bless'd, be born!
    And a new Cibber shall the stage adorn.


    'A second see, by meeker manners known,
    And modest as the maid that sips alone;
    From the strong fate of drams if thou get free,
    Another D'Urfey, Ward! shall sing in thee.
    Thee shall each ale-house, thee each gill-house mourn,
    And answering gin-shops sourer sighs return.


    'Jacob, the scourge of grammar, mark with awe,[358]
    Nor less revere him, blunderbuss of law. 150
    Lo Popple's brow, tremendous to the town,
    Horneck's fierce eye, and Roome's[359] funereal frown.
    Lo, sneering Goode,[360] half-malice and half-whim,
    A fiend in glee, ridiculously grim.
    Each cygnet sweet, of Bath and Tunbridge race,
    Whose tuneful whistling makes the waters pass:
    Each songster, riddler, every nameless name,
    All crowd, who foremost shall be damn'd to fame.
    Some strain in rhyme; the Muses, on their racks,
    Scream like the winding of ten thousand jacks; 160
    Some, free from rhyme or reason, rule or check,
    Break Priscian's head and Pegasus's neck;
    Down, down the 'larum, with impetuous whirl,
    The Pindars, and the Miltons of a Curll.


    'Silence, ye wolves! while Ralph[361] to Cynthia howls,
    And makes night hideous—answer him, ye owls!


    'Sense, speech, and measure, living tongues and dead,
    Let all give way—and Morris may be read.
    Flow, Welsted, flow! like thine inspirer, beer;
    Though stale, not ripe; though thin, yet never clear; 170
    So sweetly mawkish, and so smoothly dull;
    Heady, not strong; o'erflowing, though not full.


    'Ah Dennis! Gildon ah! what ill-starr'd rage
    Divides a friendship long confirm'd by age?
    Blockheads with reason wicked wits abhor,
    But fool with fool is barbarous civil war.
    Embrace, embrace, my sons! be foes no more!
    Nor glad vile poets with true critics' gore.


    'Behold yon pair,[362] in strict embraces join'd;
    How like in manners, and how like in mind! 180
    Equal in wit, and equally polite,
    Shall this a Pasquin, that a Grumbler write?
    Like are their merits, like rewards they share,
    That shines a consul, this commissioner.


    'But who is he, in closet close y-pent,
    Of sober face, with learned dust besprent?
    Right well mine eyes arede the myster wight,
    On parchment scraps y-fed, and Wormius hight.[363]
    To future ages may thy dulness last,
    As thou preserv'st the dulness of the past! 190


    'There, dim in clouds, the poring scholiasts mark,
    Wits, who, like owls, see only in the dark,
    A lumberhouse of books in every head,
    For ever reading, never to be read!


    'But where each science lifts its modern type,
    History her pot, divinity her pipe,
    While proud philosophy repines to show,
    Dishonest sight! his breeches rent below;
    Embrown'd with native bronze, lo! Henley[364] stands,
    Tuning his voice, and balancing his hands. 200
    How fluent nonsense trickles from his tongue!
    How sweet the periods, neither said nor sung!
    Still break the benches, Henley! with thy strain,
    While Sherlock, Hare, and Gibson[365] preach in vain.
    O great restorer of the good old stage,
    Preacher at once, and zany of thy age!
    O worthy thou of Egypt's wise abodes,
    A decent priest, where monkeys were the gods!
    But fate with butchers placed thy priestly stall,
    Meek modern faith to murder, hack, and maul; 210
    And bade thee live to crown Britannia's praise,
    In Toland's, Tindal's, and in Woolston's days.[366]


    'Yet O! my sons, a father's words attend
    (So may the fates preserve the ears you lend):
    'Tis yours a Bacon or a Locke to blame,
    A Newton's genius, or a Milton's flame:
    But O! with One, immortal One dispense,
    The source of Newton's light, of Bacon's sense.
    Content, each emanation of his fires
    That beams on earth, each virtue he inspires, 220
    Each art he prompts, each charm he can create,
    Whate'er he gives, are given for you to hate.
    Persist, by all divine in man unawed,
    But, “Learn, ye Dunces! not to scorn your God.”'


    Thus he, for then a ray of reason stole
    Half through the solid darkness of his soul;
    But soon the cloud return'd—and thus the sire:
    'See now, what Dulness and her sons admire!
    See what the charms that smite the simple heart
    Not touch'd by Nature, and not reach'd by art.' 230


    His never-blushing head he turn'd aside,
    (Not half so pleased when Goodman prophesied),
    And looked, and saw a sable sorcerer[367] rise,
    Swift to whose hand a winged volume flies:
    All sudden, Gorgons hiss, and dragons glare,
    And ten-horn'd fiends and giants rush to war.
    Hell rises, heaven descends, and dance on earth:[368]
    Gods, imps, and monsters, music, rage, and mirth,
    A fire, a jig, a battle, and a ball,
    Till one wide conflagration swallows all. 240
    Thence a new world to Nature's laws unknown


    Breaks out refulgent, with a heaven its own:
    Another Cynthia her new journey runs,
    And other planets circle other suns.
    The forests dance, the rivers upward rise,
    Whales sport in woods, and dolphins in the skies;
    And last, to give the whole creation grace,
    Lo! one vast egg produces human race.[369]


    Joy fills his soul, joy innocent of thought: 249
    'What power,' he cries, 'what power these wonders wrought?'
    'Son, what thou seek'st is in thee! Look, and find
    Each monster meets his likeness in thy mind.
    Yet would'st thou more? In yonder cloud behold,
    Whose sarsenet skirts are edged with flamy gold,
    A matchless youth! his nod these worlds controls,
    Wings the red lightning, and the thunder rolls.
    Angel of Dulness, sent to scatter round
    Her magic charms o'er all unclassic ground
    Yon stars, yon suns, he rears at pleasure higher,
    Illumes their light, and sets their flames on fire. 260
    Immortal Rich![370] how calm he sits at ease
    'Mid snows of paper, and fierce hail of pease;
    And proud his mistress' orders to perform,
    Rides in the whirlwind, and directs the storm.


    'But, lo! to dark encounter in mid air,
    New wizards rise; I see my Cibber there!
    Booth[371] in his cloudy tabernacle shrined,
    On grinning dragons thou shalt mount the wind.
    Dire is the conflict, dismal is the din,
    Here shouts all Drury, there all Lincoln's inn; 270
    Contending theatres our empire raise,
    Alike their labours, and alike their praise.


    'And are these wonders, son, to thee unknown?
    Unknown to thee? These wonders are thy own.
    These Fate reserved to grace thy reign divine,
    Foreseen by me, but ah! withheld from mine.
    In Lud's old walls though long I ruled, renown'd
    Far as loud Bow's stupendous bells resound;
    Though my own Aldermen conferred the bays,
    To me committing their eternal praise, 280
    Their full-fed heroes, their pacific mayors,
    Their annual trophies, and their monthly wars;
    Though long my party[372] built on me their hopes,
    For writing pamphlets, and for roasting popes;
    Yet lo! in me what authors have to brag on!
    Reduced at last to hiss in my own dragon.
    Avert it, Heaven! that thou, my Cibber, e'er
    Should'st wag a serpent-tail in Smithfield fair!
    Like the vile straw that's blown about the streets,
    The needy poet sticks to all he meets, 290
    Coach'd, carted, trod upon, now loose, now fast,
    And carried off in some dog's tail at last;
    Happier thy fortunes! like a rolling stone,
    Thy giddy dulness still shall lumber on,
    Safe in its heaviness, shall never stray,
    But lick up every blockhead in the way.
    Thee shall the patriot, thee the courtier taste,
    And every year be duller than the last;
    Till raised from booths, to theatre, to court,
    Her seat imperial Dulness shall transport. 300
    Already Opera prepares the way,
    The sure forerunner of her gentle sway:
    Let her thy heart, next drabs and dice, engage,
    The third mad passion of thy doting age.
    Teach thou the warbling Polypheme[373] to roar,
    And scream thyself as none e'er scream'd before!
    To aid our cause, if Heaven thou can'st not bend,
    Hell thou shalt move; for Faustus[374] is our friend:
    Pluto with Cato thou for this shalt join,
    And link the Mourning Bride to Proserpine. 310
    Grub Street! thy fall should men and gods conspire,
    Thy stage shall stand, ensure it but from fire.[375]
    Another AEschylus appears![376] prepare
    For new abortions, all ye pregnant fair!
    In flames, like Semele's, be brought to bed,
    While opening Hell spouts wild-fire at your head.


    'Now, Bavius, take the poppy from thy brow,
    And place it here! here, all ye heroes, bow!
    This, this is he, foretold by ancient rhymes:
    Th' Augustus born to bring Saturnian times. 320
    Signs following signs lead on the mighty year!
    See! the dull stars roll round and re-appear.
    See, see, our own true Phoebus wears the bays!
    Our Midas sits Lord Chancellor of Plays!
    On poets' tombs see Benson's titles writ![377]
    Lo! Ambrose Philips[378] is preferr'd for wit!
    See under Ripley rise a new Whitehall,
    While Jones' and Boyle's united labours fall;[379]
    While Wren with sorrow to the grave descends,
    Gay dies unpension'd with a hundred friends; 330
    Hibernian politics, O Swift! thy fate;
    And Pope's, ten years to comment and translate.


    'Proceed, great days! till Learning fly the shore,
    Till Birch shall blush with noble blood no more,
    Till Thames see Eton's sons for ever play,
    Till Westminster's whole year be holiday,
    Till Isis' elders reel, their pupils sport,
    And Alma Mater lie dissolved in port!'


    Enough! enough! the raptured monarch cries;
    And through the Ivory Gate the vision flies. 340



    VARIATIONS.


    VER. 73. In the former edition—


    Far eastward cast thine eye, from whence the sun
    And orient science at a birth begun.


    VER. 149. In the first edition it was—


    Woolston, the scourge of scripture, mark with awe!
    And mighty Jacob, blunderbuss of law!


    VER. 151. Lo Popple's brow, &c. In the former edition—


    Haywood, Centlivre, glories of their race,
    Lo Horneck's fierce, and Roome's funereal face.


    VER. 157. Each songster, riddler, &c. In the former edition—


    Lo Bond and Foxton, every nameless name.


    After VER. 158 in the first edition followed—


    How proud, how pale, how earnest all appear!
    How rhymes eternal jingle in their ear!


    VER. 197. In the first edition it was—


    And proud philosophy with breeches tore,
    And English music with a dismal score:
    Fast by in darkness palpable enshrined
    W—-s, B—-r, M—-n, all the poring kind.


    After VER. 274 in the former edition followed—


    For works like these let deathless journals tell,
    'None but thyself can be thy parallel.'


    VER. 295. Safe in its heaviness, etc. In the former edition—


    Too safe in inborn heaviness to stray,
    And lick up every blockhead in the way.
    Thy dragons, magistrates and peers shall taste,
    And from each show rise duller than the last;
    Till raised from booths, etc.


    VER. 323. See, see, our own, &c. In the former edition—


    Beneath his reign shall Eusden wear the bays.
    Cibber preside Lord Chancellor of plays,
    Benson sole Judge of Architecture sit,
    And Namby Pamby be preferr'd for wit!
    I see the unfinish'd dormitory wall,
    I see the Savoy totter to her fall;
    Hibernian politics, O Swift! thy doom,
    And Pope's, translating three whole years with Broome.
    Proceed great days, &c.


    VER. 331. In the former edition, thus—


    ——O Swift! thy doom,
    And Pope's, translating ten whole years with Broome.


    See Life.


    After VER. 338, in the first edition, were the following lines—


    Then when these signs declare the mighty year,
    When the dull stars roll round and re-appear;
    Let there be darkness! (the dread Power shall say)
    All shall be darkness, as it ne'er were day;
    To their first Chaos wit's vain works shall fall,
    And universal darkness cover all.



    BOOK THE FOURTH.


    ARGUMENT.


    The poet being, in this book, to declare the completion of the
    prophecies mentioned at the end of the former, makes a new invocation;
    as the greater poets are wont, when some high and worthy matter is to be
    sung. He shows the goddess coming in her majesty to destroy order and
    science, and to substitute the kingdom of the Dull upon earth; how she
    leads captive the Sciences, and silenceth the Muses; and what they be
    who succeed in their stead. All her children, by a wonderful attraction,
    are drawn about her; and bear along with them divers others, who promote
    her empire by connivance, weak resistance, or discouragement of Arts;
    such as half-wits, tasteless admirers, vain pretenders, the flatterers
    of Dunces, or the patrons of them. All these crowd round her; one of
    them offering to approach her, is driven back by a rival, but she
    commends and encourages both. The first who speak in form are the
    geniuses of the schools, who assure her of their care to advance her
    cause, by confining youth to words, and keeping them out of the way of
    real knowledge. Their address, and her gracious answer; with her charge
    to them and the Universities. The Universities appear by their proper
    deputies, and assure her that the same method is observed in the
    progress of education. The speech of Aristarchus on this subject. They
    are driven off by a band of young gentlemen returned from travel with
    their tutors; one of whom delivers to the goddess, in a polite oration,
    an account of the whole conduct and fruits of their travels; presenting
    to her at the same time a young nobleman perfectly accomplished. She
    receives him graciously, and indues him with the happy quality of want
    of shame. She sees loitering about her a number of indolent persons
    abandoning all business and duty, and dying with laziness: to these
    approaches the antiquary Annius, entreating her to make them virtuosos,
    and assign them over to him; but Mummius, another antiquary, complaining
    of his fraudulent proceeding, she finds a method to reconcile their
    difference. Then enter a troop of people fantastically adorned, offering
    her strange and exotic presents: amongst them, one stands forth and
    demands justice on another, who had deprived him of one of the greatest
    curiosities in nature; but he justifies himself so well, that the
    goddess gives them both her approbation. She recommends to them to find
    proper employment for the indolents before-mentioned, in the study of
    butterflies, shells, birds' nests, moss, &c., but with particular
    caution not to proceed beyond trifles, to any useful or extensive views
    of nature, or of the Author of nature. Against the last of these
    apprehensions, she is secured by a hearty address from the minute
    philosophers and freethinkers, one of whom speaks in the name of the
    rest. The youth thus instructed and principled, are delivered to her in
    a body, by the hands of Silenus; and then admitted to taste the cup of
    the Magus her high-priest, which causes a total oblivion of all
    obligations, divine, civil, moral, or rational. To these her adepts she
    sends priests, attendants, and comforters, of various kinds; confers on
    them orders and degrees; and then dismissing them with a speech,
    confirming to each his privileges, and telling what she expects from
    each, concludes with a yawn of extraordinary virtue: the progress and
    effects whereof on all orders of men, and the consummation of all, in
    the restoration of Night and Chaos, conclude the poem.


    Yet, yet a moment, one dim ray of light
    Indulge, dread Chaos, and eternal Night!
    Of darkness visible so much be lent,
    As half to show, half veil the deep intent.
    Ye Powers! whose mysteries restored I sing,
    To whom Time bears me on his rapid wing,
    Suspend a while your force inertly strong,
    Then take at once the poet and the song.


    Now flamed the dog-star's unpropitious ray,
    Smote every brain, and wither'd every bay; 10
    Sick was the sun, the owl forsook his bower,
    The moon-struck prophet felt the madding hour:
    Then rose the seed of Chaos, and of Night,
    To blot out order, and extinguish light,
    Of dull and venal a new world to mould,
    And bring Saturnian days of lead and gold.


    She mounts the throne: her head a cloud conceal'd,
    In broad effulgence all below reveal'd,
    ('Tis thus aspiring Dulness ever shines),
    Soft on her lap her laureate son reclines. 20


    Beneath her foot-stool, Science groans in chains,
    And Wit dreads exile, penalties and pains.
    There foam'd rebellious Logic, gagg'd and bound,
    There, stripp'd, fair Rhetoric languish'd on the ground;
    His blunted arms by Sophistry are borne,
    And shameless Billingsgate her robes adorn.
    Morality, by her false guardians drawn.
    Chicane in furs, and Casuistry in lawn,
    Gasps, as they straiten at each end the cord,
    And dies, when Dulness gives her page the word. 30
    Mad Mathesis[380] alone was unconfined,
    Too mad for mere material chains to bind,
    Now to pure space[381] lifts her ecstatic stare,
    Now running round the circle, finds it square.[382]
    But held in tenfold bonds the Muses lie,
    Watch'd both by Envy's and by Flattery's eye:
    There to her heart sad Tragedy address'd
    The dagger wont to pierce the tyrant's breast;
    But sober History restrain'd her rage,
    And promised vengeance on a barbarous age. 40
    There sunk Thalia, nerveless, cold, and dead,
    Had not her sister Satire held her head:
    Nor could'st thou, Chesterfield![383] a tear refuse,
    Thou wept'st, and with thee wept each gentle Muse.


    When, lo! a harlot form[384] soft sliding by,
    With mincing step, small voice, and languid eye:
    Foreign her air, her robe's discordant pride
    In patchwork fluttering, and her head aside:
    By singing peers upheld on either hand,
    She tripp'd and laugh'd, too pretty much to stand; 50
    Cast on the prostrate Nine a scornful look,
    Then thus in quaint recitative spoke:


    'O Cara! Cara! silence all that train:
    Joy to great Chaos! let division reign:[385]
    Chromatic[386] tortures soon shall drive them hence,
    Break all their nerves, and fritter all their sense:
    One trill shall harmonise joy, grief, and rage,
    Wake the dull church, and lull the ranting stage;[387]
    To the same notes thy sons shall hum, or snore,
    And all thy yawning daughters cry, Encore! 60
    Another Phoebus, thy own Phoebus, reigns,
    Joys in my jigs, and dances in my chains.
    But soon, ah soon, rebellion will commence,
    If music meanly borrows aid from sense:
    Strong in new arms, lo! giant Handel stands,
    Like bold Briareus, with a hundred hands;
    To stir, to rouse, to shake the soul he comes,
    And Jove's own thunders follow Mars's drums.
    Arrest him, empress; or you sleep no more'—
    She heard, and drove him to the Hibernian shore. 70


    And now had Fame's posterior trumpet blown,
    And all the nations summon'd to the throne.
    The young, the old, who feel her inward sway,
    One instinct seizes, and transports away.
    None need a guide, by sure attraction led,
    And strong impulsive gravity of head;
    None want a place, for all their centre found,
    Hung to the goddess, and cohered around.
    Not closer, orb in orb, conglobed are seen
    The buzzing bees about their dusky queen. 80


    The gathering number, as it moves along,
    Involves a vast involuntary throng,
    Who, gently drawn, and struggling less and less,
    Roll in her vortex, and her power confess.
    Not those alone who passive own her laws,
    But who, weak rebels, more advance her cause.
    Whate'er of dunce in college or in town
    Sneers at another, in toupee or gown;
    Whate'er of mongrel no one class admits,
    A wit with dunces, and a dunce with wits. 90


    Nor absent they, no members of her state,
    Who pay her homage in her sons, the great;
    Who, false to Phoebus, bow the knee to Baal;
    Or, impious, preach his word without a call.
    Patrons, who sneak from living worth to dead,
    Withhold the pension, and set up the head;
    Or vest dull flattery in the sacred gown;
    Or give from fool to fool the laurel crown.
    And (last and worst) with all the cant of wit,
    Without the soul, the Muse's hypocrite. 100


    There march'd the bard and blockhead, side by side,
    Who rhymed for hire, and patronised for pride.
    Narcissus,[388] praised with all a parson's power,
    Look'd a white lily sunk beneath a shower.
    There moved Montalto with superior air;
    His stretch'd-out arm display'd a volume fair;
    Courtiers and patriots in two ranks divide,
    Through both he pass'd, and bow'd from side to side;
    But as in graceful act, with awful eye
    Composed he stood, bold Benson[389] thrust him by: 110
    On two unequal crutches propp'd he came,
    Milton's on this, on that one Johnston's name.
    The decent knight[390] retired with sober rage,
    Withdrew his hand, and closed the pompous page.
    But (happy for him as the times went then)
    Appear'd Apollo's mayor and aldermen,
    On whom three hundred gold-capp'd youths await,
    To lug the ponderous volume off in state.


    When Dulness, smiling—'Thus revive the wits!
    But murder first, and mince them all to bits; 120
    As erst Medea (cruel, so to save!)
    A new edition of old Aeson gave;
    Let standard authors, thus, like trophies borne,
    Appear more glorious as more hack'd and torn.
    And you, my critics! in the chequer'd shade,
    Admire new light through holes yourselves have made.
    Leave not a foot of verse, a foot of stone,
    A page, a grave, that they can call their own;
    But spread, my sons, your glory thin or thick,
    On passive paper, or on solid brick. 130
    So by each bard an alderman[391] shall sit,
    A heavy lord shall hang at every wit,
    And while on Fame's triumphal car they ride,
    Some slave of mine be pinion'd to their side.'


    Now crowds on crowds around the goddess press,
    Each eager to present the first address.
    Dunce scorning dunce beholds the next advance,
    But fop shows fop superior complaisance.
    When, lo! a spectre rose, whose index-hand
    Held forth the virtue of the dreadful wand; 140
    His beaver'd brow a birchen garland wears,
    Dropping with infants' blood and mothers' tears.
    O'er every rein a shuddering horror runs;
    Eton and Winton shake through all their sons.
    All flesh is humbled, Westminster's bold race
    Shrink, and confess the genius of the place:
    The pale boy-senator yet tingling stands,
    And holds his breeches close with both his hands.


    Then thus: 'Since man from beast by words is known,
    Words are man's province, words we teach alone, 150
    When reason doubtful, like the Samian letter,[392]
    Points him two ways, the narrower is the better.
    Placed at the door of Learning, youth to guide,
    We never suffer it to stand too wide.
    To ask, to guess, to know, as they commence,
    As fancy opens the quick springs of sense,
    We ply the memory, we load the brain,
    Bind rebel wit, and double chain on chain,
    Confine the thought, to exercise the breath,
    And keep them in the pale of words till death. 160
    Whate'er the talents, or howe'er design'd,
    We hang one jingling padlock on the mind:
    A poet the first day he dips his quill;
    And what the last? a very poet still.
    Pity! the charm works only in our wall,
    Lost, lost too soon in yonder House or Hall.[393]
    There truant Wyndham every Muse gave o'er,
    There Talbot sunk, and was a wit no more!
    How sweet an Ovid, Murray was our boast!
    How many Martials were in Pulteney lost! 170
    Else sure some bard, to our eternal praise,
    In twice ten thousand rhyming nights and days,
    Had reach'd the work, the all that mortal can,
    And South beheld that master-piece of man.'[394]


    'Oh (cried the goddess) for some pedant reign!
    Some gentle James,[395] to bless the land again;
    To stick the doctor's chair into the throne,
    Give law to words, or war with words alone,
    Senates and courts with Greek and Latin rule,
    And turn the council to a grammar school! 180
    For sure, if Dulness sees a grateful day,
    'Tis in the shade of arbitrary sway.
    Oh! if my sons may learn one earthly thing,
    Teach but that one, sufficient for a king;
    That which my priests, and mine alone, maintain,
    Which as it dies or lives, we fall or reign:
    May you, may Cam and Isis, preach it long!
    “The right divine of kings to govern wrong.”'


    Prompt at the call, around the goddess roll
    Broad hats, and hoods, and caps, a sable shoal: 190
    Thick and more thick the black blockade extends,
    A hundred head of Aristotle's friends.
    Nor wert thou, Isis! wanting to the day,
    Though Christ-church long kept prudishly away.
    Each stanch polemic, stubborn as a rock,
    Each fierce logician, still expelling Locke,[396]
    Came whip and spur, and dash'd through thin and thick
    On German Crousaz,[397] and Dutch Burgersdyck.
    As many quit the streams[398] that murmuring fall
    To lull the sons of Margaret and Clare-hall, 200
    Where Bentley late tempestuous wont to sport
    In troubled waters, but now sleeps in port.[399]
    Before them march'd that awful Aristarch!
    Plough'd was his front with many a deep remark:
    His hat, which never vail'd to human pride,
    Walker with reverence took, and laid aside.
    Low bow'd the rest: he, kingly, did but nod;
    So upright Quakers please both man and God.
    'Mistress! dismiss that rabble from your throne:
    Avaunt! is Aristarchus yet unknown? 210
    Thy mighty scholiast, whose unwearied pains
    Made Horace dull, and humbled Milton's strains.
    Turn what they will to verse, their toil is vain,
    Critics like me shall make it prose again.
    Roman and Greek grammarians! know your better,
    Author of something yet more great than letter;[400]
    While towering o'er your alphabet, like Saul,
    Stands our digamma,[401] and o'ertops them all.


    ''Tis true, on words is still our whole debate,
    Disputes of me or te, of aut or at, 220
    To sound or sink in cano, O or A,
    Or give up Cicero[402] to C or K.
    Let Freind[403] affect to speak as Terence spoke,
    And Alsop never but like Horace joke:
    For me, what Virgil, Pliny, may deny,
    Manilius or Solinus[404] shall supply:
    For Attic phrase in Plato let them seek,
    I poach in Suidas[405] for unlicensed Greek.
    In ancient sense if any needs will deal,
    Be sure I give them fragments, not a meal; 230
    What Gellius or Stobaeus hash'd before,
    Or chew'd by blind old scholiasts o'er and o'er,
    The critic eye, that microscope of wit,
    Sees hairs and pores, examines bit by bit:
    How parts relate to parts, or they to whole,
    The body's harmony, the beaming soul,
    Are things which Kuster, Burman, Wasse shall see,
    When Man's whole frame is obvious to a flea.


    'Ah, think not, mistress! more true Dulness lies
    In Folly's cap, than Wisdom's grave disguise; 240
    Like buoys, that never sink into the flood,
    On Learning's surface we but lie and nod.
    Thine is the genuine head of many a house,
    And much divinity[406] without a [Greek: Nous].
    Nor could a Barrow work on every block,
    Nor has one Atterbury spoil'd the flock.
    See! still thy own, the heavy cannon roll,
    And metaphysic smokes involve the pole.
    For thee we dim the eyes, and stuff the head
    With all such reading as was never read: 250
    For thee explain a thing till all men doubt it,
    And write about it, goddess, and about it:
    So spins the silk-worm small its slender store,
    And labours till it clouds itself all o'er.


    'What though we let some better sort of fool
    Thrid every science, run through every school?
    Never by tumbler through the hoops was shown
    Such skill in passing all, and touching none.
    He may indeed (if sober all this time)
    Plague with dispute, or persecute with rhyme. 260
    We only furnish what he cannot use,
    Or wed to what he must divorce, a Muse:
    Full in the midst of Euclid dip at once,
    And petrify a genius to a dunce;[407]
    Or, set on metaphysic ground to prance,
    Show all his paces, not a step advance.
    With the same cement, ever sure to bind,
    We bring to one dead level every mind.
    Then take him to develop, if you can,
    And hew the block off,[408] and get out the man. 270
    But wherefore waste I words? I see advance
    Whore, pupil, and laced governor from France.
    Walker! our hat,'—nor more he deign'd to say,
    But, stern as Ajax' spectre,[409] strode away.


    In flow'd at once a gay embroider'd race,
    And tittering push'd the pedants off the place:
    Some would have spoken, but the voice was drown'd
    By the French horn, or by the opening hound.
    The first came forwards,[410] with an easy mien,
    As if he saw St James's[411] and the queen; 280
    When thus the attendant orator begun:
    'Receive, great empress! thy accomplish'd son:
    Thine from the birth, and sacred from the rod,
    A dauntless infant! never scared with God.
    The sire saw, one by one, his virtues wake:
    The mother begg'd the blessing of a rake.
    Thou gav'st that ripeness which so soon began,
    And ceased so soon—he ne'er was boy nor man;
    Through school and college, thy kind cloud o'ercast,
    Safe and unseen the young AEneas pass'd: 290
    Thence bursting glorious, all at once let down,
    Stunn'd with his giddy 'larum half the town.
    Intrepid then, o'er seas and lands he flew:
    Europe he saw, and Europe saw him too.
    There all thy gifts and graces we display,
    Thou, only thou, directing all our way,
    To where the Seine, obsequious as she runs,
    Pours at great Bourbon's feet her silken sons;
    Or Tiber, now no longer Roman, rolls,
    Vain of Italian arts, Italian souls: 300
    To happy convents, bosom'd deep in vines,
    Where slumber abbots, purple as their wines:
    To isles of fragrance, lily-silver'd vales,[412]
    Diffusing languor in the panting gales:
    To lands of singing or of dancing slaves,
    Love-whispering woods, and lute-resounding waves.
    But chief her shrine where naked Venus keeps,
    And Cupids ride the lion of the deeps;[413]
    Where, eased of fleets, the Adriatic main
    Wafts the smooth eunuch and enamour'd swain, 310
    Led by my hand, he saunter'd Europe round,
    And gather'd every vice on Christian ground;
    Saw every court, heard every king declare
    His royal sense of operas or the fair;
    The stews and palace equally explored,
    Intrigued with glory, and with spirit whored;
    Tried all hors-d'oeuvres, all liqueurs defined,
    Judicious drank, and greatly-daring dined;[414]
    Dropp'd the dull lumber of the Latin store,
    Spoil'd his own language, and acquired no more; 320
    All classic learning lost on classic ground;
    And last turned air, the echo of a sound!
    See now, half-cured, and perfectly well-bred,
    With nothing but a solo in his head;
    As much estate, and principle, and wit,
    As Jansen, Fleetwood, Cibber[415] shall think fit;
    Stolen from a duel, follow'd by a nun,
    And, if a borough choose him, not undone;
    See, to my country happy I restore
    This glorious youth, and add one Venus more. 330
    Her too receive (for her my soul adores),
    So may the sons of sons of sons of whores
    Prop thine, O empress! like each neighbour throne,
    And make a long posterity thy own.'
    Pleased, she accepts the hero, and the dame
    Wraps in her veil, and frees from sense of shame.


    Then look'd, and saw a lazy, lolling sort,
    Unseen at church, at senate, or at court,
    Of ever-listless loiterers that attend
    No cause, no trust, no duty, and no friend. 340
    Thee, too, my Paridel![416] she marked thee there,
    Stretch'd on the rack of a too easy chair,
    And heard thy everlasting yawn confess
    The pains and penalties of idleness.
    She pitied! but her pity only shed
    Benigner influence on thy nodding head.
    But Annius,[417] crafty seer, with ebon wand,
    And well-dissembled emerald on his hand,
    False as his gems, and canker'd as his coins,
    Came, cramm'd with capon, from where Pollio dines. 350
    Soft, as the wily fox is seen to creep,
    Where bask on sunny banks the simple sheep,
    Walk round and round, now prying here, now there,
    So he; but pious, whisper'd first his prayer.


    'Grant, gracious goddess! grant me still to cheat,[418]
    Oh may thy cloud still cover the deceit!
    Thy choicer mists on this assembly shed,
    But pour them thickest on the noble head.
    So shall each youth, assisted by our eyes,
    See other Caesars, other Homers rise; 360
    Through twilight ages hunt the Athenian fowl,[419]
    Which Chalcis gods, and mortals call an owl,
    Now see an Attys, now a Cecrops[420] clear,
    Nay, Mahomet! the pigeon at thine ear;
    Be rich in ancient brass, though not in gold,
    And keep his Lares, though his house be sold;
    To headless Phoebe his fair bride postpone,
    Honour a Syrian prince above his own;
    Lord of an Otho, if I vouch it true;
    Bless'd in one Niger, till he knows of two.' 370


    Mummius[421] o'erheard him; Mummius, fool-renown'd,
    Who like his Cheops[422] stinks above the ground,
    Fierce as a startled adder, swell'd, and said,
    Rattling an ancient sistrum at his head;


    'Speak'st thou of Syrian prince?[423] Traitor base!
    Mine, goddess! mine is all the horned race.
    True, he had wit to make their value rise;
    From foolish Greeks to steal them was as wise;
    More glorious yet, from barbarous hands to keep,
    When Sallee rovers chased him on the deep. 380
    Then, taught by Hermes, and divinely bold,
    Down his own throat he risk'd the Grecian gold,
    Received each demi-god, with pious care,
    Deep in his entrails—I revered them there,
    I bought them, shrouded in that Irving shrine,
    And, at their second birth, they issue mine.'


    'Witness, great Ammon![424] by whose horns I swore,
    (Replied soft Annius) this our paunch before
    Still bears them, faithful; and that thus I eat,
    Is to refund the medals with the meat. 390
    To prove me, goddess! clear of all design,
    Bid me with Pollio sup, as well as dine:
    There all the learn'd shall at the labour stand,
    And Douglas[425] lend his soft, obstetric hand.'


    The goddess smiling seem'd to give consent;
    So back to Pollio, hand in hand, they went.


    Then thick as locusts blackening all the ground,
    A tribe, with weeds and shells fantastic crown'd,
    Each with some wondrous gift approach'd the power,
    A nest, a toad, a fungus, or a flower. 400
    But far the foremost, two, with earnest zeal,
    And aspect ardent, to the throne appeal.


    The first thus open'd: 'Hear thy suppliant's call,
    Great queen, and common mother of us all!
    Fair from its humble bed I rear'd this flower,
    Suckled, and cheer'd, with air, and sun, and shower;
    Soft on the paper ruff its leaves I spread,
    Bright with the gilded button tipp'd its head;
    Then throned in glass, and named it Caroline:[426]
    Each maid cried, charming! and each youth, divine! 410
    Did Nature's pencil ever blend such rays,
    Such varied light in one promiscuous blaze?
    Now prostrate! dead! behold that Caroline:
    No maid cries, charming! and no youth, divine!
    And lo, the wretch! whose vile, whose insect lust
    Laid this gay daughter of the spring in dust.
    Oh, punish him, or to th' Elysian shades
    Dismiss my soul, where no carnation fades.'
    He ceased, and wept. With innocence of mien,
    Th' accused stood forth, and thus address'd the queen: 420


    'Of all th' enamell'd race, whose silvery wing
    Waves to the tepid zephyrs of the spring,
    Or swims along the fluid atmosphere,
    Once brightest shined this child of heat and air.
    I saw, and started, from its vernal bower,
    The rising game, and chased from flower to flower;
    It fled, I follow'd; now in hope, now pain;
    It stopp'd, I stopp'd; it moved, I moved again.
    At last it fix'd; 'twas on what plant it pleased,
    And where it fix'd, the beauteous bird I seized: 430
    Rose or carnation was below my care;
    I meddle, goddess! only in my sphere.
    I tell the naked fact without disguise,
    And, to excuse it, need but show the prize;
    Whose spoils this paper offers to your eye,
    Fair ev'n in death! this peerless butterfly.'


    'My sons! (she answer'd) both have done your parts:
    Live happy both, and long promote our arts.
    But hear a mother, when she recommends
    To your fraternal care our sleeping friends. 440
    The common soul, of Heaven's more frugal make,
    Serves but to keep fools pert and knaves awake:
    A drowsy watchman, that just gives a knock,
    And breaks our rest, to tell us what's a clock.
    Yet by some object every brain is stirr'd;
    The dull may waken to a humming-bird;
    The most recluse, discreetly open'd, find
    Congenial matter in the cockle-kind;
    The mind in metaphysics at a loss,
    May wander in a wilderness of moss;[427] 450
    The head that turns at super-lunar things,
    Poised with a tail, may steer on Wilkins' wings.[428]


    'Oh! would the sons of men once think their eyes
    And reason given them but to study flies!
    See nature in some partial narrow shape,
    And let the Author of the whole escape:
    Learn but to trifle; or, who most observe,
    To wonder at their Maker, not to serve.'


    'Be that my task' (replies a gloomy clerk,
    Sworn foe to mystery, yet divinely dark; 460
    Whose pious hope aspires to see the day
    When moral evidence[429] shall quite decay,
    And damns implicit faith, and holy lies,
    Prompt to impose, and fond to dogmatise:)
    'Let others creep by timid steps and slow,
    On plain experience lay foundations low,
    By common sense to common knowledge bred,
    And last, to Nature's cause through Nature led:
    All-seeing in thy mists, we want no guide,
    Mother of arrogance, and source of pride! 470
    We nobly take the high priori road,[430]
    And reason downward, till we doubt of God:
    Make Nature still[431] encroach upon his plan;
    And shove him off as far as e'er we can:
    Thrust some mechanic cause into his place;
    Or bind in matter, or diffuse in space.[432]
    Or, at one bound o'erleaping all his laws,
    Make God man's image, man the final cause,
    Find virtue local, all relation scorn,
    See all in self, and but for self be born: 480
    Of nought so certain as our reason still,
    Of nought so doubtful as of soul and will.
    O! hide the God still more! and make us see,
    Such as Lucretius drew, a God like thee:
    Wrapt up in self, a God without a thought,
    Regardless of our merit or default.
    Or that bright image[433] to our fancy draw,
    Which Theocles[434] in raptured vision saw,
    While through poetic scenes the genius roves,
    Or wanders wild in academic groves; 490
    That Nature our society adores,[435]
    Where Tindal dictates, and Silenus[436] snores.'


    Roused at his name, up rose the bousy sire,
    And shook from out his pipe the seeds of fire;
    Then snapt his box, and stroked his belly down:
    Rosy and reverend, though without a gown.
    Bland and familiar to the throne he came,
    Led up the youth, and call'd the goddess dame.
    Then thus: 'From priestcraft happily set free,
    Lo! every finish'd son returns to thee: 500
    First, slave to words,[437] then vassal to a name,
    Then dupe to party; child and man the same;
    Bounded by nature, narrow'd still by art,
    A trifling head, and a contracted heart;
    Thus bred, thus taught, how many have I seen,
    Smiling on all, and smiled on by a queen?[438]
    Mark'd out for honours, honour'd for their birth,
    To thee the most rebellious things on earth:
    Now to thy gentle shadow all are shrunk,
    All melted down in pension or in punk! 510
    So K——, so B——sneak'd into the grave,
    A monarch's half, and half a harlot's slave.
    Poor W——,[439] nipp'd in folly's broadest bloom,
    Who praises now? his chaplain on his tomb.
    Then take them all, oh, take them to thy breast!
    Thy Magus, goddess! shall perform the rest.'


    With that, a wizard old his cup extends,
    Which whoso tastes forgets his former friends,
    Sire, ancestors, himself. One casts his eyes
    Up to a star, and like Endymion dies: 520
    A feather, shooting from another's head,
    Extracts his brain, and principle is fled;
    Lost is his God, his country, everything;
    And nothing left but homage to a king![440]
    The vulgar herd turn off to roll with hogs,
    To run with horses, or to hunt with dogs;
    But, sad example! never to escape
    Their infamy, still keep the human shape.
    But she, good goddess, sent to every child
    Firm Impudence, or Stupefaction mild; 530
    And strait succeeded, leaving shame no room,
    Cibberian forehead, or Cimmerian gloom.


    Kind Self-conceit to some her glass applies,
    Which no one looks in with another's eyes:
    But as the flatterer or dependant paint,
    Beholds himself a patriot, chief, or saint.


    On others Interest her gay livery flings,
    Interest, that waves on party-colour'd wings:
    Turn'd to the sun, she casts a thousand dyes,
    And, as she turns, the colours fall or rise. 540


    Others the Syren sisters warble round,
    And empty heads console with empty sound.
    No more, alas! the voice of fame they hear,
    The balm of Dulness[441] trickling in their ear.
    Great C——, H——, P——, R——, K——,
    Why all your toils? your sons have learn'd to sing.
    How quick ambition hastes to ridicule!
    The sire is made a peer, the son a fool.


    On some, a priest succinct in amice white
    Attends; all flesh is nothing in his sight! 550
    Beeves, at his touch, at once to jelly turn,
    And the huge boar is shrunk into an urn:
    The board with specious miracles he loads,[442]
    Turns hares to larks, and pigeons into toads.
    Another (for in all what one can shine?)
    Explains the seve and verdeur of the vine.[443]
    What cannot copious sacrifice atone?
    Thy truffles, Perigord! thy hams, Bayonne!
    With French libation, and Italian strain,
    Wash Bladen white, and expiate Hays's stain.[444] 560
    Knight lifts the head; for what are crowds undone
    To three essential partridges in one?
    Gone every blush, and silent all reproach,
    Contending princes mount them in their coach.


    Next bidding all draw near on bended knees,
    The queen confers her titles and degrees.
    Her children first of more distinguish'd sort,
    Who study Shakspeare at the Inns of Court,
    Impale a glow-worm, or vertu profess,
    Shine in the dignity of F.R.S. 570
    Some, deep freemasons, join the silent race,
    Worthy to fill Pythagoras's place:
    Some botanists, or florists at the least,
    Or issue members of an annual feast.
    Nor pass'd the meanest unregarded; one
    Rose a Gregorian, one a Gormogon.[445]
    The last, not least in honour or applause,
    Isis and Cam made Doctors of her Laws.


    Then, blessing all, 'Go, children of my care!
    To practice now from theory repair. 580
    All my commands are easy, short, and full:
    My sons! be proud, be selfish, and be dull.
    Guard my prerogative, assert my throne:
    This nod confirms each privilege your own.
    The cap and switch be sacred to his grace;
    With staff and pumps the marquis lead the race;
    From stage to stage the licensed earl may run,
    Pair'd with his fellow-charioteer the sun;
    The learned baron butterflies design,
    Or draw to silk Arachne's subtile line;[446] 590
    The judge to dance his brother sergeant call;[447]
    The senator at cricket urge the ball;
    The bishop stow (pontific luxury!)
    An hundred souls of turkeys in a pie;
    The sturdy squire to Gallic masters stoop,
    And drown his lands and manors in a soup.
    Others import yet nobler arts from France,
    Teach kings to fiddle, and make senates dance.[448]
    Perhaps more high some daring son may soar,
    Proud to my list to add one monarch more; 600
    And nobly conscious, princes are but things
    Born for first ministers, as slaves for kings,
    Tyrant supreme! shall three estates command,
    And MAKE ONE MIGHTY DUNCIAD OF THE LAND!'


    More she had spoke, but yawn'd—All Nature nods:
    What mortal can resist the yawn of gods?
    Churches and chapels instantly it reach'd;
    (St James's first, for leaden Gilbert[449] preach'd;)
    Then catch'd the schools; the Hall scarce kept awake;
    The Convocation gaped, but could not speak; 610
    Lost was the nation's sense, nor could be found,
    While the long solemn unison went round:
    Wide, and more wide, it spread o'er all the realm;
    Even Palinurus nodded at the helm:
    The vapour mild o'er each committee crept;
    Unfinish'd treaties in each office slept;
    And chiefless armies dozed out the campaign;
    And navies yawn'd for orders on the main.[450]


    O Muse! relate (for you can tell alone,
    Wits have short memories, and dunces none,) 620
    Relate, who first, who last resign'd to rest;
    Whose heads she partly, whose completely bless'd;
    What charms could faction, what ambition, lull,
    The venal quiet, and entrance the dull;
    'Till drown'd was sense, and shame, and right, and wrong—
    O sing, and hush the nations with thy song!


    In vain, in vain,—the all-composing hour
    Resistless falls: the Muse obeys the power.
    She comes! she comes! the sable throne behold
    Of Night primeval, and of Chaos old! 630
    Before her, Fancy's gilded clouds decay,
    And all its varying rainbows die away.
    Wit shoots in vain its momentary fires,
    The meteor drops, and in a flash expires.
    As one by one, at dread Medea's strain,
    The sick'ning stars fade off the ethereal plain;
    As Argus' eyes, by Hermes' wand oppress'd,
    Closed one by one to everlasting rest;
    Thus at her felt approach, and secret might,
    Art after art goes out, and all is night. 640
    See skulking Truth to her old cavern fled,[451]
    Mountains of casuistry heap'd o'er her head!
    Philosophy, that lean'd on heaven before,
    Shrinks to her second cause, and is no more.
    Physic of Metaphysic begs defence,
    And Metaphysic calls for aid on Sense!
    See Mystery to Mathematics fly!
    In vain! they gaze, turn giddy, rave, and die.
    Religion, blushing, veils her sacred fires,
    And unawares Morality expires. 650
    Nor public flame, nor private, dares to shine;
    Nor human spark is left, nor glimpse divine!
    Lo! thy dread empire, Chaos! is restored;
    Light dies before thy uncreating word:
    Thy hand, great Anarch! lets the curtain fall;
    And universal darkness buries all.



    VARIATIONS.


    VER. 114—


    'What! no respect, he cried, for Shakspeare's page?'


    VER. 441. The common soul, &c. In the first edition, thus—


    Of souls the greater part, Heaven's common make,
    Serve but to keep fools pert, and knaves awake;
    And most but find that sentinel of God,
    A drowsy watchman in the land of Nod.


    VER. 643. In the former edition, it stood thus—


    Philosophy, that reach'd the heavens before,
    Shrinks to her hidden cause, and is no more.



    BY THE AUTHOR.


    A DECLARATION.


    Whereas certain haberdashers of points and particles, being instigated
    by the spirit of pride, and assuming to themselves the name of critics
    and restorers, have taken upon them to adulterate the common and current
    sense of our glorious ancestors, poets of this realm, by clipping,
    coining, defacing the images, mixing their own base alloy, or otherwise
    falsifying the same; which they publish, utter, and vend as genuine: The
    said haberdashers having no right thereto, as neither heirs, executors,
    administrators, assigns, or in any sort related to such poets, to all or
    any of them: Now we, having carefully revised this our Dunciad,[452]
    beginning with the words 'The Mighty Mother,' and ending with the words
    'buries all,' containing the entire sum of one thousand seven hundred
    and fifty-four verses, declare every word, figure, point, and comma of
    this impression to be authentic: And do therefore strictly enjoin and
    forbid any person or persons whatsoever, to erase, reverse, put between
    hooks, or by any other means, directly or indirectly, change or mangle
    any of them. And we do hereby earnestly exhort all our brethren to
    follow this our example, which we heartily wish our great predecessors
    had heretofore set, as a remedy and prevention of all such abuses.
    Provided always, that nothing in this Declaration shall be construed to
    limit the lawful and undoubted right of every subject of this realm, to
    judge, censure, or condemn, in the whole or in part, any poem or poet
    whatsoever.


    Given under our hand at London, this third day of January, in the year
    of our Lord one thousand seven hundred thirty and two.


    Declarat' cor' me,
    JOHN BARBER, Mayor.






    APPENDIX TO THE DUNCIAD.



    I.—PREFACE


    PREFIXED TO THE FIVE FIRST IMPERFECT EDITIONS OF THE DUNCIAD, IN THREE
    BOOKS, PRINTED AT DUBLIN AND LONDON, IN OCTAVO AND DUODECIMO, 1727.


    THE PUBLISHER TO THE READER.


    It will be found a true observation, though somewhat surprising, that
    when any scandal is vented against a man of the highest distinction and
    character, either in the state or in literature, the public in general
    afford it a most quiet reception; and the larger part accept it as
    favourably as if it were some kindness done to themselves: whereas, if a
    known scoundrel or blockhead but chance to be touched upon, a whole
    legion is up in arms, and it becomes the common cause of all scribblers,
    booksellers, and printers whatsoever.


    Not to search too deeply into the reason hereof, I will only observe as
    a fact, that every week for these two months past, the town has been
    persecuted with pamphlets, advertisements, letters, and weekly essays,
    not only against the wit and writings, but against the character and
    person of Mr Pope. And that of all those men who have received pleasure
    from his works, which by modest computation may be about a hundred
    thousand in these kingdoms of England and Ireland (not to mention
    Jersey, Guernsey, the Orcades, those in the new world, and foreigners
    who have translated him into their languages), of all this number not a
    man hath stood up to say one word in his defence.


    The only exception is the author of the following poem, who, doubtless,
    had either a better insight into the grounds of this clamour, or a
    better opinion of Mr Pope's integrity, joined with a greater personal
    love for him, than any other of his numerous friends and admirers.


    Further, that he was in his peculiar intimacy, appears from the
    knowledge he manifests of the most private authors of all the anonymous
    pieces against him, and from his having in this poem attacked no man
    living, who had not before printed or published some scandal against
    this gentleman.


    How I came possessed of it is no concern to the reader; but it would
    have been a wrong to him had I detained the publication, since those
    names which are its chief ornaments die off daily so fast, as must
    render it too soon unintelligible. If it provoke the author to give us a
    more perfect edition, I have my end.


    Who he is I cannot say, and (which is a great pity) there is certainly
    nothing in his style and manner of writing which can distinguish or
    discover him: for if it bears any resemblance to that of Mr Pope, 'tis
    not improbable but it might be done on purpose, with a view to have it
    pass for his. But by the frequency of his allusions to Virgil, and a
    laboured (not to say affected) shortness in imitation of him, I should
    think him more an admirer of the Roman poet than of the Grecian, and in
    that not of the same taste with his friend.


    I have been well informed, that this work was the labour of full six
    years of his life, and that he wholly retired himself from all the
    avocations and pleasures of the world, to attend diligently to its
    correction and perfection; and six years more he intended to bestow upon
    it, as it should seem by this verse of Statius, which was cited at the
    head of his manuscript—


    'Oh mihi bissenos multum vigilata per annos,
    Duncia!'


    Hence, also, we learn the true title of the poem; which, with the same
    certainty as we call that of Homer the Iliad, of Virgil the Aeneid, of
    Camoens the Lusiad, we may pronounce, could have been, and can be no
    other than


    THE DUNCIAD.


    It is styled heroic, as being doubly so: not only with respect to its
    nature, which, according to the best rules of the ancients, and
    strictest ideas of the moderns, is critically such; but also with regard
    to the heroical disposition and high courage of the writer, who dared to
    stir up such a formidable, irritable, and implacable race of mortals.


    There may arise some obscurity in chronology from the names in the poem,
    by the inevitable removal of some authors, and insertion of others in
    their niches. For whoever will consider the unity of the whole design,
    will be sensible that the poem was not made for these authors, but these
    authors for the poem. I should judge that they were clapped in as they
    rose, fresh and fresh, and changed from day to day; in like manner as
    when the old boughs wither, we thrust new ones into a chimney.


    I would not have the reader too much troubled or anxious, if he cannot
    decipher them; since when he shall have found them out, he will probably
    know no more of the persons than before.


    Yet we judged it better to preserve them as they are, than to change
    them for fictitious names; by which the satire would only be multiplied,
    and applied to many instead of one. Had the hero, for instance, been
    called Codrus, how many would have affirmed him to have been Mr T., Mr
    E., Sir R. B., &c.; but now all that unjust scandal is saved by calling
    him by a name, which by good luck happens to be that of a real person.



    II.—A LIST OF BOOKS, PAPERS, AND VERSES,


    IN WHICH OUR AUTHOR WAS ABUSED, BEFORE THE PUBLICATION OF THE DUNCIAD;
    WITH THE TRUE NAMES OF THE AUTHORS.


    Reflections Critical and Satirical on a late Rhapsody, called an Essay
    on Criticism. By Mr Dennis. Printed by B. Lintot, price 6d.


    A New Rehearsal, or Bayes the Younger; containing an Examen of Mr Rowe's
    plays, and a word or two on Mr Pope's Rape of the Lock. Anon. [By
    Charles Gildon]. Printed for J. Roberts, 1714, price 1s.


    Homerides, or a Letter to Mr Pope, occasioned by his intended
    translation of Homer. By Sir Iliad Doggrel. [Tho. Burnet and G. Ducket,
    Esquires]. Printed for W. Wilkins, 1715, price 9d.


    Aesop at the Bear Garden; a Vision, in imitation of the Temple of Fame.
    By Mr Preston. Sold by John Morphew, 1715, price 6d.


    The Catholic Poet, or Protestant Barnaby's Sorrowful Lamentations; a
    Ballad about Homer's Iliad. By Mrs Centlivre and others, 1715, price 1d.


    An Epilogue to a Puppet Show at Bath, concerning the said Iliad. By
    George Ducket, Esq. Printed by E. Curll.


    A Complete Key to the What-d'ye-call-it? Anon. [By Griffin, a player,
    supervised by Mr Th—-]. Printed by J. Roberts, 1715.


    A True Character of Mr P. and his Writings, in a Letter to a Friend.
    Anon. [Dennis]. Printed for S. Popping, 1716, price 3d.


    The Confederates, a Farce. By Joseph Gay. [J. D. Breval]. Printed for R.
    Burleigh, 1717, price 1s.


    Remarks upon Mr Pope's Translation of Homer; with Two Letters concerning
    the Windsor Forest, and the Temple of Fame. By Mr Dennis. Printed for E.
    Curll, 1717, price 1s. 6d.


    Satires on the Translators of Homer, Mr P. and Mr T. Anon. [Bez.
    Morris]. 1717, price 6d.


    The Triumvirate; or, a Letter from Palaemon to Celia at Bath. Anon.
    [Leonard Welsted]. 1711, folio, price 1s.


    The Battle of Poets, an Heroic Poem. By Thomas Cooke. Printed for J.
    Roberts. Folio, 1725.


    Memoirs of Lilliput. Anon. [Eliza Haywood]. Octavo, printed in 1727.


    An Essay on Criticism, in Prose. By the Author of the Critical History
    of England [J. Oldmixon]. Octavo, printed 1728.


    Gulliveriana and Alexandriana; with an ample Preface and Critique on
    Swift and Pope's Miscellanies. By Jonathan Smedley. Printed by J.
    Roberts. Octavo, 1728.


    Characters of the Times; or, an Account of the Writings, Characters,
    &c., of several Gentlemen libelled by S——and P—-, in a late
    Miscellany. Octavo, 1728.


    Remarks on Mr Pope's Rape of the Lock, in Letters to a Friend. By Mr
    Dennis. Written in 1724, though not printed till 1728. Octavo.



    VERSES, LETTERS, ESSAYS, OR ADVERTISEMENTS, IN THE PUBLIC PRINTS.


    British Journal, Nov. 25, 1727. A Letter on Swift and Pope's
    Miscellanies. [Writ by M. Concanen].


    Daily Journal, March 18, 1728. A Letter by Philo-mauri. James Moore
    Smith.


    Ibid. March 29. A Letter about Thersites; accusing the author of
    disaffection to the Government. By James Moore Smith.


    Mist's Weekly Journal, March 30. An Essay on the Arts of a Poet's
    Sinking in Reputation; or, a Supplement to the Art of Sinking in Poetry.
    [Supposed by Mr Theobald].


    Daily Journal, April 3. A Letter under the name of Philo-ditto. By James
    Moore Smith.


    Flying Post, April 4. A Letter against Gulliver and Mr P. [By Mr
    Oldmixon.]


    Daily Journal, April 5. An Auction of Goods at Twickenham. By James
    Moore Smith.


    The Flying Post, April 6. A Fragment of a Treatise upon Swift and Pope.
    By Mr Oldmixon.


    The Senator, April 9. On the same. By Edward Roome.


    Daily Journal, April 8. Advertisement by James Moore Smith.


    Flying Post, April 13. Verses against Dr Swift, and against Mr P—-'s
    Homer. By J. Oldmixon.


    Daily Journal, April 23. Letter about the Translation of the Character
    of Thersites in Homer. By Thomas Cooke, &c.


    Mist's Weekly Journal, April 27. A Letter of Lewis Theobald.


    Daily Journal, May 11. A Letter against Mr P. at large. Anon. [John
    Dennis].


    All these were afterwards reprinted in a pamphlet, entitled, A
    Collection of all the Verses, Essays, Letters, and Advertisements,
    occasioned by Mr Pope and Swift's Miscellanies, prefaced by Concanen,
    Anonymous, octavo, and printed for A. Moore, 1728, price 1s. Others of
    an elder date, having lain as waste paper many years, were, upon the
    publication of the Dunciad, brought out, and their authors betrayed by
    the mercenary booksellers (in hope of some possibility of vending a
    few), by advertising them in this manner:—“The Confederates, a Farce.
    By Captain Breval (for which he was put into the Dunciad). An Epilogue
    to Powell's Puppet Show. By Colonel Ducket (for which he is put into the
    Dunciad). Essays, &c. By Sir Richard Blackmore. (N.B.—It was for a
    passage of this book that Sir Richard was put into the Dunciad).” And so
    of others.



    AFTER THE DUNCIAD, 1728.


    An Essay on the Dunciad, octavo. Printed for J. Roberts. [In this book,
    p. 9, it was formally declared, 'That the complaint of the aforesaid
    libels and advertisements was forged and untrue; that all mouths had
    been silent, except in Mr Pope's praise; and nothing against him
    published, but by Mr Theobald.']


    Sawney, in Blank Verse, occasioned by the Dunciad; with a Critique on
    that Poem. By J. Ralph [a person never mentioned in it at first, but
    inserted after]. Printed for J. Roberts, octavo.


    A Complete Key to the Dunciad. By E. Curll. 12mo, price 6d.


    A Second and Third Edition of the same, with Additions, 12mo.


    The Popiad. By E. Curll. Extracted from J. Dennis, Sir Richard
    Blackmore, &c. 12mo, price 6d.


    The Curliad. By the same E. Curll.


    The Female Dunciad. Collected by the same Mr Curll. 12mo, price 6d. With
    the Metamorphosis of P. into a Stinging Nettle. By Mr Foxton. 12mo.


    The Metamorphosis of Scriblerus into Snarlerus. By J. Smedley. Printed
    for A. Moore, folio, price 6d.


    The Dunciad Dissected. By Curll and Mrs Thomas. 12mo.


    An Essay on the Tastes and Writings of the Present Times. Said to be
    writ by a Gentleman of C. C. C. Oxon. Printed for J. Roberts, octavo.


    The Arts of Logic and Rhetoric, partly taken from Bouhours, with New
    Reflections, &c. By John Oldmixon. Octavo.


    Remarks on the Dunciad. By Mr Dennis. Dedicated to Theobald. Octavo.


    A Supplement to the Profund. Anon. By Matthew Coucanen. Octavo.


    Mist's Weekly Journal, June 8. A long Letter, signed W. A. Writ by some
    or other of the Club of Theobald, Dennis, Moore, Concanen, Cooke, who
    for some time held constant weekly meetings for these kind of
    performances.


    Daily Journal, June 11. A Letter signed Philoscriblerus, on the name of
    Pope. Letter to Mr Theobald, inverse, signed B. M. (Bezaleel Morris)
    against Mr P—-. Many other little Epigrams about this time in the same
    papers, by James Moore, and others.


    Mist's Journal, June 22. A Letter by Lewis Theobald.


    Flying Post, August 8. Letter on Pope and Swift.


    Daily Journal, August 8. Letter charging the Author of the Dunciad with
    Treason.


    Durgen: A Plain Satire on a Pompous Satirist. By Edward Ward, with a
    little of James Moore.


    Apollo's Maggot in his Cups. By E. Ward.


    Gulliveriana Secunda. Being a Collection of many of the Libels in the
    Newspapers, like the former Volume, under the same title, by Smedley.
    Advertised in the Craftsman, Nov. 9, 1728, with this remarkable promise,
    that 'any thing which any body should send as Mr Pope's or Dr
    Swift's should be inserted and published as theirs.'


    Pope Alexander's Supremacy and Infallibility Examined, &c. By George
    Ducket and John Dennis. Quarto.


    Dean Jonathan's Paraphrase on the Fourth Chapter of Genesis. Writ by E.
    Roome. Folio. 1729.


    Labeo. A Paper of Verses by Leonard Welsted, which after came into One
    Epistle
    , and was published by James Moore, quarto, 1730. Another part
    of it came out in Welsted's own name, under the just title of Dulness
    and Scandal, folio, 1731.


    There have been since published—


    Verses on the Imitator of Horace. By a Lady (or between a Lady, a Lord,
    and a Court-squire). Printed for J. Roberts. Folio.


    An Epistle from a Nobleman to a Doctor of Divinity, from Hampton Court
    (Lord H—-y). Printed for J. Roberts. Folio.


    A Letter from Mr Cibber to Mr Pope. Printed for W. Lewis in Covent
    Garden. Octavo.



    III.—ADVERTISEMENT TO THE FIRST EDITION—WITH NOTES,


    IN QUARTO, 1729.


    It will be sufficient to say of this edition, that the reader has here a
    much more correct and complete copy of the Dunciad than has hitherto
    appeared. I cannot answer but some mistakes may have slipped into it,
    but a vast number of others will be prevented by the names being now not
    only set at length, but justified by the authorities and reasons given.
    I make no doubt the author's own motive to use real rather than feigned
    names, was his care to preserve the innocent from any false application;
    whereas, in the former editions, which had no more than the initial
    letters, he was made, by Keys printed here, to hurt the inoffensive, and
    (what was worse) to abuse his friends, by an impression at Dublin.


    The commentary which attends this poem was sent me from several hands,
    and consequently must be unequally written; yet will have one advantage
    over most commentaries, that it is not made upon conjectures, or at a
    remote distance of time: and the reader cannot but derive one pleasure
    from the very obscurity of the persons it treats of, that it partakes of
    the nature of a secret, which most people love to be let into, though
    the men or the things be ever so inconsiderable or trivial.


    Of the persons it was judged proper to give some account; for since it
    is only in this monument that they must expect to survive (and here
    survive they will, as long as the English tongue shall remain such as it
    was in the reigns of Queen Anne and King George), it seemed but humanity
    to bestow a word or two upon each, just to tell what he was, what he
    writ, when he lived, and when he died.


    If a word or two more are added upon the chief offenders, it is only as
    a paper pinned upon the breast, to mark the enormities for which they
    suffered; lest the correction only should be remembered, and the crime
    forgotten. In some articles it was thought sufficient barely to
    transcribe from Jacob, Curll, and other writers of their own rank, who
    were much better acquainted with them than any of the authors of this
    comment can pretend to be. Most of them had drawn each other's
    characters on certain occasions; but the few here inserted are all that
    could be saved from the general destruction of such works.


    Of the part of Scriblerus, I need say nothing; his manner is well enough
    known, and approved by all but those who are too much concerned to be
    judges.


    The Imitations of the Ancients are added, to gratify those who either
    never read, or may have forgotten them; together with some of the
    parodies and allusions to the most excellent of the Moderns. If, from
    the frequency of the former, any man think the poem too much a Cento,
    our poet will but appear to have done the same thing in jest which
    Boileau did in earnest; and upon which Vida, Fracastorius, and many of
    the most eminent Latin poets, professedly valued themselves.



    IV.—ADVERTISEMENT TO THE FIRST EDITION OF THE FOURTH BOOK OF THE
    DUNCIAD,


    WHEN PRINTED SEPARATELY IN THE YEAR 1742.


    We apprehend it can be deemed no injury to the author of the three first
    books of the Dunciad that we publish this fourth. It was found merely by
    accident in taking a survey of the library of a late eminent nobleman;
    but in so blotted a condition, and in so many detached pieces, as
    plainly showed it to be not only incorrect, but unfinished. That the
    author of the three first books had a design to extend and complete his
    poem in this manner appears from the dissertation prefixed to it, where
    it is said that the design is more extensive, and that we may expect
    other episodes to complete it; and from the declaration in the argument
    to the third book, that the accomplishment of the prophecies therein
    would be the theme hereafter of a greater Dunciad. But whether or no he
    be the author of this, we declare ourselves ignorant. If he be, we are
    no more to be blamed for the publication of it than Tucca and Varius for
    that of the last six books of the Aeneid, though perhaps inferior to the
    former.


    If any person be possessed of a more perfect copy of this work, or of
    any other fragments of it, and will communicate them to the publisher,
    we shall make the next edition more complete: in which we also promise
    to insert any criticisms that shall be published (if at all to the
    purpose) with the names of the authors; or any letters sent us (though
    not to the purpose) shall yet be printed under the title of Epistolae
    Obscurorum Virorum
    ; which, together with some others of the same kind
    formerly laid by for that end, may make no unpleasant addition to the
    future impressions of this poem.



    V.—ADVERTISEMENT TO THE COMPLETE EDITION of 1743.


    I have long had a design of giving some sort of Notes on the works of
    this poet. Before I had the happiness of his acquaintance, I had written
    a commentary on his Essay on Man, and have since finished another on the
    Essay on Criticism. There was one already on the Dunciad, which had met
    with general approbation; but I still thought some additions were
    wanting (of a more serious kind) to the humorous notes of Scriblerus,
    and even to those written by Mr Cleland, Dr Arbuthnot, and others. I had
    lately the pleasure to pass some months with the author in the country,
    where I prevailed upon him to do what I had long desired, and favour me
    with his explanation of several passages in his works. It happened that
    just at that juncture was published a ridiculous book against him, full
    of personal reflections, which furnished him with a lucky opportunity of
    improving this poem, by giving it the only thing it wanted—a more
    considerable hero. He was always sensible of its defect in that
    particular, and owned he had let it pass with the hero it had purely for
    want of a better; not entertaining the least expectation that such an
    one was reserved for this post as has since obtained the Laurel: but
    since that had happened, he could no longer deny this justice either to
    him or the Dunciad.


    And yet I will venture to say, there was another motive which had still
    more weight with our author. This person was one who from every folly
    (not to say vice) of which another would be ashamed has constantly
    derived a vanity; and therefore was the man in the world who would least
    be hurt by it.


    W. W.



    VI.—ADVERTISEMENT PRINTED IN THE JOURNALS, 1730.


    Whereas, upon occasion of certain pieces relating to the gentlemen of
    the Dunciad, some have been willing to suggest, as if they looked upon
    them as an abuse: we can do no less than own it is our opinion, that to
    call these gentlemen bad authors is no sort of abuse, but a great truth.
    We cannot alter this opinion without some reason; but we promise to do
    it in respect to every person who thinks it an injury to be represented
    as no wit, or poet, provided he procures a certificate of his being
    really such, from any three of his companions in the Dunciad, or from Mr
    Dennis singly, who is esteemed equal to any three of the number.



    VII.—A PARALLEL OF THE CHARACTERS OF MR DRYDEN AND MR POPE,


    AS DRAWN BY CERTAIN OF THEIR CONTEMPORARIES.


    MR DRYDEN—HIS POLITICS, RELIGION, MORALS.


    MR DRYDEN is a mere renegado from monarchy, poetry, and good
    sense[453]—a true republican son of monarchical Church[454]—a
    republican atheist.[455] Dryden was from the beginning an [Greek:
    alloprosallos], and I doubt not will continue so to the last.[456]


    In the poem called Absalom and Achitophel are notoriously traduced, the
    King, the Queen, the Lords and Gentlemen, not only their honourable
    persons exposed, but the whole nation and its representatives
    notoriously libelled. It is scandalum magnatum, yea of majesty
    itself.[457]


    He looks upon God's gospel as a foolish fable, like the Pope, to whom he
    is a pitiful purveyor.[458] His very Christianity may be
    questioned.[459] He ought to expect more severity than other men, as he
    is most unmerciful in his own reflections on others.[460] With as good a
    right as his holiness, he sets up for poetical infallibility.[461]


    MR DRYDEN ONLY A VERSIFIER.


    His whole libel is all bad matter, beautified (which is all that can be
    said of it) with good metre.[462] Mr Dryden's genius did not appear in
    any thing more than his versification, and whether he is to be ennobled
    for that only is a question.[463]


    MR DRYDEN'S VIRGIL.


    Tonson calls it Dryden's Virgil, to show that this is not that Virgil so
    admired in the Augustaean age; but a Virgil of another stamp, a silly,
    impertinent, nonsensical writer.[464] None but a Bavius, a Maevius, or a
    Bathyllus carped at Virgil; and none but such unthinking vermin admire
    his translator.[465] It is true, soft and easy lines might become Ovid's
    Epistles or Art of Love; but Virgil, who is all great and majestic, &c.,
    requires strength of lines, weight of words, and closeness of
    expressions—not an ambling muse running on carpet-ground, and shod as
    lightly as a Newmarket racer. He has numberless faults in his author's
    meaning, and in propriety of expression.[466]


    MR DRYDEN UNDERSTOOD NO GREEK NOR LATIN.


    Mr Dryden was once, I have heard, at Westminster school. Dr Bushby would
    have whipped him for so childish a paraphrase.[467] The meanest pedant
    in England would whip a lubber of twelve for construing so
    absurdly.[468] The translator is mad, every line betrays his
    stupidity.[469] The faults are innumerable, and convince me that Mr
    Dryden did not, or would not understand his author.[470] This shows how
    fit Mr D. may be to translate Homer! A mistake in a single letter might
    fall on the printer well enough, but [Greek: eichor] for [Greek: ichor]
    must be the error of the author. Nor had he art enough to correct it at
    the press.[471] Mr Dryden writes for the court ladies. He writes for the
    ladies, and not for use.[472]


    The translator puts in a little burlesque now and then into Virgil, for
    a ragout to his cheated subscribers.[473]


    MR DRYDEN TRICKED HIS SUBSCRIBERS.


    I wonder that any man, who could not but be conscious of his own
    unfitness for it, should go to amuse the learned world with such an
    undertaking! A man ought to value his reputation more than money; and
    not to hope that those who can read for themselves will be imposed upon,
    merely by a partially and unseasonably celebrated name.[474] Poetis
    quidlibei audendi
    shall be Mr Dryden's motto, though it should extend
    to picking of pockets.[475]


    NAMES BESTOWED ON MR DRYDEN.


    An Ape.—A crafty ape dressed up in a gaudy gown—whips put into an
    ape's paw, to play pranks with—none but apish and papish brats will
    heed him.[476]


    An Ass.—A camel will take upon him no more burden than is sufficient
    for his strength, but there is another beast that crouches under
    all.[477]


    A Frog.—Poet Squab endued with Poet Maro's spirit! an ugly croaking
    kind of vermin, which would swell to the bulk of an ox.[478]


    A Coward.—A Clinias or a Damaetas, or a man of Mr Dryden's own
    courage.[479]


    A Knave.—Mr Dryden has heard of Paul, the knave of Jesus Christ; and,
    if I mistake not, I've read somewhere of John Dryden, servant to his
    Majesty.[480]


    A Fool.—Had he not been such a self-conceited fool.[481]—Some great
    poets are positive blockheads.[482]


    A Thing.—So little a thing as Mr Dryden.[483]



    MR POPE—HIS POLITICS, RELIGION, MORALS.


    MR POPE is an open and mortal enemy to his country, and the commonwealth
    of learning.[484] Some call him a Popish Whig, which is directly
    inconsistent.[485] Pope, as a papist, must be a Tory and
    High-flyer.[486] He is both a Whig and Tory.[487]


    He hath made it his custom to cackle to more than one party in their own
    sentiments.[488]


    In his miscellanies, the persons abused are—the King, the Queen, his
    late Majesty, both Houses of Parliament, the Privy Council, the Bench of
    Bishops, the Established Church, the present Ministry, &c. To make sense
    of some passages, they must be construed into royal scandal.[489]


    He is a popish rhymester, bred up with a contempt of the Sacred
    Writings.[490] His religion allows him to destroy heretics, not only
    with his pen, but with fire and sword; and such were all those unhappy
    wits whom he sacrificed to his accursed popish principles.[491] It
    deserved vengeance to suggest that Mr Pope had less infallibility than
    his namesake at Rome.[492]


    MR POPE ONLY A VERSIFIER.


    The smooth numbers of the Dunciad are all that recommend it, nor has it
    any other merit.[493] It must be owned that he hath got a notable knack
    of rhyming and writing smooth verse.[494]


    MR POPE'S HOMER.


    The Homer which Lintot prints does not talk like Homer, but like Pope;
    and he who translated him, one would swear, had a hill in Tipperary for
    his Parnassus, and a puddle in some bog for his Hippocrene.[495] He has
    no admirers among those that can distinguish, discern, and judge.[496]
    He hath a knack at smooth verse, but without either genius or good
    sense, or any tolerable knowledge of English. The qualities which
    distinguish Homer are the beauties of his diction and the harmony of his
    versification. But this little author, who is so much in vogue, has
    neither sense in his thoughts nor English in his expressions.[497]


    MR POPE UNDERSTOOD NO GREEK.


    He hath undertaken to translate Homer from the Greek, of which he knows
    not one word, into English, of which he understands as little.[498] I
    wonder how this gentleman would look, should it be discovered that he
    has not translated ten verses together in any book of Homer with justice
    to the poet, and yet he dares reproach his fellow-writers with not
    understanding Greek.[499] He has stuck so little to his original as to
    have his knowledge in Greek called in question.[500] I should be glad to
    know which it is of all Homer's excellencies which has so delighted the
    ladies, and the gentlemen who judge like ladies.[501]


    But he has a notable talent at burlesque; his genius slides so naturally
    into it, that he hath burlesqued Homer without designing it.[502]


    MR POPE TRICKED HIS SUBSCRIBERS.


    'Tis indeed somewhat bold, and almost prodigious, for a single man to
    undertake such a work; but 'tis too late to dissuade by demonstrating
    the madness of the project. The subscribers' expectations have been
    raised in proportion to what their pockets have been drained of.[503]
    Pope has been concerned in jobs, and hired out his name to
    booksellers.[504]


    NAMES BESTOWED ON MR POPE.


    An Ape.—Let us take the initial letter of his Christian name, and the
    initial and final letters of his surname, viz., A P E, and they give you
    the same idea of an ape as his face,[505] &c.


    An Ass.—It is my duty to pull off the lion's skin from this little
    ass.[506]


    A Frog.—A squab short gentleman—a little creature that, like the frog
    in the fable, swells, and is angry that it is not allowed to be as big
    as an ox.[507]


    A Coward.—A lurking, way-laying coward.[508]


    A Knave.—He is one whom God and nature have marked for want of common
    honesty.[509]


    A Fool.—Great fools will be christened by the names of great poets, and
    Pope will be called Homer.[510]


    A Thing.—A little abject thing.[511]






    FOOTNOTES:


    [1] 'Patricio:' Lord Godolphin.


    [2] 'Charron:' an imitator of Montaigne.


    [3] 'Perjured prince:' Louis XI. of France. See 'Quentin Durward'.


    [4] 'Godless regent:' Philip Duke of Orleans, Regent of France in the
    minority of Louis XV., a believer in judicial astrology, though an
    unbeliever in all religion.


    [5] 'Charles:' Charles V.


    [6] 'Philip:' Philip II. in the battle of Quintin.


    [7] 'Punk:' Cleopatra.


    [8] 'Wilmot:' Earl of Rochester.


    [9] 'Noble dame a whore:' the sister of Cato, and mother of Brutus.


    [10] 'Lanesborough:' an ancient nobleman, who continued this practice
    long after his legs were disabled by the gout. Upon the death of Prince
    George of Denmark, he demanded an audience of the Queen, to advise her
    to preserve her health and dispel her grief by dancing.—P.


    [11] 'Narcissa:' Mrs Oldfield, the actress.


    [12] 'Sappho:' Lady M. W. Montague.


    [13] 'Narcissa:' Duchess of Hamilton.


    [14] 'Philomede:' Henrietta, younger Duchess of Marlborough, to whom
    Congreve left the greater part of his fortune.


    [15] 'Her Grace:' Duchess of Montague.


    [16] 'Atossa:' Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough.


    [17] 'Chloe:' Mrs Howard, afterwards Countess of Suffolk.


    [18] 'Mahomet:' servant to the late king, said to be the son of a
    Turkish pasha, whom he took at the siege of Buda, and constantly kept
    about his person—P.


    [19] 'Parson Hale;' Dr Stephen Hale, not more estimable for his useful
    discoveries as a natural philosopher, than for his exemplary life and
    pastoral charity as a parish priest.—P.


    [20] 'Epistle III.:' this epistle was written after a violent outcry
    against our author, on a supposition that he had ridiculed a worthy
    nobleman merely for his wrong taste. He justified himself upon that
    article in a letter to the Earl of Burlington; at the end of which are
    these words: 'I have learnt that there are some who would rather be
    wicked than ridiculous; and therefore it may be safer to attack vices
    than follies. I will therefore leave my betters in the quiet possession
    of their idols, their groves, and their high places; and change my
    subject from their pride to their meanness, from their vanities to their
    miseries; and as the only certain way to avoid misconstructions, to
    lessen offence, and not to multiply ill-natured applications, I may
    probably, in my next, make use of real names instead of fictitious
    ones.'—P.


    [21] 'Ward:' John Ward of Hackney, Esq., member of Parliament, being
    prosecuted by the Duchess of Buckingham, and convicted of forgery, was
    first expelled the House, and then stood in the pillory on the 17th of
    March 1727.—P.


    [22] 'Chartres:' see a former note.


    [23] 'The patriot's cloak:' this is a true story, which happened in the
    reign of William III. to an unsuspected old patriot, who coming out at
    the back-door from having been closeted by the king, where he had
    received a large bag of guineas, the bursting of the bag discovered his
    business there.—P.


    [24] 'Ship off senates:' alludes to several ministers, counsellors, and
    patriots banished in our times to Siberia, and to that more glorious
    fate of the Parliament of Paris, banished to Pontoise in the year
    1720.—P.


    [25] 'Coals:' some misers of great wealth, proprietors of the
    coal-mines, had entered at this time into an association to keep up
    coals to an extravagant price, whereby the poor were reduced almost to
    starve, till one of them, taking the advantage of underselling the rest,
    defeated the design. One of these misers was worth ten thousand, another
    seven thousand a-year.—P.


    [26] 'Colepepper:' Sir William Colepepper, Bart., a person of an ancient
    family and ample fortune, without one other quality of a gentleman, who,
    after ruining himself at the gaming table, passed the rest of his days
    in sitting there to see the ruin of others; preferring to subsist upon
    borrowing and begging, rather than to enter into any reputable method of
    life, and refusing a post in the army which was offered him.—P.


    [27] 'Turner:' a miser of the day.


    [28] 'Hopkins:' a citizen whose rapacity obtained him the name of
    Vulture Hopkins.—P.


    [29] 'Japhet:' Japhet Crook, alias Sir Peter Stranger, was punished with
    the loss of those parts, for having forged a conveyance of an estate to
    himself.—P.


    [30] 'Endow a college or a cat:' a famous Duchess of Richmond, in her
    last will, left considerable legacies and annuities to her cats.—P.


    [31] 'Bond:' the director of a charitable corporation.


    [32] 'To live on venison:' in the extravagance and luxury of the
    South-sea year, the price of a haunch of venison was from three to five
    pounds.—P.


    [33] 'General excise:' many people, about the year 1733, had a conceit
    that such a thing was intended, of which it is not improbable this lady
    might have some intimation.—P.


    [34] 'Wise Peter:' an attorney who made a large fortune.


    [35] 'Rome's great Didius:' a Roman lawyer, so rich as to purchase the
    Empire when it was set to sale upon the death of Pertinax.—P.


    [36] 'Blunt:' one of the first projectors of the South-sea scheme.


    [37] 'Oxford's better part:' Edward Harley, Earl of Oxford—P.


    [38] 'The Man of Ross:' the person here celebrated, who, with a small
    estate, actually performed all these good works, and whose true name was
    almost lost (partly by the title of the Man of Ross, given him by way of
    eminence, and partly by being buried without so much as an inscription)
    was called Mr John Kyrle. He effected many good works, partly by raising
    contributions from other benevolent persons. He died in the year 1724,
    aged 90, and lies interred in the chancel of the church of Ross, in
    Herefordshire.—P.


    [39] 'Go search it there:' the parish register.


    [40] 'Eternal buckle takes in Parian stone:' the poet ridicules the
    wretched taste of carving large periwigs on bustos, of which there are
    several vile examples in the tombs at Westminster and elsewhere.—P.


    [41] 'Great Villiers lies:' this lord, yet more famous for his vices
    than his misfortunes, after having been possessed of about L.50,000
    a-year, and passed through many of the highest posts in the kingdom,
    died in the year 1687, in a remote inn in Yorkshire, reduced to the
    utmost misery.—P.


    [42] 'Shrewsbury:' the Countess of Shrewsbury, a woman abandoned to
    gallantries. The earl, her husband, was killed by the Duke of Buckingham
    in a duel; and it has been said, that during the combat she held the
    duke's horse in the habit of a page.—P.


    [43] 'Cutler:' a notorious miser.


    [44] 'Where London's column:' the monument, built in memory of the fire
    of London, with an inscription, importing that city to have been burnt
    by the Papists.


    [45] 'Topham:' a gentleman famous for a judicious collection of
    drawings.—P.


    [46] 'Hearne:' the antiquarian.


    [47] 'Ripley:' this man was a carpenter, employed by a first minister,
    who raised him to an architect, without any genius in the art; and after
    some wretched proofs of his insufficiency in public buildings, made him
    comptroller of the Board of Works.—P.


    [48] 'Bubo:' Bubb Doddington, who had just finished a mansion at
    Eastbury.


    [49] 'Dr Clarke:' Dr S. Clarke's busto placed by the Queen in the
    Hermitage, while the doctor duly frequented the court.—P.


    [50] 'Timon's villa:' Cannons, the estate of Lord Chandos. See Life.


    [51] 'Verrio or Laguerre:' Verrio (Antonio) painted many ceilings, &c.,
    at Windsor, Hampton Court, &c; and Laguerre at Blenheim Castle, and
    other places.—P.


    [52] 'Who never mentions hell:' this is a fact; a reverend Dean,
    preaching at court, threatened the sinner with punishment in 'a place
    which he thought it not decent to name in so polite an assembly.'—P.


    [53] 'Sancho's dread doctor:' see 'Don Quixote,' chap, xlvii.—P.


    [54] This was originally written in the year 1715, when Mr Addison
    intended to publish his book of medals; it was sometime before he was
    Secretary of State; but not published till Mr Tickell's edition of his
    works; at which time the verses on Mr Craggs, which conclude the poem,
    were added, viz., in 1720.—P.


    [55] 'Vadius:' see his history, and that of his shield, in the 'Memoirs
    of Scriblerus,' ch. ii.


    [56] Alemena, mother of Hercules, is after his death here recounting her
    misfortunes to Iole, who replies by narrating the transformations of her
    sister Dryope.


    [57] Such sons: Eteocles and Polynices.


    [58] The Marchantes Tale. Written at sixteen or seventeen years of age.


    [59] The first part of this prologue was written by Pope, the conclusion
    by Mallet.


    [60] Shows a cap with ears.


    [61] Flings down the cap, and exit.


    [62] 'Basset-Table:' only this of all the Town Eclogues was Mr Pope's,
    and is here printed from a copy corrected by his own hand. The humour of
    it consists in this, that the one is in love with the game, and the
    other with the sharper—W.


    [63] 'The Lady Frances Shirley:' a lady whose great merit Mr Pope took a
    real pleasure in celebrating.


    [64] 'Bertrand's:' a famous toy-shop at Bath.


    [65] 'Fool or ass:' 'The Dunciad.'—P.


    [66] 'Flattery or fib:' the 'Epistle to Dr Arbuthnot.'—P.


    [67] 'Arms:' such toys being the usual presents from lovers to their
    mistresses.—P.


    [68] 'Print:' when she delivers Aeneas a suit of heavenly armour.—P.


    [69] 'Truth nor lies:' if you have neither the courage to write satire,
    nor the application to attempt an epic poem. He was then meditating on
    such a work.—P.


    [70] 'Algerian grot:' alluding to Numa's projecting his system of
    politics in this grot, assisted, as he gave out, by the goddess
    Aegeria.—P.


    [71] 'What-d'ye-call-it:' a comedy by Gay.


    [72] 'Turk:' Ulrick, the Turk.


    [73] 'Pope:' the author.


    [74] 'Bellenden, Lepell, and Griffin:' ladies of the Court of the
    Princess Caroline.


    [75] 'Blunderland:' Ireland.


    [76] 'Meadows:' see verses to Mrs Howe.


    [77] 'God send the king safe landing:' this ballad was written anno
    1717.


    [78] 'Philips:' Ambrose Philips.


    [79] 'Budgell:' Eustace Budgell.


    [80] 'Carey:' Henry Carey.


    [81] 'Mrs Pulteney:' the daughter of John Gumley of Isleworth, who
    acquired his fortune by a glass manufactory.


    [82] 'Sandys:' George Sandy's, the old, and as yet unequalled,
    translator of Ovid's Metamorphoses.


    [83] 'Jacob's:' old Jacob Tonson, the publisher of the Metamorphoses.


    [84] 'P——:' perhaps Pembroke.


    [85] 'Umbra:' intended, it is said, for Ambrose Philips.


    [86] 'Only Johnson:' Charles Johnson, a second-rate dramatist.


    [87] 'The Man Mountain:' this Ode, and the three following pieces, were
    produced by Pope on reading 'Gulliver's Travels.'


    [88] 'Biddel:' name of a sea captain mentioned in Gulliver's Travels.


    [89] 'Pannel:' name of a sea captain mentioned in Gulliver's Travels.


    [90] 'B——:' Britain.


    [91] 'C——:' Cobham.


    [92] 'P——'s: Pulteney's.


    [93] 'S——:' Sandys.


    [94] 'S——:' Shippen.


    [95] 'C——:' Perhaps the Earl of Carlisle.


    [96] 'Ch—-s W——:' Sir Charles Hanbury Williams.


    [97] 'Sir Har-y or Sir P——:' Sir Henry Oxenden or Sir Paul Methuen.


    [98] 'G—-r, C—-m, B—-t:' Lords Gower, Cobham, and Bathurst.


    [99] 'C—-d:' Chesterfield.


    [100] 'C—-t:' Lord Carteret.


    [101] 'P——:' William Pulteney, created in 1742 Earl of Bath.


    [102] 'W——:' Walpole.


    [103] 'H——:' either Sir Robert's brother Horace, who had just quitted
    his embassy at the Hague, or his son Horace, who was then on his
    travels.


    [104] 'W——:' W. Winnington.


    [105] 'Young:' Sir William Young.


    [106] 'Bub:' Dodington.


    [107] 'H——:' probably Hare, Bishop of Chicester.


    [108] 'F——, H—-y:' Fox and Henley.


    [109] 'H—-n:' Hinton.


    [110] 'Ebor:' Blackburn, Archbishop of York, and Hoadley, Bishop of
    Winchester.


    [111] 'O—-w:' Onslow, Speaker of the House of Commons, and the Earl of
    Delawar, Chairman of the Committees of the House of Lords.


    [112] 'N——:' Newcastle.


    [113] 'D——'s sager:' Dorset; perhaps the last word should be sneer.


    [114] 'M——'s:' Duke of Marlborough.


    [115] 'J——'s:' Jekyll.


    [116] 'H—-k's:' Hardwick.


    [117] 'C——:' probably Sir John Cummins, Lord Chief-Justice of the
    Common Pleas.


    [118] 'B——:' Britain.


    [119] 'S—-w:' Earl of Scarborough.


    [120] 'M-m-t's:' Marchmont.


    [121] 'P—-th:' Polwarth, son to Lord Marchmont.


    [122] 'W—-m:' Wyndham.


    [123] 'Sl—-s:' slaves.


    [124] 'Se—-s:' senates.


    [125] 'Ad....:' administration.


    [126] King's.


    [127] 'Religion:' an allusion perhaps to Frederick Prince of Wales.


    [128] 'First Book of Horace:' attributed to Pope.


    [129] The person here meant was Dr Robert Friend, head master of
    Westminster School.


    [130] The Misses Lisle.


    [131] There occurred here originally the following lax stanza:—


    Can sins of moment claim the rod

      Of everlasting fires?


    [132] And that offend great nature's God, Which nature's self
    inspires.—See Boswell's 'Johnson.'


    [133] This gentleman was of Scotland, and bred at the university of
    Utrecht, with the Earl of Mar. He served in Spain under Earl Rivers.
    After the peace, he was made one of the Commissioners of the Customs in
    Scotland, and then of Taxes in England, in which having shewn himself
    for twenty years diligent, punctual, and incorruptible, though without
    any other assistance of fortune, he was suddenly displaced by the
    minister in the sixty-eighth year of his age, and died two months after,
    in 1741.—P.


    [134] Giles Jacob's Lives of Poets, vol. ii. in his Life.


    [135] Dennis's Reflections on the Essay on Criticism.


    [136] Dunciad Dissected, p. 4.


    [137] Guardian, No. 40.


    [138] Jacob's Lives, &c. vol. ii.


    [139] Dunciad Dissected, p. 4.


    [140] Farmer P—-and his Son.


    [141] Dunciad Dissected.


    [142] Characters of the Times, p. 45.


    [143] Female Dunciad, p. ult.


    [144] Dunciad Dissected.


    [145] Roome, Paraphrase on the 4th of Genesis, printed 1729.


    [146] Character of Mr Pope and his Writings, in a Letter to a Friend,
    printed for S. Popping, 1716, p. 10. Curll, in his Key to the Dunciad
    (first edition, said to be printed for A. Dodd), in the 10th page,
    declared Gildon to be author of that libel; though in the subsequent
    editions of his Key he left out this assertion, and affirmed (in the
    Curlliad, p. 4 and 8) that it was written by Dennis only.


    [147] Reflections, Critical and Satirical, on a Rhapsody called An Essay
    on Criticism. Printed for Bernard Lintot, 8vo.


    [148] Essay on Criticism in prose, 8vo, 1728, by the author of the
    Critical History of England.


    [149] Preface to his Poems, p.18, 53.


    [150] Spectator, No. 253.


    [151] Letter to B. B. at the end of the Remarks on Pope's Homer, 1717.


    [152] Printed 1728, p. 12.


    [153] Alma, canto 2.


    [154] In his Essays, vol. i., printed for E. Curll.


    [155] Censor, vol. ii. n. 33.


    [156] Vide preface to Mr Tickel's translation of the first book of the
    Iliad, 4to. Also vide Life.


    [157] Daily Journal, March 18, 1728.


    [158] Ibid, April 3, 1728.


    [159] Verses to Mr Pope on his translation of Homer.


    [160] Poem prefixed to his works.


    [161] In his poems, printed for B. Lintot.


    [162] Universal Passion, Satire i.


    [163] In his Poems, and at the end of the Odyssey.


    [164] The names of two weekly papers.


    [165] Theobald, Letter in Mist's Journal, June 22, 1728.


    [166] Smedley, Preface to Gulliveriana, p. 14, 16.


    [167] Gulliveriana, p. 332.


    [168] Anno 1723.


    [169] Anno 1729.


    [170] Preface to Remarks on the Rape of the Lock, p. 12, and in the last
    page of that treatise.


    [171] Pages 6, 7 of the Preface, by Concanen, to a book entitled, A
    Collection of all the Letters, Essays, Verses, and Advertisements
    occasioned by Pope and Swift's Miscellanies. Printed for A. Moore, 8vo,
    1712.


    [172] Key to the Dunciad, third edition, p. 18.


    [173] A list of persons, &c., at the end of the forementioned Collection
    of all the Letters, Essays, &c.


    [174] Introduction to his Shakspeare Restored, in 4to, p. 3.


    [175] Commentary on the Duke of Buckingham's Essay, 8vo, 1721, p. 97,
    98.


    [176] In his prose Essay on Criticism.


    [177] Printed by J. Roberts, 1742, p. 11.


    [178] Battle of Poets, folio, p. 15.


    [179] Printed under the title of the Progress of Dulness, duodecimo,
    1728.


    [180] Cibber's Letter to Mr Pope, p. 9, 12.


    [181] In a letter under his hand, dated March 12, 1733.


    [182] Dennis's Preface to his Reflections on the Essay on Criticism.


    [183] Preface to his Remarks on Homer.


    [184] Remarks on Homer, p. 8, 9.


    [185] Ibid, p. 8.


    [186] Character of Mr Pope, p. 7.


    [187] Ibid, p. G.


    [188] Gulliver, p. 886.


    [189] Cibber's Letter to Mr. Pope, p. 19.


    [190] Burnet Homerides, p. 1 of his Translation of the Iliad.


    [191] The London and Mist's Journals, on his undertaking of the Odyssey.


    [192] Vide Bossu, Du Poeme Epique, ch. viii.


    [193] Bossu, chap. vii.


    [194] Book i. ver. 32, &c.


    [195] Ver. 45 to 54.


    [196] Ver. 57 to 77.


    [197] Ver. 80.


    [198] Ibid, chap, vii., viii.


    [199] Bossu, chap. viii. Vide Aristot. Poetic, chap. ix.


    [200] Cibber's Letter to Mr Pope, pp. 9, 12, 41.


    [201] See his Essays.


    [202] Si nil Heros Poetique doit etre un honnete homme. Bossu, du Poeme
    Epique, lib. v. ch. 5.


    [203] Dedication to the Life of C. C.


    [204] Life, p. 2, 8vo edition.


    [205] Life, ibid.


    [206] Life, p. 23, 8vo.


    [207] Alluding to these lines in the Epistle to Dr Arbuthnot:


    'And has not Colley still his lord and whore,
    His butchers, Henley, his freemasons, Moore?'


    [208] Letter to Mr Pope, p. 46.


    [209] P. 31.


    [210] Life, p. 23, 24.


    [211] Letter, p. 8.


    [212] Letter, p. 53.


    [213] Letter, p. 1.


    [214] Don Quixote, Part ii. book ii. ch. 22.


    [215] See Life, p. 148.


    [216] Life, p. 149.


    [217] p. 424.


    [218] p. 366.


    [219] p. 457.


    [220] p. 18.


    [221] p. 425.


    [222] pp. 436, 437.


    [223] p. 52.


    [224] p. 47.


    [225] p. 57.


    [226] pp. 58, 59.


    [227] A statuary.


    [228] Life, p. 6.


    [229] p. 424.


    [230] p. 19.


    [231] Life, p. 17.


    [232] Ibid. p. 243, 8vo edition.


    [233] Ovid, of the serpent biting at Orpheus's head.


    [234] 'The Dunciad:' sic MS. It may well be disputed whether this be a
    right reading. Ought it not rather to be spelled Dunceiad, as the
    etymology evidently demands? Dunce with an e, therefore Dunceiad with
    an e? That accurate and punctual man of letters, the restorer of
    Shakespeare, constantly observes the preservation of this very letter
    e, in spelling the name of his beloved author, and not like his common
    careless editors, with the omission of one, nay, sometimes of two e's
    (as Shakspear), which is utterly unpardonable. 'Nor is the neglect of a
    single letter so trivial as to some it may appear; the alteration
    whereof in a learned language is an achievement that brings honour to
    the critic who advances it; and Dr Bentley will be remembered to
    posterity for his performances of this sort, as long as the world shall
    have any esteem for the remains of Menander and Philemon.'— Theobald.


    This is surely a slip in the learned author of the foregoing note, there
    having been since produced by an accurate antiquary, an autograph of
    Shakspeare himself, whereby it appears that he spelled his own name
    without the first e. And upon this authority it was, that those most
    critical curators of his monument in Westminster Abbey erased the former
    wrong reading, and restored the true spelling on a new piece of old
    Egyptian granite. Nor for this only do they deserve our thanks, but for
    exhibiting on the same monument the first specimen of an edition of an
    author in marble; where (as may be seen on comparing the tomb with the
    book), in the space of five lines, two words and a whole verse are
    changed, and it is to be hoped will there stand, and outlast whatever
    hath been hitherto done in paper; as for the future, our learned sister
    University (the other eye of England) is taking care to perpetuate a
    total new Shakspeare, at the Clarendon press.—Bentl.


    It is to be noted, that this great critic also has omitted one
    circumstance: which is, that the inscription with the name of Shakspeare
    was intended to be placed on the marble scroll to which he points with
    his hand; instead of which it is now placed behind his back, and that
    specimen of an edition is put on the scroll, which indeed Shakspeare
    hath great reason to point at.—Anon.


    Though I have as just a value for the letter e as any grammarian
    living, and the same affection for the name of this poem as any critic
    for that of his author, yet cannot it induce me to agree with those who
    would add yet another e to it, and call it the Dunceiade; which being
    a French and foreign termination, is no way proper to a word entirely
    English and vernacular. One e, therefore, in this case is right, and
    two e's wrong. Yet, upon the whole, I shall follow the manuscript, and
    print it without any e at all; moved thereto by authority (at all
    times, with critics, equal, if not superior to reason). In which method
    of proceeding, I can never enough praise my good friend, the exact Mr
    Thomas Hearne; who, if any word occur which to him and all mankind is
    evidently wrong, yet keeps he it in the text with due reverence, and
    only remarks in the margin sic MS. In like manner we shall not amend
    this error in the title itself, but only note it obiter, to evince to
    the learned that it was not our fault, nor any effect of our ignorance
    or inattention.—Scriblerus.


    This poem was written in the year 1726. In the next year, an imperfect
    edition was published at Dublin, and reprinted at London in twelves;
    another at Dublin, and another at London in octavo; and three others in
    twelves the same year. But there was no perfect edition before that of
    London in quarto; which was attended with notes. We are willing to
    acquaint posterity, that this poem was presented to King George the
    Second and his queen by the hands of Sir Robert Walpole, on the 12th of
    March 1728-9.—Schol. Vet.


    It was expressly confessed in the preface to the first edition, that
    this poem was not published by the author himself. It was printed
    originally in a foreign country. And what foreign country? Why, one
    notorious for blunders; where finding blanks only instead of proper
    names, these blunderers filled them up at their pleasure.


    The very hero of the poem hath been mistaken to this hour; so that we
    are obliged to open our notes with a discovery who he really was. We
    learn from the former editor, that this piece was presented by the hands
    of Sir Robert Walpole to King George II. Now the author directly tells
    us, his hero is the man


                       'who brings
    The Smithfield muses to the ear of kings.'


    And it is notorious who was the person on whom this prince conferred the
    honour of the laurel.


    It appears as plainly from the apostrophe to the great in the third
    verse, that Tibbald could not be the person, who was never an author in
    fashion, or caressed by the great; whereas this single characteristic is
    sufficient to point out the true hero, who, above all other poets of his
    time, was the peculiar delight and chosen companion of the nobility of
    England, and wrote, as he himself tells us, certain of his works at the
    earnest desire of persons of quality.


    Lastly, the sixth verse affords full proof; this poet being the only one
    who was universally known to have had a son so exactly like him, in his
    poetical, theatrical, political, and moral capacities, that it could
    justly be said of him,


    'Still Dunce the second reign'd like Dunce the first.'—Bentl.


    [235] 'Her son who brings,' &c. Wonderful is the stupidity of all the
    former critics and commentators on this work! It breaks forth at the
    very first line. The author of the critique prefixed to Sawney, a poem,
    p. 5, hath been so dull as to explain 'the man who brings,' &c., not of
    the hero of the piece, but of our poet himself, as if he vaunted that
    kings were to be his readers—an honour which though this poem hath had,
    yet knoweth he how to receive it with more modesty.


    We remit this ignorant to the first lines of the Aeneid, assuring him
    that Virgil there speaketh not of himself but of Aeneas:


    'Arma virumque cano, Trojae qui primus ab oris
    Italiam, fato profugus, Lavinaque venit
    Littora: multum ille et terris jactatus et alto,' &c.


    I cite the whole three verses, that I may by the way offer a conjectural
    emendation, purely my own, upon each: First, oris should be read
    aris, it being, as we see, Aen. ii. 513, from the altar of Jupiter
    Hercaeus that Aeneas fled as soon as he saw Priam slain. In the second
    line I would flatu for fato, since it is most clear it was by winds
    that he arrived at the shore of Italy. Jactatus, in the third, is
    surely as improperly applied to terris, as proper to alto. To say a
    man is tossed on land, is much at one with saying, he walks at sea.
    Risum teneatis, amici? Correct it, as I doubt not it ought to be,
    vexatus.—Scriblerus.


    [236] 'The Smithfield Muses.' Smithfield was the place where Bartholomew
    Fair was kept, whose shows, machines, and dramatical entertainments,
    formerly agreeable only to the taste of the rabble, were, by the hero of
    this poem and others of equal genius, brought to the theatres of Covent
    Garden, Lincolns-Inn-Fields, and the Haymarket, to be the reigning
    pleasures of the court and town. This happened in the reigns of King
    George I. and II. See Book iii.


    [237] 'By Dulness, Jove, and Fate:' i.e., by their judgments, their
    interests, and their inclinations.—W.


    [238] 'Say how the goddess,' &c. The poet ventureth to sing the action
    of the goddess; but the passion she impresseth on her illustrious
    votaries, he thinketh can be only told by themselves.—Scribl. W.


    [239] 'Daughter of Chaos,' &c. The beauty of this whole allegory being
    purely of the poetical kind, we think it not our proper business, as a
    scholiast, to meddle with it, but leave it (as we shall in general all
    such) to the reader, remarking only that Chaos (according to Hesiod's
    [Greek: Theogonia]), was the progenitor of all the gods.— Scriblerus.


    [240] 'Laborious, heavy, busy, bold,' &c. I wonder the learned
    Scriblerus has omitted to advertise the reader, at the opening of this
    poem, that Dulness here is not to be taken contractedly for mere
    stupidity, but in the enlarged sense of the word, for all slowness of
    apprehension, shortness of sight, or imperfect sense of things. It
    includes (as we see by the poet's own words) labour, industry, and some
    degree of activity and boldness—a ruling principle not inert, but
    turning topsy-turvy the understanding, and inducing an anarchy or
    confused state of mind. This remark ought to be carried along with the
    reader throughout the work; and without this caution he will be apt to
    mistake the importance of many of the characters, as well as of the
    design of the poet. Hence it is, that some have complained he chooses
    too mean a subject, and imagined he employs himself like Domitian, in
    killing flies; whereas those who have the true key will find he sports
    with nobler quarry, and embraces a larger compass; or (as one saith, on
    a like occasion)—


    'Will see his work, like Jacob's ladder, rise,
    Its foot in dirt, its head amid the skies.'—Bentl.


    [241] 'Still her old empire to restore.' This restoration makes the
    completion of the poem. Vide Book iv.—P.


    [242] 'Drapier, Bickerstaff, or Gulliver!' the several names and
    characters he assumed in his ludicrous, his splenetic, or his
    party-writings; which take in all his works.—P.


    [243] 'Or praise the court, or magnify mankind:' ironice, alluding to
    Gulliver's representations of both. The next line relates to the papers
    of the Drapier against the currency of Wood's copper coin in Ireland,
    which, upon the great discontent of the people, his Majesty was
    graciously pleased to recall.


    [244] 'By his famed father's hand:' Mr Caius-Gabriel Cibber, father of
    the poet laureate. The two statues of the lunatics over the gates of
    Bedlam Hospital were done by him, and (as the son justly says of them)
    are no ill monuments of his fame as an artist.


    [245] 'Bag-fair' is a place near the Tower of London, where old clothes
    and frippery are sold—P.


    [246] 'A yawning ruin hangs and nods in air:'—Here in one bed two
    shivering sisters lie, The cave of Poverty and Poetry.


    [247] 'Curll's chaste press, and Lintot's rubric post:' two booksellers,
    of whom, see Book ii. The former was fined by the Court of King's Bench
    for publishing obscene books; the latter usually adorned his shop with
    titles in red letters.—P.


    [248] 'Hence hymning Tyburn's elegiac lines:' it is an ancient English
    custom for the malefactors to sing a psalm at their execution at Tyburn,
    and no less customary to print elegies on their deaths, at the same
    time, or before.—P.


    [249] 'Sepulchral lies:' is a just satire on the flatteries and
    falsehoods admitted to be inscribed on the walls of churches, in
    epitaphs, which occasioned the following epigram:—


    'Friend! in your epitaphs, I'm grieved,
    So very much is said:
    One-half will never be believed,
    The other never read.'—W.


    [250] 'New-year odes:' made by the poet laureate for the time being, to
    be sung at Court on every New-Year's Day, the words of which are happily
    drowned in the voices and instruments.—P.


    [251] 'Jacob:' Tonson, the well-known bookseller.


    [252] 'How farce and epic—how Time himself,' allude to the
    transgressions of the unities in the plays of such poets. For the
    miracles wrought upon time and place, and the mixture of tragedy and
    comedy, farce and epic, see Pluto and Proserpine, Penelope, &c., if yet
    extant.—P.


    [253] ''Twas on the day, when Thorold rich and grave, like Cimon,
    triumph'd:' viz., a Lord Mayor's day; his name the author had left in
    blanks, but most certainly could never be that which the editor foisted
    in formerly, and which no way agrees with the chronology of the
    poem.—Bentl. The procession of a lord mayor is made partly by land,
    and partly by water. Cimon, the famous Athenian general, obtained a
    victory by sea, and another by land, on the same day, over the Persians
    and Barbarians.—P.


    [254] 'Glad chains:' The ignorance of these moderns! This was altered in
    one edition to gold chains, showing more regard to the metal of which
    the chains of aldermen are made than to the beauty of the Latinism and
    Graecism—nay, of figurative speech itself: Loetas segetes, glad, for
    making glad, &c.—P.


    [255] 'But lived, in Settle's numbers, one day more:' a beautiful manner
    of speaking, usual with poets in praise of poetry, in which kind nothing
    is finer than those lines of Mr Addison:—


    'Sometimes, misguided by the tuneful throng,
    I look for streams immortalised in song,
    That lost in silence and oblivion lie,
    Dumb are their fountains, and their channels dry;
    Yet run for over by the Muses' skill,
    And in the smooth description murmur still.—P.


    Settle was poet to the city of London. His office was to compose yearly
    panegyrics upon the lord mayors, and verses to be spoken in the
    pageants. But that part of the shows being at length frugally abolished,
    the employment of city-poet ceased, so that upon Settle's demise there
    was no successor to that place.—P.


    [256] John Heywood, whose interludes were printed in the time of Henry
    VIII.—P.


    [257] 'Daniel Defoe,' a man in worth and original genius incomparably
    superior to his defamer.


    [258] 'And Eusden eke out,' &c.: Laurence Eusden, poet laureate. Mr
    Jacob gives a catalogue of some few only of his works, which were very
    numerous. Mr Cook, in his Battle of Poets, saith of him—


    'Eusden, a laurell'd bard, by fortune raised,
    By very few was read, by fewer praised.'—P.


    [259] Nahum Tate was poet laureate, a cold writer, of no invention; but
    sometimes translated tolerably when befriended by Mr Dryden. In his
    second part of Absalom and Achitophel are above two hundred admirable
    lines together of that great hand, which strongly shine through the
    insipidity of the rest. Something parallel may be observed of another
    author here mentioned.—P.


    [260] 'Dennis rage:' Mr John Dennis was the son of a sadler in London,
    born in 1657. He paid court to Mr Dryden; and having obtained some
    correspondence with Mr Wycherly and Mr Congreve, he immediately obliged
    the public with their letters. He made himself known to the Government
    by many admirable schemes and projects, which the ministry, for reasons
    best known to themselves, constantly kept private.—P.


    [261] 'Shame to Fortune:' because she usually shows favour to persons of
    this character, who have a threefold pretence to it.


    [262] 'Poor Fletcher's half-eat scenes:' a great number of them taken
    out to patch up his plays.—P.


    [263] 'Tibbald:' this Tibbald, or Theobald, published an edition of
    Shakspeare, of which he was so proud himself as to say, in one of Mist's
    journals, June 8, 'That to expose any errors in it was impracticable.'
    And in another, April 27, 'That whatever care might for the future be
    taken by any other editor, he would still give above five hundred
    emendations, that shall escape them all.'—P.


    [264] 'Wish'd he had blotted:' it was a ridiculous praise which the
    players gave to Shakspeare, 'that he never blotted a line.' Ben Jonson
    honestly wished he had blotted a thousand; and Shakspeare would
    certainly have wished the same, if he had lived to see those alterations
    in his works, which, not the actors only (and especially the daring hero
    of this poem) have made on the stage, but the presumptuous critics of
    our days in their editions—P.


    [265] 'Ogilby the great:' 'John Ogilby was one who, from a late
    initiation into literature, made such a progress as might well style him
    the prodigy of his time! sending into the world so many large volumes.
    His translations of Homer and Virgil done to the life, and with such
    excellent sculptures. And (what added great grace to his works) he
    printed them all on special good paper, and in a very good
    letter.'—Winstanly, Lives of Poets.—P.


    [266] 'There, stamp'd with arms, Newcastle shines complete:' Langbaine
    reckons up eight folios of the Duchess of Newcastle's works, which were
    usually adorned with gilded covers, and had her coat of arms upon them.


    [267] 'Worthy Settle, Banks, and Broome:' the poet has mentioned these
    three authors in particular, as they are parallel to our hero in his
    three capacities—1. Settle was his brother laureate—only, indeed, upon
    half-pay, for the city instead of the court; but equally famous for
    unintelligible flights in his poems on public occasions, such as shows,
    birth-days, &c.; 2. Banks was his rival in tragedy (though more
    successful) in one of his tragedies, the Earl of Essex, which is yet
    alive: Anna Boleyn, the Queen of Scots, and Cyrus the Great, are dead
    and gone. These he dressed in a sort of beggar's velvet, or a happy
    mixture of the thick fustian and thin prosaic; exactly imitated in
    Perolla and Isidora, Caesar in Egypt, and the Heroic Daughter; 3. Broome
    was a serving-man of Ben Jonson, who once picked up a comedy from his
    betters, or from some cast scenes of his master, not entirely
    contemptible.—P.


    [268] 'Caxton:' a printer in the time of Edward IV., Richard III., and
    Henry VII.; Wynkyn de Worde, his successor, in that of Henry VII. and
    VIII.—P.


    [269] 'Nich. de Lyra:' or Harpsfield, a very voluminous commentator,
    whose works, in five vast folios, were printed in 1472.—P.


    [270] 'Philemon Holland:' doctor in physic. 'He translated so many
    books, that a man would think he had done nothing else; insomuch that he
    might be called translator general of his age. The books alone of his
    turning into English are sufficient to make a country gentleman a
    complete library.'—Winstanly.—P.


    [271] 'E'er since Sir Fopling's periwig:' the first visible cause of the
    passion of the town for our hero, was a fair flaxen full-bottomed
    periwig, which, he tells us, he wore in his first play of the Fool in
    Fashion. It attracted, in a particular manner, the friendship of Col.
    Brett, who wanted to purchase it.—P.


    [272] 'Ridpath—Mist:' George Ridpath, author of a Whig paper, called
    the Flying Post; Nathanael Mist, of a famous Tory journal.—P.


    [273] 'Rome's ancient geese:' relates to the well-known story of the
    geese that saved the Capitol; of which Virgil, Aen. VIII.


    'Atque hic auratis volitans argenteus anser
    Porticibus, Gallos in limine adesse canebat.'


    A passage I have always suspected. Who sees not the antithesis of
    auratis and argenteus to be unworthy the Virgilian majesty? And what
    absurdity to say a goose sings? canebat. Virgil gives a contrary
    character of the voice of this silly bird, in Ecl. ix.


    ... 'argutos interstrepere anser olores.'


    Read it, therefore, adesse strepebat. And why auratis porticibus?
    does not the very verse preceding this inform us,


    'Romuleoque recens horrebat regia culmo.'


    Is this thatch in one line, and gold in another, consistent? I scruple
    not (repugnantibas omnibus manuscriptis) to correct it auritis.
    Horace uses the same epithet in the same sense.—P.


    [274] 'Bear and Fiddle:' see 'Butler's Hudibras.'


    [275] 'Gratis-given Bland—Sent with a pass.' It was a practice so to
    give the Daily Gazetteer and ministerial pamphlets (in which this Bland,
    Provost of Eton, was a writer), and to send them post-free to all the
    towns in the kingdom.—P.


    [276] 'With Ward, to ape-and-monkey climes.' Edward Ward, a very
    voluminous poet in Hudibrastic verse, but best known by the London Spy,
    in prose. He has of late years kept a public-house in the City (but in a
    genteel way), and with his wit, humour, and good liquor (ale) afforded
    his guests a pleasurable entertainment, especially those of the
    High-Church party. Jacob, Lives of Poets, vol. ii., p. 225. Great number
    of his works were yearly sold into the plantations. Ward, in a book
    called Apollo's Maggot, declared this account to be a great falsity,
    protesting that his public-house was not in the City, but in
    Moorfields.—P.


    [277] 'Tate, Shadwell:' two of his predecessors in the Laurel.—P.


    [278] 'The dear Nonjuror, Moliere's old stubble:' a comedy threshed out
    of Moliere's Tartuffe, and so much the translator's favourite, that he
    assures us all our author's dislike to it could only arise from
    disaffection to the government:


    'Qui meprise Cotin, n'estime point son roi,
    Et n'a, selon Cotin, ni Dieu, ni foi, ni loi.'—Boil.


    He assures us, that 'when he had the honour to kiss his Majesty's hand
    upon presenting his dedication of it, he was graciously pleased, out of
    his royal bounty, to order him two hundred pounds for it. And this he
    doubts not grieved Mr P.'—P.


    [279] 'Thule:' An unfinished poem of that name, of which one sheet was
    printed many years ago, by Amb. Philips, a northern author. It is a
    usual method of putting out a fire to cast wet sheets upon it. Some
    critics have been of opinion that this sheet was of the nature of the
    asbestos, which cannot be consumed by fire: but I rather think it an
    allegorical allusion to the coldness and heaviness of the writing.—P.


    [280] 'Tibbald:' Lewis Tibbald (as pronounced) or Theobald (as written)
    was bred an attorney, and son to an attorney (says Mr Jacob) of
    Sittenburn, in Kent. He was author of some forgotten plays,
    translations, and other pieces. He was concerned in a paper called the
    Censor, and a Translation of Ovid. 'There is a notorious idiot, one
    hight Whachum, who, from an under-spur-leather to the law, is become an
    under-strapper to the play-house, who hath lately burlesqued the
    Metamorphoses of Ovid by a vile translation, &c. This fellow is
    concerned in an impertinent paper called the Censor.' Dennis, Rem. on
    Pope's Hom. pp. 9, 10.—P.


    [281] 'Ozell:' 'Mr John Ozell (if we credit Mr Jacob) did go to school
    in Leicestershire, where somebody left him something to live on, when he
    shall retire from business. He was designed to be sent to Cambridge, in
    order for priesthood; but he chose rather to be placed in an office of
    accounts in the city, being qualified for the same by his skill in
    arithmetic, and writing the necessary hands. He has obliged the world
    with many translations of French plays.' Jacob, Lives of Dram. Poets, p.
    198.—P. Mr Jacob's character of Mr Ozell seems vastly short of his
    merits, and he ought to have further justice done him, having since
    fully confuted all sarcasms on his learning and genius, by an
    advertisement of September 20, 1729, in a paper called the Weekly
    Medley, &c. 'As to my learning, this envious wretch knew, and everybody
    knows, that the whole bench of bishops, not long ago, were pleased to
    give me a purse of guineas, for discovering the erroneous translations
    of the Common Prayer in Portuguese, Spanish, French, Italian, &c. As for
    my genius, let Mr Cleland show better verses in all Pope's works than
    Ozell's version of Boileau's Lutrin, which the late Lord Halifax was so
    pleased with, that he complimented him with leave to dedicate it to him,
    &c. Let him show better and truer poetry in the Rape of the Lock than in
    Ozell's Rape of the Bucket (La Secchia Rapita). And Mr Toland and Mr
    Gildon publicly declared Ozell's translation of Homer to be, as it was
    prior, so likewise superior to Pope's. Surely, surely, every man is free
    to deserve well of his country.'—John Ozell. We cannot but subscribe to
    such reverend testimonies as those of the bench of bishops, Mr Toland,
    and Mr Gildon.—P.


    [282] 'A heidegger:' a strange bird from Switzerland, and not (as some
    have supposed) the name of an eminent person who was a man of parts,
    and, as was said of Petronius, arbiter elegantiarum.—P.


    [283] 'Gildon:' Charles Gildon, a writer of criticisms and libels of the
    last age, bred at St Omer's with the Jesuits; but renouncing Popery, he
    published Blount's books against the divinity of Christ, the Oracles of
    Reason, &c. He signalised himself as a critic, having written some very
    bad plays, abused Mr Pope very scandalously in an anonymous pamphlet of
    the Life of Mr Wycherly, printed by Curll; in another, called the New
    Rehearsal, printed in 1714; in a third, entitled the Complete Art of
    English Poetry, in two volumes, and others.—P.


    [284] 'Howard:' Hon. Edward Howard, author of the British Princes, and a
    great number of wonderful pieces, celebrated by the late Earls of Dorset
    and Rochester, Duke of Buckingham, Mr Waller, &c.—P.


    [285] 'Under Archer's wing—Gaming:' when the statute against gaming was
    drawn up, it was represented that the king, by ancient custom, plays at
    hazard one night in the year; and therefore a clause was inserted, with
    an exception as to that particular. Under this pretence, the
    groom-porter had a room appropriated to gaming all the summer the court
    was at Kensington, which his Majesty, accidentally being acquainted of,
    with a just indignation prohibited. It is reported the same practice is
    yet continued wherever the court resides, and the hazard table there
    open to all the professed gamesters in town.


    'Greatest and justest sovereign! know ye this?
    Alas! no more, than Thames' calm head can know
    Whose meads his arms drown, or whose corn o'erflow.'


    DONNE to QUEEN ELIZ.—P.


    [286] 'Chapel-royal:' the voices and instruments used in the service of
    the chapel-royal being also employed in the performance of the Birth-day
    and New-year Odes.—P.


    [287] 'But pious Needham:' a matron of great and peculiar fame, and very
    religious in her way.—P.


    [288] 'Back to the Devil:' the Devil Tavern in Fleet Street, where these
    odes are usually rehearsed before they are performed at court.—W.


    [289] 'Ogilby—God save King Log:' See Ogilby's Aesop's Fables, where,
    in the story of the Frogs and their King, this excellent hemistich is to
    be found.—P.


    [290] Sir George Thorald, Lord Mayor of London in the year 1720.


    [291] 'A little Ajax:' in duodecimo, translated from Sophocles by
    Tibhald.


    [292] 'Henley's gilt tub:' the pulpit of a dissenter is usually called a
    tub; but that of Mr Orator Henley was covered with velvet, and adorned
    with gold. He had also a fair altar, and over it is this extraordinary
    inscription, 'The Primitive Eucharist.' See the history of this person,
    book iii.


    [293] 'Flecknoe's Irish throne:' Richard Flecknoe was an Irish priest,
    but had laid aside (as himself expressed it) the mechanic part of
    priesthood. He printed some plays, poems, letters, and travels.—P.


    [294] 'Or that whereon her Curlls the public pours:' Edmund Curll stood
    in the pillory at Charing Cross, in March 1727-8. 'This,' saith Edmund
    Curll, 'is a false assertion. I had, indeed, the corporal punishment of
    what the gentlemen of the long robe are pleased jocosely to call
    mounting the rostrum for one hour; but that scene of action was not in
    the month of March, but in February' (Curliad, 12mo, p. 19). And of the
    history of his being tossed in a blanket, he saith—'Here, Scriblerus!
    thou leeseth in what thou assertest concerning the blanket—it was not a
    blanket, but a rug,' p. 25. Much in the same manner Mr Cibber
    remonstrated, that his brothers at Bedlam, mentioned book i., were not
    brazen, but blocks; yet our author let it pass unaltered, as a trifle
    that no way altered the relationship.—P.


    [295] 'Rome in her Capitol saw Querno sit:' Camillo Querno was of
    Apulia, who, hearing the great encouragement which Leo X. gave to poets,
    travelled to Rome with a harp in his hand, and sung to it twenty
    thousand verses of a poem called Alexias. He was introduced as a buffoon
    to Leo, and promoted to the honour of the laurel—a jest which the court
    of Rome and the pope himself entered into so far as to cause him to ride
    on an elephant to the Capitol, and to hold a solemn festival on his
    coronation, at which it is recorded the poet himself was so transported
    as to weep for joy.[296] He was ever after a constant frequenter of the
    pope's table, drank abundantly, and poured forth verses without number.
    Paulus Jovius, Elog. Vir. doct. chap. lxxxii. Some idea of his poetry is
    given by Fam. Strada, in his Prolusions.—P.


    [296] See Life of C.C. chap. vi. p. 149.


    [297] 'Never was dash'd out, at one lucky hit:' our author here seems
    willing to give some account of the possibility of Dulness making a wit
    (which could be done no other way than by chance). The fiction is the
    more reconciled to probability, by the known story of Apelles, who being
    at a loss to express the foam of Alexander's horse, dashed his pencil in
    despair at the picture, and happened to do it by that fortunate
    stroke.—P.


    [298] 'And call'd the phantom More:' Curll, in his Key to the Dunciad,
    affirmed this to be James Moore Smith, Esq., and it is probable
    (considering what is said of him in the Testimonies) that some might
    fancy our author obliged to represent this gentleman as a plagiary, or
    to pass for one himself. His case, indeed, was like that of a man I have
    heard of, who, as he was sitting in company, perceived his next
    neighbour had stolen his handkerchief. 'Sir,' said the thief, finding
    himself detected, 'do not expose me, I did it for mere want; be so good
    but to take it privately out of my pocket again, and say nothing.' The
    honest man did so, but the other cried out, 'See, gentlemen, what a
    thief we have among us! look, he is stealing my handkerchief!'—P.—
    Moore was a notorious plagiarist.—It appears from hence, that this is
    not the name of a real person, but fictitious. More, from [Greek:
    moros], stultus, [Greek: moria], stultitia, to represent the folly of a
    plagiary. Thus Erasmus, Admonuit me Mori cognomen tibi, quod tam ad
    Moriae vocabulum accedit quam es ipse a re alienus
    . Dedication of
    Moriae Encomium to Sir Tho. More; the farewell of which may be our
    author's to his plagiary, Vale, More! et moriam tuam gnaviter defende.
    Adieu, More! and be sure strongly to defend thy own folly! Scribl.—P.


    [299] 'But lofty Lintot:' we enter here upon the episode of the
    booksellers, persons whose names being more known and famous in the
    learned world than those of the authors in this poem, do therefore need
    less explanation. The action of Mr Lintot here imitates that of Dares in
    Virgil, rising just in this manner to lay hold on a bull. This eminent
    bookseller printed the Rival Modes before-mentioned.—P.


    [300] 'Stood dauntless Curll:' we come now to a character of much
    respect, that of Mr Edmund Curll. As a plain repetition of great actions
    is the best praise of them, we shall only say of this eminent man, that
    he carried the trade many lengths beyond what it ever before had arrived
    at; and that he was the envy and admiration of all his profession. He
    possessed himself of a command over all authors whatever; he caused them
    to write what he pleased; they could not call their very names their
    own. He was not only famous among these; he was taken notice of by the
    state, the church, and the law, and received particular marks of
    distinction from each. It will be owned that he is here introduced with
    all possible dignity: he speaks like the intrepid Diomede; he runs like
    the swift-footed Achilles; if he falls, 'tis like the beloved Nisus; and
    (what Homer makes to be the chief of all praises) he is favoured of the
    gods; he says but three words, and his prayer is heard; a goddess
    conveys it to the seat of Jupiter: though he loses the prize, he gains
    the victory; the great mother herself comforts him, she inspires him
    with expedients, she honours him with an immortal present (such as
    Achilles receives from Thetis, and Aeneas from Venus) at once
    instructive and prophetical: after this he is unrivalled and triumphant.
    The tribute our author here pays him is a grateful return for several
    unmerited obligations. Many weighty animadversions on the public
    affairs, and many excellent and diverting pieces on private persons, has
    he given to his name. If ever he owed two verses to any other, he owed
    Mr Curll some thousands. He was every day extending his fame, and
    enlarging his writings: witness innumerable instances; but it shall
    suffice only to mention the Court Poems, which he meant to publish as
    the work of the true writer, a lady of quality; but being first
    threatened, and afterwards punished for it by Mr Pope, he generously
    transferred it from her to him, and ever since printed it in his name.
    The single time that ever he spoke to C. was on that affair, and to that
    happy incident he owed all the favours since received from him: so true
    is the saying of Dr Sydenham, 'that any one shall be, at some time or
    other, the better or the worse for having but seen or spoken to a good
    or bad man.'—P.


    [301] 'Left-legged Jacob:' Jacob Tonson.


    [302] 'Curll's Corinna:' this name, it seems, was taken by one Mrs
    T——, who procured some private letters of Mr Pope, while almost a boy,
    to Mr Cromwell, and sold them without the consent of either of those
    gentleman to Curll, who printed them in 12mo, 1727. He discovered her to
    be the publisher, in his Key, p. 11. We only take this opportunity of
    mentioning the manner in which those letters got abroad, which the
    author was ashamed of as very trivial things, full not only of levities,
    but of wrong judgments of men and books, and only excusable from the
    youth and inexperience of the writer.—P.—See Life.


    [303] 'Down with the Bible, up with the Pope's Arms:' the Bible, Curll's
    sign; the Cross-keys, Lintot's.


    [304] 'Seas:' see Lucian's Icaro-Menippus, where this fiction is more
    extended.—P.


    [305] 'Evans, Young, and Swift:' some of those persons whose writings,
    epigrams, or jests he had owned.—P.


    [306] 'Bezaleel:' Bezaleel Morris was author of some satires on the
    translators of Homer, with many other things printed in newspapers.
    'Bond wrote a satire against Mr P——. Capt. Breval was author of the
    Confederates, an ingenious dramatic performance to expose Mr P., Mr Gay,
    Dr Arb., and some ladies of quality,' says Curll, Key, p. 11.—P.


    [307] 'Joseph:' Joseph Gay, a fictitious name put by Curll before
    several pamphlets, which made them pass with many for Mr Gay's.—P.


    [308] 'And turn this whole illusion on the town:' it was a common
    practice of this bookseller to publish vile pieces of obscure hands
    under the names of eminent authors.—P.


    [309] 'Cook shall be Prior:' the man here specified wrote a thing called
    the Battle of the Poets, in which Philips and Welsted were the heroes,
    and Swift and Pope utterly routed. He also published some malevolent
    things in the British, London, and Daily journals; and at the same time
    wrote letters to Mr Pope protesting his innocence. His chief work was a
    translation of Hesiod, to which Theobald wrote notes and half-notes,
    which he carefully owned.—P.


    [310] 'Rueful length of face:' 'the decrepit person or figure of a man
    are no reflections upon his genius; an honest mind will love and esteem
    a man of worth, though he be deformed or poor. Yet the author of the
    Dunciad hath libelled a person for his rueful length of face!'—Mist's
    Journal, June 8. This genius and man of worth, whom an honest mind
    should love, is Mr Curll. True it is he stood in the pillory, an
    incident which would lengthen the face of any man though it were ever so
    comely, therefore is no reflection on the natural beauty of Mr Curll.
    But as to reflections on any man's face or figure Mr Dennis saith
    excellently: 'Natural deformity comes not by our fault; 'tis often
    occasioned by calamities and diseases, which a man can no more help than
    a monster can his deformity. There is no one misfortune and no one
    disease but what all the rest of mankind are subject to. But the
    deformity of this author is visible, present, lasting, unalterable, and
    peculiar to himself. 'Tis the mark of God and nature upon him, to give
    us warning that we should hold no society with him, as a creature not of
    our original, nor of our species; and they who have refused to take this
    warning which God and nature have given them, and have, in spite of it,
    by a senseless presumption, ventured to be familiar with him, have
    severely suffered, &c. 'Tis certain his original is not from Adam, but
    from the Devil,' &c.—Dennis, Character of Mr P., octavo, 1716.
    Admirably it is observed by Mr Dennis against Mr Law, p. 33, 'That the
    language of Billingsgate can never be the language of charity, nor
    consequently of Christianity.'—P.


    [311] 'On Codrus' old, or Dunton's modern bed:' of Codrus the poet's
    bed, see Juvenal, describing his poverty very copiously, Sat. iii. ver.
    103, &c. John Dunton was a broken bookseller, and abusive scribbler. He
    wrote Neck or Nothing, a violent satire on some ministers of state; a
    libel on the Duke of Devonshire, and the Bishop of Peterborough, &c.—P.


    [312] 'And Tutchin flagrant from the scourge:' John Tutchin, author of
    some vile verses, and of a weekly paper called the Observator. He was
    sentenced to be whipped through several towns in the west of England,
    upon which he petitioned King James II. to be hanged. When that prince
    died in exile, he wrote an invective against his memory, occasioned by
    some humane elegies on his death. He lived to the time of Queen
    Anne.—P.


    [313] 'There Ridpath, Roper:' authors of the Flying-post and Post-boy,
    two scandalous papers on different sides, for which they equally and
    alternately deserved to be cudgelled, and were so.—P.


    [314] 'Himself among the storied chiefs he spies:' the history of
    Curll's being tossed in a blanket and whipped by the scholars of
    Westminster is well known.—P.


    [315] 'Eliza:' Eliza Haywood. This woman was authoress of those most
    scandalous books called the Court of Carimania, and the New Utopia.—P.


    [316] 'Kirkall:' the name of an engraver. Some of this lady's works were
    printed in four volumes in 12mo, with her picture thus dressed up before
    them.—P.


    [317] 'Osborne, Thomas;' a bookseller in Gray's Inn, very well qualified
    by his impudence to act this part; and therefore placed here instead of
    a less deserving predecessor. This man published advertisements for a
    year together, pretending to sell Mr Pope's subscription books of
    Homer's Iliad at half the price. Of which books he had none, but cut to
    the size of them (which was quarto) the common books in folio, without
    copperplates, on a worse paper, and never above half the value.—P. This
    was the man Johnson knocked down.


    [318] 'Rolli:' Paolo Antonio Rolli, an Italian poet, and writer of many
    operas in that language, which, partly by the help of his genius,
    prevailed in England near twenty years. He taught Italian to some fine
    gentlemen, who affected to direct the operas.—P.


    [319] 'Bentley:' this applies not to Richard but to Thomas Bentley, his
    nephew, and a small imitator of his great uncle.


    [320] 'Welsted:' Leonard Welsted, author of the Triumvirate, or a Letter
    in verse from Palaemon to Celia at Bath, which was meant for a satire on
    Mr P. and some of his friends about the year 1718.—P.


    [321] 'With thunder rumbling from the mustard bowl:' the old way of
    making thunder and mustard were the same; but since it is more
    advantageously performed by troughs of wood with stops in them. Whether
    Mr Dennis was the inventor of that improvement, I know not; but it is
    certain that being once at a tragedy of a new author, he fell into a
    great passion at hearing some, and cried, ''Sdeath! that is my
    thunder.'—P.


    [322] 'Norton:' see ver. 417.—J. Durant Breval, author of a very
    extra-ordinary Book of Travels, and some poems.—P.


    [323] 'Webster:' the editor of a newspaper called the Weekly Miscellany.


    [324] 'Whitfield:' the great preacher—what a contrast to his satirist!


    [325] 'As morning prayer, and flagellation end:' it is between eleven
    and twelve in the morning, after church service, that the criminals are
    whipped in Bridewell. This is to mark punctually the time of the day:
    Homer does it by the circumstance of the judges rising from court, or of
    the labourers' dinner; our author by one very proper both to the persons
    and the scene of his poem, which we may remember commenced in the
    evening of the Lord-mayor's day. The first book passed in that night;
    the next morning the games begin in the Strand; thence along Fleet
    Street (places inhabited by booksellers); then they proceed by Bridewell
    towards Fleet-ditch; and, lastly, through Ludgate to the City and the
    temple of the goddess.—P.


    [326] 'Dash through thick and thin—love of dirt—dark dexterity:' the
    three chief qualifications of party-writers: to stick at nothing, to
    delight in flinging dirt, and to slander in the dark by guess.—P.


    [327] 'The weekly journals:' papers of news and scandal intermixed, on
    different sides and parties, and frequently shifting from one side to
    the other, called the London Journal, British Journal, Daily Journal,
    &c., the concealed writers of which for some time were Oldmixon, Roome,
    Arnall, Concanen, and others; persons never seen by our author.—P.


    [328] 'A peck of coals a-piece:' our indulgent poet, whenever he has
    spoken of any dirty or low work, constantly puts us in mind of the
    poverty of the offenders, as the only extenuation of such practices. Let
    any one but remark, when a thief, a pickpocket, a highwayman, or a
    knight of the post are spoken of, how much our hate to those characters
    is lessened, if they add a needy thief, a poor pickpocket, a hungry
    highwayman, a starving knight of the post, &c.—P.


    [329] 'In naked majesty Oldmixon stands:' Mr John Oldmixon, next to Sir
    Dennis the most ancient critic of our nation.—P.


    [330] 'Next Smedley dived:' the person here mentioned, an Irishman, was
    author and publisher of many scurrilous pieces, a weekly Whitehall
    journal, in the year 1722, in the name of Sir James Baker; and
    particularly whole volumes of Billingsgate against Dr Swift and Mr Pope,
    called Gulliveriana and Alexandriana, printed in octavo, 1728.—P.


    [331] 'Aaron Hill:' see life.


    [332] 'With each a sickly brother at his back: sons of a day, &c:' these
    were daily papers, a number of which, to lessen the expense, were
    printed one on the back of another.—P.


    [333] 'Osborne:' a name assumed by the eldest and gravest of these
    writers, who at last, being ashamed of his pupils, gave his paper over,
    and in his age remained silent.—P.


    [334] 'Gazetteers:' temporary journals, the ephemerals of the then
    press, the spawn of the minister of the hour, 'born and dying with the
    foul breath that made them.'


    [335] 'William Arnall:' bred an attorney, was a perfect genius in this
    sort of work. He began under twenty with furious party-papers; then
    succeeded Concanen in the 'British Journal.' At the first publication of
    the 'Dunciad,' he prevailed on the author not to give him his due place
    in it, by a letter professing his detestation of such practices as his
    predecessor's. But since, by the most unexampled insolence, and personal
    abuse of several great men, the poet's particular friends, he most amply
    deserved a niche in the temple of infamy: witness a paper, called the
    'Free Briton;' a dedication entitled, 'To the genuine blunderer,' 1732,
    and many others. He wrote for hire, and valued himself upon it; not
    indeed without cause, it appearing that he received 'for Free Britons,
    and other writings, in the space of four years, no less than ten
    thousand nine hundred and ninety-seven pounds, six shillings, and eight
    pence, out of the Treasury.' But frequently, through his fury or folly,
    he exceeded all the bounds of his commission, and obliged his honourable
    patron to disavow his scurrilities.—P.


    [336] 'The plunging prelate:' Bishop Sherlock.


    [337] 'And Milbourn:' Luke Milbourn, a clergyman, the fairest of
    critics, who, when he wrote against Mr Dryden's Virgil, did him justice
    in printing at the same time his own translations of him, which were
    intolerable.—P.


    [338] 'Lud's famed gates:' 'King Lud, repairing the city, called it
    after his own name, Lud's Town; the strong gate which he built in the
    west part he likewise, for his own honour, named Ludgate. In the year
    1260, this gate was beautified with images of Lud and other kings. Those
    images in the reign of Edward VI. had their heads smitten off, and were
    otherwise defaced by unadvised folks. Queen Mary did set new heads upon
    their old bodies again. The 28th of Queen Elizabeth, the same gate was
    clean taken down, and newly and beautifully builded, with images of Lud
    and others, as afore.' Stowe's Survey of London.—P.


    [339] 'Thrice Budgell aim'd to speak:' famous for his speeches on many
    occasions about the South Sea Scheme, &c. 'He is a very ingenious
    gentleman, and hath written some excellent Epilogues to Plays, and one
    small piece on Love, which is very pretty.' Jacob, Lives of Poets, vol.
    ii. p. 289. But this gentleman since made himself much more eminent, and
    personally well known to the greatest statesmen of all parties, as well
    as to all the courts of law in this nation.—P.


    [340] 'Toland and Tindal:' two persons, not so happy as to be obscure,
    who wrote against the religion of their country. Toland, the author of
    the Atheist's liturgy, called 'Pantheisticon,' was a spy, in pay to Lord
    Oxford. Tindal was author of the 'Rights of the Christian Church,' and
    'Christianity as Old as the Creation.' He also wrote an abusive pamphlet
    against Earl S——, which was suppressed, while yet in MS., by an
    eminent person, then out of the ministry, to whom he showed it,
    expecting his approbation: this doctor afterwards published the same
    piece, mutatis mutandis, against that very person.—P.


    [341] 'Christ's no kingdom here:' this is said by Curll, Key to Dunc.,
    to allude to a sermon of a reverend Bishop (Hoadley).—P.


    [342] 'Centlivre:' Mrs Susanna Centlivre, wife to Mr Centlivre, Yeoman
    of the Mouth to his Majesty. She wrote many plays, and a song (says Mr
    Jacob, vol. i. p. 32) before she was seven years old. She also wrote a
    ballad against Mr Pope's Homer, before he began it.—P.


    [343] 'Motteux:' translator of Don Quixote.


    [344] 'Boyer the state, and Law the stage gave o'er:' A. Boyer, a
    voluminous compiler of annals, political collections, &c.—William Law,
    A.M., wrote with great zeal against the stage; Mr Dennis answered with
    as great.—P. William Law was an extraordinary man. His 'Serious Call'
    made Dr Johnson religious. He became mystical in his views.


    [345] 'Morgan:' a writer against religion.


    [346] 'Mandeville:' the famous author of the 'Fable of the Bees.'


    [347] 'Norton:' Norton Defoe, natural offspring of the famous Daniel. He
    edited the 'Flying Post,' and was a detractor of Pope.


    [348] 'Taylor:' John Taylor, the water-poet, an honest man, who owns he
    learned not so much as the Accidence—a rare example of modesty in a
    poet!


    'I must confess I do want eloquence,
    And never scarce did learn my Accidence;
    For having got from possum to posset,
    I there was gravell'd, could no further get.'


    He wrote fourscore books in the reign of James I. and Charles I., and
    afterwards (like Edward Ward) kept an ale-house in Long-Acre. He died in
    1654.—P.


    [349] 'Benlowes:' a country gentleman, famous for his own bad poetry,
    and for patronising bad poets, as may be seen from many dedications of
    Quarles and others to him. Some of these anagrammed his name, Benlowes,
    into Benevolus; to verify which, he spent his whole estate upon
    them.—P.


    [350] 'And Shadwell nods the poppy:' Shadwell took opium for many years,
    and died of too large a dose, in the year 1692.—P.


    [351] 'Old Bavius sits:' Bavius was an ancient poet, celebrated by
    Virgil for the like cause as Bayes by our author, though not in so
    Christian-like a manner: for heathenishly it is declared by Virgil of
    Bavius, that he ought to be hated and detested for his evil works; qui
    Bavium non odit
    ; whereas we have often had occasion to observe our
    poet's great good nature and mercifulness through the whole course of
    this poem. Scribl.—P.


    [352] 'Brown and Mears:' booksellers, printers for anybody.—The
    allegory of the souls of the dull coming forth in the form of books,
    dressed in calf's leather, and being let abroad in vast numbers by
    booksellers, is sufficiently intelligible.—P.


    [353] 'Ward in pillory:' John Ward of Hackney, Esq., member of
    parliament, being convicted of forgery, was first expelled the House,
    and then sentenced to the pillory on the 17th of February 1727. Mr Curll
    (having likewise stood there) looks upon the mention of such a gentleman
    in a satire as a great act of barbarity. Key to the Dunc., 3d edit. p.
    16. And another author reasons thus upon it: Durgen., 8vo, pp. 11, 12,
    'How unworthy is it of Christian charity to animate the rabble to abuse
    a worthy man in such a situation? What could move the poet thus to
    mention a brave sufferer, a gallant prisoner, exposed to the view of all
    mankind? It was laying aside his senses, it was committing a crime, for
    which the law is deficient not to punish him! nay, a crime which man can
    scarce forgive or time efface! Nothing surely could have induced him to
    it but being bribed by a great lady,' &c. (to whom this brave, honest,
    worthy gentleman was guilty of no offence but forgery, proved in open
    court). But it is evident this verse could not be meant of him, it being
    notorious that no eggs were thrown at that gentleman. Perhaps,
    therefore, it might be intended of Mr Edward Ward, the poet, when he
    stood there.—P.


    [354] 'Settle:' Elkanah Settle was once a writer in vogue, as well as
    Cibber, both for dramatic poetry and politics.—P.


    [355] 'Monarch:' Chi Ho-am-ti, Emperor of China, the same who built the
    great wall between China and Tartary, destroyed all the books and
    learned men of that empire.—P.


    [356] 'Physic of the soul:' the caliph, Omar I., having conquered Egypt,
    caused his general to burn the Ptolemaean library, on the gates of which
    was this inscription, [Greek: PSYCHES IATREION], the Physic of the
    soul.—P.


    [357] 'Happy!—had Easter never been:' wars in England anciently, about
    the right time of celebrating Easter.—P.


    [358] 'Jacob, the scourge of grammar, mark with awe:' this gentleman is
    son of a considerable maltster of Romsey in Southamptonshire, and bred
    to the law under a very eminent attorney; who, between his more
    laborious studies, has diverted himself with poetry. He is a great
    admirer of poets and their works, which has occasioned him to try his
    genius that way. He has wrote in prose the Lives of the Poets, Essays,
    and a great many law-books, The Accomplished Conveyancer, Modern
    Justice, &c.' Giles Jacob of himself, Lives of Poets, vol. i. He very
    grossly, and unprovoked, abused in that book the author's friend, Mr
    Gay.—P.


    [359] 'Horneck and Roome:' these two were virulent party-writers,
    worthily coupled together, and one would think prophetically, since,
    after the publishing of this piece, the former dying, the latter
    succeeded him in honour and employment. The first was Philip Horneck,
    author of a Billingsgate paper called The High German Doctor. Edward
    Roome was son of an undertaker for funerals in Fleet Street, and wrote
    some of the papers called Pasquin, where by malicious innuendos he
    endeavoured to represent our author guilty of malevolent practices with
    a great man then under prosecution of Parliament. Of this man was made
    the following epigram:


    'You ask why Roome diverts you with his jokes,
    Yet if he writes, is dull as other folks?
    You wonder at it. This, sir, is the case,
    The jest is lost unless he prints his face.'


    Popple was the author of some vile plays and pamphlets. He published
    abuses on our author in a paper called the Prompter.—P.


    [360] 'Goode:' an ill-natured critic, who wrote a satire on our author,
    called The Mock Aesop, and many anonymous libels in newspapers for
    hire.—P.


    [361] 'Ralph:' James Ralph, a name inserted after the first editions,
    not known to our author till he writ a swearing-piece called Sawney,
    very abusive of Dr Swift, Mr Gay, and himself. These lines allude to a
    thing of his, entitled Night, a Poem. This low writer attended his own
    works with panegyrics in the journals, and once in particular praised
    himself highly above Mr Addison, in wretched remarks upon that author's
    account of English Poets, printed in a London journal, September 1728.
    He was wholly illiterate, and knew no language, not even French. Being
    advised to read the rules of dramatic poetry before he began a play, he
    smiled and replied, 'Shakspeare wrote without rules.' He ended at last
    in the common sink of all such writers, a political newspaper, to which
    he was recommended by his friend Arnall, and received a small pittance
    for pay.—P. B. Franklin seems to have thought that his friend Ralph was
    alluded to here. See his Autobiography.


    [362] 'Behold yon pair:' one of these was author of a weekly paper
    called The Grumbler, as the other was concerned in another called
    Pasquin, in which Mr Pope was abused with the Duke of Buckingham and
    Bishop of Rochester. They also joined in a piece against his first
    undertaking to translate the Iliad, entitled Homerides, by Sir Iliad
    Doggrel, printed 1715.—P.


    [363] 'Wormius hight:' let not this name, purely fictitious, be
    conceited to mean the learned Olaus Wormius; much less (as it was
    unwarrantably foisted into the surreptitious editions) our own
    antiquary, Mr Thomas Hearne, who had no way aggrieved our poet, but, on
    the contrary, published many curious tracts which he hath to his great
    contentment perused.—P.


    [364] 'Lo! Henley stands,' &c.: J. Henley, the orator; he preached on
    the Sundays upon theological matters, and on the Wednesdays upon all
    other sciences. Each auditor paid one shilling. He declaimed some years
    against the greatest persons, and occasionally did our author that
    honour.—P.


    [365] 'Sherlock, Hare, Gibson:' bishops of Salisbury, Chichester, and
    London, whose Sermons and Pastoral Letters did honour to their country
    as well as stations.—P.


    [366] Of Toland and Tindal, see book ii. Thomas Woolston was an impious
    madman, who wrote in a most insolent style against the miracles of the
    Gospel, in the year 1726, &c.—P.


    [367] 'A sable sorcerer:' Dr Faustus, the subject of a set of farces,
    which, lasted in vogue two or three seasons, in which both playhouses
    strove to outdo each other for some years.—P.


    [368] 'Hell rises, Heaven descends, and dance on earth:' this monstrous
    absurdity was actually represented in Tibbald's Rape of Proserpine.—P.


    [369] 'Lo! one vast egg:' in another of these farces, Harlequin is
    hatched upon the stage, out of a large egg.—P.


    [370] 'Immortal Rich:' Mr John Rich, master of the Theatre Royal in
    Covent Garden, was the first that excelled this way.—P.


    [371] Booth and Cibber were joint managers of the Theatre in Drury
    Lane.—P.


    [372] 'Though long my party:' Settle, like most party-writers, was very
    uncertain in his political principles. He was employed to hold the pen
    in the character of a popish successor, but afterwards printed his
    narrative on the other side. He had managed the ceremony of a famous
    pope-burning on Nov. 17, 1680, then became a trooper in King James's
    army, at Hounslow Heath. After the Revolution he kept a booth at
    Bartholomew Fair, where, in the droll called St George for England, he
    acted in his old age in a dragon of green leather of his own invention;
    he was at last taken into the Charter-house, and there died, aged sixty
    years.—P.


    [373] 'Polypheme:' he translated the Italian Opera of Polifemo, but
    unfortunately lost the whole gist of the story. The Cyclops asks Ulysses
    his name who tells him his name is Noman. After his eye is put out, he
    roars and calls the brother Cyclops to his aid: they inquire who has
    hurt him? he answers Noman; whereupon they all go away again. Our
    ingenious translator made Ulysses answer, 'I take no name,' whereby all
    that followed became unintelligible. Hence it appears that Mr Gibber
    (who values himself on subscribing to the English translation of Homer's
    Iliad) had not that merit with respect to the Odyssey, or he might have
    been better instructed in the Greek Punology.—P.


    [374] 'Faustus, Pluto,' &c.: names of miserable farces, which it was the
    custom to act at the end of the best tragedies, to spoil the digestion
    of the audience.—P.


    [375] 'Ensure it but from fire:' in Tibbald's farce of Proserpine, a
    corn-field was set on fire; whereupon the other play-house had a barn
    burned down for the recreation of the spectators. They also rivalled
    each other in showing the burnings of hell fire, in Dr Faustus.—P.


    [376] 'Another AEschylus appears:' it is reported of AEschylus, that when
    his tragedy of the Furies was acted, the audience were so terrified that
    the children fell into fits, and the big-bellied women miscarried.—P.


    [377] 'On poets' tombs see Benson's titles writ:' W——-m Benson
    (surveyor of the buildings to his Majesty King George I.) gave in a
    report to the Lords, that their house and the painted-chamber adjoining
    were in immediate danger of falling. Whereupon the Lords met in a
    committee to appoint some other place to sit in, while the house should
    be taken down. But it being proposed to cause some other builders first
    to inspect it, they found it in very good condition. The Lords, upon
    this, were going upon an address to the king against Benson for such a
    misrepresentation; but the Earl of Sunderland, then secretary, gave them
    an assurance that his Majesty would remove him, which was done
    accordingly. In favour of this man, the famous Sir Christopher Wren, who
    had been architect to the Crown for above fifty years, who built most of
    the churches in London, laid the first stone of St Paul's, and lived to
    finish it, had been displaced from his employment at the age of nearly
    ninety years.—P.


    [378] 'Ambrose Philips:' 'he was,' saith Mr Jacob, 'one of the wits at
    Button's, and a justice of the peace.'—P.


    [379] 'While Jones' and Boyle's united labours fall:' at the time when
    this poem was written, the banqueting-house of Whitehall, the church and
    piazza of Covent Garden, and the palace and chapel of Somerset House,
    the works of the famous Inigo Jones, had been for many years so
    neglected as to be in danger of ruin. The portico of Covent Garden
    church had been just then restored and beautified at the expense of the
    Earl of Burlington, who, at the same time, by his publication of the
    designs of that great master and Palladio, as well as by many noble
    buildings of his own, revived the true taste of architecture in this
    kingdom.—P.


    [380] 'Mad Mathesis:' alluding to the strange conclusions some
    mathematicians have deduced from their principles, concerning the real
    quantity of matter, the reality of space, &c.—P. W.


    [381] 'Pure space:' i.e. pure and defaecated from matter. 'Ecstatic
    stare:' the action of men who look about with full assurance of seeing
    what does not exist, such as those who expect to find space a real
    being.—W.


    [382] 'Running round the circle, finds it square:' regards the wild and
    fruitless attempts of squaring the circle.—P. W.


    [383] 'Nor couldst thou,' &c.: this noble person in the year 1737, when
    the act aforesaid was brought into the House of Lords, opposed it in an
    excellent speech (says Mr Cibber), 'with a lively spirit, and uncommon
    eloquence.' This speech had the honour to be answered by the said Mr
    Cibber, with a lively spirit also, and in a manner very uncommon, in the
    8th chapter of his Life and Manners.—P.


    [384] 'Harlot form:' the attitude given to this phantom represents the
    nature and genius of the Italian Opera; its affected airs, its
    effeminate sounds, and the practice of patching up these operas with
    favourite songs, incoherently put together. These things were supported
    by the subscriptions of the nobility. This circumstance, that Opera
    should prepare for the opening of the grand sessions, was prophesied of
    in book iii. ver. 304,


    'Already Opera prepares the way,
    The sure forerunner of her gentle sway.'


    P. W.


    [385] 'Division reign:' alluding to the false taste of playing tricks in
    music with numberless divisions, to the neglect of that harmony which
    conforms to the sense, and applies to the passions. Mr Handel had
    introduced a great number of hands, and more variety of instruments into
    the orchestra, and employed even drums and cannon to make a fuller
    chorus; which proved so much too manly for the fine gentlemen of his
    age, that he was obliged to remove his music into Ireland. After which
    they were reduced, for want of composers, to practise the patch-work
    above mentioned.—P. W.


    [386] 'Chromatic:' that species of the ancient music called the
    Chromatic was a variation and embellishment, in odd irregularities, of
    the diatonic kind. They say it was invented about the time of Alexander,
    and that the Spartans forbad the use of it, as languid and
    effeminate.—W.


    [387] 'Wake the dull church, and lull the ranting stage:' i.e. dissipate
    the devotion of the one by light and wanton airs; and subdue the pathos
    of the other by recitative and sing-song.—W.


    [388] 'Narcissus:' Lord Hervey.


    [389] 'Bold Benson:' this man endeavoured to raise himself to fame by
    erecting monuments, striking coins, setting up heads, and procuring
    translations of Milton; and afterwards by as great passion for Arthur
    Johnston, a Scotch physician's version of the Psalms, of which he
    printed many fine editions. See more of him, book iii. v. 325.—P. W.


    [390] 'The decent knight:' Sir Thomas Hanmer, who was about to publish a
    very pompous edition of a great author, at his own expense.—P. W.


    [391] 'So by each bard an alderman,' &c.: alluding to the monument of
    Butler erected by Alderman Barber.


    [392] 'The Samian letter:' the letter Y, used by Pythagoras as an emblem
    of the different roads of Virtue and Vice.


    'Et tibi quae Samios diduxit litera ramos.'—Pers. P. W.


    [393] 'House or Hall:' Westminster Hall and the House of Commons.—W.


    [394] 'Master-piece of man:' viz., an epigram. The famous Dr South
    declared a perfect epigram to be as difficult a performance as an epic
    poem. And the critics say, 'An epic poem is the greatest work human
    nature is capable of.'—P. W.


    [395] 'Gentle James:' Wilson tells us that this king, James I., took
    upon himself to teach the Latin tongue to Carr, Earl of Somerset; and
    that Gondomar, the Spanish ambassador, would speak false Latin to him,
    on purpose to give him the pleasure of correcting it, whereby he wrought
    himself into his good graces.—P. W. See Fortunes of Nigel.


    [396] 'Locke:' in the year 1703 there was a meeting of the heads of the
    University of Oxford to censure Mr Locke's Essay on Human Understanding,
    and to forbid the reading it. See his Letters in the last edit.—P. W.


    [397] 'Crousaz:' see Life.


    [398] 'The streams:' the River Cam, running by the walls of these
    colleges, which are particularly famous for their skill in
    disputation.—P. W.


    [399] 'Sleeps in port:' viz., 'now retired into harbour, after the
    tempests that had long agitated his society.' So Scriblerus. But the
    learned Scipio Maffei understands it of a certain wine called port, from
    Oporto a city of Portugal, of which this professor invited him to drink
    abundantly. Scip. Maff., De Compotationibus Academicis.—P. W.


    [400] 'Letter:' alluding to those grammarians, such as Palamedes and
    Simonides, who invented single letters. But Aristarchus, who had found
    out a double one, was therefore worthy of double honour.—Scribl. W.


    [401] 'Digamma:' alludes to the boasted restoration of the Aeolic
    digamma, in his long-projected edition of Homer. He calls it something
    more than letter, from the enormous figure it would make among the other
    letters, being one gamma set upon the shoulders of another.—P. W.


    [402] 'Cicero:' grammatical disputes about the manner of pronouncing
    Cicero's name in Greek.—W.


    [403] 'Freind—Alsop:' Dr Robert Freind, master of Westminster school,
    and canon of Christ-church—Dr Anthony Alsop, a happy imitator of the
    Horatian style.—P. W.


    [404] 'Manilius or Solinus:' some critics having had it in their choice
    to comment either on Virgil or Manilius, Pliny or Solinus, have chosen
    the worse author, the more freely to display their critical
    capacity.—P. W.


    [405] 'Suidas, Gellius, Stobaeus:' the first a dictionary-writer, a
    collector of impertinent facts and barbarous words; the second a minute
    critic; the third an author, who gave his common-place book to the
    public, where we happen to find much mince-meat of old books.—P. W.


    [406] 'Divinity:' a word much affected by the learned Aristarchus in
    common conversation, to signify genius or natural acumen. But this
    passage has a further view: [Greek: Nous] was the Platonic term for
    mind, or the first cause, and that system of divinity is here hinted at
    which terminates in blind nature without a [Greek: Nous].—P. W.


    [407] 'Petrify a genius:' those who have no genius, employed in works of
    imagination; those who have, in abstract sciences.—P. W.


    [408] 'And hew the block off:' a notion of Aristotle, that there was
    originally in every block of marble a statue, which would appear on the
    removal of the superfluous parts.—P. W.


    [409] 'Ajax' spectre:' see Homer Odyss. xi., where the ghost of Ajax
    turns sullenly from Ulysses the traveller, who had succeeded against him
    in the dispute for the arms of Achilles.—Scribl. W.


    [410] 'The first came forwards:' this forwardness or pertness is the
    certain consequence, when the children of Dulness are spoiled by too
    great fondness of their parent.—W.


    [411] 'As if he saw St James's:' reflecting on the disrespectful and
    indecent behaviour of several forward young persons in the presence, so
    offensive to all serious men, and to none more than the good
    Scriblerus.—P. W.


    [412] 'Lily-silver'd vales:' Tube roses.—P.


    [413] 'Lion of the deeps:' the winged Lion, the arms of Venice.—P. W.


    [414] 'Greatly-daring dined:' it being, indeed, no small risk to eat
    through those extraordinary compositions, whose disguised ingredients
    are generally unknown to the guests, and highly inflammatory and
    unwholesome.—P. W.


    [415] 'Jansen, Fleetwood, Cibber:' three very eminent persons, all
    managers of plays; who, though not governors by profession, had, each in
    his way, concerned themselves in the education of youth, and regulated
    their wits, their morals, or their finances, at that period of their age
    which is the most important—their entrance into the polite world.—P.
    W.


    [416] 'Paridel:' the poet seems to speak of this young gentleman with
    great affection. The name is taken from Spenser, who gives it to a
    wandering courtly squire, that travelled about for the same reason for
    which many young squires are now fond of travelling, and especially to
    Paris.—P. W.


    [417] 'Annius:' the name taken from Annius the Monk of Viterbo, famous
    for many impositions and forgeries of ancient manuscripts and
    inscriptions, which he was prompted to by mere vanity, but our Annius
    had a more substantial motive. Annius, Sir Andrew Fontaine.—P. W.


    [418] 'Still to cheat:' some read skill, but that is frivolous, for
    Annius hath that skill already; or if he had not, skill were not wanting
    to cheat such persons.—Bentl. P. W.


    [419] 'Hunt the Athenian fowl:' the owl stamped on the reverse on the
    ancient money of Athens.—P. W.


    [420] 'Attys and Cecrops:' the first king of Athens, of whom it is hard
    to suppose any coins are extant; but not so improbable as what follows,
    that there should be any of Mahomet, who forbad all images, and the
    story of whose pigeon was a monkish fable. Nevertheless, one of these
    Annius's made a counterfeit medal of that impostor, now in the
    collection of a learned nobleman.—P. W.


    [421] 'Mummius:' this name is not merely an allusion to the mummies he
    was so fond of, but probably referred to the Roman General of that name,
    who burned Corinth, and committed the curious statues to the captain of
    a ship, assuring him, 'that if any were lost or broken, he should
    procure others to be made in their stead,' by which it should seem
    (whatever may be pretended) that Mummius was no virtuoso.-P. W.


    [422] 'Cheops:' a king of Egypt, whose body was certainly to be known,
    as being buried alone in his pyramid, and is therefore more genuine than
    any of the Cleopatras. This royal mummy, being stolen by a wild Arab,
    was purchased by the consul of Alexandria, and transmitted to the Museum
    of Mummius; for proof of which he brings a passage in Sandys's Travels,
    where that accurate and learned voyager assures us that he saw the
    sepulchre empty, which agrees exactly (saith he) with the time of the
    theft above mentioned. But he omits to observe that Herodotus tells the
    same thing of it in his time.—P. W.


    [423] 'Speak'st thou of Syrian princes:' the strange story following,
    which may be taken for a fiction of the poet, is justified by a true
    relation in Spon's Voyages. Vaillant (who wrote the History of the
    Syrian Kings as it is to be found on medals) coming from the Levant,
    where he had been collecting various coins, and being pursued by a
    corsair of Sallee, swallowed down twenty gold medals. A sudden bourasque
    freed him from the rover, and he got to land with them in his belly. On
    his road to Avignon, he met two physicians, of whom he demanded
    assistance. One advised purgations, the other vomits. In this
    uncertainty he took neither, but pursued his way to Lyons, where he
    found his ancient friend, the famous physician and antiquary Dufour, to
    whom he related his adventure. Dufour first asked him whether the medals
    were of the higher empire? He assured him they were. Dufour was ravished
    with the hope of possessing such a treasure—he bargained with him on
    the spot for the most curious of them, and was to recover them at his
    own expense.—P. W.


    [424] 'Witness, great Ammon:' Jupiter Ammon is called to witness, as the
    father of Alexander, to whom those kings succeeded in the division of
    the Macedonian Empire, and whose horns they wore on their medals.—P. W.


    [425] 'Douglas:' a physician of great learning and no less taste; above
    all, curious in what related to Horace, of whom he collected every
    edition, translation, and comment, to the number of several hundred
    volumes.—P. W.


    [426] 'And named it Caroline:' it is a compliment which the florists
    usually pay to princes and great persons, to give their names to the
    most curious flowers of their raising. Some have been very jealous of
    vindicating this honour, but none more than that ambitions gardener, at
    Hammersmith, who caused his favourite to be painted on his sign, with
    this inscription—'This is my Queen Caroline.'—P. W.


    [427] 'Moss:' of which the naturalists count I can't tell how many
    hundred species.—P. W.


    [428] 'Wilkins' wings:' one of the first projectors of the Royal
    Society, who, among many enlarged and useful notions, entertained the
    extravagant hope of a possibility to fly to the moon; which has put some
    volatile geniuses upon making wings for that purpose.—P. W.


    [429] 'Moral evidence:' alluding to a ridiculous and absurd way of some
    mathematicians in calculating the gradual decay of moral evidence by
    mathematical proportions; according to which calculation, in about fifty
    years it will be no longer probable that Julius Caesar was in Gaul, or
    died in the senate-house.—P. W.


    [430] 'The high priori road:' those who, from the effects in this
    visible world, deduce the eternal power and Godhead of the First Cause,
    though they cannot attain to an adequate idea of the Deity, yet discover
    so much of him as enables them to see the end of their creation, and the
    means of their happiness; whereas they who take this high priori road
    (such as Hobbes, Spinoza, Descartes, and some better reasoners) for one
    that goes right, ten lose themselves in mists, or ramble after visions,
    which deprive them of all right of their end, and mislead them in the
    choice of the means.—P. W.


    [431] 'Make Nature still:' this relates to such as, being ashamed to
    assert a mere mechanic cause, and yet unwilling to forsake it entirely,
    have had recourse to a certain plastic nature, elastic fluid, subtile
    matter, &c.—P. W.


    [432]


    'Thrust some mechanic cause into his place,
    Or bind in matter, or diffuse in space:'


    The first of these follies is that of Descartes; the second, of Hobbes;
    the third, of some succeeding philosophers.—P. W.


    [433] 'Bright image:' bright image was the title given by the later
    Platonists to that vision of nature which they had formed out of their
    own fancy, so bright that they called it [Greek: Autopton Agalma], or
    the self-seen image, i. e., seen by its own light. This ignis fatuus
    has in these our times appeared again in the north; and the writings of
    Hutcheson, Geddes, and their followers, are full of its wonders. For in
    this lux borealis, this self-seen image, these second-sighted
    philosophers see everything else.—Scribl. W. Let it be either the
    Chance god of Epicurus, or the Fate of this goddess.—W.


    [434] 'Theocles:' thus this philosopher calls upon his friend, to
    partake with him in these visions:


    'To-morrow, when the eastern sun
    With his first beams adorns the front
    Of yonder hill, if you're content
    To wander with me in the woods you see,
    We will pursue those loves of ours,
    By favour of the sylvan nymphs:


    and invoking, first, the genius of the place, we'll try to obtain at
    least some faint and distant view of the sovereign genius and first
    beauty.' Charact. vol. ii. p. 245.—P. W.


    [435] 'Society adores:' see the Pantheisticon, with its liturgy and
    rubrics, composed by Toland.—W.


    [436] 'Silenus:' Silenus was an Epicurean philosopher, as appears from
    Virgil, Eclog. vi., where he sings the principles of that philosophy in
    his drink. He is meant for one Thomas Gordon.—P. W.


    [437] 'First, slave to words:' a recapitulation of the whole course of
    modern education described in this book, which confines youth to the
    study of words only in schools, subjects them to the authority of
    systems in the universities, and deludes them with the names of party
    distinctions in the world,—all equally concurring to narrow the
    understanding, and establish slavery and error in literature,
    philosophy, and politics. The whole finished in modern free-thinking;
    the completion of whatever is vain, wrong, and destructive to the
    happiness of mankind, as it establishes self-love for the sole principle
    of action.—P. W.


    [438] 'Smiled on by a queen:' i.e. this queen or goddess of Dulness.—P.


    [439] 'Mr Philip Wharton, who died abroad and outlawed in 1791.


    [440] 'Nothing left but homage to a king:' so strange as this must seem
    to a mere English reader, the famous Mons. de la Bruyere declares it to
    be the character of every good subject in a monarchy; 'where,' says he,
    'there is no such thing as love of our country; the interest, the glory,
    and service of the prince, supply its place.'—De la Republique, chap.
    x.—P.


    [441] 'The balm of Dulness:' the true balm of Dulness, called by the
    Greek physicians [Greek: Kolakeia], is a sovereign remedy against
    inanity, and has its poetic name from the goddess herself. Its ancient
    dispensators were her poets; and for that reason our author, book ii. v.
    207, calls it the poet's healing balm; but it is now got into as many
    hands as Goddard's Drops or Daffy's Elixir.—W.


    [442] 'The board with specious miracles he loads:' these were only the
    miracles of French cookery, and particularly pigeons en crapeau were a
    common dish.—P. W.


    [443] 'Seve and verdeur:' French terms relating to wines, which
    signify their flavour and poignancy.—P. W.


    [444] 'Bladen—Hays:' names of gamesters. Bladen is a black man. Robert
    Knight, cashier of the South Sea Company, who fled from England in 1720
    (afterwards pardoned in 1742). These lived with the utmost magnificence
    at Paris, and kept open tables frequented by persons of the first
    quality of England, and even by princes of the blood of France.—P. W.
    The former note of 'Bladen is a black man,' is very absurd. The
    manuscript here is partly obliterated, and doubtless could only have
    been, Wash blackmoors white, alluding to a known proverb.—Scribl. P. W.
    Bladen was uncle to Collins the poet. See our edition of 'Collins.'


    [445] 'Gregorian, Gormogon:' a sort of lay-brothers, slips from the root
    of the freemasons.—P. W.


    [446] 'Arachne's subtile line:' this is one of the most ingenious
    employments assigned, and therefore recommended only to peers of
    learning. Of weaving stockings of the webs of spiders, see the Phil.
    Trans.—P. W.


    [447] 'Sergeant call:' alluding perhaps to that ancient and solemn
    dance, entitled, A Call of Sergeants.—P. W.


    [448] 'Teach kings to fiddle:' an ancient amusement of sovereign
    princes, viz. Achilles, Alexander, Nero; though despised by
    Themistocles, who was a republican. 'Make senates dance:' either after
    their prince, or to Pontoise, or Siberia.—P. W.


    [449] 'Gilbert:' Archbishop of York, who had attacked Dr King, of
    Oxford, a friend of Pope's.


    [450] Verses 615-618 were written many years ago, and may be found in
    the state poems of that time. So that Scriblerus is mistaken, or whoever
    else have imagined this poem of a fresher date.—P. W.


    [451] 'Truth to her old cavern fled:' alluding to the saying of
    Democritus, that Truth lay at the bottom of a deep well, from whence he
    had drawn her; though Butler says, he first put her in, before he drew
    her out.—W.


    [452] Read thus confidently, instead of 'beginning with the word books,
    and ending with the word flies,' as formerly it stood. Read also,
    'containing the entire sum of one thousand seven hundred and fifty-four
    verses,' instead of 'one thousand and twelve lines;' such being the
    initial and final words, and such the true and entire contents of this
    poem. Thou art to know, reader! that the first edition thereof, like
    that of Milton, was never seen by the author (though living and not
    blind). The editor himself confessed as much in his preface; and no two
    poems were ever published in so arbitrary a manner. The editor of this
    had as boldly suppressed whole passages, yea the entire last book, as
    the editor of Paradise Lost added and augmented. Milton himself gave but
    ten books, his editor twelve; this author gave four books, his editor
    only three. But we have happily done justice to both; and presume we
    shall live, in this our last labour, as long as in any of our
    others.—Bentl.


    [453] Milbourn on Dryden's Virgil, 8vo, 1698, p. 6.


    [454] Ibid. p. 38.


    [455] Ibid. p. 192.


    [456] Ibid. p. 8.


    [457] Whip and Key, 4to, printed for R. Janeway, 1682, preface.


    [458] Ibid.


    [459] Milbourn, p. 9.


    [460] Ibid. p. 176.


    [461] Ibid. p. 39.


    [462] Whip and Key, preface.


    [463] Oldmixon, Essay on Criticism, p. 84.


    [464] Milbourn, p. 2.


    [465] Ibid. p. 35.


    [466] Ibid. pp. 22, 192.


    [467] Ibid. p. 72.


    [468] Ibid. p. 203.


    [469] Ibid, p. 78.


    [470] Ibid, p. 206.


    [471] Ibid. p. 19.


    [472] Ibid. p. 144, 190.


    [473] Ibid. p. 67.


    [474] Milbourn, p. 192.


    [475] Ibid. p. 125.


    [476] Whip and Key, preface.


    [477] Milbourn, p. 105.


    [478] Ibid. p. 11.


    [479] Ibid. p. 176.


    [480] Ibid. p. 57.


    [481] Whip and Key, preface.


    [482] Milbourn, p. 34.


    [483] Ibid. p. 35.


    [484] Dennis's Remarks on the Rape of the Lock, preface, p. xii.


    [485] Dunciad Dissected.


    [486] Preface to Gulliveriana.


    [487] Dennis, Character of Mr P.


    [488] Theobald, Letter in Mist's Journal, June 22, 1728.


    [489] List at the end of a Collection of Verses, Letters,
    Advertisements, 8vo, printed for A. Moore, 1728, and the preface to it,
    p. 6.


    [490] Dennis's Remarks on Homer, p. 27.


    [491] Preface to Gulliveriana, p. 11.


    [492] Dedication to the Collection of Verses, Letters, &c., p. 9.


    [493] Mist's Journal of June 8, 1728.


    [494] Character of Mr P. and Dennis on Homer.


    [495] Dennis's Remarks on Pope's Homer, p. 12.


    [496] Ibid. p. 14.


    [497] Character of Mr P., p. 17, and Remarks on Homer, p. 91.


    [498] Dennis's Remarks on Homer, p. 12.


    [499] Daily Journal, April 23, 1728.


    [500] Supplement to the Profund, preface.


    [501] Oldmixon, Essay on Criticism, p. 66.


    [502] Dennis's Remarks, p. 28.


    [503] Homerides, p. 1, &c.


    [504] British Journal, Nov. 25, 1727.


    [505] Dennis, Daily Journal, May 11, 1728.


    [506] Dennis, Remarks on Homer, Preface.


    [507] Dennis's Remarks on the Rape of the Lock, preface, p. 9.


    [508] Character of Mr P., p. 3.


    [509] Ibid.


    [510] Dennis, Remarks on Homer, p. 37.


    [511] Ibid, p. 8.


    END OF POPE'S WORKS.