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Can fleep without a Poem in my head,
Nor know, if Dennis be alive or dead.

Why am I afk'd what next shall see the light?
Heav'ns! was I born for nothing but to write?
Has Life no joys for me? or (to be grave)
Have I no friend to ferve, no foul to fave?

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270

274

"I found him clofe with Swift-Indeed? no doubt (Cries prating Balbus) fomething will come out." 'Tis all in vain, deny it as I will

66

1;

No, fuch a Genius never can lie ftill;" And then for mine obligingly mistakes

The firft Lampoon Sir Will. or Bubo makes.

280

Poor

VARIATIONS.

After Ver. 270. in the MS.

Friendships from youth I fought, and seek them still:
Fame, like the wind, may breathe where'er it will.
The World I knew, but made it not my School*,

And in a course of flattʼry liv'd no fool.

By not making the World his School, he means, he did not form his fyftem of morality on the principles or practice of men in businefs.

NOTES.

VER. 270. if Dennis be alive, &c.] This is the ftrongest proof of the contrary: Dennis would not have been mentioned, if Pope was fo indifferent.

VER. 271. Why am I afk'd, &c.] This is intended as a reproof of thofe impertinent complaints, which were continually made to him by thofe who called themselves his friends, for not entertaining the Town as often as it wanted amufement.- A French Writer says well on this occafion - Dès qu'on eft auteur, il femble qu'on foit aux gages d'un tas de fainéans, pour leur fournir de quoi amufer leur oifiveté. WARBURTON.

VER. 280. Sir Will.] Sir William Young.

VER. 280. or Bubo makes.] By Bubo, it is univerfally confidered, Pope meant Bubb Dodington, afterwards Lord Mel

combe.

Poor guiltlefs I! and can I chufe but smile,
When ev'ry Coxcomb knows me by my Style?

VARIATIONS.

After Ver 282. in the MS.

P What if I fing Augustus, great and good?
A. You did fo lately, was it understood?

P. Be nice no more, but, with a mouth profound,

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With

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combe. By the kindnefs of Mr. Wyndham, member for Wiltshire, I have been able to examine all Lord Melcombe's correfpond. ence with many of the first characters in point of rank and literature and it is fingular, though there are letters from so many literary men, and upon literary fubjects, particularly from Voltaire, Young, Thomson, &c. Pope's name is never once mentioned. Dodington, although it appears his governing principle was to fide with that party by which he could get moft, had in other refpects many good qualities. He was a liberal patron, and kind friend. His magnificent houfe at Eafbury was the refort of men of genius. Thomson was enabled, by his liberal bounty, to travel into France and Italy; and his letters to Dodington from thence are very interefting, and expreffive of the utmoft refpect and gratitude.

He was handsome, and of a striking figure, and was certainly poffeffed of wit and talents, if not of great parts. Some of his verses are written with great elegance and beauty, and are particularly animated. Lady M. W. Montagu in her letter calls him, "the all accomplished Mr. Dodington."

The manfion, which he built at Eafbury, near Blandford, did not long furvive him. It came into the poffeffion of the Marquis of Buckingham, and was taken down a few years fince. Part of the offices were left ftanding, and have been turned into a very convenient and handfome houfe, now in the poffeffion of J. Wedgewood, Efq. who purchased the estate of the Marquis of Buckingham.

VER. 282. When ev'ry Coxcomb knows me by my Style?] The difcovery of a concealed author by his Style, not only requires a

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Curft be the verse, how well foe'er it flow, That tends to make one worthy man my foe,

Give

A. No

VARIATIONS.

With GEORGE and FRED'RIC roughen ev'ry verse,
Then smooth up all, and CAROLINE rehearse.
the high task to lift up Kings to Gods,
Leave to Court-fermons, and to Birth-day Cdes.
On themes like thefe, fuperior far to thine,

Let laurell'd Cibber, and great Arnal shine.
P. Why write at all? ----A. Yes, filence if you keep,
The Town, the Court, the Wits, the Dunces weep.

NOTES.

perfect intimacy with his writings, but great fkill in the nature of compofition. But, in the practice of these Critics, knowing an Author by his ftyle, is like judging of a man's whole person from the view of one of his moles.

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When Mr. Pope wrote the Advertisement to the first edition of the New Dunciad, intimating, that it was by a different hand from the other, and found in detached pieces, incorrect and unfinished," I objected to him the affectation of ufing fo unpromifing an attempt to mislead his Reader. He replied, that I thought too highly of the public tafte; that, moft commonly, it was formed on that of half a dozen people in fashion; who took the lead, and who fometimes have intruded on the Town the dulleft performances, for works of wit: while, at the fame time, fome true effort of genius, without name or recommendation, hath paffed by the public eye unobserved or neglected: That he once before made the trial, I now objected to, with fuccefs, in the Efay on Man: which was at firft given (as he told me) to Dr. Young, to Dr. Defaguliers, to Lord Bolingbroke, to Lord Paget, and, in fhort, to every body but to him who was capable of writing it. However, to make him amends, this fame Public, when let into the fecret, would, for fome time after, fuffer no poem with a moral title, to pass for any man's but his. So the Essay on Human Life, the Effay on Reafon, and many others of a worse tendency, were very liberally bestowed upon him. WARBURTON.

Give Virtue fcandal, Innocence a fear,

Or from the foft-ey'd Virgin steal a tear!
But he who hurts a harmless neighbour's peace,
Infults fall'n worth, or Beauty in distress,
Who loves a Lie, lame Slander helps about,
Who writes a Libel, or who copies out:
That Fop, whose pride affects a patron's name,
Yet abfent, wounds an author's honest fame:
Who can your merit felfifbly approve,
And fhow the sense of it without the love;
Who has the vanity to call you friend,
Yet wants the honour, injur'd, to defend;
Who tells whate'er you think, whate'er you fay,
And, if he lie not, must at least betray:

Who to the Dean, and filver bell can fwear,
And fees at Cannons what was never there;

NOTES.

285

290

295

300

Who

VFR. 285. Give Virtue fcanda!, &c.] The whole of this pas fage is beautifully worked up; were Satire only fo employed, we fhould hail it as the aid of virtue, if not the corrector of vice. If there be a tone of asperity here, it appears the natural warmth of genuine and honest feelings, and it is rendered more pleas. ing on account of the fentiments, which Pope did not always, I fear, remember:

Curst be the verse, how well foe'er it flow,
That tends to make one worthy man my foe,
Give Virtue fcandal, Innocence a fear,

Or from the foft-ey'd Virgin steal a tear!

The mufical flow of the paffage, and the force of the words, need not be pointed out; who can read it, and not say,

Ofi, fic omnia?

Who reads, but with a luft to mifapply,
Make Satire a Lampoon, and Fiction Lie.
A lafh like mine no honest man shall dread,
But all fuch babling blockheads in his stead.

Let Sporus tremble-A. What? that thing of filk, Sporus, that mere white curd of Afs's milk?

NOTES.

306

Satire

VER. 299. Who to the Dean, and filver bell, &c.] Meaning the man who would have perfuaded the Duke of Chandos that Mr. Pope meant him in those circumstances ridiculed in the Epistle on Tafe. See Mr. Pope's letter to the Earl of Burlington concern. ing this matter. POPE.

VER. 305. Let Sporus tremble] Language cannot afford more glowing or more forcible terms to exprefs the utmost bitterness of contempt. We think we are here reading. Milton against Salmafius. The raillery is carried to the very verge of railing, fome will fay ribaldry. He has armed his muse with a scalping-knife. The portrait is certainly over-charged: for Lord H. for whom it was defign'd, whatever his morals might be, had yet confiderable abilities, though marred by affectation. Some of his fpeeches in parliament were much beyond florid impotence. They were, it is true, in favour of Sir R. Walpole; and this was fufficiently offenfive to Pope. The fact that particularly excited his indignation, was Lord H.'s Epiftle to a Doctor of Divinity (Dr. Sherwin) from a Nobleman at Hampton Court, 1733; as well as his having been concerned with Lady M. W. M. in Verfes to the Imitator of Horace, 1732. This Lady's beauty, wit, gerius, and travels, of which she gave an account in a series of elegant and entertaining letters, very characteristical of the manners of the Turks, and of which many are addreffed to Pope; are well known, and juftly celebrated. With both noble perfonages had Pope lived in a ftate of intimacy. And justice obligeth us to confefs that he was the aggreffor in the quarrel with them; as he first affaulted and affronted Lord H. by these two lines in his Imita. tion of the first Satire of Horace's fecond Book:

The

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