Who can your merit selfishly approve, ; 295 Yet wants the honour, injur'd, to defend; NOTES. 300 VER. 293.felfifhly approve,] Because to deny, or pretend not to fee, a well established merit, would impeach his own heart or understanding. VER. 294. And show the sense of it without the love ;] i. e. will never fuffer the admiration of an excellence to produce any esteem for him, to whom it belongs. VER. 295. Who has the vanity to call you friend, Yes wants the honour, injur'd, to defend;] When a great Genius, whose writings have afforded the world much pleasure and inftruction, happens to be enviously attacked, or falfely accused, it is natural to think, that a sense of gratitude for so agreeable an obligation, or a fense of that honour resulting to our Country from fuch a Writer, should raise amongst those who call themselves his friends, a pretty general indignation. But every day's experience fhews us the very contrary. Some take a malignant fatisfaction in the attack; others a foolish pleasure in a literary conflict; and the far greater part look on with a selfish indifference. VER. 299. Who to the Dean, and filver bell, &c.] Meaning the man who would have perfuaded the Duke of Chandos that Mr. P. meant him in thofe circumstances ridiculed in the Epiftle on Tafte. See Mr. Pope's Letter to the Earl of Burlington concerning this matter. Who reads, but with a luft to mifapply, 306 Let Sporus tremble-A. What? that thing of filk, Sporus, that mere white curd of Ass's milk? Satire or fenfe, alas! can Sporus feel? Who breaks a butterfly upon a wheel? P. Yet let me flap this bug with gilded wings, This painted child of dirt, that stinks and ftings; 310 Yet wit ne'er taftes, and beauty ne'er enjoys: In mumbling of the game they dare not bite. 315 As fhallow ftreams run dimpling all the way. And, as the prompter breathes, the puppet fqueaks ; Or at the ear of Eve, familiar Toad, Half froth, half venom, fpits himself abroad, In puns, or politics, or tales, or lies, Or fpite, or fmut, or rhymes, or blafphemies. NOTES. VER. 319. See Milton, Book iv. P. 320 VER. 320. Half froth,] Alluding to thofe frothy excretions, called by the people, Toad-fpits, feen in fummertime hanging upon plants, and emitted by young infects which lie hid in the midst of them, for their preservation, whule in their helpless state. His wit all fee-faw, between that and this, Amphibious thing! that acting either part, Beauty that shocks you, parts that none will truft, NOTES. } 326 330 335 VER. 340. That not in Fancy's maze he wander'd long,] His merit in this will appear very great, if we confider, that in this walk he had all the advantages which the mot poetic Imagination could give to a great Genius. M. Voltaire in a MS. letter now before me, writes thus from England to a friend in Paris. "I intend to fend you two or three poems of Mr. Pope, the best poet of England, "and at prefent of all the world. I hope you are ac quainted enough with the English tongue, to be fenfi"ble of all the charms of his works. For my part, I "look upon his poem called the Effay on Criticism as fu"perior to the Art of poetry of Horace; and his Rape of the Lock is, in my opinion, above the Lutrin of Def : That not in Fancy's maze he wander'd long, The blow unfelt, the tear he never shed; 340 345 350 NOTES. preaux. I never faw fo amiable an imagination, fo gentle graces, fo great variety, fo much wit, and fo "refined knowledge of the world, as in this little perform"ance." MS. Let. O&. 15, 1726. VER. 341. But ftoop'd to Truth] The term is from falconry; and the allufion to one of thofe untamed birds of fpirit, which fometimes wantons at large in airy circles before it regards, or ftoops to, its prey. VER. 350. the lye so oft oe'rthrown] As, that he received fubfcriptions for Shakespear, that he fet his name to Mr. Broome's verfes, &c. which, tho' publicly dis. proved were nevertheless fhamelessly repeated in the Libels, and even in that called the Nobleman's Epistle. P. VER. 351. Th' imputed trash] Such as profane Pfalms, Court-Poems, and other fcandalous things, printed in his Name by Curl and others. P. The morals blacken'd when the writings fcape, 355 The whisper, that to greatness still too near, Alike my scorn, if he fucceed or fail, A hireling fcribler, or a hireling peer, He gain his Prince's ear, or lose his own. NOTES. 365 VER. 354. Abuse, on all he lov'd, or lov'd him, Spread.] Namely on the Duke of Buckingham, the Earl of Burlington, Lord Bathurst, Lord Bolingbroke, Bishop Atterbury, Dr. Swift, Dr. Arbuthnot, Mr. Gay, his Friends, his Parents, and his very Nurse, afperfed in printed papers, by James Moore, G. Ducket, L. Welfted, Tho. Bentley, and other obfcure perfons. P. VER. 359. For thee, fair Virtue! welcome ev'n the laft!] This line is remarkable for presenting us with the most amiable image of fteady Virtue, mixed with a modest concern for his being forced to undergo the fevereft proofs of his love for it, which was the being thought hardly of by his SOVEREIGN, |