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fore 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 band 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,

THE

DUNCIAD1.

To Dr. Jonathan Swift.

BOOK I.

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 Thulé. 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-Laureat, anoints him, carries him to Court, and proclaims him successor.

THE mighty mother, and her son, who brings
The Smithfield Muses to the ear of kings,

REMARKS.

1 It is an inconvenience to which writers of reputation are subject, that the justice of their resentment is not always

I sing. Say you, her instruments, the great! Call'd to this work by Dulness, Jove, and Fate;

REMARKS.

rightly understood: for the calumnies of dull authors being soon forgotten, and those whom they aimed to injure, not caring to recall to memory the particulars of false and scandalous abuse, their necessary correction is suspected of severity unprovoked. But in this case it would be but candid to estimate the chastisement on the general character of the offender, compared with that of the person injured. Let this serve with the candid reader in justification of the poet, and, on occasion, of the editor.

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 II. 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

You by whose care, in vain decried and cursed,
Still dunce the second reigns like dunce the first;
Say how the goddess 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,
Dulness o'er all possess'd her ancient right,
Daughter of Chaos 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,
She ruled, in native anarchy, the mind.

Still her old empire to restore she tries,
For, born a goddess, Dulness never dies.
O thou! whatever title please thine ear,
Dean, Drapier, Bickerstaff, or Gulliver!
Whether thou choose Cervantes' serious air,
Or laugh and shake in Rabelais' easy chair,
Or praise the court, or magnify mankind,

Or thy grieved country's copper chains unbind1⁄44;

REMARKS.

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 reigns like dunce the first.'

IMITATIONS.

BENTLEY.

• Alluding to a verse of Mr. Dryden, not in Mac Fleckno, (as is said ignorantly in the Key to the Dunciad, p. 1,) but in his verses to Mr. Congreve,

'And Tom the second reigns like Tom the first.'

24 Relating 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.

W.

"

From thy Bootia though her power retires, Mourn not, my Swift! at aught 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 Monroe would take her down, Where o'er the gates by his famed father's hand,31 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 Curl's chaste press, and Lintot's rubric post:4°
Hence hymning Tyburn's elegiac lines 1 ;

Hence journals, medleys, mercuries, magazines:
Sepulchral lies, our holy walls to grace,

And New-year odes, and all the Grub-street race.

REMARKS.

31 -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.

40 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.

W.

IMITATIONS.

41 42 Hence hymning Tyburn's—hence, &c.]

Genus unde Latinum,

Albanique patres, atque altæ monia Romæ.'

VIRG. En. .1

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