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Who fees with equal eye, as God of all,

A hero perifh, or a sparrow fall,

Atoms or systems into ruin hurl'd,

And now a bubble burst, and now a world.

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Hope humbly then; with trembling pinions foar; Wait the greater teacher Death; and God adore,

VARIATIONS.

After 88. in the MS.

No great, no little; 'tis as much decreed
That Virgil's Gnat should die as Cæfar bleed.

NOTES.

VER. 87. Who fees with equal eye, &c.] Matth. x. 29. VER. 91. Hope humbly then; ] The Hope of a happy futurity was implanted in the human breaft by God himself for this very purpose, as an earnest of that Blifs, which, always flying from us here, is referved for the good Man hereafter. The reason why the poet chufes to infist on this proof of a future ftate, in preference to others, is in order to give his fyftem (which is founded in a fublime and improved Platonifm) the greater grace of uniformity. For HOPE was Plato's peculiar argument for a future ftate; and the words here employed the foul uneafy, &c. his peculiar expreffion. The poet in this place, therefore, fays in exprefs terms, that God gave us Hope to fupply that future blifs, which be at prefent keeps hid from us. In his fecond epiftle, 274, he goes ftill further, and fays, this HOPE quits us not even at Death, when every thing mortal drops from us:

Hope travels thro' nor quits us when we die.

And, in the fourth epiftle, he fhews how the fame HOPE is a proof of a future ftate, from the confideration of God's

What future blifs, he gives not thee to know,
But gives that Hope to be thy bleffing now.

VARIATIONS.

In the firft Fol. and Quarto,

What blifs above he gives not thee to know,
But gives that Hope to be thy blifs below.

NOTES.

giving man no appetite in vain, or what he did not intend Thould be fatisfied;

He fees, why Nature plants in Man alone

Hope of known bliss, and Faith in bliss unknown: (Nature, whofe dictates to no other kind

Are giv'n in vain, but what they seek they find)

It is only for the good man, he tells us, that Hope leads from goal to goal, &c. It would be strange indeed then, if it should prove a delufion.

VER. 93. What future bliss, &c.] It hath been objected, that the Syftem of the best weakens the other natural arguments for a future ftate; because, if the evils which good Men fuffer promote the benefit of the whole, then every thing is here in order; and nothing amifs that wants to be fet right: Nor has the good man any reason to expect amends, when the evils he fuffered had such a tendency. To this it may be replied, 1. That the poet tells us (Ep. iv.

361.) That God loves from whole to parts. 2. That the fyftem of the beft is fo far from weakening those natural arguments, that it ftrengthens and fupports them. For if thofe evils, to which good men are fubject, be mere Diforders, without any tendency to the greater good of the whole; then, though we must indeed conclude that they will hereafter be fet right, yet this view of things, reprefenting God as fuffering diforders for no other end than to fet them right, gives us a very low idea of the divine wif

Hope fprings eternal in the human breast:

Man never Is, but always To be bleft:
The foul, uneafy, and confin'd, from home,
Refts and expatiates in a life to come.

NOTES.

95

dom. But if thofe evils (according to the fyftem of the beft) contribute to the greater perfection of the whole; fuch a reafon may be then given for their permiffion, as fupports our idea of divine wisdom to the highest religious purposes. Then, as to the good man's hopes of a retribution, thofe ftill remain in their original force: For our idea of God's juftice, and how far that juftice is engaged to a retribution, is exactly and invariably the fame on either hypothefis. For though the fyftem of the beft fuppofes that the evils themselves will be fully compenfated by the good they produce to the whole, yet this is fo far from fuppofing that particulars fhall fuffer for a general good, that it is effential to this fyftem to conclude, that, at the completion of things, when the whole is arrived to the state of utmost perfection, particular and univerfal good shall coincide.

Such is the World's great harmony, that springs From Order, Union, full Confent of things. Where Small and great, where weak and mighty, made To ferve, not fuffer, ftrengthen not invade, &c. Ep. iii. 295. Which coincidence can never be, without a retribution to good men for the evils fuffered here below.

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VER. 97. from home,] The conftruction is, “The "foul being from home (confined and uneafy) expatiates," &c. by which words, it was the Poet's purpose to teach, that the prefent life is only a ftate of probation for another, more fuitable to the effence of the foul, and to the free exercife of it's qualities.

Lo, the poor Indian! whofe untutor❜d mind

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Sees God in clouds, or hears him in the wind; 109
His foul, proud Science never taught to stray
Far as the folar walk, or milky way;

Yet fimple Nature to his hope has giv'n,
Behind the cloud-topt hill, an humbler heav'n,
Some fafer world in depth of woods embrac'd, 105
Some happier island in the watry waste,

Where flaves once more their native land behold,
No fiends torment, no Christians thirst for gold.
To Be, contents his natural defire,

He afks no Angel's wing, no Seraph's fire ;

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But does he say the Maker is not good,
Till he's exalted to what ftate he wou'd:
Himself alone high Heav'n's peculiar care
Alone made happy when he will, and where?

NOTES.

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VER. 99. Lo, the poor Indian! &c.] The poet, as we faid, having bid Man comfort himself with expectation of future happiness, having fhewn him that this HOPE is an earnest of it, and put in one very neceffary caution,

Hope humbly then, with trembling pinions foar; provoked at those miscreants whom he afterwards (Ep. iii. 263) defcribes as building Hell on fpite, and Heaven on pride, he upbraids them (from y 99 to 112) with the example of the poor Indian, to whom alfo Nature hath gi

But thinks, admitted to that equal sky,

His faithful dog fhall bear him company.

115

IV. Go, wifer thou; and, in thy fcale of fenfe, Weigh thy Opinion against Providence ; Call imperfection what thou fancy'ft fuch, Say, here he gives too little, there too much : Deftroy all creatures for thy sport or gust, Yet cry, If Man's unhappy, God's unjuft; If Man alone ingrofs not Heav'ns high care, Alone made perfect here, immortal there: Snatch from his hand the balance and the rod, Re-judge his juftice, be the GOD of GOD. In Pride, in reas'ning Pride, our error lies; All quit their sphere, and rufh into the skies.

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120

ven this common HOPE of Mankind: But, though his untutored mind had betrayed him into many childish fancies concerning the nature of that future ftate, yet he is so far from excluding any part of his own fpecies (a vice which could proceed only from the pride of Science) that he humanely admits even his faithful dog to bear him company.

VER. 123. In Pride, &c] Arnobius has paffed the fame cenfure on thefe very follies, which he fuppofes to arife from the cause here affigned.- "Nihil eft quod nos

fallat, nihil quod nobis polliceatur fpes caffas (id quod "nobis a quibufdam dicitur viris immoderata fui opinione "fublatis) animas immortales effe, Deo, rerum ac prin"cipi, gradu proximas dignitatis, genitore illo ac patre

186

prolatas, divinas, fapientes, doctas, neque ulla corporis attrectatione contiguas." Adverfus gentes.

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