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The Dunciad: Preface, letters and Notes

    By Alexander Pope



    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 £200 from King George I., and £100
    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 Æneid 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 acmè 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 Æneas. 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
    honnête 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 Æneis. 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.



Extra Info:
[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 Poëtique doit être un honnête homme. Bossu, du Poême 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.


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