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Rise, rise, great 'W --, fated to appear,
Spite of thyself, a glorious minister!
Speak the loud language princes .
And treat with half the . . .

At length to B-- kind, as to thy
Espouse the nation, you .

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Though still he travels on no bad pretence, To show ..

Or those foul copies of thy face and tongue, Veracious" W --- and frontless Young;

P

Sagacious Bub, so late a friend, and there

q

So late a foe, yet more sagacious & H---?

45

50

55

Hervey and Hervey's school, F-, H--y, 'H --n,
Yea, moral Ebor, or religious Winton.
How! what can "O -- w, what can D---

The wisdom of the one and other chair,

X

WN --- laugh, or D--s sager,
Ν

y

Or thy dread truncheon M.'s mighty peer?

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What help from J---s opiates canst thou draw,

Or H--k's quibbles voted into law?

b C. that Roman in his nose alone,

с

Who hears all causes, B--, but thy own,

Or those proud fools whom nature, rank, and fate

Made fit companions for the sword of state.

1 Walpole.

60

65

m Either Sir Robert's brother Horace, who had just quitted his embassy

at the Hague, or his son Horace, who was then on his travels.

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Blackburn, Archbishop of York, and Hoadley, bishop of Winchester. "Onslow, Speaker of the House of Commons, and the Earl of Delawar, Chairman of the Committees of the House of Lords.

w Newcastle.

Dorset; perhaps the last word should be sneer. y Duke of Marlborough.

Probably Sir John Cummins,

Pleas.

< Britain.

z Jekyll.

a

Hardwick.

Lord Chief Justice of the Common

Can the light packhorse, or the heavy steer,
The sowzing prelate, or the sweating peer,
Drag out with all its dirt and all its weight,
The lumbering carriage of thy broken state?
Alas! the people curse, the carman swears,
The drivers quarrel, and the master stares.

The plague is on thee, Britain, and who tries
To save thee, in the infectious office dies.
The first firm P--y soon resign'd his breath,
Brave S-- w loved thee, and was lied to death.
Good M-m-t's fate tore 'P--th from thy side,
And thy last sigh was heard when W--m died.

e

NOTES.

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Ver. 80. W--m died.] Sir William Wyndham died this year; his death was a severe blow to the party, and none felt it perhaps more than Bolingbroke, whose friendship for him appears to have been ardent and sincere. The following extract of a letter from Bolingbroke to Sir Charles Wyndham on this occasion will be read with interest, as it particularly shows the sentiments of the party at this time:

LORD BOLINGBROKE TO SIR CHARLES WYNDHAM. "DEAR SIR, Argeville, August 8th, 1740. "I feel as I ought to do, the kindness you show me in sending a servant on purpose, with a letter that gives me as much comfort as I am capable of receiving, since the loss we have sustained by the death of your father and my friend. You are in the right, and I love you the better for the sentiment it is reputation to be descended from so great and so good a man; and surely it is some to have lived thirty years with him in the warmest and most active friendship. Far from any need of making excuses, that you did not write the cruel news to me when you sent to my Lady Denbigh, I have thanks to return you for sparing me, as you spared yourself. The news came to me with less surprize, but not with less effect. My unhappiness, for such it will be as long as I am able to feel pleasure and pain, began however a little later. It is a plain truth, free from all affectation or compliment, that as your father was dearer to me than all the rest of the world, so must every thing be that remains of him : you, Sir, especially, who are as dear to my heart as you could be, if, being the same worthy man you are, you was my own son. The resolutions you have taken both as to public and private life, are such as become the son and successor of Sir William Wyndham. To be a friend to your country, is to be what he was eminently; it is to be what he would have recommended you to be, even with his dying breath, if the nature of his distemper had permitted such an effort. He thought this country on the brink

Earl of Scarborough. In another place Pope spells his name with a w. Ep. to the Sat. Dial. 2. 1. 65. Polwarth, son to Lord Marchmont.

e Marchmont.

VOL. V.

✓ Wyndham.

I

85

i

Thy nobles "sl-s, thy ses bought with gold,
Thy clergy perjured, thy whole people sold.
An atheist a "”'s ad .

Blotch thee all o'er, and sink

Alas! on one alone our all relies,

Let him be honest, and he must be wise,

Let him no trifler from his

Nor like his . .

school,

still a

Be but a man! unminister'd, alone,

And free at once the senate and the throne;
Esteem the public love his best supply,

1

A 's true glory his integrity;

Rich with his . . . . in his . . . strong,

Affect no conquest, but endure no wrong.
Whatever his religion or his blood,

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His public virtue makes his title good.

Europe's just balance and our own may stand,
And one man's honesty redeem the land.

NOTES.

of ruin, and that monarchical but free constitution of government, wherein the glory and the happiness of our nation consisted, at the point of being dissolved, and sacrificed to the support of a weak and wicked administration; but he thought that the greater the distress was, the more incumbent and the more pressing the duty of struggling to prevent, or to alleviate it, became. One of the last things he said to me the day before he left this place was, that he did not expect to live to see Britain restored to a flourishing and secure state, but that he would die in labouring to procure that happiness to those he should leave behind him.- -" MS. from the Egremont Papers; communicated by Mr. Coxe.

Ver. 95. Whatever his religion] He probably means Frederick Prince of Wales, who took a decided part with the malecontents against Sir R. Walpole's administration. This was written the year before the general election, which decided the fate of Walpole. It is singular that Pope, in this Satire, turns his weapons against his own party, and attacks many of those whom he had lately panegyrised with the most extravagant praise, particularly Pulteney and Chesterfield, of whom he said in 1738 :

"How can I, Pulteney, Chesterfield forget,

While Roman spirit charms and Attic wit."-Bowles.

The respectable authority under which the foregoing fragment has been given to the public, has induced the Editor to reprint it here; not

h Slaves.

k Administration.

i Senates.

1 King's.

however without feeling a strong conviction that the external evidence of its being the work of Pope is greatly over-balanced by the nature of its contents, which are entirely contrary to any idea that we could reasonably form of the sentiments of Pope at this period. That the celebrity of Pope occasioned many pieces to be unjustly attributed to him by Curll and others is certain; and it was not without reason that he complained of "The imputed trash and dulness not his own."

That this is the piece to which Warburton alludes in his Note on the poem to Lady Frances Shirley (vide ante, p. 106,) where he says that Pope began a third Dialogue more severe and sublime than the first and second, can scarcely be admitted; because this is not a dialogue, nor is there a single passage in it that can be called sublime, or even that exceeds mediocrity.

Additional Notes.

Ver. 5. C- his own proud dupe,]. These lines seem to be imitated from the Dunciad, book iv. line 601.

"And nobly conscious princes are but things

Born for first ministers, as slaves for kings."

It is impossible that they could have any application to Lord Cobham, with whom Pope lived at this time in the most friendly intimacy.

Ver. 9. Through clouds of passion] Pulteney was not created Earl of Bath till 1742. These lines are therefore either prophetic, or were not written till after that period, when the fourth book of the Dunciad had also been published.

Ver. 16. Stern S--] It is impossible that Pope could have written these lines on Shippen, whose political sentiments nearly corresponded with his own, and whose integrity he has alluded to in the well-known lines:

"I love to pour out all myself as plain,

As downright Shippen, or as old Montaigne."

Ver. 23. G--r, C-m, B-t, &c.] Can we conceive that Pope would have applied this contemptuous language to Lord Cobham and Lord Bathurst? of the former of whom he had said

"O save my country, heaven! shall be your last!"

and to the latter of whom he intended (as appears from one of his letters) to pay a visit, in the very year when this piece is said to have been written.

Ver. 25. And C--d, &c.] Was the "attic wit" of Chesterfield, for which Pope had celebrated him in 1738, so degenerated in 1740? or was the decided part he took against the minister, reconcileable in common sense with the idea that his country was only "a butt to crack his joke on ?"

It is remarkable that this nobleman is alluded to by Pope in the fourth book of the Dunciad, written in 1741, as lamenting the degraded state of the literature of his country:

"Nor could'st thou, Chesterfield, a tear refuse,

Thou wept'st, and with thee wept each gentle muse." No instances of such inconsistency in his treatment of his friends can be found in the works of Pope.

Ver. 43. Rise, rise, great W--] Sir Robert Walpole, to whom Pope always considered himself as under obligations, and with whom at this period he occasionally visited. In a letter to Mr. Fortescue, he says: "You see I have made Sir Robert Walpole a second compliment in print, in my second Dialogue, and he ought to take it for no small one, since in it I couple him with Lord Bolingbroke. As he shows a right sense of this,

I may make him a third in my third Dialogue." How is this reconcileable with the gross abuse thrown out on Walpole in this piece, with the sneer upon him as a glorious minister, the insinuations (as it seems) respecting his wife, the scurrilous lines on his son Horace, and the mention of W. and Yonge as only

"Foul copies of his face and tongue ?"

Is this making him another compliment in his third Dialogue?

Ver. 81. Thy nobles slaves, &c.] Can it be supposed that this vulgar abuse ever escaped the pen of Pope? Or that the author of the sublime passage at the end of the first Dialogue of 1738, could have sunk into the miserable libeller who produced these lines?

Ver. 95. Whatever his religion, &c.] On this passage Mr. Bowles appears afterwards to have changed his opinion. In his Life of Pope, p. cxiv., he says, in reference to these lines: "Although they might be construed to apply to the Prince of Wales, they were more probably addressed to the Chevalier St. George, commonly called the Pretender, who came to England four years afterwards to claim the crown. He was now in his twentieth year; and the satirist seems to think there could be no hope left to the country but by again resorting to the exiled heir of the Stuarts." -"It appears therefore, that notwithstanding his joining any party against the Court, Pope continued in the same principles which he inherited from his father." Conceiving that Pope could never have degraded himself by this piece of vulgar declamation, I willingly resign it to any interpretation that Mr. Bowles, or any one else, may be pleased to put upon it,

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