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Court-virtues bear, like gems, the highest rate,
Born where heav'n's influence scarce can penetrate:
In life's low vale,' the soil the virtues like,
They please as beauties, here as wonders strike.
Though the same sun, with all-diffusive rays,
Blush in the rose, and in the diamond blaze,
We prize the stronger effort of his pow'r,
And justly set the gem above the flow'r.

"Tis education forms the common mind,'
Just as the twig is bent, the tree's inclined.
Boastful and rough, your first son is a squire;
The next a tradesman, meek, and much a liar :
Tom struts a soldier, open, bold, and brave;
Will sneaks a scriv'ner, an exceeding knave.
Is he a churchman? then he's fond of pow'r :
A quaker? sly a presbyterian? sour:
A smart free-thinker? all things in an hour.
Ask men's opinions: Scoto now shall tell
How trade increases, and the world goes well;

The fulsome clench, that nauseates the
town,

Would from a judge, or alderman, go down,
Such virtue is there in a robe or gown!
And that insipid stuff, which here you
hate,

Might somewhere else be called a grave
debate:

Dulness is decent in the church and state.
-WAKEFIELD.

The same thought is found in a letter from Swift to Mrs. Howard, dated 1 Feby. 1727: "I am sorry I have no complaints to make of her Royal Highness; therefore I think I may let you tell her that every grain of virtue and good sense in one of her rank, considering their bad education among flatterers and adorers, worth a dozen in any inferior person." Pope, however, is speaking ironically.

2 From Cowley, Translation of Virgil. Georgic II. 458:

In life's cool vale let my low scene be laid.

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3 These lines (149-157) seem to run counter to the general drift of the argument. Pope says (v.100), we cannot "from the apparent what conclude the why." But here he says, ""Tis Education forms the common mind." Perhaps, however, he means to start a supposed objection to his theory in this verse, with a view to afterwards overthrowing it, by showing how entirely different the characters of children brought up in the same family often are. If so, Warburton ought to have brought out the line of reasoning more clearly in the analysis of the Essay. In the early editions, when the Epistle made less pretension to regularity of thought, this inconsistency was less glaring.

The first edition has J———n, meaning no doubt old Mr. Johnston, who had been King William's Secretary for Scotland. He retired from

Strike off his pension by the setting sun,
And Britain, if not Europe, is undone.

That gay free-thinker, a fine talker once,'
What turns him now a stupid, silent dunce?
Some God or Spirit he has lately found;
Or chanced to meet a minister that frowned."
Judge we by nature? Habit can efface,
Int'rest o'ercome, or policy take place :3
By actions? those uncertainty divides:
By passions? these dissimulation hides:
Opinions? they still take a wider

range: Find, if you can, in what you cannot change.

Manners with fortunes, humours turn with climes, Tenets with books, and principles with times."

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6

III.

Search then the ruling passion: there, alone, The wild are constant, and the cunning known; The fool consistent, and the false sincere: Priests, princes, women, no dissemblers here.

public life on a pension, and fixed himself in an elegant villa at Twickenham (since known as Orleans House), where he amused himself with horti culture, but neither neighbourhood nor similarity of taste could reconcile Pope to the old Whig. He was a cousin of Bishop Burnet, and was recommended by him to King Wil liam.-CROKER.

1 These four lines first appeared in Warburton's edition.

2 Variation:

Or chanced to meet Sir Robert when he frowned.-WARBURTON.

3 The construction requires "take its place." The grammatical error in this passage seems to arise from carelessness, as Pope might have written "displace."

VOL. III.--POETRY.

175

4"Affections," in the earlier edi

tions.

5 We find here in the compass of eight lines an anatomy of human nature; more sense and observation cannot well be compressed in a narrower space.-WARTON. He is perhaps indebted to La Bruyère, who says in his Essay De l'Homme : "Les besoins de la vie, la situation où l'on se trouve, la loi de la nécessité, forcent la nature, et y causent ces grands changements. Ainsi tel homme au fond et en lui-même ne se peut définir; trop de choses qui sont hors de lui l'attirent, le changent, le bouleversent; il n'est point précisement ce qu'il est ou ce qu'il parait être."

6 Till Warburton's edition these

F

This clue once found, unravels all the rest,

The prospect clears, and Wharton stands confest.'
Wharton, the scorn and wonder of our days,
Whose ruling passion was the lust of praise:
Born with whate'er could win it from the wise,

2

Women and fools must like him, or he dies:
Though wond'ring senates hung on all he spoke,'
The club must hail him master of the joke.
Shall parts so various aim at nothing new?
He'll shine a Tully and a Wilmot', too:
Then turns repentant, and his God adores
With the same spirit that he drinks and whores;
Enough, if all around him but admire,

And now the punk applaud, and now the friar."
Thus with each gift of nature and of art,
And wanting nothing but an honest heart;

lines were printed after ver. 171. Instead of "Search then," the reading was "Tis in," i.e., "Tis only in the ruling passion you cannot change.

1 "Clodio," in the earlier editions, which was the name given to his father in the Satire called Faction Displayed.-CRoker.

Philip, son of the Marquis of Wharton, born in December, 1698, died in May, 1731. He was created Duke of Wharton in 1718 before he was twenty-one years of age, as a reward for his services in debate.

2 Alluding to his intimacy with Lady Mary Wortley Montagu. See note to ver. 207.

3 His most celebrated speech during his short parliamentary career was delivered May, 1723, when he was little more than twenty-four, in opposition to the bill of pains and penalties against Atterbury. "It was heard," says Dr. King, "with universal applause and admiration, and was indeed not unworthy of the oldest and most accomplished senator, or the

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4 He was President of the celebrated Hell-Fire Club.

5 John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester, famous for his wit and extravagances in the time of Charles II.-POPE.

6"Not long after a whim took his Grace to go into a convent, in order to prepare for Easter; and he behaved himself so well there, and discoursed so well upon all points of religion, that the good Fathers beheld him with admiration."-Life of Wharton, prefixed to the edition of his works published in 1740.

Grown all to all; from no one vice exempt;
And most contemptible to shun contempt;'
His passion still, to covet gen'ral praise ;
His life, to forfeit it a thousand ways;

A constant bounty which no friend has made;
An angel tongue, which no man can persuade;"
A fool, with more of wit than half mankind;
Too rash for thought, for action too refined;
A tyrant to the wife his heart approves ;3
A rebel to the very king he loves;"

He dies, sad outcast of each church' and state,
And, harder still! flagitious, yet not great."
Ask you why Wharton broke through ev'ry rule?
'Twas all for fear the knaves should call him fool.'

1 i.e., making himself most contemptible to avoid being despised.

2 The grammatical construction of this couplet is certainly daring, but the effect is not unhappy. The Duke's liberality to men of letters was profuse. He gave Young £2,000 for his tragedy of Revenge. See Imitation to Horace, Epistles 1. 6. ver. 88 and

note.

3 The Duke married before he was seventeen years of age the daughter of Major-General Holmes. He ap pears to have entirely neglected her after his final departure from England, and she died on the 14th of April, 1726, upon which he married Miss O'Byrne, "a beautiful young lady at the Spanish Court, one of the Maids of Honour to the Queen of Spain, daughter of an Irish Colonel in the Spanish service." He treated his first wife badly, but it can scarcely be said that "his heart approved her;" his heart may have approved of his second wife, but there is no evidence that he treated her badly. It is probable that Pope merely inserted the traits of character described in this couplet for the sake of antithesis.

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4 A Bill of indictment was preferred against him for High Treason, the fact laid to his charge being, appearing in arms before, and firing off cannon against, his Majesty's Town of Gibraltar. His father was one of the first who joined the Prince of Orange. When about seventeen years old the Duke told an English gentleman, "that he had pawned his principles to Gordon the Pretender's banker for a considerable sum, and till he had the money to repay him he must be a Jacobite, but that as soon as he had redeemed them he should be a Whig again."-Life of Wharton.

This is not quite accurate. He died a member of the church of Rome, in a Bernardine convent among the mountains of Catalonia.

i.e., not having achieved really great celebrity by his wickedness.

7 The union of opposite extremes in Wharton seems rather to be an illustration of what La Bruyère says, that men without principle "have no character at all": "Adraste était si corrumpu et si libertin, qu'il lui a été moins difficile de suivre la

Nature well known, no prodigies remain,'
Comets are regular, and Wharton plain."

Yet in this search, the wisest may mistake,
If second qualities for first they take.
When Catiline by rapine swelled his store;
When Cæsar made a noble dame a whore;"
In this the lust, in that the avarice,
Were means, not ends; ambition was the vice.
That very Cæsar, born in Scipio's days,
Had aimed, like him, by chastity at praise."
Lucullus, when frugality could charm,
Had roasted turnips in the Sabine farm.
In vain th' observer eyes the builder's toil,
But quite mistakes the scaffold for the pile.

5

In this one passion man can strength enjoy, As fits give vigour, just when they destroy.

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mode, et se faire dévot; il lui eut couté davantage d'être homme de bien." But the Duke is used as an illustration of Pope's theory for personal rather than philosophical reasons. He had written a satire upon Pope, and had given a copy of it to Lady Mary Wortley Montagu. The poet therefore was moved against him both by jealousy and resentment. 1 In former editions:

Nature well known no Miracles remain.

Altered as above for very obvious reasons.- -WARBURTON.

2 Tautology. This was said before at ver. 178, 179.-CROKER.

3 Servilia, the sister of Cato and mother of Brutus. Next to Cleopatra, she was the most beloved of all Cæsar's mistresses; and Suetonius says, Cæsar bought for her a single jewel at the price of £50,000.-WARTON.

4 P. Cornelius Scipio. His character is variously portrayed. Arnold says, "By his friends Scipio is repre

sented as one who amid all temptations of youth and power, maintained the complete mastery over his passions while his enemies said that his youth was utterly dissolute." Arnold himself is inclined to think that his early life may have been like that of our own Henry V.-History of Rome, vol. iii., c. 47.

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5 This is the mistake of a satirist and fatalist, whose tendency it always is to depreciate human virtue. Had Lucullus lived in Curius' days, he would have shown in the possession of ten pounds of silver-plate the same spirit which, in his own days, was shown in the splendour of his feasts in the Apollo had Curius lived in the days of Cicero, he would have displayed, like Cicero, in the government of his province, the same spotless integrity which he proved actually in sitting by his cottage fire, and refusing the humble presents of the Samnites." -ARNOLD, History of Rome, vol. ii., c. 38.

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