What God, what mortal, fhall prevent thy fall? Turn, turn thy eyes from wicked men in place, b And fee what fuccour from the Patriot Race. 6 C ---, his own proud dupe, thinks Monarchs things Thro' Clouds of Paffion P--'s views are clear, Pulteney He foams a Patriot to fubfide a Peer; Impatient fees his country bought and fold, And damns the market where he takes no gold. 10 NOTES. Grave, VER. 1. O wretched B ,] There is no doubt but that this interefting fragment was the beginning of the very Satire to which Warburton alludes in the laft Poem. Pope was afraid to go on in his career of perfonal acrimony, Paul Whitehead, having thrown out an indecent sarcasm against Dr. Sherlock, was threatened with a profecution. This was ineant as a hint to Pope; and it is very plain his fatiric progrefs was interrupted, for his alarm evidently appears. In this Poem, (which certainly was part of his plan, as a continuation of the Epilogue,) he feems, "Willing to wound, and yet afraid to frike." I have added fome explanatory names. Grave, righteous S - joggs on till, past belief, He finds himself companion with a thief. To purge and let thee blood, with fire and fword, Is all the help ftern 'S-- wou'd afford. 16 That those who bind and rob thee, would not kill, e Good Chopes, and candidly fits still. Of 'Ch-s W -- who fpeaks at all, No more than of Sir Har-y or Sir P - - . 20 Whose names once up, they thought it was not wrong To lie in bed, but fure they lay too long. h "G-- r, C-m, B - t, pay thee due regards, Unless the ladies bid them mind their cards. with wit that muft And Cd who fpeaks fo well and writes, 25 muft needs Whofe wit and equally provoke one, Finds thee, at beft, the butt to crack his joke on. k 30 Then urg'd by Ct, or by Ct stopt, They follow rev'rently each wond'rous wight, Amaz'd that one can read, that one can write : So e Sandys. d Shippen. • Perhaps the Earl of Carlisle. f Sir Charles Hanbury Williams. Sir Henry Oxenden and Sir Paul Methuen. h Lords Gower, Cobham, and Bathurt. i Lord Cheflerfield. k Lord Carteret. 1 William Pulteney, created in 1742 Farl of Bath. So geefe to gander prone obedience keep, Content but for five fhillings in the pound, Speak the loud language Princes And treat with half the .. At length to B - kind, as to thy Tho' ftill he travels on no bad pretence, n Or those foul copies of thy face and tongue, Veracious W - - - and frontless Young; Sagacious Bub, fo late a friend, and there P So late a foe, yet more fagacious H---? I Walpole. 35 40 45 50 55 Hervey Either Sir Robert's, brother Horace, who had juft quitted his embafly at the Hague, or his fon Horace, who was then on his travels. AW. Winnington. • Sir William Young. Hervey and Hervey's school, 'F -, H - - у, ' H - - n, Yea, moral 'Ebor, or religious Winton. How! what can Ow, what can D... The wisdom of the one and other chair, "N- laugh, or D - - s fager, Or thy dread truncheon M.'s mighty peer? a Or H-k's quibbles voted into law? b C. that Roman in his nofe alone, Or those proud fools whom nature, rank, and fate 60 65 Made fit companions for the Sword of State. Can the light packhorse, or the heavy steer, The fow zing Prelate, or the fweating Peer, 70 The plague is on thee, Britain, and who tries 75 To fave thee in th' infectious office dies. The 4 Fox and Henley, : Hinton. Blackburn, Archbishop of York, and Hoadley, bishop of Winchester. t Onflow, Speaker of the Houfe of Commons, and the Earl of Delawar, Chairman of the Committees of the Houfe of Lords. Newcastle. * Dorset; perhaps the laft word fhould be fneer. y Duke of Marlborough. z Jekyll. a Hardwick. Probably Sir John Cummins, Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas. Britain. |