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with. This can't fo well be brought about with serious faces; we must laugh with them at what deferves it, or be content to be laughed at, with fuch as deferve it.

As to particulars: you cannot but have obferved, that at first the whole objection against the fimile of Wit and Faith lay to the word They: when that was beyond contradiction removed (the very grammar ferving to confute them) then the objection was against the fimile itself; or if that fimile will not be objected to (fenfe and common. reafon being indeed a little stubborn, and not apt to give way to every body) next the mention of Superftition must become a crime; as if religion and fhe were fifters, or that it were fcandal upon the family of Chrift, to say a word against the devil's baftard. Afterwards more mif chief is discover'd in a place that seemed innocent at first, the two lines about Schifmatics. An ordinary man would imagine the author plainly declared against those schistics for quitting the true faith out of a contempt of the underftanding of fome few of its believers: but thefe believers are called dull, and because I fay that thofe fchifmatics think fome believers dul!, therefore these charitable interpreters of my meaning will have it that I think all believers dull. I was lately telling Mr. *** these objections: who affured me I had faid nothing which a catholic need to disown; and I have cause to know that gentleman's fault (if he has any) is not want of zeal: he put a notion into my head, which, I confefs, I can't but acquiefce in; that when a fet of people are piqued at any truth which they think to their own difadvantage, their method of revenge on the truth-speaker is to attack his reputation a by-way, and not openly to object to the place they are really galled by: what thefe therefore (in his opinion) are in carneft angry at, is that Erafmus, whom their tribe oppreffed and perfecuted, fhould be vindicated after an age of obloquy by one of their own people, willing to utter an honest truth in behalf of the dead, whom no man fure will flatter, and to whom few will do juftice.

Others,

Others, you know, were as angry that I mentioned Mr. Walsh with honour; who, as he never refused to any one of merit of any party the praife due to him, fo honestly deferved it from all others, tho' of ever fo different interefts or sentiments. May I be ever guilty of this fort of liberty, and latitude of principle! which gives us the hardiness of speaking well of those whom envy oppresses even after death. As I would always fpeak well of my living friends when they are abfent, nay because they are absent, so would I much more of the dead, in that eternal absence; and the rather, because I expect no thanks for it.

Thus, Sir, you fee I do in my confcience perfift in what I have written; yet in my friendship I will recant and alter whatever you please, in case of a second edition (which I think the book. will not so soon arrive at, for Tonfon's printer told me he drew off a thousand copies in this first impreffion, and, I fancy, a treatife of this nature, which not one gentleman in threefcore, even of a liberal education, can underftand, can hardly exceed the vent of that number.) You fhall find me a true Trojan in my faith and friendship, in both which I will persevere Your, &c.

to the end.

I

LETTER IV.

To my Lord LANSDOWN.

Binfield, Jan. 10, 1712. Thank you for having given my poem of Windfor Foreft its greatest ornament, that of bearing your name in the front of it. 'Tis one thing when a person of true merit permits us to have the honour of drawing him as like as we can; and another, when we make a fine thing at random, and perfuade the next vain creature we can find that 'tis his own likeness; which is the cafe every day of my fellow fcriblers. Yet, my Lord, this honour

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has given me no more pride than your honours have given you; but it affords me a great deal of pleature, which is much better than a great deal of pride; and it indeed would give me fome pain, if I was not fure of one advantage; that whereas others are offended if they have not more than justice done them, you would be displeased if had fo much therefore I may fafely do you as you much injury in my word, as you do yourself in your own thoughts. I ain fo vain as to think I have fhewn you a favour, in fparing your modefty, and you cannot but make me fome return for prejudicing the truth to gratify you: This I beg may be the free correction of these verfes, which will have few beauties, but what may be made by your blots. I am in the circumftance of an ordinary painter drawing Sir Godfrey Kneller, who by a few touches of his own could make the piece very valuable. I might then hope, that many years hence the world might read, in conjunction with your name, that of Your Lordship's, &c.

I

LETTER V.

The Hon. J. C. to Mr. POPE.

May 23, 1712. AM very glad for the fake of the widow, and for the credit of the deceased, that * Betterton's remains are fallen into fuch hands as may render them reputable to the one, and beneficial to the other. Befides the public acquaintance I long had with that poor man, I also had a flender knowledge of his parts and capacity by private conversation, and ever thought it pity he was neceffitated by the ftraitness of his fortune, to act (and efpecially to his latest hours) an imaginary and fictitious part, who

A Tranflation of fome part of Chaucer's Canterbury Tales, the Pro~ logues, etc. printed in a Mifcellany with fome works of Mr. Pope, in 2 vol. 12mo, by B. Lintot.

was

was capable of exhibiting a real one, with credit to himself, and advantage to his neighbour.

I hope your health permitted you to execute your de fign of giving us an imitation of Pollio; I am fatisfy'd 'twill be doubly divine, and I fhall long to fee it. I ever thought church-mufic the most ravishing of all harmonious compofitions, and must also believe facred subjects, well-handled, the moft infpiring of all poetry.

But where hangs the Lock now? (tho' I know, that rather than draw any just reflection upon yourself of the least shadow of ill-nature, you would freely have fupprefs'd one of the best of poems.) I hear no more of itwill it come out in Lintot's Miscellany or not? I wrote to Lord Petre upon the subject of the Lock, fome time fince, but have as yet had no answer, nor indeed do I know when he'll be in London. I have, fince I faw you, correfponded with Mrs. W. I hope fhe is now with her Aunt, and that her journey thither was fomething facilitated by my writing to that lady as preffingly as poffible, not to let any thing whatfoever obftruct it. I fent her obliging anfwer to the party it most concern'd; and when I hear Mrs. W. is certainly there, I will write again to my Lady, to urge as much as poffible the effecting the only thing that in my opinion can make her niece easy. I have run out my extent of paper, and am

I

LETTER VI.

The Answer.

Your, &c.

May 28, 1712.

T is not only the difpofition I always have of converfing with you, that makes me fo fpeedily answer your obliging letter, but the apprehenfion left your charitable intent of writing to my Lady A. on Mrs. W.'s affair should be fruftrated, by the short stay she makes there. She went thither on the 25th with that mixture of expec

tation

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tation and anxiety, with which people ufually go into unknown or half-discover'd countries, utterly ignorant of the difpofitions of the inhabitants, and the treatment they are to meet with. The unfortunate of all people are the moft unfit to be left alone; yet, we fee, the world generally takes care they shall be fo: whereas, if we took a confiderate prospect of the world, the business and study of the happy and easy should be to divert and humour, as well as comfort and pity, the diftreffed. I cannot therefore excufe fome near Allies of mine for their conduct of late towards this Lady, which has given me a great deal of anger as well as forrow all I fhall fay to you of them at present is, that they have not been my Relations these two months. The confent of opinions in our minds, is certainly a nearer tye than can be contracted by all the blood in our bodies; and I am proud of finding I have fomething congenial with you. Will you permit me to confefs to you, that all the favours and kind offices you have fhewn towards me, have not for ftrongly cemented me yours, as the discovery of that generous and manly compaffion you manifefted in the cafe of this unhappy Lady? I am afraid to infinuate to you how much I efteem you: Flatterers have taken up the ftyle which was once peculiar to friends, and an honest man has now no way left to exprefs himself befides the common one of knaves; so that true friends now-a-days differ in their address from flatterers, much as right maftiffs do from fpaniels, and fhow themfelves by a dumb, furly fort of fidelity, rather than by a complaisant and open kindness.-Will you never leave commending my poetry? In fair truth, Sir, I like it but too well myself already expose me no more, I beg you, to the great danger of vanity, (the rock of all men, but most of young men) and be kindly content for the future, when you would please me thoroughly, to fay only you like what I write.

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Your, &c.

LETTER

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