Abbildungen der Seite
PDF
EPUB

Self-love and Reafon to one end aspire,

Pain their averfion, Pleasure their defire;
But greedy That, its object would devour,

This taste the honey, and not wound the flow'r: Pleasure, or wrong or rightly understood,

Our greatest evil, or our greatest good.

91

III. Modes of Self-love the Paffions we may call : 'Tis real good, or feeming, moves them all :

COMMENTARY.

every thing which hath the appearance of good; the other weighs and examines whether it be indeed what it appears.

This fhews, as he next obferves, the folly of the schoolmen, who confider them as two oppofite principles, the one good and the other evil. The obfervation is feasonable and judicious; for this dangerous school-opinion gives great fupport to the Manichean or Zoroaftran error, the confutation of which was one of the author's chief ends in writing. For if there be two principles in Man, a good and bad, it is natural to think him the joint product of the two Manichean deities (the firft of which contributed to his Reafon, the other to his Paffions) rather than the creature of one Individual Caufe. This was Plutarch's notion, and, as we may fee in him, of the more ancient Manicheans. It was of importance, therefore, to reprobrate and fubvert a notion that ferved to the fupport of fo dangerous an error: And this the poet has done with more force and clearnefs than is often to be found in whole volumes written against that heretical opinion.

VER. 93. Modes of Self-love &c.] Having given this account of the nature of Self-love in general, he comes now to anatomize it, in a discourse on the PASSIONS, which he aptly names the modes of Self-love. The object of all these, he fhews (from 92 to 101) is good; and, when under the guidance of Reafon, real good, either of ourselves or of another; for some goods not being capable of divifion or communication, and Reason at the fame time directing us to provide for ourselves,

[ocr errors]

95

But fince not ev'ry good we can divide,
And Reafon bids us for our own provide;
Paffions, tho' felfish, if their means be fair,
Lift under Reason, and deferve her care;
Thofe, that imparted, court a nobler aim,
Exalt their kind, and take fome Virtue's name. 100
In lazy Apathy let Stoics boast

Their Virtue fix'd; 'tis fix'd as in a froft;
Contracted all, retiring to the breast;

But strength of mind is Exercife, not Reft:
The rifing tempeft puts in act the foul,
Parts it may ravage, but preferves the whole.

COMMENTARY.

105

we therefore, in pursuit of these objects, fometimes aim at our own good, fometimes at the good of others: when fairly aiming at our own, the quality is called Prudence, when at another's, Virtue.

Hence (as he fhews from 100 to 105) appears the folly of the Stoics, who would eradicate the Paffions, things fo neceffary both to the good of the Individual and of the Kind. Which prepofterous method of promoting Virtue he therefore very reafonably reproves.

VER. 105. The rising tempeft puts in act the foul,] But as it was from obfervation of the evils occafioned by the Paffions, that the Stoics thus extravagantly projected their extirpation, the poet recurs (from 104 to 111) to his grand principle, so often before, and to fo good purpose, infifted on, that partial Ill is univerfal Good; and fhews, that though the tempeft of the Paffions, like that of the air, may tear and ravage fome few parts of nature in its paffage, yet the falutary agitation produced by it preferves the whole in life and vigour. This is his first argument against the Stoics, which he illuftrates by.

On life's vaft ocean diverfely we fail,

[ocr errors]

Reason the card, but Paffion is the gale;
Nor God alone in the ftill calm we find,
He mounts the storm, and walks upon the wind.
Paffions, like Elements, tho' born to fight,
Yet, mix'd and foften'd, in his work unite;

VARIATIONS.

After VER. 108. in the MS,

A tedious Voyage! where how useless lies
The compafs, if no pow'rful gufts arise?
After VER. 112. in the MS.

The foft reward the virtuous, or invite ;
The fierce, the vicious punish or affright.

COMMENTARY.

a very beautiful fimilitude, on a hint taken from Scripture ; Nor God alone in the ftill calm we find,

He mounts the ftorm, and walks upon the wind.

VER. III. Paffions, like Elements, &c.] His fecond argument against the Stoics (from 110 to 133) is, that Paffions go to the composition of a moral character, juft as elementary particles go to the compofition of an organized body: Therefore, for Man to project the destruction of what compofes his very Being, is the height of extravagance. 'Tis true, he tells us,

C.

NOTES.

VER. 109. Nor God alone, &c.] Thefe words are only a fimple affirmation in the poetic drefs of a fimilitude, to this purpose: Good is not only produced by the fubdual of the Paffions, but by the turbulent exercise of them. A truth conveyed under the moft fublime imagery that poetry could con

ceive or paint. For the author is here only fhewing the providential iffue of the Paffions, and how, by God's gracious difpofition, they are turned away from their natural byas, to promote the happiness of Mankind. As to the method in which they are to be treated by Man, in whom

115

These 'tis enough to temper and employ ;
But what compofes Man, can Man destroy?
Suffice that Reafon keep to Nature's road,
Subject, compound them, follow her and God,
Love, Hope, and Joy, fair pleasure's smiling train,
Hate, Fear, and Grief, the family of pain,

These mix'd with art, and to due bounds confin'd,
Make and maintain the balance of the mind: 120
The lights and fhades, whofe well accorded ftrife
Gives all the strength and colour of our life.

Pleasures are ever in our hands or eyes; And when, in act, they cease, in prospect, rise:

COMMENTARY.

that these Paffions, which, in their natural state, like elements, are in perpetual jar, must be tempered, foftened, and united, in order to perfect the work of the great plastic Artist; who, in this office, employs human Reason; whose business it is to follow the road of Nature, and to obferve the dictates of the Deity; Follow her and God, The ufe and importance of this precept is evident: For in doing the firft, fhe will difcover the abfurdity of attempting to eradicate the Paffions; in doing the fecond, fhe will learn how to make them fubfervient to the intereft of Virtue.

VER. 123. Pleasures are ever in our hands or eyes;] His third argument against the Stoics (from y 122 to 127) is, that the Paffions are a continual fpur to the purfuit of Happiness; which, without these powerful inciters, we should neglect, and fink' into a fenfeless indolence. Now Happiness is the end of our

NOTES.

they are found, all that he contends for, in favour of them,

is only this, that they should not be quite rooted up and

Prefent to grafp, and future ftill to find,

125

The whole employ of body and of mind.
All spread their charms, but charm not all alike
On diff'rent fenfes diff'rent objects strike;
Hence diffrent Paffions more or lefs inflame,
As ftrong or weak, the organs of the frame;

COMMENTARY.

;

130

creation; and this excitement the means of Happiness; therefore, these movers, the Paffions, are the inftruments of God, which he hath put into the hands of Reason to work withal.

VER. 127. All Spread their charms, &c.] The poet now proceeds in his fubject; and this last obfervation leads him naturally to the difcuffion of his next principle. He fhews then, that though all the Paffions have their turn in fwaying the determinations of the mind, yet every Man hath one MASTER PASSION that at length ftifles or abforbs all the reft. The fact he illuftrates at large in his epiftle to Lord Cobham. Here (from 126 to 149) he giveth us the caufe of it. Thofe Pleasures or Goods, which are the objects of the Paflions, affect the mind by ftriking on the fenfes; but, as through the formation of the organs of our frame, every man hath fome one fense stronger and more acute than others, the object which strikes that stronger or acuter fenfe, whatever it be, will be the object most desired; and confequently, the purfuit of that will be the ruling Paffion. That the difference of force in this ruling Paffion fhall, at first, perhaps, be very small or even imperceptible; but Nature, Habit, Imagination, Wit, nay even Reafon itself fhall affift its growth, 'till it hath at length drawn and converted every other into itself. All which is delivered in a strain of Poetry fo won

NOTES.

deftroyed, as the Stoics, and their followers in all religions, foolishly attempted. For the

reft, he conftantly repeats this advice,

The action of the ftronger to fufpend,
Reafon ftill ufe, to Reafon fill attend.

« ZurückWeiter »