To either India fee the Merchant fly, See him, with pains of body, pangs of foul, Burn through the Tropic, freeze beneath the Pole! To stop thy foolish views, thy long defires, 70 75 Here, Wisdom calls: "Seek Virtue first, be bold! "As Gold to Silver, Virtue is to Gold." k There, London's voice: "Get Money, Money still! "And then let Virtue follow, if she will." This, this the faving doctrine, preach'd to all, 1 From low St. James's up to high St. Paul; m From him whose " quills ftand quiver'd at his ear, 80 concifenefs, has, before he was aware, fallen into this abfurd meaning. VER. 82. From low St. James's up to high St. Paul,] i. e. This is a doctrine in which both Whigs and Tories agree. VER. 83. From bim whofe quills fand quiver'd at bis ear,] They who do not take the delicacy of this fatire, may think the figure of ftanding quiver'd, extremely hard and quaint; but it has an exquifite beauty, infinuating that the pen of a Scrivener is as ready as the quill of a porcupine, and as fatal as the shafts of a Parthian.-Quiver'd at his ear, which defcribes the position it is ufually found in, alludes to the cuftom of the American canibals, who make ufe of their hair (tied in a knot on the top. of their heads) for a quiver for their poison'd arrows. VER. 84. notches fticks] Exchequer Tallies. Eft animus tibi, funt mores, eft lingua fidefque : Sed quadringentis sex septem millia defint, • Plebs eris. Pat pueri ludentes, Rex eris, aiunt, Si recte facies. Hic murus aheneus efto, Nil confcire fibi, nulla pallefcere culpa. Rofcia, die fodes, melior lex, an puerorum eft Naenia, quae regnum recte facientibus offert, Et maribus Curiis et decantata Camillis? Ifne tibi melius fuadet, qui, " Rem facias; rem, VER. 95. Be this thy Screen, and this thy Wall of Brafs ;] Hic murus aheneus efto. Dacier laughs at an able Critic, who was scandalized, that the antient Scholiafts had not explained what Horace meant by a wall of brafs; for, fays Dacier, " Chacun se fait des difficultez "à fa mode, & demande des remarques proportionnées à fon goût:" he then fets himself in good earnest about this impor Barnard" in fpirit, fenfe, and truth abounds; 85 Pray then, what wants he?" Fourfcore thoufand pounds; A penfion, or fuch Harness for a flave As Bug now has, and Dorimant would have. He's arm'd without that's innocent within; 9 Be this thy Screen, and this thy Wall of Brafs; 95 Compar'd to this a Minister's an Ass. And fay, to which fhall our applause belong, This new Court jargon, or the good old fong? The modern language of corrupted Peers, t S Or what was spoke at CRESSY and POITIERS? 100 ↑ Who counsels best? who whispers, "Be but great, "With Praise or Infamy leave that to fate; tant inquiry; and, by a paffage in Vegetius, luckily discovers, that it fignified an old veteran armed cap-a-pie in brass, and PLACED TO COVER HIS FELLOW. Our Poet has happily ferved himself of this impertinence to convey a very finė stroke of fatire. VER. 97. And fay, etc.] These four lines greatly superior to any thing in the Original. "Si poffis, recte; fi non, quocunque modo rem.” Ut' propius fpectes lacrymofa poemata Pupi! W An, qui fortunae te refponfare fuperbae X Liberum et erectum, praefens hortatur et aptat? y Quod fi me Populus Romanus forte roget, cur Non, ut porticibus, fic judiciis fruar îfdem; Nec fequar aut fugiam, quae diligit ipse vel odit : VER. 117. Full many a Beaft goes in, but none come out.] This expreffion is used for the joke's fake; but it hurts his moral; which is, that they come out beafts. He should here have ftuck to the terms of his Original, veftigia omnia te adverfum Spectantia. VER. 118. Adieu to Virtue, etc.] These two lines are intended "Get Place and Wealth, if poffible, with grace; "If not, by any means get Wealth and Place. t For what? to have a Box where Eunuchs fing, 105 Or " he, who bids thee face with steady view 110 Shou'd chance to make the well-drest Rabble stare; If honeft S*z take scandal at a Spark, That lefs admires the Palace than the Park: Faith I fhall give the answer Reynard gave: "I cannot like, dread Sir, your Royal Cave: 115 "Because I fee, by all the tracks about, "Full many a Beast goes in, but none come out.” Adieu to Virtue, if you're once a Slave: Send her to Court, you fend her to her grave." b The People are a many-headed Beast: Can they direct what measures to pursue, 120 for the application or moral of a fable, which needed no explaining; fo that, they impair the grace of it, at best, inferior to his Original. For Horace fpeaks of the common people, Populus Romanus, to whom one of Æfop's Fables was properly addressed:" but, this is too fimple a method of conveying truth to the welldreft Rabble of St. James's. |