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could come from no other informer than the faid

Mr. JAMES-MOORE SMITH.

"a The Memoirs of a Parish Clerk was a very dull "and unjust abuse of a person who wrote in defence "of our Religion and Constitution, and who has been "dead many years." This feemeth also most untrue; it being known to divers that these Memoirs were written at the seat of the Lord Harcourt in Oxfordshire, before that excellent person (bishop Burnet's) death, and many years before the appearance of that history, of which they are pretended to be an abuse. Most true it is, that Mr. Moore had fuch a design, and was himfelf the man who prest Dr. Arbuthnot and Mr. Pope to affift him therein; and that he borrowed thofe Memoirs of our author, when that history came forth, with intent to turn them to fuch abuse. But being able to obtain from our author but one fingle hint, and either changing his mind, or having more mind than ability, he contented himself to keep the said Memoirs, and read them as his own to all his acquaintance. A noble perfon there is, into whofe company Mr. Pope once chanced to introduce him, who well remembereth the converfation of Mr. Moore to have turned upon the "Con"tempt he had for the work of that reverend prelate, "and how full he was of a design he declared himself "to have of expofing it." This noble Perfon is the Earl of PETERBOROUGH.

VOL. III,

a Daily Journal, April 3, 1728.
D

Here

Here in truth fhould we crave pardon of all the forefaid right honourable and worthy personages, for having mentioned them in the fame page with fuch weekly riff-raff railers and rhymers; but that we had their ever-honoured commands for the fame; and that they are introduced not as witnesses in the controversy, but as witnesses that cannot be controverted: not to dispute, but to decide.

Certain it is, that dividing our writers into two classes, of fuch who were acquaintance, and of fuch who were ftrangers to our author; the former are thofe who fpeak well, and the other those who speak evil of him. Of the first clafs, the most noble

JOHN DUKE OF BUCKINGHAM

fums up his character in these lines :

❝b And yet so wondrous, fo fublime a thing,
"As the great Iliad, scarce could make me fing,
"Unless I justly could at once commend
"A good companion, and as firm a friend;
"One moral, or a mere well-natur'd deed,
"Can all defert in sciences exceed."

So alfo is he decypher'd by the honourable
SIMON HARCOURT.

[chufe,

"Say, wondrous youth, what column wilt thou "What laurel'd arch, for thy triumphant Mufe? Though each great ancient court thee to his shrine, "Though every laurel through the dome be thine,

b Verfes to Mr. P. on his tranflation of Homer. c Poem prefixed to his works.

"Go

"Go to the good and juft, and awful train!

"Thy foul's delight,

Recorded in like manner for his virtuous difpofition, and gentle bearing, by the ingenious

Mr. WALTER HART.

in this apoftrophe:

❝d Oh!-ever worthy, ever crown'd with praise! "Bleft in thy life, and bleft in all thy lays, "Add, that the Sifters every thought refine, "And ev❜n thy life be faultless as thy line, "Yet envy still with fiercer rage pursues, "Obfcures the virtue, and defames the Mufe. "A foul like thine, in pain, in grief, resign'd, "Views with just scorn the malice of mankind.” The witty and moral fatirist

Dr. EDWARD YOUNG,

wishing some check to the corruption and evil manners of the times, calleth out upon our poet to undertake a task fo worthy of his virtue:

"e Why flumbers Pope, who leads the Muse's train, "Nor hears that Virtue, which he loves, complain?" Mr. MALLET,

in his Epistle on Verbal Criticism :

"Whose life, severely fcan'd, transcends his lays; "For wit fupreme, is but his fecond praise," Mr. HAMMOND,

That delicate and correct imitator of Tibullus, in his Love Elegies, Elegy xiv.

d In his Poems, printed for B. Lintot.

e Univerfal Paffion, Sat. i.

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"Now, fir'd by Pope and Virtue, leave the age, "In low pursuit of self-undoing wrong, "And trace the author through his moral page, "Whose blameless life still answers to his fong." Mr. THOMSON,

in his elegant and philosophical poem of the Seafons: "Although not sweeter his own Homer fings, "Yet is his life the more endearing fong." To the fame tune alfo fingeth that learned clerk, of Suffolk,

Mr. WILLIAM BROOME,

«f Thus, nobly rifing in fair Virtue's cause,

"From thy own life transcribe th' unerring laws." And, to close all, hear the reverend dean of St. Patrick's:

"A Soul with every virtue fraught,

"By Patriots, Priests, and Poets taught.

“Whose filial Piety excells

"Whatever Grecian story tells.

"A genius for each bufinefs fit,

"Whose meaneft talent is his Wit," &c.

Let us now recreate thee by turning to the other fide, and fhewing his Character drawn by those with whom he never converfed, and whofe countenances he could not know, though turned against him: First again commencing with the high voiced and never enough quoted

Mr. JOHN DENNIS,

f In his Poems, and at the end of the Odyssey.

Who,

Who, in his Reflections on the Effay on Criticism, thus defcribeth him: "A little affected hypocrite, who has "nothing in his mouth but candour, truth, friendship, "good-nature, humanity, and magnanimity. He is "fo great a lover of falfehood, that, whenever he has "a mind to calumniate his contemporaries, he brands "them with fome defect which was just contrary to fome "good quality, for which all their friends and acquaint"ance commend them. He feems to have a particular 'pique to People of quality, and authors of that rank. "He must derive his religion from St. Omer's."But in the Character of Mr. P. and his writings, (printed by S. Popping, 1716) he faith, "Though "he is a professor of the worst religion, yet he laughs "at it ;" but that, "nevertheless, he is a virulent Pa"pift; and yet a Pillar for the Church of England." Of both which opinions

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Mr. LEWIS THEOBALD

feems alfo to be; declaring, in Mift's Journal of June 22, 1718, "That, if he is not fhrewdly abused, he "made it his practice to cackle to both parties in their "own fentiments." But, as to his pique against People of Quality, the fame Journalist doth not agree, but faith (May 8, 1728) "He had, by fome means or "other, the acquaintance and 1riendship of the whole "body of our nobility."

However contradictory this may appear, Mr. Dennis and Gildon, in the character laft cited, make it all plain, by affuring us, "That he is a creature that reconciles all contradictions: he is a beaft, and a man'; " a Whig,

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