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Others I see, as noble, and more true,

By no court-badge distinguish'd from the rest
First see I Methuen, of sincerest mind,

As Arthur brave, as soft as woman-kind.

What lady's that, to whom he gently bends?

Who knows her not? ah! those are Wortley's eyes!
How art thou honour'd, number'd with her friends,
For she distinguishes the good and wise.
The sweet-tongued Murray near her side attends.
Now to my heart the glance of Howard flies;
Now Hervey, fair of face, I mark full well,
With thee, Youth's youngest daughter, sweet Lepell.

I see two lovely sisters, hand in hand,

The fair-hair'd Martha and Teresa brown ;
Madge Bellenden, the tallest of the land;
And smiling Mary, soft and fair as down.
Yonder I see the cheerful Duchess stand,

For friendship, zeal, and blithesome humours known:
Whence that loud shout in such a hearty strain ?
Why all the Hamiltons are in her train !"

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"'Twas when the seas were roaring" and "Black-eyed Susan have placed Gay among British lyrists. He had great humour, and a genuine love of external nature which links him with the romantic writers.

The two last-mentioned poets succeeded best in jocose verse; Thomas Parnell (1679-1718), Archdeacon of Clogher, who also endeavoured to be merry, was best inspired when he was grave or even elegiacal. We know little of his life. Pope discovered him, buried in an Ulster parsonage, and stimulated him to write. Swift brought him up to town, and insisted on presenting him to Harley. Parnell's best pieces all belong to the period between 1713, when he came under Pope's influence, and his early death in 1718. Yet Parnell cannot be called a disciple of Pope; within the narrow range of what he did well there was no poetical writer of his time who showed a greater originality. The Hermit is a very perfect piece of sententious narrative work in the heroic couplet, not easily to be matched for polish, elegance, and

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symmetry. Parnell's remarkable odes, The Night Piece and The Hymn to Contentment, however, possess more real inspiration. They form a link between Milton on the one hand and Gray and Collins on the other, and their employment of the octosyllabic measure is wonderfully subtle and harmonious. The Hymn

opens thus:

"The silent heart, which grief assails,

Treads soft and lonesome o'er the vales,
Sees daisies open, rivers run,

And seeks, as I have vainly done,
Amusing thought; but learns to know
That solitude's the nurse of woe.

No real happiness is found

In trailing purple o'er the ground;
Or in a soul exalted high,

To range the circuit of the sky,

Converse with stars above, and know

All nature in its forms below;

The rest it seeks, in seeking dies,

And doubts at last, for knowledge, rise.”

It would be easy to sustain the thesis that there is more of imagination, in the purely Wordsworthian sense, more of mystery and spirituality, in Parnell than in any other poet of the time. He was very diffident, and published nothing; but in 1722 Pope collected his posthumous pieces into a volume to which he prefixed a fine dedication, the only fault of which is that it contains too little about the dead Parnell and too much about the living Harley to whom, as the muse "shaded his evening walk with bays," the volume was inscribed.

Among the wits and templars who surrounded Addison many wrote verses, but few wrote them particularly well. Three of his chief friends, however, stand out beyond the rest with some recognised claim to the title of poet. Ambrose Philips (1671-1749) is chiefly remembered on account of his dispute with Pope about the merit of their rival pastorals. Philips wrote, from Copenhagen, an Epistle to the Earl of Dorset, which was once admired; and, towards the close of his career, he composed

a number of birthday odes to children of quality, in a sevensyllabled measure, which earned him the name of " NambyPamby," but which form, in their infantile, or servile, prettiness, his main claim to distinction. Thomas Tickell (1686-1740) is a man of one poem; he composed a really superb elegy, inspired by deep and genuine feeling, on the death of Addison:

"Can I forget the dismal night, that gave
My soul's best part for ever to the grave!
How silent did his old companions tread,
By mid-night lamps, the mansions of the dead,
Thro' breathing statues, then unheeded things,
Thro' rows of warriors, and thro' walks of kings!
What awe did the slow solemn knell inspire;
The pealing organ, and the pausing choir;
The duties by the lawn-robed prelate payed;
And the last words, that dust to dust conveyed!
While speechless o'er thy closing grave we bend,
Accept these tears, thou dear departed friend,
Oh gone for ever, take this long adieu ;

And sleep in peace, next thy loved Montagu!"

William Somerville (1677-1742) was more interesting as a man than either Tickell or Philips. He was a fox-hunting Warwickshire squire, who used to come up to town periodically to worship Mr. Addison, and who rather late in life ventured upon verse of his own. His chief poem, The Chase (1734), is a didactic epic, in four books of blank verse, on the art of hunting with the hounds. He delayed writing it so long that we find his old Addisonian style tempered by the new and freer manner of Thomson. Somerville, in fact, is one of the few transitional figures of the end of this period.

Dr. Samuel Croxall (1680 ?-1752) published anonymously in 1720 The Fair Circassian, a paraphrase of the Canticles. He had previously issued two cantos in imitation of the Faery Queen. Croxall was blamed for the voluptuous warmth of his verses, which was indeed something extraordinary from the pen of an embryo canon residentiary. He translated Æsop in 1722. He described

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his poetical ambition rather too arrogantly, when he said that his aim was "to set off the dry and insipid stuff" of the age by publishing "a whole piece of rich glowing scarlet." Two stanzas from his utterly neglected poetry will show how little Croxall shared the manner of his contemporaries :

"Unlock the tresses of your burnish'd hair,

Loose let your ringlets o'er your shoulders spread ;
Thus mix'd, we view them more distinctly fair,
Like trails of golden wire on ivory laid;

So Phoebus o'er the yielding ether streams,

And streaks the silver clouds with brighter beams.

What rosy odours your soft bosom yields,

Heaving and falling gently as you breathe!

Like hills that rise amidst fair fertile fields,

With round smooth tops and flowery vales beneath;
So swell the candid Alps with fleecy snow,

While myrtles bud, and violets bloom below."

The long life of Allan Ramsay (1686-1758), the Edinburgh wig-maker, projects beyond that of Pope at both ends. He gave up the outside of the head for the inside by becoming a bookseller and a publisher; from his shop at the sign of the Mercury he regarded the wits of distant London with almost superstitious reverence. He wrote a great deal of absolute rubbish, but his pastoral drama of The Gentle Shepherd (1725) is the best British specimen of its class, and contains some very beautiful passages both of dialogue and of description. Most of Ramsay's original songs were poor, but he preserved the habit of writing in the Doric dialect, and as an editor and collector of national poetry he did thoroughly efficient and valuable work. His two miscellanies, The Tea-Table and The Evergreen, were not without their direct usefulness in preparing the Scottish ear for Burns.

CHAPTER V

SWIFT AND THE DEISTS

THREE years before the close of the seventeenth century two short works were ready for publication, which a mere accident postponed into the age of Anne. At the darkest moment of English literature, when every branch of original writing except comedy seemed dying or dead, a genius of the very first order was preparing for the press The Battle of the Books and A Tale of a Tub. It is desirable to remember that these works were complete in 1697, although not published until 1704, since the fact emphasises Swift's precedence of all the other wits of the reign of Anne. It cannot, indeed, be too strongly insisted upon that he was the leader of their chorus. In poetry, Pope, though stimulated and sustained by his sympathy, was quite independent of Swift; but the masters of prose, the great essayists, did not begin to flourish till his mighty spirit had breathed upon them. Swift is the dominant intellectual figure of the first half of the century, as Johnson of the second, and it is hard to deny that he is altogether greater than Johnson. He is original in the first degree. His personal character is such as to illuminate, or else obscure, every other individual that meets him. Swift's love or Swift's hatred colours our conception of every important literary figure of his age. If the saeva indignatio which he so adroitly indicated in his own draft of an epitaph has been over-insisted upon, no one can deny or evade the splendida bilis. The mag

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