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THE LIFE OF THOMAS PARNELL, D.D. ARCHDEACON of CLOGHER.

Price ONE SHILLING.

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THE LIFE OF THOMAS PARNELL, D.D. ARCHDEACON of CLOGHER. COMPILED FROM ORIGINAL PAPERS and MEMOIRS: IN WHICH ARE INCLUDED SEVERAL LETTERS Of Mr. POPE, Mr. GAY, Dr. ARBUTHNOT, &c. &c.

By Dr. GOLDSMITH.

LONDON: Printed for T. DAVIES, in Ruſſel-Street, Covent-Garden. MDCCLXX.

THE LIFE OF THOMAS PARNELL, D.D.

[1]

THE life of a ſcholar ſeldom abounds with adventure. His fame is acquired in ſolitude, and the hiſtorian who only views him at a diſtance, muſt be content with a dry detail of actions by which he is ſcarce diſtinguiſhed from the reſt of mankind. But we are fond of talking of thoſe who have given us pleaſure; not that we have any thing important to ſay, but becauſe the ſubject is pleaſing.

Thomas Parnell, D. D. was deſcended from an ancient family, that had for ſome centuries been ſettled at Congleton in Cheſhire. His [2] father, Thomas Parnell, who had been attached to the commonwealth party, upon the reſtoration went over to Ireland; thither he carried a large perſonal fortune, which he laid out in lands in that kingdom. The eſtates he purchaſed there, as alſo that of which he was poſſeſſed in Cheſhire, deſcended to our poet, who was his eldeſt ſon, and ſtill remain in the family. Thus want, which has compelled many of our greateſt men into the ſervice of the Muſes, had no influence upon Parnell; he was a poet by inclination.

He was born in Dublin, in the year 1679, and received the firſt rudiments of his education at the ſchool of Doctor Jones in that city. Surpriſing things are told us of the greatneſs of his memory at that early period, as of his being able to repeat by heart forty lines of any book at the firſt reading; of his getting the third book of the Iliad in one night's time, which was given in order to confine him for ſome days. Theſe ſtories, which are told of almoſt [3] every celebrated wit, may perhaps be true. But for my own part, I never found any of thoſe prodigies of parts, although I have known enough that were deſirous, among the ignorant, of being thought ſo.

There is one preſumption, however, of the early maturity of his underſtanding. He was admitted a member of the college of Dublin at the age of thirteen, which is much ſooner than uſual, as at that univerſity they are a great deal ſtricter in their examination for entrance, than either at Oxford or Cambridge. His progreſs through the college courſe of ſtudy was probably marked with but little ſplendour; his imagination might have been too warm to reliſh the cold logic of Burgerſdicius, or the dreary ſubtleties of Smigleſius; but it is certain, that as a claſſical ſcholar, few could equal him. His own compoſitions ſhew this, and the difference which the moſt eminent men of his time paid him upon that head, put it beyond a doubt. He took the degree of Maſter of [2] [...] [3] [...] [4] Arts the ninth of July, 1700, and in the ſame year, he was ordained a deacon, by William, biſhop of Derry, having a diſpenſation from the primate, as being under twenty-three years of age. He was admitted into prieſt's orders about three years after, by William, archbiſhop of Dublin, and on the ninth of February, 1705, he was collated by Sir George Aſhe, biſhop of Clogher, to the archdeaconry of Clogher. About that time alſo he married Miſs Anne Minchin, a young lady of great merit and beauty, by whom he had two ſons, who died young, and one daughter, who is ſtill living. His wife died ſome time before him, and her death is ſaid to have made ſo great an impreſſion on his ſpirits, that it ſerved to haſten his own. On the thirty-firſt of May, 1716, he was preſented, by his friend and patron archbiſhop King, to the vicarage of Finglaſs, a benefice worth about four hundred pounds a year in the dioceſe of Dublin, but he lived to enjoy his preferment a very ſhort time. He died at Cheſter, in July, 1717, on [5] his way to Ireland, and was buried in Trinity church in that town, without any monument to mark the place of his interment. As he died without male iſſue, his eſtate devolved to his only nephew, Sir John Parnell, baronet, whoſe father was younger brother to the archdeacon, and one of the juſtices of the King's Bench in Ireland.

Such is the very unpoetical detail of the life of a poet. Some dates, and ſome few facts ſcarce more intereſting than thoſe that make the ornaments of a country tomb-ſtone, are all that remain of one whoſe labours now begin to excite univerſal curioſity. A poet, while living, is ſeldom an object ſufficiently great to attract much attention; his real merits are known but to a few, and theſe are generally ſparing in their praiſes. When his fame is increaſed by time, it is then too late to inveſtigate the peculiarities of his diſpoſition; the dews of the morning are paſt, and we vainly [6] try to continue the chace by the meridian ſplendour,

There is ſcarce any man but might be made the ſubject of a very intereſting and amuſing hiſtory, if the writer, beſides a thorough acquaintance with the character he draws, were able to make thoſe nice diſtinctions which ſeparate it from all others. The ſtrongeſt minds have uſually the moſt ſtriking peculiarities, and would conſequently afford the richeſt materials: but in the preſent inſtance, from not knowing Doctor Parnell, his peculiarities are gone to the grave with him, and we are obliged to take his character from ſuch as knew but little of him; or who, perhaps, could have given very little information if they had known more.

PARNELL, by what I have been able to collect from my father and uncle, who knew him, was the moſt capable man in the world to make the happineſs of thoſe he converſed with, [7] and the leaſt able to ſecure his own. He wanted that evenneſs of diſpoſition which bears diſappointment with phlegm, and joy with indifference. He was ever very much elated or depreſſed; and his whole life ſpent in agony or rapture. But the turbulence of theſe paſſions only affected himſelf, and never thoſe about him, he knew the ridicule of his own character, and very effectually raiſed the mirth of his companions, as well at his vexations as at his triumphs.

How much his company was deſired, appears from the extenſiveneſs of his connexions, and the number of his friends. Even before he made any figure in the literary world, his friendſhip was ſought by perſons of every rank and party. The wits at that time differed a good deal from thoſe who are moſt eminent for their underſtanding at preſent. It would now be thought a very indifferent ſign of a writer's good ſenſe to diſclaim his private friends for happening to be of a different party in politics; [8] but it was then otherwiſe, the Whig wits held the Tory wits in great contempt, and theſe retaliated in their turn. At the head of one party were Addiſon, Steele, and Congreve; at that of the other, Pope, Swift, and Arbuthnot. Parnell was a friend to both ſides, and with a liberality becoming a ſcholar, ſcorned all thoſe trifling diſtinctions, that are noiſy for the time, and ridiculous to poſterity. Nor did he emancipate himſelf from theſe without ſome oppoſition from home. Having been the ſon of a commonwealth's man, his Tory connexions on this ſide of the water, gave his friends in Ireland great offence; they were much enraged to ſee him keep company with Pope, and Swift, and Gay; they blamed his undiſtinguiſhing taſte, and wondered what pleaſure he could find in the converſation of men who approved the Treaty of Utrecht and diſliked the duke of Marlborough.

His converſation is ſaid to have been extremely pleaſing, but in what its peculiar excellence [9] conſiſted is now unknown. The letters which were written to him by his friends, are all full of compliments upon his talents as a companion, and his good nature as a man. I have ſeveral of them now before me. Pope was particularly fond of his company, and ſeems to regret his abſence more than any of the reſt. A letter from him follows thus:

Dear SIR,

I Wiſh it were not as ungenerous as vain to complain too much of a man that forgets me, but I could expoſtulate with you a whole day upon your inhuman ſilence; I call it inhuman; nor would you think it leſs, if you were truly ſenſible of the uneaſineſs it gives me. Did I know you ſo ill as to think you proud, I would be much leſs concerned than I am able to be, when I know one of the beſt-natured men alive neglects me; and if you know me ſo ill as to think amiſs of me, with regard to my friendſhip for you, [10] you really do not deſerve half the trouble you occaſion me. I need not tell you, that both Mr. Gay and myſelf have written ſeveral letters in vain; and that we are conſtantly enquiring of all who have ſeen Ireland, if they ſaw you, and that (forgotten as we are) we are every day remembering you in our moſt agreeable hours. All this is true, as that we are ſincerely lovers of you, and deplorers of your abſence, and that we form no wiſh more ardently than that which brings you over to us, and places you in your old ſeat between us. We have lately had ſome diſtant hopes of the Dean's deſign to reviſit England; will not you accompany him? or is England to loſe every thing that has any charms for us, and muſt we pray for baniſhment as a benediction?—I have once been witneſs of ſome, I hope all of your ſplenetic hours, come and be a comforter in your turn to me, in mine. I am in ſuch an unſettled ſtate, that I can't tell if I ſhall ever ſee you, unleſs it be this year; whether I do or not, [11] be ever aſſured, you have as large a ſhare of my thoughts and good wiſhes as any man, and as great a portion of gratitude in my heart as would enrich a monarch, could he know where to find it. I ſhall not die without teſtifying ſomething of this nature, and leaving to the world a memorial of the friendſhip that has been ſo great a pleaſure and pride to me. It would be like writing my own epitaph, to acquaint you what I have loſt ſince I ſaw you, what I have done, what I have thought, where I have lived, and where I now repoſe in obſcurity. My friend Jervas, the bearer of this, will inform you of all particulars concerning me, and Mr. Ford is charged with a thouſand loves, and a thouſand commiſſions to you on my part. They will both tax you with the neglect of ſome promiſes which were too agreeable to us all to be forgot; if you care for any of us tell them ſo, and write ſo to me. I can ſay no more, but that I love you, and [12] am, in ſpite of the longeſt neglect of happineſs,

Dear Sir,
Your moſt faithful affectionate friend And ſervant, A. POPE.

Gay is in Devonſhire, and from thence goes to Bath; my father and mother never fail to commemorate you.

Among the number of his moſt intimate friends was Lord Oxford, whom Pope has ſo finely complimented upon the delicacy of his choice.

For him, thou oft haſt bid the world attend,
Fond to forget the ſtateſman in the friend;
For Swift and him, deſpis'd the farce of ſtate,
The ſober follies of the wiſe and great;
[13] Dextrous, the craving, fawning crowd to quit,
And pleas'd to 'ſcape from flattery to wit.

Pope himſelf was not only exceſſively ſond of his company, but under ſeveral literary obligations to him for his aſſiſtance in the tranſlation of Homer. Gay was obliged to him upon another account; for being always poor, he was not above receiving from Parnell, the copymoney which the latter got for his writings. Several of their letters, now before me, are proofs of this, and as they have never appeared before, it is probable the reader will be much better pleaſed with their idle effuſions, than with any thing I can hammer out for his amuſement.

Dear SIR,

I Believe the hurry you were in hindered your giving me a word by the laſt poſt, ſo that I am yet to learn whether you got [14] well to town or continue ſo there? I very much fear both for your health and your quiet; and no man living can be more truly concerned in any thing that touches either than myſelf. I would comfort myſelf, however, with hoping that your buſineſs may not be unſucceſsful, for your ſake; and that, at leaſt it may ſoon be put into other proper hands. For my own, I beg earneſtly of you to return to us as ſoon as poſſible. You know how very much I want you, and that however your buſineſs may depend upon any other, my buſineſs depends entirely upon you, and yet ſtill I hope you will find your man, even though I loſe you the mean while. At this time, the more I love you, the more I can ſpare you; which alone will, I dare ſay, be a reaſon to you to let me have you back the ſooner. The minute I loſt you, Euſtathius with nine hundred pages, and nine thouſand contractions of the Greek characters, aroſe to view! Spendanus, with all his auxiliaries, in number a thouſand pages, (value three ſhillings) and [15] Dacier's three volumes, Barnes's two, Valterie's three, Cuperus, half in Greek, Leo Allatius, three parts in Greek; Scaliger, Macrobius, and (worſe than them all) Aulus Gellius! All theſe ruſhed upon my ſoul at once, and whelmed me under a fit of the headach. I curſed them all religiouſly, damn'd my beſt friends among the reſt, and even blaſphemed Homer himſelf. Dear Sir, not only as you are a friend, and a good-natured man; but as you are a chriſtian and a divine, come back ſpeedily, and prevent the increaſe of my ſins; for at the rate I have begun to rave, I ſhall not only damn all the poets and commentators who have gone before me, but be damn'd myſelf by all who come after me. To be ſerious, you have not only left me to the laſt degree impatient for your return, who at all times ſhould have been ſo; (tho' never ſo much as ſince I knew you in beſt health here) but you have wrought ſeveral miracles upon our family; you have made old people fond of a young and gay perſon, and inveterate [16] papiſts of a clergyman of the church of England; even nurſe herſelf is in danger of being in love in her old age, and (for all I know) would even marry Dennis for your ſake, becauſe he is your man, and loves his maſter. In ſhort, come down forthwith, or give me good reaſons for delaying, though but for a day or two, by the next poſt. If I find them juſt, I will come up to you, though you know how precious my time is at preſent; my hours were never worth ſo much money before; but perhaps you are not ſenſible of this, who give away your own works. You are a generous author, I a hackney ſcribbler; you a Grecian, and bred at an univerſity; I a poor Engliſhman, of my own educating; you are a reverend parſon, I a wagg; in ſhort, you are Dr. Parnelle, (with an E at the end of your name) and I

Your moſt obliged and Affectionate friend and Faithful Servant, A. POPE.
[17]

My hearty ſervice to the Dean, Dr. Arbuthnot, Mr. Ford, and the true genuine ſhepherd, J. Gay of Devon, I expect him down with you.

We may eaſily perceive by this, that Parnell was not a little neceſſary to Pope in conducting his tranſlation; however he has worded it ſo ambiguouſly, that it is impoſſible to bring the charge directly againſt him. But he is much more explicit, when he mentions his friend Gay's obligations in another letter, which he takes no pains to conceal.

Dear SIR,

I Write to you with the ſame warmth, the ſame zeal of good will and friendſhip with which I uſed to converſe with you two years ago, and can't think myſelf abſent, when I feel you ſo much at my heart; the picture of you, which Jervas brought me over, is infinitely leſs lively a repreſentation, than [18] that I carry about with me, and which riſes to my mind whenever I think of you; I have many an agreeable reverie, through thoſe woods and downs, where we once rambled together; my head is ſometimes at the Bath, and ſometimes at Letcomb, where the Dean makes a great part of my imaginary entertainment, this being the cheapeſt way of treating me; I hope he will not be diſpleaſed, at this manner of paying my reſpects to him, inſtead of following my friend Jarvas's example, which to ſay the truth, I have as much inclination to do as I want ability. I have been ever ſince December laſt in greater variety of buſineſs than any ſuch men as you (that is, divines and philoſophers,) can poſſibly imagine a reaſonable creature capable of. Gay's play, among the reſt, has coſt much time and long ſuffering, to ſtem a tide of malice and party, that certain authors have raiſed againſt it; the beſt revenge upon ſuch fellows, is now in my hands, I mean your Zoilus, which really tranſcends the expectation [19] I had conceived of it. I have put it into the preſs, beginning with the poem Batrachom: for you ſeem by the firſt paragraph of the dedication to it, to deſign to prefix the name of ſome particular perſon. I beg therefore to know for whom you intend it, that the publication may not be delayed on this account, and this as ſoon as is poſſible. Inform me alſo upon what terms I am to deal with the bookſeller, and whether you deſign the copymoney for Gay, as you formerly talk'd, what number of books you would have yourſelf, &c. I ſcarce ſee anything to be altered in this whole piece; in the poems you ſent I will take the liberty you allow me; the ſtory of Pandora, and the Eclogue upon Health, are two of the moſt beautiful things I ever read. I don't ſay this to the prejudice of the reſt, but as I have read theſe oftner. Let me know how far my commiſſion is to extend, and be confident of my punctual performance of whatever you enjoin. I muſt add a paragraph on this occaſion, in regard to Mr. [20] Ward, whoſe verſes have been a great pleaſure to me; I will contrive they ſhall be ſo to the world, whenever I can find a proper opportunity of publiſhing them.

I ſhall very ſoon print an entire collection of my own madrigals, which I look upon as making my laſt will and teſtament, ſince in it I ſhall give all I ever intend to give, (which I'll beg your's and the Dean's acceptance of) you muſt look on me no more a poet, but a plain commoner, who lives upon his own, and fears and flatters no man. I hope before I die to diſcharge the debt I owe to Homer, and get upon the whole juſt fame enough to ſerve for an annuity for my own time, though I leave nothing to poſterity.

I beg our correſpondence may be more frequent than it has been of late. I am ſure my eſteem and love for you never more deſerved it from you, or more prompted it from you. I deſired our friend Jervas, (in the greateſt hurry [21] of my buſineſs) to ſay a great deal in my name, both to yourſelf and the Dean, and muſt once more repeat the aſſurances to you both, of an unchangeing friendſhip and unalterable eſteem. I am, dear Sir, moſt entirely,

Your affectionate, Faithful, obliged friend and ſervant, A. POPE.

From theſe letters to Parnell, we may conclude, as far as their teſtimony can go, that he was an agreeable, a generous, and a ſincere man. Indeed he took care that his friends ſhould always ſee him to the beſt advantage; for when he found his fits of ſpleen and uneaſineſs, which ſometimes laſted for weeks together, returning, he returned with all expedition to the remote parts of Ireland, and there made out a gloomy kind of ſatisfaction, in giving hideous deſcriptions of the ſolitude to [22] which he retired. It is ſaid of a famous painter, that being confined in priſon for debt, his whole delight conſiſted in drawing the faces of his creditors in caricatura. It was juſt ſo with Parnell. From many of his unpubliſhed pieces which I have ſeen, and from others that have appeared, it would ſeem, that ſcarce a bog in his neighbourhood, was left without reproach, and ſcarce a mountain rear'd its head unſung. ‘"I can eaſily,"’ ſays Pope, in one of his letters, in anſwer to a dreary deſcription of Parnell's. ‘"I can eaſily image to my thoughts the ſolitary hours of your eremitical life in the mountains, from ſomething parallel to it in my own retirement at Binfield;"’ and in another place; ‘"We are both miſerably enough ſituated, God knows; but of the two evils, I think the ſolitudes of the South are to be preferred to the deſarts of the Weſt."’ In this manner Pope anſwered him in the tone of his own complaints; and theſe deſcriptions of the imagined diſtreſſes of his ſituation, ſerved to give him a temporary relief: they threw off [23] the blame from himſelf, and laid upon fortune and accident, a wretchedneſs of his own creating.

But though this method of quarrelling in his poems with his ſituation ſerved to relieve himſelf, yet it was not ſo eaſily endured by the gentlemen of the neighbourhood, who did not care to confeſs themſelves his fellow ſufferers. He received many mortifications upon that account among them; for being naturally fond of company, he could not endure to be without even theirs, which however, among his Engliſh friends, he pretended to deſpiſe. In fact, his conduct, in this particular, was rather ſplendid than wiſe; he had either loſt the art to engage, or did not employ his ſkill, in ſecuring thoſe more permament, tho' more humble connexions, and ſacrificed for a month or two in England a whole year's happineſs by his country fire-ſide at home.

[24] However, what he permitted the world to ſee of his life, was elegant and ſplendid; his fortune (for a poet) was very conſiderable, and it may eaſily be ſuppoſed he lived to the very extent of it. The fact is, his expences were greater than his income, and his ſucceſſor found the eſtate ſomewhat impaired at his deceaſe. As ſoon as ever he had collected in his annual revenues, he immediately ſet out for England, to enjoy the company of his deareſt friends, and laugh at the more prudent world that were minding buſineſs and gaining money. The friends, to whom, during the latter part of his life, he was chiefly attached, were Pope, Swift, Arbuthnot, Jervas, and Gay. Among theſe he was particularly happy, his mind was entirely at eaſe, and gave a looſe to every harmleſs folly that came uppermoſt. Indeed it was a ſociety, in which, of all others, a wiſe man might be moſt ſooliſh without incurring any danger or contempt. Perhaps the reader will be pleaſed to ſee a letter to him from a part of this junto, as there is ſomething [25] ſtriking even in the levities of genius. It comes from Gay, Jervas, Arbuthnot, and Pope, aſſembled at a chop-houſe near the Exchange, and is as follows:

My dear SIR,

I Was laſt ſummer in Devonſhire, and am this winter at Mrs. Bonyer's. In the ſummer I wrote a poem, and in the winter I have publiſhed it; which I have ſent to you by Dr. Elwood. In the ſummer I eat two diſhes of toad-ſtools of my own gathering, inſtead of muſhrooms; and in the winter I have been ſick with wine, as I am at this time, bleſſed be God for it, as I muſt bleſs God for all things. In the ſummer I ſpoke truth to damſels; in the winter I told lyes to ladies: Now you know where I have been, and what I have done. I ſhall tell you what I intend to do the enſuing ſummer; I propoſe to do the ſame thing I did laſt, which was to meet you in any part of England, you [26] would appoint; don't let me have two diſappointments. I have longed to hear from you, and to that intent teazed you with three or four letters, but having no anſwer, I feared both yours and my letters might have miſcarried. I hope my performance will pleaſe the Dean, whom I often wiſh for, and to whom I would have often wrote; but for the ſame reaſons I neglected writing to you. I hope I need not tell you how I love you, and how glad I ſhall be to hear from you; which next to ſeeing you, would be the greateſt ſatisfaction to

Your moſt affectionate friend and Humble ſervant, J. G.
[27]
Dear Mr. ARCHDEACON,

THOUGH my proportion of this epiſtle ſhould be but a ſketch in miniature, yet I take up half this page, having paid my club with the good company both for our dinner of chops and for this paper. The poets will give you lively deſcriptions in their way; I ſhall only acquaint you with that, which is directly my province. I have juſt ſet the laſt hand to a couplet, for ſo I may call two nymphs in one piece. They are Pope's favourites, and though few, you will gueſt muſt have coſt me more pains than any nymphs can be worth. He has been ſo unreaſonable to expect that I ſhould have made them as beautiful upon canvas as he has done upon paper. If this ſame Mr. P— ſhould omit to write for the dear Frogs, and the Pervigilium, I muſt intreat you not to let me languiſh for them, as I have done ever ſince they croſs'd the ſeas; Remember by [28] what neglects, &c. we miſs'd them when we loſt you, and therefore I have not yet forgiven any of thoſe triflers that let them eſcape and run thoſe hazards. I am going on at the old rate, and want you and the Dean prodigiouſly, and am in hopes of making you a viſit this ſummer, and of hearing from you both now you are together. Forteſcue, I am ſure, will be concerned that he is not in Cornhill, to ſet his hand to theſe preſents, not only as a witneſs, but as a

Servitcur tres humble C. JERVAS.

It is ſo great an honour to a poor Scotchman to be remembered at this time a-day, eſpecially by an inhabitant of the Glacialis Ierne, that I take it very thankfully, and have with my good friends, remembered you at our table in the chop-houſe in Exchange-Alley. There wanted nothing to compleat our happineſs but your company, and our dear friend [29] the Dean's. I am ſure the whole entertainment would have been to his reliſh. Gay has got ſo much money by his Art of Walking the Streets, that he is ready to ſet up to his equipage: he is juſt going to the Bank to negociate ſome exchange bills. Mr. Pope delays his ſecond volume of his Homer till the martial ſpirit of the rebels is quite quelled, it being judged that the firſt part did ſome harm that way. Our love again and again to the dear Dean, fuimus Torys, I can ſay no more.

ARBUTHNOT.

When a man is conſcious that he does no good himſelf, the next thing is to cauſe others to do ſome. I may claim ſome merit this way, in haſtening this teſtimonial from your friends above-writing: their love to you indeed wants no ſpur, their ink wants no pen, their pen wants no hand, their hand wants no heart, and ſo forth, (after the manner of Rabelais; which is betwixt ſome meaning [30] and no meaning;) and yet it may be ſaid; when preſent thought and opportunity is wanting, their pens want ink, their hands want pens, their hearts want hands, &c. till time, place and conveniency, concur to ſet them a writing, as at preſent, a ſociable meeting, a good dinner, warm fire, and an eaſy ſituation do, to the joint labour and pleaſure of this epiſtle.

Wherein if I ſhould ſay nothing I ſhould ſay much, (much being included in my love) though my love be ſuch, that if I ſhould ſay much, I ſhould yet ſay nothing, it being (as Cowley ſays) equally impoſſible either to conceal or to expreſs it.

If I were to tell you the thing I wiſh above all things, it is to ſee you again; the next is to ſee here your treatiſe of Zoilus, with the Batrachomuomachia, and the Pervigilium Veneris, both which poems are maſterpieces in ſeveral kinds; and I queſtion not the proſe is [31] as excellent in its ſort, as the Eſſay on Homer. Nothing can be more glorious to that great author, than that the ſame hand that raiſed his beſt ſtatue, and decked it with its old laurels, ſhould alſo hang up the ſcarecrow of his miſerable critick, and gibbet up the carcaſe of Zoilus, to the terror of the witlings of poſterity. More, and much more, upon this and a thouſand other ſubjects, will be the matter of my next letter, wherein I muſt open all the friend to you. At this time I muſt be content with telling you, I am faithfully your moſt affectionate and

Humble ſervant, A. POPE.

If we regard this letter with a critical eye, we ſhall find it indifferent enough; if we conſider it as mere effuſion of friendſhip, in which every writer contended in affection, it will appear [32] much to the honour of thoſe who wrote it. To be mindful of an abſent friend in the hours of mirth and feaſting, when his company is leaſt wanted, ſhews no ſlight degree of ſincerity. Yet probably there was ſtill another motive for writing thus to him in conjunction. The above-named, together with Swift and Parnell, had ſometime before formed themſelves into a ſociety, called the Scribblerus Club, and I ſhould ſuppoſe they commemorated him thus, as being an abſent member.

It is paſt a doubt that they wrote many things in conjunction, and Gay uſually held the pen. And yet I don't remember any productions which were the joint effort of this ſociety, as doing it honour. There is ſomething feeble and queint in all their attempts, as if company repreſſed thought, and genius wanted ſolitude for its boldeſt and happieſt exertions. Of thoſe productions in which Parnell had a principal ſhare, that of the Origin of the Sciences from the Monkies in Ethiopia, is particularly [33] mentioned by Pope himſelf, in ſome manuſcript anecdotes which he left behind him. The Life of Homer alſo, prefixed to the tranſlation of the Iliad, is written by Parnell and corrected by Pope; and as that great poet aſſures us in the ſame place, this correction was not effected without great labour. It is ſtill ſtiff, ſays he, and was written ſtill ſtiffer, as it is, I verily think it coſt me more pains in the correcting, than the writing it would have done. All this may be eaſily credited; for every thing of Parnell's, that has appeared in proſe, is written in a very aukward inelegant manner. It is true, his productions teem with imagination, and ſhew great learning, but they want that eaſe and ſweetneſs for which his poetry is ſo much admired, and the language is alſo moſt ſhamefully incorrect. Yet, tho' all this muſt be allowed, Pope ſhould have taken care not to leave his errors upon record againſt him, or put it in the power of envy to tax his friend with faults that do not appear in what he has left to the world. A poet has a right to expect [34] the ſame ſecrecy in his friend as in his confeſſor; the ſins he diſcovers are not divulged for puniſhment but pardon. Indeed Pope is almoſt inexcuſable in this inſtance, as what he ſeems to condemn in one place, he very much applauds in another. In one of the letters from him to Parnell, abovementioned, he treats the Life of Homer with much greater reſpect, and ſeems to ſay, that the proſe is excellent in its kind. It muſt be confeſſed however, that he is by no means inconſiſtent; what he ſays in both places may very eaſily be reconciled to truth, but who can defend his candour and his ſincerity.

It would be hard, however, to ſuppoſe that there was no real friendſhip between theſe great men. The benevolence of Parnell's diſpoſition remains unimpeached; and Pope, tho' ſubject to ſtarts of paſſion and envy, yet never miſſed an opportunity of being truly ſerviceable to him. The commerce between them was carried on to the common intereſt of both. [35] When Pope had a miſcellany to publiſh, he applied to Parnell for poetical aſſiſtance, and the latter as implicitly ſubmitted to him for correction. Thus they mutually advanced each other's intereſt or fame, and grew ſtronger by conjunction. Nor was Pope the only perſon to whom Parnell had recourſe for aſſiſtance. We learn from Swift's letters to Stella, that he ſubmitted his pieces to all his friends, and readily adopted their alterations. Swift, among the number, was very uſeful to him in that particular; and care has been taken that the world ſhould not remain ignorant of the obligation.

But in the connexion of wits, intereſt has generally very little ſhare; they have only pleaſure in view, and can ſeldom find it but among each other. The Scribblerus club, when the members were in town, were ſeldom aſunder, and they often made excurſions together into the country, and generally on foot. Swift was uſually the butt of the company, and if a [36] trick was played, he was always the ſufferer. The whole party once agreed to walk down to the houſe of Lord B—, who is ſtill living, and whoſe ſeat is about twelve miles from town. As every one agreed to make the beſt of his way, Swift, who was remarkable for walking, ſoon left all the reſt behind him, fully reſolved, upon his arrival, to chuſe the very beſt bed for himſelf, for that was his cuſtom. In the mean time Parnell was determined to prevent his intentions, and taking horſe, arrived at Lord B—'s, by another way, long before him. Having apprized his lordſhip of Swift's deſign, it was reſolved at any rate to keep him out of the houſe, but how to effect this was the queſtion. Swift never had the ſmall-pox, and was very much afraid of catching it: as ſoon therefore as he appeared ſtriding along at ſome diſtance from the houſe, one of his lordſhip's ſervants was diſpatched, to inform him, that the ſmall-pox was then making great ravages in the family, but that there was a ſummer-houſe with a [37] field-bed at his ſervice, at the end of the garden. There the diſappointed Dean was obliged to retire, and take a cold ſupper that was ſent out to him, while the reſt were feaſting within. However, at laſt, they took compaſſion on him; and upon his promiſing never to chuſe the beſt bed again, they permitted him to make one of the company,

There is ſomething ſatisfactory in theſe accounts of the follies of the wiſe, they give a natural air to the picture, and reconcile us to our own. There have been few poetical ſocieties, more talked of, or productive of a greater variety of whimſical conceits than this of the Scriblerus club, but how long it laſted I cannot exactly determine. The whole of Parnell's poetical exiſtence was not of more than eight or ten years continuance; his firſt excurſions to England began about the year 1706, and he died in the year 1718, ſo that it is probable the club began with him, and his death ended the connexion. Indeed the feſtivity of [38] his converſation, the benevolence of his heart, and the generoſity of his temper, were qualities that might ſerve to cement any ſociety, and that could hardly be replaced when he was taken away. During the two or three laſt years of his life, he was more fond of company than ever, and could ſcarce bear to be alone. The death of his wife, it is ſaid, was a loſs to him that he was unable to ſupport or recover. From that time he could never venture to court the muſe in ſolitude. where he was ſure to find the image of her who firſt inſpired his attempts. He began therefore to throw himſelf into every company, and to ſeek from wine, if not relief, at leaſt inſenſibility. Thoſe helps that ſorrow firſt called in for aſſiſtance, habit ſoon rendered neceſſary, and he died before his fortieth year, in ſome meaſure a martyr to conjugal fidelity.

Thus in the ſpace of a very few years, Parnell attained a ſhare of fame, equal to what moſt of his cotemporaries were a long life in [39] acquiring. He is only to be conſidered as a poet, and the univerſal eſteem in which his poems are held, and the reiterated pleaſure they give in the peruſal, are a ſufficient teſt of their merit. He appears to me to be the laſt of that great ſchool that had modelled itſelf upon the ancients, and taught Engliſh poetry to reſemble what the generality of mankind have allowed to excel. A ſtudious and correct obſerver of antiquity, he ſet himſelf to conſider nature with the lights it lent him, and he found that the more aid he borrowed from the one, the more delightfully he reſembled the other. To copy nature is a taſk the moſt bungling workman is able to execute; to ſelect ſuch parts as contribute to delight, is reſerved only for thoſe whom accident has bleſt with uncommon talents, or ſuch as have read the ancients with indefatigable induſtry. Parnell is ever happy in the ſelection of his images, and ſcrupulouſly careful in the choice of his ſubjects. His productions bear no reſemblance to thoſe tawdry things, which it has for ſome [40] time been the faſhion to admire; in writing which the poet ſits down without any plan, and heaps up ſplendid images without any ſelection; where the reader grows dizzy with praiſe and admiration, and yet ſoon grows weary, he can ſcarce tell why. Our poet, on the contrary, gives out his beauties with a more ſparing hand; he is ſtill carrying his reader forward, and juſt gives him refreſhment ſufficient to ſupport him to his journey's end. At the end of his courſe the reader regrets that his way has been ſo ſhort, he wonders that it gave him ſo little trouble, and ſo reſolves to go the journey over again.

His poetical language is not leſs correct than his ſubjects are pleaſing. He found it at that period, in which it was brought to its higheſt pitch of refinement; and ever ſince his time it has been gradually debaſing. It is indeed amaſing, after what has been done by Dryden, Addiſon, and Pope, to improve and harmonize our native tongue, that their ſucceſſors ſhould [41] have taken ſo much pains to involve it in priſtine barbarity. Theſe miſguided innovators have not been content with reſtoring antiquated words and phraſes, but have indulged themſelves in the moſt licentious tranſpoſitions, and the harſheſt conſtructions, vainly imagining, that the more their writings are unlike proſe, the more they reſemble poetry. They have adopted a language of their own, and call upon mankind for admiration. All thoſe who do not underſtand them are ſilent, and thoſe who make out their meaning, are willing to praiſe, to ſhew they underſtand. From theſe follies and affectations, the poems of Parnell are entirely free; he has conſidered the language of poetry as the language of life, and conveys the warmeſt thoughts in the ſimpleſt expreſſion.

Parnell has written ſeveral poems beſides theſe publiſhed by Pope, and ſome of them have been made public with very little credit to his reputation. There are ſtill many more [42] that have not yet ſeen the light, in the poſſeſſion of Sir John Parnell his nephew, who from that laudable zeal which he has for his Uncle's reputation, will probably be ſlow in publiſhing what he may even ſuſpect will do it injury. Of thoſe in the following collection, ſome are indifferent, and ſome moderately good, but the greater part are excellent. A ſlight ſtricture on the moſt ſtriking, ſhall conclude this account, which I have already drawn out to a diſproportioned length.

Heſiod, or the Riſe of Woman, is a very fine illuſtration of an hint from Heſiod. It was one of his earlieſt productions, and firſt appeared in a miſcellany, publiſhed by Tonſon.

Of the three ſongs that follow, two of them were written upon the lady he afterwards married; they were the genuine dictates of his paſſion, but are not excellent in their kind.

[43] The Anacreontic, beginning with, When Spring came on with freſh delight, is taken from a French poet, whoſe name I forget, and, as far as I am able to judge of the French language, is better than the original. The Anacreontic that follows, Gay Bacchus, &c. is alſo a tranſlation of a Latin poem, by Aurelius Augurellus, an Italian poet, beginning with

Invitat olim Bacchus ad coenam ſuos
Comum, Jocum, Cupidinem.

Parnell, when he tranſlated it, applied the characters to ſome of his friends, and as it was written for their entertainment, it probably gave them more pleaſure than it has given the public in the peruſal. It ſeems to have more ſpirit than the original; but it is extraordinary that it was publiſhed by an original and not as a tranſlation. Pope ſhould have acknowledged it, as he knew.

[44] The Fairy Tale is inconteſtably one of the fineſt pieces in any language. The old dialect is not perfectly well preſerved, but that is a very ſlight defect where all the reſt is ſo excellent.

The Pervigilium Veneris, (which, by the bye, does not belong to Catullus) is very well verſified, and in general all Parnell's tranſlations are excellent. The Battle of the Frogs and Mice, which follows, is done as well as the ſubject would admit; but there is a defect in the tranſlation, which ſinks it below the original, and which it was impoſſible to remedy. I mean the names of the combatants, which in the Greek bear a ridiculous alluſion to their natures, have no force to the Engliſh reader. A Bacon Eater was a good name for a Mouſe, and Pternotractas in Greek, was a very good ſounding word, that conveyed that meaning. Puff-cheek would ſound odiouſly as a name for a Frog, and yet Phyſignathos does admirably well in the original.

[45] The letter to Mr. Pope is one of the fineſt compliments that ever was paid to any poet; the deſcription of his ſituation at the end of it is very fine, but far from being true. That part of it where he deplores his being far from wit and learning, as being far from Pope, gave particular offence to his friends at home. Mr. Coote, a gentleman in his neighbourhood, who thought that he himſelf had wit, was very much diſpleaſed with Parnell for caſting his eyes ſo far off for a learned friend, when he could ſo conveniently be ſupplied at home.

The tranſlation of a part of the Rape of the Lock into monkiſh verſe, ſerves to ſhew what a maſter Parnell was of the Latin; a copy of verſes made in this manner, is one of the moſt difficult trifles that can poſſibly be imagined. I am aſſured that it was written upon the following occaſion. Before the Rape of the Lock was yet completed, Pope was reading it to his friend Swift, who ſat very attentively, [46] while Parnell, who happened to be in the houſe, went in and out without ſeeming to take any notice. However he was very diligently employed in liſtening, and was able, from the ſtrength of his memory to bring away the whole deſcription of the toilet pretty exactly. This he verſified in the manner now publiſhed in his works, and the next day when Pope was reading his poem to ſome friends, Parnell inſiſted that he had ſtolen that part of the deſcription from an old monkiſh manuſcript. An old paper with the Latin verſes was ſoon brought forth, and it was not till after ſome time that Pope was delivered from the confuſion which it at firſt produced.

The Book-Worm is another unacknowledged tranſlation from a Latin poem by Beza. It was the faſhion with the wits of the laſt age, to conceal the places from whence they took their hints or their ſubjects. A trifling acknowledgment would have made that lawful prize, which may now be conſidered as plunder.

[47] The Night Piece on Death, deſerves every praiſe, and I ſhould ſuppoſe, with very little amendment, might be made to ſurpaſs all thoſe night pieces and church-yard ſcenes that have ſince appeared. But the poem of Parnell's, beſt known, and on which his beſt reputation is grounded, is the Hermit. Pope, ſpeaking of this, in thoſe manuſcript anecdotes already quoted, ſays, that the poem is very good. The ſtory, continues he, was written originally in Spaniſh, whence probably Howel had tranſlated it into proſe, and inſerted it in one of his letters. Addiſon liked the ſcheme, and was not diſinclined to come into it. However this may be, Dr. Henry More, in his Dialogues, has the very ſame ſtory; and I have been informed by ſome, that it is originally of Arabian invention.

With reſpect to the proſe works of Parnell, I have mentioned them already; his fame is too well grounded for any defects in them to ſhake it. I will only add, that the Life of [48] Zoilus, was written at the requeſt of his friends, and deſigned as a ſatire upon Dennis and Theobald, with whom his club had long been at variance. I ſhall end this account with a letter to him from Pope and Gay, in which they endeavour to haſten him to finiſh that production.

Dear SIR,

I Muſt own I have long owed you a letter, but you muſt own, you have owed me one a good deal longer. Beſides, I have but two people in the whole kingdom of Ireland to take care of; the Dean and you: but you have ſeveral who complain of your neglect in England. Mr. Gay complains, Mr. Harcourt complains, Mr. Jarvas complains, Dr. Arbuthnot complains, my Lord complains; I complain. (Take notice of this figure of iteration, when you make your next ſermon) ſome ſay, you are in deep diſcontent at the [49] new turn of affairs; others, that you are ſo much in the Archbiſhop's good graces, that you will not correſpond with any that have ſeen the laſt miniſtry. Some affirm, you have quarrel'd with Pope, (whoſe friends they obſerve daily fall from him on account of his ſatyrical and comical diſpoſition) others, that you are inſinuating yourſelf into the opinion of the ingenious Mr. What-do-ye-call-him. Some think you are preparing your ſermons for the preſs, and others that you will transform them into eſſays and moral diſcourſes. But the only excuſe, that I will allow, is, your attention to the Life of Zoilus, the Frogs already ſeem to croak for their tranſportation to England, and are ſenſible how much that Doctor is curſed and hated, who introduced their ſpecies into your nation; therefore, as you dread the wrath of St. Patrick, ſend them hither, and rid your kingdom of thoſe pernicious and loquacious Animals.

[50] I have at length received your poem out of Mr. Addiſon's hands; which ſhall be ſent as ſoon as you order it, and in what manner you ſhall appoint. I ſhall in the mean time give Mr. Tooke a packet for you, conſiſting of divers merry pieces. Mr. Gay's new Farce, Mr. Burnet's Letter to Mr. Pope, Mr. Pope's Temple of Fame, Mr. Thomas Burnet's Grumbler on Mr. Gay, and the Biſhop of Ailſbury's Elegy, written either by Mr. Cary or ſome other hand.

Mr. Pope is reading a letter, and in the mean time, I make uſe of the pen to teſtify my uneaſineſs in not hearing from you. I find ſucceſs, even in the moſt trivial things, raiſes the indignation of ſcribblers: for I, for my What-d'-ye-call-it, could neither eſcape the fury of Mr. Burnet, or the German Doctor; then where will rage end, when Homer is to be tranſlated? Let Zoilus haſten to your friend's aſſiſtance, and envious criticiſm ſhall be no more. I am in hopes that we may order our [51] affairs ſo as to meet this ſummer at the Bath; for Mr. Pope and myſelf have thoughts of taking a trip thither. You ſhall preach, and we will write lampoons; for it is eſteemed as great an honour to leave the Bath, for fear of a broken head, as for a Terrae Filius of Oxford to be expelled. I have no place at court, therefore, that I may not entirely be without one every where, ſhew that I have a place in your remembrance;

Your moſt affectionate, Faithful ſervant, A. POPE, and J. GAY.

Homer will be publiſhed in three weeks.

Appendix A

*I cannot finiſh this trifle, without returning my ſincereſt acknowledgments to Sir John Parnell, for the generous aſſiſtance he was pleaſed to give me, in furniſhing me with many materials, when he heard I was about writing the life of his Uncle; as alſo to Mr. and Mrs. Hayes, relations of our poet; and to my very good friend Mr. Steevens, who being an ornament to letters himſelf, is very ready to aſſiſt all the attempts of others.

THE END.
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