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LETTERS

O F.

Mr. POP E,

AND

Several of his FRIEND s.

Quo Defiderio veteres revocamus Amores,
Atque olim amiffas flemus Amicitias!

VOL. VII.

B

CATULL.

LETTERS

TO AND FROM

Mr. WY CHERLEY.

From the Year 1704 to 1710.

LETTER I.

Binfield in Windfor Foreft, Dec. 26, 1704

I

T was certainly a great fatisfaction to me to fee and converse with a Man, whom in his writings I had fo long known with pleasure; but it was a high addition to it, to hear

thofe of Mr Pope: while, on the other hand, a childish jealoufy, a puerile affectation, an attention and lying at catch for turns and points, together with a total ignorance and contempt of order, of method, and of all relation of the parts to one another to compofe a reasonable whole. make up the character of those of Mr. Wycherley.

If one were to judge of this fet of Letters by the manner of thinking and turn of expreffion, one fhould conclude they had been all miftitled; and that the Letters given to the boy of fixteen, were written by the man of feventy, and fo on the contrary: fuch fober fenfe, fuch gravity of manners, and fo much judgment, and knowledge of compofition, enlivened with the sprightlinefs of manly wit, diftinguish Sixteen. B 2

The Author's Age then

you,

you, at our very first meeting, doing justice to your dead friend Mr. Dryden. I was not fo happy as to know him: Virgilium tantum vidi. Had I been born early enough, I must have known and lov'd him: For I have been affured, not only by yourself, but by Mr. Congreve and Sir William Trumbul, that his perfonal Qualities were as amiable as his Poetical, notwithstanding the many libellous mifrepresentations of them, against which the former of these Gentlemen has told me he will one day vindicate him. I fuppofe thofe injuries were begun by the violence of Party, but 'tis no doubt they were continued by envy at his fuccefs and fame: And those Scriblers who attacked him in his latter times, were only like gnats in a fummer's evening, which are never very troublesome but in the finest and most glorious feafon; for his fire, like the fun's, fhined cleareft towards its fetting.

You must not therefore imagine, that when you told me my own performances were

When a very young duodecimo Edition of DryBoy, he prevailed with aden's Plays, 1717.

friend to
him to a Cof-
carry
fee-house which Dryden fre-
quented; where he had the
fatisfaction he speaks of.

He fince did fo, in his dedication to the Duke of Newcastle, prefix'd to the

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P.

The fact feems to have been just the reverse. One of the firft Satires against him was the Duke of Buckingham's Rehearsal; and one of the laft, Montague's parody of his Hind and Panther.

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