“You say truly, that death is only terrible to us as it separates us from those we love, but I really think those have the worst of it who are left by us, if we are true friends. I have felt more (I fancy) in the loss of Mr. Gay, than I shall suffer in the thought of going away myself into a state that can feel none of this sort of losses.”
If Alexander Pope is read
today, he’s read as a manufacturer of elegantly barbed witticisms, a crafter of technically perfect verse. What is The
Dunciad but an assault on his sorry contemporaries, exemplars of “Dulness”? Pope himself wrote “The life of a Wit is a warfare upon earth."
Pope writes above in a letter to
Swift on April 2, 1733. John Gay, the poet and playwright, had died less than
four months earlier. The letter continues:
“I wished vehemently to
have seen [Gay] in a condition of living independent, and to have lived in
perfect indolence the rest of our days together, the two most idle, most
innocent, undesigning poets of our age. I now as vehemently wish you and I
might walk into the grave together, by as slow steps as you please, but
contentedly and cheerfully: whether that ever can be, or in what country, I
know no more, than into what country we shall walk out of the grave.”
Pope would live another
eleven years; Swift, another twelve. As a boy, tuberculosis of the spine left
Pope stunted and in pain. He never grew taller than four feet, six inches. If
his physical suffering accounts for his satirical gift, it also helps explain
his love for and dependence on Swift and his other friends. They “help me thro’
this long Disease, my Life.” He also faced the English laws banning Roman Catholics
from teaching, attending university, voting and holding public office. Pope to
Swift on September 15, 1734:
“I have ever thought you
as sensible as any man I knew . . . When the heart is full, it is angry at all
words that cannot come up to it; and you are now the man in all the world I am
most troubled to write to, for you are the friend I have left whom I am most
grieved about. Death has not done worse to me in separating poor Gay, or any
other, than disease and absence in dividing us. I am afraid to know how you do,
since most accounts I have give me pain for you . . .”
My niece tells me she is
reading Pope’s poetry and asked what I thought of him. In my private pantheon
he is one of the supreme English poets and terribly unfashionable. Our age could use him. Hannah gave me a little hope.
1 comment:
In a letter to John Murray, dated September 15, 1817, Byron wrote "I took Moore's poems and my own and some others, and went over them side by side with Pope's, and I was really astonished (I ought not to have been so) and mortified at the ineffable distance in point of sense, harmony, effect and even Imagination, passion and Invention, between the little Queen Anne's man, and us of the Lower Empire. Depend upon it, it is all Horace then, and Claudian now, among us..."
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