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Nor Virtue, male or female, can we name,

But what will grow on Pride, or grow on Shame. Thus Nature gives us (let it check our pride) The virtue nearest to our vice ally'd:

Reason the byas turns to good from ill,

And Nero reigns a Titus, if he will.

VARIATIONS.

After 194. in the MS.

1

How oft, with Paffion, Virtue points her Charms!

Then shines the Hero, then the Patriot warms.

Peleus' great Son, or Brutus, who had known,

Had Lucrece been a Whore, or Helen none?
But Virtues opposite to make agree,

That, Reason! is thy tafk; and worthy Thee.
Hard task, cries Bibulus, and reason weak.
-Make it a point, dear Marquefs! or a pique.
Once, for a whim, perfuade yourself to pay
A debt to reason, like a debt at play.

For right or wrong have mortals suffer'd more?
B for his Prince, or ** for his Whore?
Whofe felf-denials nature most controul?
His, who would fave a Sixpence or his Soul?
Web for his health, a Chartreux for his Sin,
Contend they not which foonest shall grow thin?
What, we refolve, we can: but here's the fault,
We ne'er refolve to do the thing we ought.

COMMENTARY.

196

VER. 197. Reafon the byass &c.] But left it should be objected that this account favours the doctrine of Neceffity, and would infinuate that Men are only acted upon, in the production of Good out of Evil; the poet teacheth (from 196 to 203) that Man is a free agent, and hath it in his own power to turn the natural paffions into Virtues or into Vices, properly fo called:

200

The fiery foul abhor'd in Catiline,
In Decius charms, in Curtius is divine:
The fame ambition can destroy or fave,
And makes a patriot as it makes a knave.
This light and darkness in our chaos join'd,
What shall divide? The God within the mind.

COMMENTARY.

Reason the byafs turns to good from ill,
And Nero reigns a Titus, if he will.

Secondly, If it fhould be objected, that though he doth indeed tell us fome actions are beneficial and fome hurtful, yet he could not call thofe virtuous nor these vicious, because, as he hath defcribed things, the motive appears to be only the gratification of fome paffion; give me leave to answer for him, that this would be mistaking the argument, which (to 249 of this epiftle) confiders the paffions only with regard to Society, that is, with regard to their effects rather than their motives. That however, 'tis his defign to teach that actions are properly virtuous and vicious; and though it be difficult to diftinguifh genuine Virtue from fpurious, they having both the fame appearance, and both the fame public effects, yet they may be difembarraffed. If it be afked, by what means? He replies (from 202 to 205) By Confcience; which is to the purpofe; for it is folely a Man's own concern to know whether his Virtue be pure and folid; for

NOTES.

VER. 203. This light &c.] A Platonic phrase for Confcience; and here employed with great judgment and propriety. For Confcience either fignifies, fpeculatively, the judgment we pafs of things upon whatever principles we chance to have; and then it is only Opinion, a very unable judge and divider,

Or elfe it fignifies, practically, the application of the eternal rule of right (received by us as the law of God) to the regulation of our actions; and then it is properly Confcience, the God (or the law of God) within the mind, of power to divide the light from the darknefs in this chaos of the paffions.

Extremes in Nature equal ends produce, 205

210

In Man they join to fome mysterious use ;
Tho' each by turns the other's bound invade,
As, in fome well-wrought picture, light and fhade,
And oft fo mix, the diff'rence is too nice
Where ends the Virtue, or begins the Vice.
Fools! who from hence into the notion fall,
That Vice or Virtue there is none at all.
If white and black blend, soften, and unite
A thousand ways, is there no black or white?
Afk

your own heart, and nothing is so plain; 215 'Tis to mistake them, costs the time and pain.

COMMENTARY.

what is it to others, whether this Virtue, while, as to them, the effects of it is the fame, be real or unsubstantial ?

VER. 205. Extremes in Nature equal ends produce,] But still it will be faid, why all this difficulty to distinguish true Virtue from falfe? The poet fhews why (from 204 to 211) That though indeed Vice and Virtue so invade each other's bounds, that fometimes we can scarce tell where one ends and the other begins, yet great purposes are ferved thereby, no less than the perfecting the conftitution of the whole, as lights and fhades, which run into one another in a well-wrought picture, make the harmony and spirit of the compofition. But on this account to fay there is neither Vice or Virtue, the poet fhews (from ✯ 210 to 217) would be just as wife as to fay there is neither black nor white; because the shade of that and the light of this often run into one another :

Afk your own heart, and nothing is so plain ;

'Tis to mistake them, costs the time and pain.

This is an error of speculation, which leads Men fo foolishly to conclude, that there is neither Vice nor Virtue.

Vice is a monster of fo frightful mien, As, to be hated, needs but to be seen ; Yet feen too oft, familiar with her face, We first endure, then pity, then embrace.

220

But where th'Extreme of Vice, was ne'er agreed:
Afk where's the North? atYork, 'tis on the Tweed;
In Scotland, at the Orcades; and there,
At Greenland, Zembla, or the Lord knows where.
No creature owns it in the first degree, 225
But thinks his neighbour farther gone than he ;

VARIATION S.

After 220. in the 1ft Edition, followed thefe,

A Cheat! a Whore! who starts not at the name,
In all the Inns of Court or Drury-lane?

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The Col'nel fwears the Agent is a dog,
The Scriv'ner vows th' Attorney is a rogue.
Against the Thief th' Attorney loud inveighs,
For whose ten pound the County twenty pays.
The Thief damns Judges, and the Knaves of State;
And dying, mourns fmall Villains hang'd by great.

COMMENTARY.

VER. 217. Vice is a monster &c.] There is another Error of practice, which hath more common and fatal effects; and is next confidered (from 216 to 221.) It is this, that though, at the first aspect, Vice be fo horrible as to affright all beholders, yet, when by habit we are once grown familiar with her, we first fuffer, and in time begin to lose the memory of her nature; which neceffarily implies an equal ignorance in the nature of Virtue. Hence Men conclude, that there is neither one nor the other.

VER. 221. But where th’Extreme of Vice, &c.] But it is not

Ev'n those who dwell beneath its very zone,
Or never feel the rage, or never own;
What happier natures fhrink at with affright,
The hard inhabitant contends is right.

Virtuous and vicious ev'ry Man must be,
Few in th’extreme, but all in the degree;
The rogue and fool by fits is fair and wife;
And ev❜n the best, by fits, what they defpife.
'Tis but by parts we follow good or ill;
For, Vice or Virtue, Self directs it still;

COMMENTARY.

230

235

only that extreme of Vice next to Virtue, which betrays us into these mistakes. We are deceived too, as he fhews us (from

220 to 231) by our obfervations about the other extreme: For from the extreme of Vice being unfettled, Men conclude that Vice itself is only nominal.

VER. 231. Virtuous and vicious ev'ry Man muft be,] There is yet a third cause of this error, of no Vice no Virtue, composed of the other two, i. e. partly fpeculative, and partly practical. And this also the poet here confiders (from ✯ 230 to 239) fhewing it arifeth from the imperfection of the beft characters, and the inequality of all; whence it happens that no Man is extremely virtuous or vicious, nor extremely conftant in the purfuit of either. Why it fo happens, the poet affigns an admirable reafon in this line:

For, Vice or Virtue, SELF directs it fill.

An adherence or regard to what is, in the sense of the world, a Man's own Intereft, making an extreme in either impoffible. Its effect in keeping a good Man from the extreme of Virtue, needs no explanation; and in an ill Man, Self-interest shewing him the neceffity of fome kind of reputation, the procuring, and preferving that, will neceffarily keep him from the extreme of Vice.

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