: pist ma •LUCIUS.L HUBBARD HOUGHTON MICHIGAN : PR 372 н H3 173 THE WORKS N OF JONATH SWIFT, D.D:D.S.P.D. WITH Notes Hiftorical and Critical. By J. HAWKE SWORTH,L.L.D. and others. VOL.I. Printed for J.WILLIAMS, DUBLIN 1774. Gjaac Taylor scalp, Lond. Res. Lucius L. Hubbard gg. 10-81-1922 15 vole. 409899 I HE DUBLIN EDITOR'S PREFACE. WH HENEVER any thing from the Prefs is offered to the Public, it will be confidered in the fame light, as money which receives its currency from its conftituent Qualities. Authors and Editors are both accountable to the World. He who compofes will con- fider public Utility and public Entertainment; he who compiles ought to be judicious, as well as careful, in collecting; and he who would be the faithful Editor, will bring to public view, Matter deduced from Autho- rity, properly digefted and arranged in due form: Among different Precedents he will chufe the moſt ac- curate, clear, and edifying: If he has modefty, his Choice will be guided by thofe whofe judgment and taſte qualify them to inftruct him: If he has Prudence he will attend to their Advice. Upon theſe Principles is an Edition of the Works of the Great SWIFT, offered to the Public; an Attempt not deriving from thofe interested Motives, which too often abſorb all other Confiderations; for altho' the fair reward of Labour is a lawful defire, yet Reputati- on is ſtill to ſhare in the Undertaking. Care has been taken to print this Edition as cor- rectly as poffible; and, in point of Accuracy, it will be found vaftly fuperior to any former one; as no pains or expence have been fpared to render it com- plete. The difagreeable Inconvenience refulting to the Reader from the very confufed and irregular Manner in which the Letters have been placed throughout all the former Editions,not excepting even the London Royal Quarto, which fells for upwards of Ten Guineas- is effectually obviated in This; as they fucceed each other in exact Chro- nological Order. VOL. I. THE THE FAMILY OF SWIFT.* Taken from Mr. DEANE SWIFT's Effay. SECT. I. in Yorkmire. From them defcended a I.T HE family of the SWIFTS was ancient noted perſon who paffed under the name of Cavatiero Swift, a man of wit and humour. He was made an Irish peer by King James or King Charles I. with the title of Baron Carlingford, † but never was in that kingdom. Many traditional pleaſant ftories are relat- ed of him, which the family planted in Ireland hath received from their parents. This Lord died without iffue- male; and his heirefs, whether of the first or fe- cond defcent, was married to Robert Fielding, Efq; commonly called Handfome Fielding. She brought him a confiderable eftate in Yorkshire, which he fquan- dered away, but had no children. The Earl of Eglin- ton married another co-heiress of the fame Family, as he hath often told me. Srcr. II. Another of the fame family was Sir Ed- ward Swift, well known in the time of the great re- bellion and ufurpation; but I am ignorant whether he left heirs or no. SECT. III. Of the other branch, whereof the great- er part fettled in Ireland, the founder was William Swift, prebendary of Canterbury, towards the laft years of Queen Elizabeth, and during the reign of King James I. He was a divine of fome diftinction. There *This little tract, Mr. Swift tells us, was written by Dr. Swift about fix or eight and twenty years ago, as an introduction to his life, which he had reafon to apprehend would fome time or other become a topic of general converfation. Mr. Swift got the origi- nal manufcript under the Doctor's own hand, from his friend and coufin-german Mrs. Whiteway. + Bernam Swift, Efq; created Viſcount (not Baron) of Carling- ford, in Ireland, March 20, 1627, the 3d of Charles I. 1 Dr. Swift is here mistaken. From the dedication of William Swift's fermon, it appears, that Thomas, the Father of William, was prefented in 1569 to the parish of St. Andrew in Canterbury; and that, upon the deceafe of Thomas, William, in 1591, fucceed- ed his father. THE FAMILY OF SWIFT iii There is a fermon of his extant, and the title is to be ſeen in the catalogue of the Bodleian library; but I never could get a copy, and I fuppofe it would now be of little value. * SECT. IV. This William married the heiress of Philpot, I fuppofe a Yorkshire gentleman, by whom he got a very confiderable eſtate; which however ſhe kept in her own power, I know not by what artifice, She was a capricious, ill-natured, and paffionate woman, of which I have been told feveral inftances. And it hath been a continual tradition in the family, that ſhe ab- folutely difinherited her only fon Thomas, for no greater crime than that of robbing an orchard when he was a boy. And thus much is certain, that, except a church or chapter leafe, which was not renewed, Tho- mas never enjoyed more than one hundred pounds a year; which was all at Goodrich, in Herefordshire, whereof not above one half is now in the poffeffion of a great-grandfon. † SECT. V. His original picture is now in the hands of Godwin Swift, I of Dublin, Efq; his great-grand- fon, as well as that of his wife's, who feems to have a good deal of the fhrew in her countenance; whofe arms as an heiress are joined with his own and by the laſt he ſeems to have been a perfon fomewhat fan- taftic; for there he gives as his device, a dolphin (in thoſe days called a Swift) twifted about an anchor, with this motto, Feftina lente. SECT. VI. There is likewife a feal with the fame coat of arms (his not joined with his wife's) which the faid William commonly made ufe of; and this is alfo now in the poffeffion of Godwin Swift | above men- tioned. аг SECT. VII. Rather a gentleman of Kent, or fome of the neighbouring counties. ↑ Deane Swift, Efq; I In the hands of Mrs. Elizabeth Swift, relict of Godwin In the hands of Mrs. Swift above mentioned. iv FAMILY OF SWIFT. THE W $ SECT. VII. His eldeft fon Thomas & feems to have been a clergyman before his father's death. He was vicar of Goodrich, in Herefordshire, within a mile or two of Rofs:* he had likewife another church-living, with about one hundred pounds a-year in land, as I have already mentioned. He built a houſe on his own land in the village of Goodrich, † which, by the ar- chitecture, denotes the builder to have been fomewhat whimsical and fingular, and very much towards a pro- jector. The houfe is above a hundred years old, and ftill in good repair, inhabited by a tenant of the female line ; but the landlord, a young gentleman, lives upon his own eftate in Ireland. SECT. VIII. This Thomas was diftinguished by his courage, as well as his loyalty to K. Charles I. and the fufferings he underwent for that prince more than any perfon of his condition in England. Some hiftorians of thofe times relate feveral particulars of what he act- ed, and what hardships he underwent for the perfon and cauſe of that bleffed martyred prince. He was plundered by the round heads fix and thirty times, fome fay above fifty. He mortgaged his fmall eftate, and gathered all the money he could get, quilted it in his waiſtcoat, got off to a town held for the King; where being asked by the governor who knew him well, what he could do for his Majefty? Mr. Swift ſaid he would give the King his coat; and ftripping it off pre- fented it to the governor; who obferving it to be worth little, Mr. Swift faid, Then take my waistcoat. He bid the governor weigh it in his hand; who ordered it to be ripped, found it lined with three hundred broad pieces of gold; which, as it proved a feaſonable relief, muſt be allowed to be an extraordinary fupply from a private clergyman with ten children, of a fmall eftate, ſo often plundered, and foon after turned out of his livings in the church. + រ SECT. IX. § His only fon Thomas was a clergyman before his father's death. 11 * Within four miles of Rofs, + Not in the village, but in the parish of Goodrich. That tenant of the female line hath been dead thefe many years. THE FAMILY OF SWIFT. SECT. IX. At another time, being informed that three hundred horfe of the rebel-party intended in a week to pafs over a certain river, upon an attempt against the Cavaliers, Mr. Swift having a head mecha- nically turned, he contrived certain pieces of iron with three fpikes, whereof one muſt always be with the point upwards. He placed them over night in the ford where he received notice that the rebels would pafs early the next morning; which they accordingly did, and loft two hundred of their men, who were drowned, or trod to death by the falling of their horfes, or torn by the fpikes. SECT. X. His fons, whereof four were fettled in Ireland, (driven thither by their fufferings, and by the death of their father,) related many other paffages, which they learned either from their father himſelf, or from what had been told them by the moſt credible perfons of Hereford fhire, and fome neighbouring counties; and which fome of thofe fons often told to their children; many of which are ftill remembered, but many more forgot. SECT. XI. He was deprived of both his church- livings fooner than most other loyal clergymen, upon account of his fuperior zeal for the King's caufe, and his eftate fequestered: His preferments, at least that of Goodrich, were given to a fanatical faint; † who fcru- pled not however to conform upon the reſtoration; and lived many years, I think till after the revolution. F have feen many perfons at Goodrich, who knew, and told me his name, which I cannot now remember. SECT. XII. The Lord Treafurer Oxford told the Dean, that he had among his father's (Sir Edward Har- ley's) papers, feveral letters from Mr. Thomas Swift writ in thofe times, which he promiſed to give to the grandfon, * He should have faid five. I fuppofe he forgot Dryden Swift, who died very young, and a batchelor, foon after he had come over- to Ireland with his brothers. + Gyles Rawlins fuccecded him in the parish of Goodrich buti the other here mentioned fucceeded Rawlins fome time before Octo- ber 1657. His name was William Tringham. VI THE FAMILY OF SWIFT. grandfon, whofe life I am now writing; but never go- ing to his houfe in Herefordshire while he was Trea- furer, and the Queen's death happening in three days. after his removal, the Dean went to Ireland; and the Earl being tried for his life, and dying while the Dean was in Ireland, he could never get them. SECT. XIII. Mr. Thomas Swift died in the year 1658, and in the [63d] year of his age. His body lies under the altar at Goodrich, with a fhort infcrip- tion. He died about two years before the return of K Charles II. who by the recommendation of fome prelates, had promifed if ever God fhould restore him, that he would promote Mr. Swift in the church, and otherwife reward his family, for his extraordinary fer- vices and zeal, and perfecutions in the royal caufe: but Mr. Swift's merit died with himfelf. SECT. XIV. He left ten fons and three or four daughters, most of which lived to be men and women. His eldeſt fon Godwin Swift, of the inner-Temple,* Efq; (fo ftyled by Guillim the herald, in whose book the family is defcribed at large) was, I think, called to the bar before the reitoration. He married a rela- tion of the old Marchionels of Ormond; and upon t' at account, as well as his father's loyalty, the old Duke of Ormond made him his attorney-general in the palatinate of Tipperary. He had four wives; one of which, to the great offence of his family, was co-heiress † to Admiral Deane, who was one of the Regicides. Godwin left feveral children, who have all ellates. He was an ill pleader, but perhaps a lit- tie too dextrous in the fubtile parts of the law. SECT. XV. The fecond fon of Mr. Thomas Swift was called by the fame name, was bred at Oxford, and took orders. He married the eldest daughter of Sir William D'Avenant; but died young, and left only one fon, who was alfo called Thomas, and is now rec- tor of Puttenham in Surry. His widow lived long. * Of Gray's inn, not of the Inner-temple. Sole heirefs. He died in May 1752. in the $7th year of his age Was THE FAMILY OF SWIFT. vii was extremely poor, and in part fupported by the fa- mous Dr. South, who had been her husband's intimate friend. SECT. XVI. The rest of his fons, as far as I can call to mind, were Mr. Dryden Swift, (called fo af- ter the name of his mother, who was a near relation to Mr. Dryden the poet | William, Jonathan, and Adam; who all lived and died in Ireland; but none of them left male iffue, except Jonathan, who, befides a daughter, left one fon, born feven months after his father's death; of whofe life I intend to write a few memorials. SECT. XVII. J. S. D. D. and D. of St. P— was the only fon of Jonathan Swift who was the fe- venth or eight fen of Mr. Thomas Swift above menti- oned, fo eminent for his loyalty and his fufferings. SECT. XVIII. His father died young, about two years after his marriage. He had ſome employ ments and agencies. His death was much lamented on ac- count of his reputation for integrity, with a tolerable good underſtanding. SECT. XIX. He married Mrs. Abigail Erick, of Leicestershire, defcended from the most ancient family of the Ericks; who derive their lineage from Erick the Forefter, a great commander, who raiſed an army to oppoſe the invafion of William the Conqueror; by whom he was vanquished; but afterwards employed to command that prince's forces and in his old age retired to his houfe in Leicestershire, where his family hath continued ever fince; but declining every age, and are now in the condition of very private gea- tlemen. SECT. XX. This marriage was on both fides very indifcreet: for his wife brought her husband little or no fortune; and his death happening fo fuddenly before he could make a fufficient establishment for his She was aunt to the famous John Dryden. He died at the age of about five and twenty. family, viii THE FAMILY OF SWIFT. family, his fon (not then born) hath often been heard to fay, that he felt the confequences of that marriage, not only through the whole courſe of his education, but during the greateft part of his life. SECT. XXI. He was born in Dublin, on St. An- drew's day. And when he was a year old, an event happened to him that feems very unufual: for his nurfe, who was a woman of Whitehaven, being un- der an abfolute neceffity of feeing one of her relations, who was then extremely fick, and from whom the ex- pected a legacy; and being extremely fond of the in- fant, the tole him on fhipboard unknown to his mother and uncle, and carried him with her to Whitehaven ; where he continued for almost three years. For, when the matter was difcovered, his mo- ther fent orders by all means not to hazard a fecond voyage, till he could be better able to bear it. The nurfe was fo careful of him, that before he returned he had learned to fpell; and by the time that he was three * years old, he could read any chapter in the Bible. SECT. XXII. After his return to Ireland, he was fent at fix years old to the fchool of Kilkenny; from whence, at fourteen, he was admitted into the univer- fity at Dublin: where, by the ill treatment of his neareſt relations, he was fo difcouraged and funk in his fpirits, that he too much neglected fome parts of his academic ſtudies; for which he had no great reliſh by nature, and turned himself to reading history and poetry: fo that when the time came for taking his de- gree of Bachelor, although he had lived with great regularity and due obfervance of the ftatutes, he was topped of his degree for dulnefs and infufficiency; and at laft hardly admitted, in a manner little to his credit, which is called in that college fpeciali gratia. And this difcreditable mark, as I am told, ftands upon record in their college-registry. SECT. XXIII. The troubles then breaking out, he went to his mother, who lived in Leiceſter, and after continuing In the year 1667. Hawkefworth fays five; and probably he is right, THE FAMILY OF SWIFT. ix continuing there fome months, he was received by Sir friend William Temple, whofe father had been a great to the family, and who was now retired to his houſe called Moorpark, near Farnham in Surrey, where he continued for about two years: for he happened, be- fore twenty years old, by a furfeit of fruit, to contract a giddinefs and coldness of ftomach, that almost brought him to his grave; and this diforder purfued him, with intermiffions of two or three years, to the end of his life. Upon this occafion he returned to Ireland, by advice of phyficians, who weakly imagined, that his native air might be of fome ufe to recover his health. But growing worfe, he foon went back to Sir William Temple; with whom growing into fome con- fidence, he was often trufted with matters of great im- portance. King William had a high eſteem for Sir William Temple, by a long acquaintance while that gentleman was ambaffador and mediator of a general peace at Nimeguen. The King, foon after his expe- dition to England, vifited his old friend often at Sheen, and took his advice in affairs of the greateſt confequence. But Sir William temple weary of living fo near London, and refolving to retire to a more pri- vate feene, bought an eftate near Farnham in Surry, of about 100 l. a-ycar, where Mr. Swift accompanied him. SECT. XXIV. About that time a bill was brought: into the house of Commons for triennial parliaments;. against which the King, who was a firanger to our conflitution, was very averfe, by the advice of fome weak people, who perfuaded the Earl of Portland, that King Charles I. loft his crown and life by con- fenting to pafs fuch a bill. The Earl, who was a weak man, came down to Moorpark, by his Majefty's orders, to have Sir William Temple's advice; who faid much to thew him the mistake: but he continued. ftill to advise the King against paffing the bill. Where. upon Mr. Swift was fent to Kenſington with the whole account of that matter in writing, to convince the King and the Earl how ill they were informed. He a 5 told. X THE FAMILY OF SWIFT. told the Earl, to whom he was referred by his Majelty. (and gave it in writing,) that the ruin of King Char- les I. was not owing to his paffing the triennial bill, which did not hinder him from diffolving any parlia- ment, but to the paffing another bill, which put it out of his power to diffolve the parliament then in being without the confent of the houſe. Mr. Swift, who was wel verfed in English hiftory, although he was then under twenty-one years old,* gave the King a hort account of the matter, but a more large one to the Earl of Portland; but all in vain for the King, . by ill advifers, was prevailed upon to refufe paffing the bill. This was the first time that Mr. Swift had any converfe with courts; and he told his friends it was the firſt incident that helped to cure him of vanity. The confequence of this wrong ftep in his Majesty was very unhappy for it put that prince under a ne- ceffity of introducing thoſe people called Whigs into power and employments, in order to parify them. For although it be held a part of the King's prerogative to refufe paffing a bill, yet the learned in the law think otherwife, from that expreffion ufed at the coronation, wherein the prince obligeth himſelf to confent to all laws quas vulgus elegerit. SECT. XXV. Mr. Swift lived with him (Sir Wil- liam Temple) fome time; † but refolving to fettle himſelf in ſome way of living, was inclined to take orders. However, although his fortune was very ſmall, he had a fcruple of entering into the church merely for fupport; and Sir W. Temple, then being mafter of the rolls in Ireland, offered him an employ of about 120l. a-year in that office: whereupon Mr. Swift told him, that ſince he had now an opportunity of liv- ing * It was fift written, but afterwards erafed in the original ma- nufcript, three and twenty years old; which in all probability was right for Dr. Swift was twenty one years old the laſt day of November 1688, and before that period there could have been no uch bill under confideration. : That is, for the space of about five years and a half, from 1638 to ang4s THE FAMILY OF SWIFT. xi ing without being driven into the church for a main- tenance, he was refolved to go to Ireland and take holy orders. † He was recommended to the Lord Capel, then Lord Deputy, who gave him a prebend in the north worth about 100l. a-year; of which growing weary in a few months, he returned to England, re- figned his living in favour of a friend, and continued in Sir William Temple's houfe till the death of that great man, who, befides a legacy, I left him the care, and truft, and advantage of publishing his pofthumous writings. SECT. XXVI. Upon this event Mr. Swift removed to London, and applied by petition to King William, upon the claim of a promife his Majeſty had made to Sir W. Temple, that he would give Mr. Swift a pre- bend of Canterbury or Weſtminiſter. The Earl of Rumney, who profeffed much friendſhip for him, pro- mifed to fecond his petition; but as he was an old, vitious, illiterate rake, without any fenfe of truth or honour, faid not a word to the King. And Mr. Swift, after long attendance in vain, thought it better to com- ply with an invitation given him by the Earl of Berkeley to attend him to Ireland, as his chaplain and private fecretary, his Lordship having been appointed one of the Lords Juftices of that kingdom. He attend- ed his Lordthip, who landed near Waterford: and Mr. Swift acted as fecretary during the whole journey to Dublin. But another perfon had fo far infinuated him- felf into the Earl's favour, by telling him, that the poft of fecretary was not proper for a clergyman, nor would be of any advantage to one who only aimed at church preferments, that, his Lordship, after a poor apology, gave that office to the other.* SECT. XXVII.. An answer extremely polite, and feemingly adorned with gra- titude; but at the fame time extremely refolute, and worthy of himfelf Suppoſed to be 500l. See a poem upon this incident, in vol 7. p. 134. xii THE FAMILY OF SWIFT. SECT. XXVII. In fome months the deanery of Der- ry fell vacant, and it was the Earl of Berkeley's turn to diſpoſe of it; yet things were fo ordered, that the ſecretary having received a bribe, the deanery was difpofed of to another, and Mr. Swift was put off with ſome other church-livings not worth above a third part of that rich deanery, and at this prefent not a fixth. The excufe pretended was his being too young, although he was then thirty years old. † He was then upwards of two and thirty years old. N B. All the notes in this tract, except the laft in p. viii, and the laft in p. xi. are taken from Mr. Deane Swift. An An ACCOUNT of the LIFE of Doctor JONATHAN SWIFT, Dean of ST. PATRICK'S DUBLIN. A LATE writer juſtly obferves, that "there has rarely paſſed a life of which a judicious and faithful narrative would not be useful. For" (adds not only every man has, in the mighty maſs of "the world, great numbers in the fame condition "with himſelf, to whom his mistakes and mifcar- he) .. riages, eſcapes and expedients, would be of imme- "diate and apparent ufe; but there is fuch an uni- formity in the ſtate of man, if it be confidered "apart from adventitious and feparable decorations and difguifes, that there is fcarce any poffibility "of good or ill, but is common to human-kind. Á great part of the time of thoſe who are placed at the greateſt diſtance by fortune, or by temper, muit unavoidably paſs in the fame manner: and though "when the claims of nature are fatisfied, caprice, and "vanity, and accident begin to produce difcriminati- ons and peculiarities; yet the eye is not very heedful or quick, which cannot diſcover the fame caufes ftill terminating their influence in the fame effects, "though fometimes accelerated, fometimes retarded, or perplexed by multiplied combinations. We are "all prompted by the fame motives, all deceived by the fame fallacies, all animated by hope, obftructed by danger, intangled by defire, and feduced by "pleaſure."* If a faithful and judicious narrative of an ordinary life would be ſo apparently uſeful; ftill greater utility may be expected to arife from that of the life of one who has made an illuftrious figure on the ftage of the world, and employed his talents in the fervice of man- kind and his country. Dr. Swift was certainly a man of that diſtinguiſhed character. He was eminent for his genius, his learning, his charities, and many vir- The Rambler, Numb. 60. tues : xiv OF AN ACCOUNT 73 : tues: and though he had faults, yet his faults were out- numbered by his virtues and as the failings of great men are to be carefully avoided, their virtues command respect, and are proper objects of imitation. An ac- count, therefore, of the life and character of the cele- brated Dr. Swift cannot but be highly agreeable to the reader, and will, it is hoped, afford both delight and inftruction.i Dr. Jonathan Swift was defcended from a younger branch of an ancient family of that name in York- ſhire. But the account of his family fhall be as ſhort as poffible; fince, (as Lord Orrery obferves,) though. his anceflors were perions of very decent and reputable characters, [and the elder branch of the family enno- bled,] he himself has been the herald to blazon the dignity of their coat. Bernam Swift, Efq; otherwife called Cavaliero Swift, a gentleman of great wit and humour, who, in the reign of K. James I. poffeffed the paternal eſtate, was, on the 20th of March 1627, by K. Charles 1. created a Peer of Ireland, by the title of Lord Viscount Carlingford, though it is faid he never went into that kingdom. He died without malc iffue; and the family inheritance defcended to his daughters; one of whom married Robert Fielding, commonly called Handfome Fielding, and the other the Earl of Eglington. Fielding foon diffipated his wife's patrimony; and that of her fifter being trans- ferred to the family of Lord Eglinton, the principal ettate of the Swifts was divided from the name for ever. [Sketch, § 1] One of the younger branches from the fame ſtem, was Sir Edward Swift, who diftinguiſhed himself by his attachment to the royal caufe in the war between King Charles I. and his parliament, from whom there is no defcendent of the name. [Sketch, § 2.] Another of the younger branches was the Rev. Mr. Thomas Swift, vicar of Goodrich, Herefordſhire, with which he alſo held another ecclefiaftical living. His father William Swift, rector of St. Andrew's in Canterbury, married the heiress of Philpot; who con- trived THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. XV trived to keep her estate, which was very confiderable, in her own hands. She is faid to have been extremely capricious and ill-natured, and to have difinherited her fon Thomas, an only child, merely for robbing an or- chard when he was a boy. But however this be, it is certain, that except a church or chapter leafe, which was not renewed, Thomas never poffeffed more than 1001. a-year. [Sketch, § 4.] This little eftate, which lay at Goodrich, in Herefordshire, he mortgaged for 300 broad pieces; and having quilted them into his waiſtcoat, he fet out for Ragland caftle, whither King Charles I. had retired after the battle of Nafcby, in 1645. The Governor, who well knew him aſked what was his errand?" I am come," faid Swift, 6 " to give his Majefty my coat ;" at the fame time pul- ling it off, and prefenting it. The Governor told him pleafantly, that his coat was worth little. Why then," faid Swift, "take my waistcoat." This was foon found to be an ufeful garment by its weight; and it is remarked by Lord Clarendon, that the king re- ceived no fupply more feafonable or acceptable than theſe 300 broad pieces during the whole war, his dif treſs being then very great, and his refources cut off. The zeal and activity of this gentleman for the royal caule expofed him to much danger, and many fufferings. He was plundered more than thirty times by the par- liament's army, and was ejected from his church livings, his eftate was fequeſtered, and he was himſelf thrown into prifon. His eftate, however, was afterwards re- covered, and part of it fold to pay the money due on the mortgage, and fome other debts; the remainder, being about one half, defcended to his heir, and is now poffeffed by his great-grandfon, Deane Swift, Efq;* [Sketch, § 8] This Mr. Thomas Swift married Mrs. Elizabeth Dryden, of an ancient family in Huntingdon fhire, fifter to the father of the famous John Dryden the poet; by whom he had ten fons and four daughters. He died in The grandmother of this gentleman, one of the wives of God- win Swift, was heiress to Adm. Deane, one of the Regicides; whence Deane became a christian name in the family. [Ske.ch, § 14.] xvi OF AN ACCOUNT in 1658; and of his fons, fix furvived him, Godwin, Thomas, Dryden, William, Jonathan, and Adam. [Sketch, § 14. 15. 16.] Thomas was bred at Oxford and took orders. He married the eldest daughter of Sir William D'Avenant; but dying young, he left only one fon, whoſe name alfo was Thomas, and who died in May 1752, in the 87th year of his age, rector of Puttenham, in Surrey, a benefice which he had poffed fixty years. [Sketch, §5] Godwin was a barrister of Gray's inn; and William, Dryden, Jonathan, and Adam, were attorneys. Godwin having married a relation of the old Marchi- nefs of Ormond, the old Duke of Ormond made him his attorney-general in the palatinate of Tipperary in Ireland. Ireland was at this time almoft without law – yers, the rebellion having made almost every man, of whatever condition, a foldier. Godwin therefore de- termined to attempt the acquifition of a fortune in that kingdom; and the fame motives induced his four bro- thers to go with him. Godwin foon became wealthy; and the reſt obtained fomething more than a genteel competence; though Dryden and Jonathan, who died foon after their arrival, had little to bequeath. [Sketch, § 14. 16.] Jonathan at the age of about three and twenty, and before he went to Ireland, married Mrs. Abigail Erick, of Leicestershire. * The family of this lady was de- fcended from Erick the Forefter, who raiſed an army to oppofe William the Conqueror; by whom he was vanquished, and afterwards made commander of his forces. But whatever was the honour of her lineage, her fortune was fmall; and about two years after her marriage, * This lady was greatly beloved and esteemed by all the family of the Swifts. Hei converfation was extremely polite, chearful, and agreeable. She was of a generous and hofpitable nature, very exact in all the dutics of religion, attended the public worship ge- nerally twice a-day, was a very caily rifer; and was always dreffed for the whole day at about fix o'clock in the morning. Her chief amufements were needle-work and reading. She was equally fond of both her children, notwithstanding fome disagreements that fubfift.. ed between them. D. S. p. 22. 23. THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. xvii marriage, he was left a widow with one child, a daughter, and pregnant with another; having no means of fubfiftence but an annuity of 201. which her huſband had purchaſed for her in England, imme- diately after his marriage. [Sketch § 19.] In this diftrefs fhe was taken with her daughter into the family of Godwin, her husband's eldeft brother; and, on the 30th of November, 1667, about faven months after her husband's death, fhe was, in Hoey's- alley, in the parish of St. Werburgh, Dublin, deli- vered of a fon, whom he called Jonathan in remem- brance of his father, and who was afterwards the cele- brated Dean of St. Patrick's. [D S. p. 22 ] Of all the brothers of Mrs. Swift's hatband, Tho- mas excepted. Godwin only had fons; and by these fons ſhe was fubfifted in her old age, as he had been before by their father and their uncles, with fuch li- berality, that he declared herſelf not only happy but rich. [D. S. p. 23.] : It happened, by whatever accident, that Jonathan was not fuckled by his mother, but by a nurfe, who was a native of Whitehaven and when he was about a year old, her affection for him was become ſo ſtrong, that finding it neceffary to vint a relation who was dangerously fick, and from whom the expected a legacy, ſhe found means to convey the child on ſhipboard, with- out the knowledge of his mother or his uncle, and car- ried him with her to Whitehaven. At this place he continued near three years? for when the matter was difcovered, his mother fent orders not to hazard a fe- cond voyage, ull he fhould be better able to bear it. The nurfe however gave other teftimonies of her affection to Jonathan : for, during his ftay at White- haven, ſhe had taught him to ſpell; and when he was five years old, he was able to read any chapter in the Bible. [Sketch, § 21. O. let. 1.] Mrs. Swift, about two years after her husband's death, quitted the family of Mr. Godwin Swift, in Ireland, and retired to Leiceſter, the place of her nati- vity but her fon was again carried to Ireland by his : nurfe, xviii OF AN ACCOUNT nurfe, and replaced under the protection of his uncle Godwin. [O. let 1.] It has been generally believed, that Swift was born in England: a mistake to which many incidents befides this have contribu ed. He had been frequently heard to fay, when the people of lieland difpleafed him, "I am not of this vile country, I am an Englishman;” and would infift, that he was stolen from England when a child, and brought over to Ireland in a band-box. Mr. Pope alfo, in one of his letters to him, mentions England as his native country. But whatever the motives were that prevailed on Dr. Swift to ſpeak in this manner, they were not borrowed from any fort of contempt which he had fe.retly entertained againit Ireland confidered merely as a nation, but rather pro- ceeded from feveral other fources, which will appear afterward. [D. S p. 26.] This account of his birth is taken from that which he left behind him in his own hand writing; and while he lived, he was fo far from feriously denying or concealing his being a na. tive of Ireland, that he often mentioned, and even pointed out the houſe in which he was born. He has alſo been thought by fome to have been a natural fon of Sir William Temple: a mistake which was probably founded upon another for till the publication of his letter to Lord Vifc, Palmerſton, among his pofthumous works, he was thought to have received fuch favours from Sir William as he could not be fuppofed to bestow upon a perſon to whom he was not related, and but diftantly related to his wife. * However, fuch a relation between Sir * William In the year of the revolution, his uncle Godwin Swift had fallen into a kind of lethargy, or dotage, which deprived him by degrees of his fpeech and memory, and rendered him totally incapa- ble of being of the leaſt ſervice to his family and friends. But, in the midst of this diſtreſsful fituation, as if it was ordained that no incident ſhould bereave mankind of fuch a genius, Sir William Temple (whofe lady was related to Dr. Swift's mother) moft ge- nerously ftept in to his affiftance, and avowedly fupported his educa- tion at the university of Oxford. Acts of generofity feldom meet with THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. xix William and the dean appears beyond contradiction to have been impoffible; for Sir William Temple was re- fident abroad in a public character from the year 1665 to 1670, firſt at Bruffels and afterwards at the Hague ; as may be proved by his letters to the Earl of Arlington, and the rest of the ministry: fo that Dr. Swift's mo- ther, who never crofied the fea, except from England to Ireland, was out of all poffibility of a perfonal cor- refpondence with Sir William Temple, till fome years after her fon's birth; who, as before obſerved. was born in 1667. [O. let. 1.] : At about the age of fix years [1673] he was fent to the fchool of Kilkenny and having continued there eight years, he was at the age of fourteen [1681] ad- mitted into the univerfity of Dublin, and became a tudent in Trinity college. There he lived in perfect regularity, and obeyed the ftatutes with the atmoft ex- afness. But the morofenefs of his temper often ren- dered him very unacceptable to his companions; fo that he was little regarded, and lefs beloved: and he was fo much depreffed by the diſadvantages of his fi- tuation, deriving his prefent fubfiftence merely from the precarious bounty of an uncle, and having no other object of hope but the continuance of it, that he with their juft applaufe, Sir William Temple's friendſhip was im- mediately construed to proceed from a confcioufnefs, that he was the real father of Mr. Swift; otherwiſe it was thought impoffible, that he could be to uncommonly munificent to a young man, no wife re- lated to him, and but diftantly related to his wife. I am not quite certain, that Swift himſelf himself did not acquiefce in the calum- ny. Perhaps, like Alexander, he though the natural fon of Jupiter would appear greater than the legitimate fon of Philip. O. let. 2. * While Swift was at the university, one day as he was looking out of his window penfive and melancholy, his pockets being then at the loweſt ebb, he fried a master of a ship gizing about in the college courts. Lord, thought he, if that perion ſhould now be in- quiring and flaring about for my chamber, in order to bring me fome prefent from my coutin Willoughby Swift, what a happy creature should I be ! He had fource amuſed himſelf with this pleafing ima- gination, when behold the shipmafter having come into his cham- ber, afked him if his name was Jonathan Swift? who having told bim it was; Why then, faid the other, I have fomething for yon that XX OF AN ACCOUNT * he could not refift the temptation to neglect many ne- ceffary objects of academic ftudy, to which he was not by nature much inclined, and apply himfelf wholly to books of history and poetry; by which he could, with- out intellectual labour, fill his mind with pleafing images, and for a while fufpend the fenfe of his condi- tion. The facrifice of the future to the prefent, whe- ther it be a folly or a fault, is feldom unpunished; and Swift foon found himself in the fituation of a man who had burned his bed to warm his hands; for at the end of four years, in the year 1685, he was refufed his de- gree of Bachelor of Arts for infufficiency, and was at Taft admitted fpeciali gratia, which is there confidered as the highest degree of reproach and difhonour. It is (fays Lord Orrery) a kind of dishonourable degree; and the record of it, notwithstanding Dr. Swift's pre- fent eſtabliſhed character throughout the learned world, muft for ever remain againſt him in the academical regiſter at Dublin. [Sketch, § 22.] † But Whereupon he and poured him As this fum was that was fent to you by Mr. Willoughby Swift. drew out of his pocket a large greaſy leather bag, out all the money that it contained on the table. greater than ever Swift had been maſter of at any one time before, he pushed over, without reckoning them, a good number of the filver cobs (for it was all in that ſpecie) to the honeſt failor, and deſired he would accept of them for his trouble. But the failor would not touch a farthing. No, no, Mafter, faid he. I'fe take nothing for my trouble; I would do more than that comes to for Mr. Willoughby Swift. Whereupon Mr. Swift gathered up the money as fast as he could, and thruſt it into his pocket: for, by the Lord Harry, faid he when relating this story, I was afraid if the money had lain much longer upon the table, he might have repented his gencrofity, and taken a good part of it. But from that time forward, he de- clared that he became a better economiit, and never was without fome little money in his pocket. D. S. p. 54, 55. *He held logic and metaphyfics in the utinoft contempt, and he ſcarce confidered mathematics and natural philofophy, unleſs to turn them into ridicule. Orrery, let. 1. + Ambition could fcarce have met with a feverer blow. Her cules found himſelf ſet aſide for want of ftrength, or, if admitted among the wrestlers, admitted only by favour and indulgence; yet ftill he must be confcious that he was Hercules. Difappointments, the earlier they happen in life, the deeper impreffion they make upon THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. xxi ་ But upon Swift this punishment was not ineffectual. He dreaded the repetition of fuch a difgrace as the lat evil that could befal him, and therefore immediately let about to prevent it as the principal buſineſs of his life. During feven years from that time he ſtudied eight hours a day [J. R. p. 50.]; and by fuch an effort of ſuch a mind fo long continued, great know- ledge must neceffarily have been acquired. He com- menced theſe ftudies at the univerfity in Dublin, where he continued them three years, till 1688; and during this time he alfo drew the firſt ſketch of his Tale of a Tub. I In 1688, when he was about twenty-one, and had been ſeven years at the college, his uncle Godwin was feized with a lethargy, and foon after totally deprived both of his ſpeech and his memory. As by this accident Swift was left without fupport, he took a journey to Leiceſter, that he might confult with his mother what courſe of life to purfue. At this time Sir William Temple was in high reputation, and honoured with the confidence and familiarity of K. William. [D. S. p. 33. 34.] His father, Sir John Temple, had been Maſter of the Rolls in Ireland, and contracted an intimate friendſhip with Godwin Swift, which con- tinued till his death; and Sir William, who inherited his title and eftate, had married a lady to whom Mrs. Swift was related. She therefore adviſed her fon to communicate his fituation to Sir William, and folicit his direction what to do. This advice, which perhaps only confirmed a refolution that Swift had fecretly ta- ken before he left Ireland, he immediately refolved to puríue. upon the heart. Sir Swift was full of indignation at the treatment which he had received in Ireland, and therefore refolved to purluz his ftudies at Oxford. Orrery, let. 1. Waffendon Warren, Efq; a gentleman of fortune near Belfast, in the north of Ireland, who was chamber-fellow with Dr. Swift, declared, that he then faw a copy of the Tale of a Tub in Swift's own hand writing. D. S. p. 31 xxii OF AN ACCOUNT Sir Sir William received him [in 1690] with great kind- nefs, and Swift's firft vifit continued two years. William had been ambaffador and mediator of a ge- neral peace at Nimeguen before the revolution. In this character he became known to the Prince of Orange, who afterwards, when King, frequently vi- fited him at Sheen, and took his advice in affairs of the utmost importance. [Sketch § 23.] Sir William being then lame with the gout, Swift ufed to attend his Majeſty in his walks about the garden; who ad- mitted him to fuch familiarity, that he fhewed him how to cut aſparagus after the Dutch manner, and once offered to make him a captain of horſe. [D. S. p. 108.] Swift appears to have fixed his mind very early upon an ecclefiaftical life; and it is therefore probable, that, upon declining this offer, he obtained a promiſe, of preferment in the church; for in a letter to his un- cle William Swift, dated in 1692, he fays, "I am not to take orders till the King gives me a prebend." Sir William becoming ftill more infirm and withing to retire farther from London, bought an eſtate at Farnham in Surrey, called Moorpark, whither he was accompanied by Swift. [Sketch, § 23.] About this time a bill was brought into the house for triennial parliaments; against which the King, who was a tranger to to the English conftitution, was very averfe, by the advice of fome weak people, who perfuaded the Earl of Portland, that Charles I. loft his crown and life by confenting to fuch a bill [Sketch, § 23. 24.] Upon *There is fome difficulty in reconciling the firſt and laſt para- graphs of fect. 23 in the Dean's ſketch of his own life, where Moor- park is mentioned. In the first it is faid, that Swift, after having been fome months with his mother at Leiceſter, was received by Sir William, who was "now retired to Moorpark ;" and in the laft, that Sir William, tired of being near London, bought an eftate near Farnham in Surrey, "where Mr. Swift accompanied him." The Senfe of the last, which feems to imply that Swift lived with Sir William at Sheen 'before' he went to Moorpark, is adopted upon the credit of Mr. Deane Swift, who fays, that Swift was there fa- miliar with King William; and the King does not appear to have continued his vifits after the removal to Moorpark. Hawkef. THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. xxiii Upon this occafion the Earl was by the King difpatch- ed to Moorpark, for Sir William's advice; who faid much to fhew him the mistake, but without effect ; and therefore he foon afterwards difpatched Swift to Kenfington, with the whole account in writing to convince the King and the Earl how ill they were in- formed. Swift, though he was then very young, was yet well acquainted with the English hiftory, and gave the King a compendious account of the matter, which he amplified to the Earl. But the meaſure was at laſt rejected; † and thus ended Swift's first embaſſy to court, fo much to his diffatisfaction, that he then de- clared it was the firſt incident that helped to cure him of vanity. [Sketch, § 24] Soon after this tranf- action he was feized with the return of a diforder which he had contracted in Ireland by eating a great quantity of fruit; and upon this occafion returned thither by the advice of his phyficians, who hoped that his native air would contribute to the recovery of his health. But from this journey he received no be- nefit; and therefore in a fhort time returned to Sir William, being ever afterwards fubject to that giddi- nefs, which gradually increafed, though with irregu- lar intermiffions, till it terminated in total debility of body and mind. * But + The confequence of this wrong ftep, (fays Dr. Swift, in this Sketch, 24,) was very unhappy; for it put K. William under a n.ceffity of introducing thofe people called Whigs, into power and employments, in order to pacify them. For although it be held a part of the King's prerogative to refufe paffing a bill, yet the learned in the law think otherwife, from that expreffion uſed at the coro- nation, wherein the prince obligeth himfelf to confent to all laws, quas vulgus elegerit,' It must have been after, though it is firft related in the ſketch; for it is faid, fect. 23. that he went to Ireland after he had been two years at Moorpark; and in feet. 24. that his expedition to court was foon after the removal from Sheen. Hawkef. * To this furfeit (fays Lord Orrery) I have often heard him af- cribe that giddinefs in his head, which, with intermiflions fome- times of a longer and fometimes of a thorter continuance, puriued him till it ſeemed to complete its conquest, by rendering him the exact xxiv ACCOUNT OF AN But he was ftill indefatigable in his ftudies; and to prevent the lofs of health in the acquifition of know- ledge, by the want of bodily exercife, it was his con- ftant practice to run up an hill that was near the houſe and back again every two hours. The diſtance back- wards and forwards was about half a mile, and he ufed to run it in about fix minutes. [D. S. p. 272.] By what books his ftudies were principally directed, cannot certainly be known. But feveral copious ex- tracts from Cyprian, Irenæus, Sleidan's Commen- taries, and Padre Paolo's hiftory of the council of Trent, were found among his papers, which appear, by me- morandums in his own hand-writing, to have been made while he lived with Sir William Temple. [D. S. p. 276.1 About a year after his return from Ireland, he thought it expedient to take his degree of Mafter of Arts at Oxford. With this view he appears to have written to his uncle William Swift, to procure and fend him the teftimonium of his Bache- lor's degree. With this teftimonium, which is dated May 3, 1692, he went to Oxford; where having re- ceived many civilities, he was admitted ad cundem June 14, and took his Maſter's degree July 5, fol- lowing. It has been faid, that the civilities, which he receiv- ed at Oxford, proceeded from a mifunderſtanding of the phrafe fpeciali gratia, which was there fuppofed to be a compliment paid to uncommon merit. [D. S. p. 30. 44. O. let. 1.] But thefe words are not to be found in that copy of the teftimonium which is entered in the congregation-book at Oxford ;* and not to have inferted exact image of one of his own Struldbruggs, a miferable fpectacle, devoid of every appearance of human nature, except the outward form. • The certificate of his degree is as follows. "Omnibus quorum intereft falutem. Nos præpofitus fociique fe- "niores Collegii Sacro-fanctæ et Individua Trinitatis juxta Dub- "lin, teftamur JONATHAN SWIFT die decimo quinto Februarii " 1685 THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. XXV inferted them there, when they were thought a com- pliment, would have been an affront. It is therefore probable, that, by the influence of Swift's uncle, they were omitted in the copy which he procured and fent; eſpecially as fome fuch favour ſeems to be intimated in Swift's letter to him, after he had received it: I am "ftill," fays he, to thank you for your care' in my teftimonium; and it was to a very good purpoſe, "for' I was never more fatisfied than in the beha- "viour of the univerfity." The civilities which he received at Oxford, might indeed proceed from his known connection with Sir William Temple; but he might reaſonably impute them alfo to the fuppreffion of a reproach against which there was good reafon to fear this connection would not have fupported him : nor is it ftrange, that Swift, after his reputation was eftabliſhed, ſhould, while he was fporting with this incident in the gaiety of his heart, pretend a miſ take which never happened, or that which he meant as a jeft upon the univerfity, fhould be feriously re- membered as an event of his life. VOL. I. b It "1685 gradum Baccalaureatûs in artibus fufcepiffe, præftito priùs "fidelitatis erga Regiam Majeftatem juramento; quod de prædicto "teftimonium, fubfcriptis fingulorum nominibus, et collegii figillo "quo in hifce utimur, confirmandu.n curavimus. Datum die tertio “ Maii 1692. CC ROB. HUNTINGTON, Præpof. L. S. ST. GEORGE ASHE, RICH. READER. GEO. BROWN, BEN. SCROGGS. > tion of The conduct of the allies,' all London, both court and city, were alarmed. The Duch envoy defigned to complain of it, and refufed dining with Dr. D'Avenant, becaufe, among others, he was fufpeed to be the auth_r. The Whigs refolved to bring it into the house of Lords, to have it there examined; and the Lord Chief Juflice fent for Morphew the printer, threatened him, aſked him who was the author of The conduct of the allies, and bound him over to appear the next term. The noife which it made was extraordinary. “It is fit” (faith the Doctor)" it thould anfwer the THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. li he drew the firſt ſketch of "An hiſtory of the four laſt years of Q. Anne.” 'The work would have been publiſhed foon after, if his friends in the miniftry had not diſagreed about it; and after the Queen's death, he ſpent much time in improving and correcting it; but it has not yet appeared. [D. S. p. 340.] During all this time, he received no gratuity or re- ward till the year 1713: and then he accepted the deanery of St. Patrick's, Dublin. C 2 It pains I have been at about it. Some lay it to Prior, others to Mr. Secretary St. John; but I am always the firft they lay every thing "to." [Dec. 2.] However within four days after it was publiſh- ed, there was a report in London, that ſeveral of the Whigs began to be content that a peace ſhould be treated. The parliament how- ever, met Dec. 7. "The Earl of Nottingham began and ſpoke C against a peace, and defired, that in their addreſs they might put in a claufe to adviſe the Queen not to make a peace without "Spain; which was debated, and carried by the Whigs, by about "fix voices, in a committee of the whole houfe," [Dec. 7.] and the next day the claufe was carried againſt the court in the houſe "of Lords almost two to one." [Dec. 8.] The Doctor, who has written copiouſly on theſe proceedings, concludes his letter in theſe words. This is a long journal, and of a day that may produce great alterations, and hazard the ruin of England. The Whigs are all in triumph. They foretold how all this would be, but we "thought it boasting. Nay, they faid the parliament should be "diffolved before Christmas, and perhaps it may. This is all [ your D of St's doings. I warned them (the ministers] "of it nine months ago, and a hundred times fince. The Secre- tary always dreaded it. I told Lord freafurer, I fhould have the "advantage of him, for he would lofe his head, and I fhould only be hanged, and fo carry my body entire to the grave." [Dec. S.] And fhortly after talking of thefe affairs, "Here are" (faith the Doctor)" the first steps towards the ruin of an excellent mi. "niſtry; for I look upon them as certainly ruined. Some are "of opinion the whole miniftry will give up their places next "week; others imagine, when the feffion is over. I do refolve, "if they give up, or are turned out foon, to retire for fome months, " and I have pitched upon the place already. I would be out of "the way upon the first of the ferment. For they lay all things on me, even ſome I have never read." [Dec. 15.) — -Neverthe- lefs, while things continued in this doubtful fituation, and many of the friends of the miniftry had given for gone, fuch was the force of reafoning, and fuch were the merits of that pamphlet, The conduct of the allies,' "that the Tory Lords and Commons in parliament arguel all from it; and all agreed, that never any thing of that kind was of fɔ great confequence, or made fo many " converts." íìì OF AN ACCOUNT < It may perhaps be thought ftrange, 'that his friends did not rather procure him a bishoprick in England, and place him in the houfe of Lords, where his political eloquence might have been employed with great ad- vantage. But this was not in their power; and they might be willing to fecure to him fuch advantage as they could, knowing their own inftability, and fore- feeing their fall.* But with whatever view, or from whatever cauſe, the deanery of St. Patrick's was given him, he re- ceived it with lefs pleaſure than he would have done a fettlement with much lefs power and profit in England. He immediately croffed the channel to take poflef- fion of his new dignity; but did not ftay in Ireland more than a fortnight, being urged by an hundred let- ters to haften back, and reconcile Lord Oxford and Lord "Converts." [Dec. 18.] And at laft, fuch were the effects that it produced almoft univerfally in the minds of men, that "the houſe of Commons" (faith the Doctor)" have this day made (C many fevere votes about our being abuſed by our allies. Thofe "who fpoke drew all their arguments from my book, and "their votes confirm all I writ. The court had a majority of 16 150. All agree that it was my book that fpirited them to theſe > " > * I am much inclined to believe, that the temper of Swift might occafion his English friends to wish him happily and properly pro- moted at a diſtance. His fpirit, for I would give it the ſofteft name, was ever untractable, The motions of his genius were often ir- regular. He affumed more the air of a patron, than of a friend. He affected rather to dictate than adviſe. He was elated with the ap- pearance of enjoying miniſterial confidence. He enjoyed the ſha- w: the fubftance was detained from him. He was employed, not trufted; and at the fame time that he imagined hin.felf a fubtle diver, who dextrouſly ſhot down into the profoundeſt regions of ро litics, he was fuffered only to found the hallows nearest the shore, and was fcarce admitted to defcend below the froth at the top. Perhaps the deeper bottoms were too muddy for his infpection, 0. let. 4. But THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. ine Lord Bolingbroke; the confequences of whofe mif- underſtanding were justly dreaded by their friends.* When he returned, he found their quarrels and cold- nefs increaſed; and having predicted their ruin from this But what reward, what recompenfe, or what dignities were con- ferred upon this heroic champion of the miniftry, this Herculean defender of the conſtitution, for all his labours? Why, to be fure. he was invited to be of the cabinet-council, he had forse part in the adminiſtration of affairs committed to his care, he was raiſed in the church even to the higheſt pinnacle of honour that he could poffibly arrive at, without having others knocked on the head to make room for his preferment? Quite the contrary: that very miniftry whoſe battles he had fought with fo much vigour and fuccefs, never once exerted their intereſt to get him any fort of promotion eitherin church or ſtate. Perhaps dreading thofe amazing abilities which had been their chief fupport, they were not defirous that he ſhould be raiſed to an Engliſh bishoprick, which would have intitled him to a feat in the houfe of Lords, where it is not impoffible that his talents might have thone forth in a blaze of politicks that would have rendered him as much the idol of the public as the wonder of all his contemporaries: and therefore, in the abundance of their fagacity, they banished him into Ireland, and gave him the deanery of St. Patrick, Dublin, which, as he himself expreffeth it, was the only ſmall favour that he had ever received at their hands. I know it hath been ſaid, and thought by many, that the Earl of Ox- ford and Lord Bolingbroke were his patrons. But, if I know the meaning of the word 'patron,' as I think I do, I cannot but affert, as a truth beyond all queftion, that Dr. Swift never had any patrons at all; or at leaft if he had. that his obligations to them were in- * vifible. Nay, I have heard the Doctor afirm, that he never was obliged to any man in his whole life; meaning undoubtedly, that he never had got any preferment in the church by the intereft of his friends, which his own particular merit had not paid for over and over. Nevertheless, if the word 'patron' muft be ufed upon thefe occafions, as I think it may, I will take my reputation against the judgment of any critic in Europe, or, in other words, I will hold fifty guineas to one, that Dr. Swift was more a patron to the mini- ftry, than any of the miniftry were patrons to Dr. Swift: which is a point fo manifeft to all that are acquainted with his political writings, that I think it would be needleis to infift upon any par- ticular proofs of it. D. S. p. 155, 6, 7. * In the beginning of the year 1714, Swift returned to England. He found his great' friends, who fat in the feat of power, much difunited among themselves. He faw the Queen declining in her health, and diftreffed in her fituation; while faction was exerting itſelf, and gathering new ftrength every day. The part which he had iiv OF AN ACCOUNT this very cauſe, he laboured to bring about a recon- ciliation, as that upon which the whole intereſt of their party depended. With this view he contrived to bring them to Lord Mafham's at St. James's; and Lord and Lady Maſham, being acquainted with his purpofe, left him alone with them. He then expoftulated with them both; but to little effect; being able only to engage them to go to Windfor the next day; ftill hoping, that if he could keep them together, they would come to fome agree. mcnt; well knowing, that in abfence the mind per- petually revolves the recent offences of a friend, and heightens them by every poffible aggravation; but that, when the offended and offender meet, the dying fparks of eleem or kindness often brighten into a flame, the remembrance of paſt pleaſure and confidence returns, and mutually inclines them to fecure, by an accommodation, that which they feel they cannot lofe without regret. Swift foon after followed them; but was told by Lord Bolingbroke, that his ſcheme had come to no- thing; and he had the mortification to obferve, that they grew more cold to each other every day. In the mean time Lord Oxford's credit grew lefs and lefs, and the Queen's health visibly declined. Swift, however, contrived yet once more to meet them at Lord Mafham's, and was again left alone with them. This was the last time they ever met, and he fpoke to them both with great freedom; but at length, deſpairing of his purpofe, he told them he would re- tire, As had to act upon this occafion, was not fo difficult, as it was difagrec- able. He exerted the utmoſt of his ſkill to reunite the miniflers, and to cement the apertures of the ſtate. I could defcend into very minute particulars, were I to relate what I have heard him fay upon this occafion. But we are at prefent too near that ara, and have too many unexpected confequences from it, either to judge im- partially, or to write undauntedly, of thofe tempeftuous times. foon as Swift found his pains fruitless, his arguments unavailing, and his endeavours, like the ftone of Sifyphus, rolling back upon himſelf, he retired to a friend's houfe in Berkshire, where he re- mained till the Queen died. So fatal a catastrophe put a final period to all his views in England, and made him return, as faft as poffible, to his deanry in Ireland, loaded with thofe agonizing paf- hions, grief and difcontent. O. let. 5. THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. tire, for that all was gone. Bolingbroke whispered him that he was right, but Oxford faid all would do well. Swift ftill adhered to his opinion; and therefore went in a day or two to Oxford by the coach, and thence to the houfe of a friend in Berkshire, where he continued till the Queen's death, which happened in about ten weeks. While he was at this place, his mind was ftill bufy for his friends; and he wrote a diſcourſe, called · Free thoughts on the prefent ftate of affairs,' which he thought might be uſeful at that juncture, and fent it up to London; but fome difference of opinion hap- pening between him and Lord Bolingbroke concern- ing it, the publication was delayed till the Queen's death; and then he recalled his copy; which was af- terwards depofited with the late alderman Barber, and having been fince publifhed, will be found in vol 4. P. 362. A few weeks after the death of the Queen, he went back to his ſtation in Ireland; all his connections with the court being broken, and all his expectations difap- pointed. But it would be an injury to Swift not to ftop a mo- ment here; and, before we defcend with him into the vale of private life, look back, as from an eminence. upon the country we have paffed. Few of thoſe who have been permitted to affociate with perfons greatly fuperior in rank and fortune, who have climbed in the retinue of power, and been diftinguiſhed by reflected greatness, have been able to fuftain the native dignity of their own character, with- out ftooping as they afcended the hill, or being blinded by the light that made them confpicuous to others. Let it therefore be recorded to the honour of Dr. Swift, and to animate others by his example and re- ward, that, during his connection with thofe who were in the highest rank, and who in every rank would have been great, he would never fuffer himſelf to be treated but as an equal; and repulfed every attempt to Ivi OF AN ACCOUNT to hold him in dependence, or keep him at a distance, with the utmoſt refentment and indignation. It happened upon fome occafion, that Harley fent. him a bank-bill of 501. by his private fecretary Mr. Lewis; which Swift inftantly returned, with a letter of expoftulation and complaint. Harley invited him to dine, but he refuſed, He wrote to Mr. Lewis to mediate between them, defiring to be reconciled; but Swift fent word, that he expected farther fatisfaction, Harley replied, if he would come and fee him, he would make him eafy but Swift infifled, that he fhould apologize by meffage; and declared that other- wife, he would caft him off.'* [D. S. p. 324, 5• < let. to S.] It is poffible that this favour might have been reject- ed, as not worth his acceptance: but it is certain, that, if it had been of greater value, it would not have atoned for any indecorum in the offer, or have induc- ed Swift to fuffer an obligation from thofe whom he did not eſteem; for he refuted the place of hiftoriogra- pher Swift was a man of fuch cxalted fpirit and fire, that if a bene- fit defigned him were not accompanied with elegance and grace in the manner of propofing it, he would fcorn the intended favour, and refent it as an affront. He quarrelled with his friend Harley on a punctilio of this kind. "Mr. Harley" (faith Dr. Swift) "defired me to dine with him again to-day, but I refuſed him; for I fell "out with him yeſterday, and will not fee him again till he makes me amends." [Let. to S. Feb. 6. 1710.] "I was this morn- "ing early" (fays he) "with Mr. Lewis of the Secretary's office, "and faw a letter Mr. Harley had fent him, defiring to be recon- "ciled but I was deaf to all intreaties, and have defired Lewis to go to him, and let him know I expect further fatisfaction. we let theſe great minifters pretend too much, there will be no governing them.' "He promifes to make me eaſy if 1 will but "come and fee him; but I won't; and he fhall do it by meffage" << << • If or I will caft caft him off;' in that he did fomething which he "intended for a favour, and I have taken it quite otherwiſe, difliking "both the thing and the manner; and it has heartily vexed me; and all I have faid is truth, though it looks, like jeft; and I ab. "folutely refuſed to fubmit' to his intended favour, and expect "further fatisfaction." [Feb. 7. 1710.] But in a few days after, he fays, "I have taken Mr. Harley into favour again." Feb. 13.] D. S. p. 323, 4. THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. lvii pher with difdain; becauſe it was in the difpofal of a perfon whom he regarded with difguft and contempt.* He would not fuffer even negative incivilities from thofe, who, if by their ftation they had not been his fu- periors, would have been his equals by learning and parts. It happened, that having on a Sunday dined with Mr. St. John, who was then fecretary of ſtate, and remarked that he appeared to be much out of temper; he took the firft opportunity to fee him alone, afked him what the d- ailed him on Sunday ; told him he obferved he was much out of temper; that he did not expect he would tell him the caufe, but would be glad to ſee he was in better; and warned him never to behave to him with filent referve, for that he would not be treated like a ſchoolboy; and that he had felt too much of that in his life already. "I told him," fays he," that I expected, that every great miniſter "who honoured me with his acquaintance, if he "heard or faw any thing to my difadvantage, would "let me know it in plain words, and not put me in 6. pain to guefs by the change or coldness of his coun- "tenance or behaviour; for it was what I would hardly bear from a crowned head, and I thought no ſubject's favour was worth it. I told him, that I defigned to let my Lord Keeper and Mr. Harley "know the fame thing, that they may ufe me ac- cordingly." . The Secretary received the reproof, like a friend, as it was given, and apologized for his behaviour, by fay- ing, that bufinefs had kept him up feveral whole. nights, and drinking one more; and to make up mat-- ters, he preffed the Doctor to ftay to dinner; which however, he declined, as well becauſe he would not en- courage a ſecond offence by too eafily paffing over the firit, C 5 P * If Swift refuſed this place, he could not, as Lord Orrery fap. pofes, be mistaken in believing it intended for him; and that he did refufe it, we have his own exprefs declaration in his letter to Pope, dated Jan, 10, 1721› Iviii OF AN ACCOUNT firft, as becauſe he was engaged with another friend. † [D. S. p. 326, 7. let to S. April 3. 1711.] If in this reprefentation of his behaviour, as it is in many particulars taken from his letters to Stella, he fhould be fufpected of having fomewhat exaggerated to gratify his vanity, he may be abundantly juftified by a letter ftill extant, which he wrote to Lord Oxford after the connection between them was broken. "When "I was with you," fays he, "I have faid more than once, that I would never allow quality or ftation "made any difference between men.-I loved you juſt "fo much the worfe for your ſtation.-In your pub- 44 lic capacity you have often angered me to the heart, "but as a private man never once I was too proud to be vain of the honour you did me.-I was never "afraid of offending you, nor am now in any pain ** for the manner I write to you in," Neither At the hours that Swift was not engaged in political affairs, ne laughed, he played, he amuſed himfelf, with every whim and vagary that floated on the furface of his imagination. "Secretary St. John" (faith he) "would needs have me dine with him to-day; and there I found three perfons I never faw; two I had no ac- quaintance with, and one I did not care for: fo I left them early "and came home; it being no day to walk, but fcurvy rain and "wind. The fecretary tells me he has put a cheat upon me; "for Lord Peterborow fent him twelve dozen Aafks of Burgundy, "on condition that I fhould have my fhare; but he never was quiet till they were all gone: fo I reckon he owes me 361."— Let. to S. Feb. 18, 1710. But, in a few days after, Swift, in a pleaſant manner, took ample fatisfaction of the fecretary. For "I dined to-day" (faith he) "with Mr. fercretary St. John, on "condition I might chufe my company; which were, Lord Ri- " vers, Lord Carteret, Sir Thomas Manfell, and Mr. Lewis. I "invited Maſham, Hill, Sir John Stanley, and George Gran- ville; but they were engaged and I did it in revenge of his "having ſuch bad company when I dined with him before. So ན་ we laughed," &c. [Feb. 25, 1710.] This puts me in mind of an accident which happened at Windfor. "The court here" (faith the Doctor) "have got by the end a good thing I faid to the fecretary fome weeks ago. He fhewed me his bill of fare, to tempt "me to dine with him. Pob, faid 1, I value not your bill of fare; give me your bill of company. Lord Treaſurer was migh- tily pleafed, and told it every body as a notable thing." [Sept, 2, 1711.] D. S. p. 322, 3. THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. lix Neither was this conduct the effect of pride and ſelf- fufficiency, but of true dignity of mind; for he exacted nothing which, in his turn, he did not pay, nor aſked more for himself than for others whofe pre- tenfions or circumftances were the fame. When he was defired by Lord Oxford to introduce Dr. Parnel to his acquaintance, he refufed, upon this principle, that a man of genius was a character fuperior to that of a Lord in a high ftation. He therefore obliged his Lordship to walk with his treaſurer's ftaff from room to room through his own levee, inquiring which was Dr. Parnel, in order to introduce him- felf, and beg the honour of his acquaintance. It was known by an accident, after his memory failed, that he allowed an annuity of fifty guineas to Mrs. Dingley; but instead of doing this with the parade of a benefactor, or gratifying his pride, by making her feel her dependence, he always pretended, that he acted only as her agent, and that the money he paid her, was the produce of a certain fum which the had in the funds: and the better to fave appearances, he always took her receipt; and fometimes would pre- tend, with great feeming vexation, that the drew up- on him before he had received her money from London. [D. S. p. 346.} As to his political principles, if his own account of them is to be believed, he abhorred Whiggifm only in thoſe who made it conſiſt in damning the church, re- viling the clergy, abetting the diffenters, and fpeaking contemptibly of revealed religion.. He always de- clared himſelf against a popish fucceffor to the crown, whatever title he might have by proximity of blood; nor did he regard the right line, upon any other ac- count, than as it was eſtabliſhed by law, and had much weight in the opinions of the people. He was of opi- nion, that when the grievances fuffered under a prefent government became greater than thofe which might probably be expected from changing it by violence, a revolution was juftifiable; and this he believed to have been the cafe in that which was brought about by the $ 1x OF AN ACCOUNT the Prince of Orange. He had a mortal antipathy againſt ſtanding armies in times of peace; and was of opinion, that our liberty could never be placed upon a firm foundation, till the ancient law fhould be reviv- ed, by which our parliaments were made annual. He abominated the political fcheme of fetting up a mo- neyed intereft in oppofition to the landed; and was an enemy to temporary fufpenfions of the Habeas corpus act. If fome afperities that cannot be juftified have escaped his pen, in papers which were haftily written in the firft ardor of his zeal, and often after great provocation from thoſe who wrote against him, furely they may, without the exertion of angelic be- nevolence be forgiven. That he was not at any time a bigot to party, and that he did not indifcriminately transfer his refent- ments from principles to perfons, was fo evident by his conduct, that it was a ufual fubject of raillery to- wards him among the minifters, that he never came to them without a Whig in his fleeve. And though he does not appear to have afked any thing for himfelf, yet he often preffed Lord Oxford in favour of Mr. Addifon, Mr. Congreve, Mr. Rowe, and Mr. Steele; with whom, except Mr. Steele, he frequently converfed dur- ing all Lord Oxford's miniftry; chufing his friends by their perfonal merit, without examining how far their notions agiced with the politics then in vogue; and in particular, his friendship with Mr. Addifon continued inviolable, and with as much kindneſs as when they uſed to meet at Lord Halifax's or Lord Sommers's, who were leaders of the oppofite party. Among other perfons with whom he was intimately acquainted during this gay part of his life, was Mrs. Vanhomrigh. She was a lady of good family, the daughter of Mr. Stone the commiffioner, and niece to the accomptant-general of Ireland. lady of politenefs and good breeding. [D. S. p. 258. ] She was alfo a She was the widow of Mr. Bartholomew Vanhomrigh, firſt a merchant of Amfterdam, and afterwards of Dub- lin, who was appointed commiffary of the ftores by King THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. lxi King William, upon his expedition into Ireland; a place which, during the war, was computed to be worth 6000l. per annum. After the affairs of Ireland were fettled, he was appointed muftermafter-general, and a commiffioner of the revenue, and laid out about 12,000l. in the purchaſe of forfeited eftates: but though he received the produce of this eſtate, and en- joyed his appointments thirteen years; yet when he died, in 1703, his expences had been fo nearly equal to his revenue, that his whole fortune, the value of his eſtate included, amounted only to 16,000l. This fum he directed, by his will, to be divided equally be- tween his wife and four children, of which two were fons and two were daughters. The fons died foon af- ter their father, and their fhare of his fortune fell to the daughters. D. S. p. 260, &c. O. let. 9. In 1709, the widow and the two young ladies came to England, where they were vifited by perfons of the first quality; and Swift, lodging within a few doors of their houfe in Bury-ftreet, St. James's, ufed to be much there, coming and going without ceremony, as if he had been one of the family. D. S. p. 259. Dur- ing this familiarity, he became infenfibly a kind of preceptor to the young ladies, particularly the eldeft, who was then about twenty years old, was much addicted to reading, and a great admirer of poe- try. In a perſon of this difpofition, it was na- tural for fuch a character as that of Swift to excite ad- miration, a paffion which by frequent converfe was foftened into complacency, and complacency was at length improved into love. Love itſelf perhaps was in this cafe complicated with vanity, which would. have been highly gratified by an alliance with the firit wit of the age; and thus what neither could have ef- fected alone, was done by the joint effort of both, and The ventured to make the Doctor a propofal of marri- age. It is probable, that his connections with Mrs. Johnfon at this time were fuch, that he could not with honour accept this propofal, whatever pleaſure or advantage it might promife: however, it is certain, he lxii OF AN ACCOUNT he declined, though without affigning any other en- gagement as the reaſon. He appears first to have affected to believe her in jeſt, then to have rallied her on fo whimſical a choice, and at laft to have put her off without an abfolute refuſal ; perhaps, partly, becauſe he was unwilling to give her pain, and partly, becaufe he could not refufe her with a good grace, otherwife than by diſcovering fome par- ticulars which he was willing to conceal. While he was in this fituation, he wrote the poem called Cadenus and Vaneſſa, vol. 6, p. 10; the principal view of which feems to have been at once to compliment and to rally her; to apologize for his conduct and foften a tacit denial, by leaving the event undetermined. This poem appears to have been written about the year 1713, a fhort time before he left Vaneffa and the reft of his friends in England, and returned to the place of his exile, which he always mentioned with regret. In the year 1714 Mrs. Vanhomrigh died; and, hav- ing lived at an expence much greater than her fortune would bear, fhe left fome debts unpaid.. Her two daughters, whofe fortunes fhe had alfo def- fened, fhe appointed joint executrixes of her will; an office which, however troubleſome, the fituation of their affairs obliged them to accept. It appears too, that they had contracted fome debts in their own right, which it was not in their power immediately to pay; and therefore to avoid an arreft, they followed the Dean into Ireland.* Upon *After the death of her huſband, and fons, with this increase of wealth, and with heads and hearts elated by affluence, and unre- ſtrained by forefight or diſcretion, the widow Vanhomrigh and her two daughters quitted the luxurious foil of their native country, for the more elegant pleaſures of the English court. During their re- fidence at London, they lived in a courfe of prodigality that ftretch- ed itſelf far beyond the limits of their income, and reduced them to great diftrefs; in the midft of which the mother died, and the two daughters hattened in all fecrecy back to Ireland, beginning their journey on a Sunday, to avoid the interruption and importunities of a certain fierce kind of animals called bailiffs, who are not only (wors THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. Ixiii Upon his arrival to take poffeffion of his deanery, and at his return after the Queen's death, he was re- ceived, according to the account of Lord Orrery, vol. 6, P 55, note, and Mr. Deane Swift, with every poffible mark of contempt and indignation, eſpecially by the populace, who not only reviled and curfed him, but pelted him with ftones and dirt as he paffed along the treets. D. S. p. 178, 183. The author of the Ob- fervations, on the contrary, affirms, that he was re- ceived by all ranks of men, not only with kindneſs, but honour; the Tories being then in full power, as well in Ireland as in England, and Swift's fervice to the church and credit at court being well known. J. R. p. 87. This indeed was true when he went to take poffeffion: but when he returned to his deanery, the power of the Tories and the Dean's credit at court were at an end; circumſtances which might well cauſe the rabble at leaft to forget his fervices to the church. It is certain, that great clamour was then raiſed by the new men againſt the late miniftry, with whom Świft had been clofely connected: they were charged with a deign to bring in the pretender; and the fame defign was confequently imputed to Swift, whom it was therefore confidered by fome as a qualification for pre- ferment to revile and oppofe: which party the mob took, whoſe fault it has never been to coincide impli- citly with a court, pofterity muft judge for themfelves. But it feems probable, that theſe accounts, however contradictory, may both be trues and that Swift at this time might be the Sacheverel of Ireland, follow- ed by the mob of one faction with execrations, and by the other with fhouts of applaufe.* It fworn foes to wit and gaiety, but whofe tyranny, although it could not have reached the deified Vaneffa, might have been very fatal to Efher Vanhomrigh. Within two years after their arrival in Ire- land, Mary the youngest, fifter died, and the fmall remains of the fhipwrecked fortune centred in Vaneſſa. O. let. 9.- See Orre- ry's account of Vancffa's character, and of Swift's conduct with her, in vol. 6. p. 10, et feq. in the notes. We are now no longer to behold Dr. Swift of any importance in England; his hopes there are crushed for ever; his minifterial friends 31 } Ixiv OF AN ACCOUNT It is however agreed, that the Archbishop of Dub- lin, and fome of his old friends in the chapter, fet themſelves againſt his meaſures with all their force, and laboured to diſappoint him in the exercife of his pow- er by every art of oppofition and delay. But whate- ver prejudice they had conceived againſt him was foon removed, by the difintereſted integrity of his conduct, which was fo apparent and ftriking, that they foon re- garded him with reſpect and veneration, and almoſt im- plicitly acquiefced in whatever he propoſed. This removal from England to Ireland was the great event which determined the colour of his life, bound- ed his views, and fhewed him at once what he might poffefs, and for what he might hope. There is a time when every man is ftruck with a fenſe of his mortality, and feels the force of a truth to which he has confented merely from cuftom, without confidering its certainty or importance. This time fel- dom happens in the chearful fimplicity of infancy, or in the first impatience of youth, when "the world is all be- fore us," when every object has the force of novelty, and every defire of pleaſure receives auxiliar ftrength from curiofity: but after the firft heat of the race, when we ftop to recover from our fatigue, we natu- rally confider the ground before us, and then per- ceive that at the end of the courfe are clouds and darkness; that the grave will foon intercept our pur- fuit of temporal felicity; and that, if we cannot ftretch to the goal that is beyond it, we run in vain, and friends are degraded, banished, or imprisoned. Indecent rage, fan- guinary zeal, and ill-tempered loyalty, revelled at large throughout the three kingdoms, efpecially in Ireland, where duels were fought almoſt every week, and where the peft was fo univerfal, that the ladies were as violent as the gentlemen. Even children at ſchool quarrelled for kings, inftead of fighting for apples. As Swift was known to have been attached to the queen's laft miniftry, to have written againſt the Whigs, and "to have oile! many a fpring "which Harley moved," he met with frequent indignities from the populace, and indeed was equally abufed by perfons of all ranks and denominations. Such a treatment foured his temper, confined his acquaintance, and added bitterness to bis ftyle. O. let. 6. See vol. P 55. in the notes. 6. THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. lxv and ſpend our ftrength for nought. Great diſappoint- ments which change our general plan, and make it neceſſary to enter the world as it were a fecond time, feldom fail to alarm us with the brevity of life, and reprefs our alacrity, by precluding our hopes. The Dean, whether by the vigour and activity of his imagination, the multitude of his ideas, or the ar- dour of his purfuits, eſcaped the force of this thought, till his retreat to Ireland on the death of the Queen: and then indeed it came upon him with fuch influence, that, after fifteen years, it conftantly recurred when he firſt awaked in the morning, and was not diſmiſſed till he again began to fleep. As foon as he was fettled at Dublin, Mrs. Johnfon removed from the country to be near him; but they ftill lived in feparate houſes: his refidence was at the deanry, and hers in lodgings on the other fide of the river Liffey. The Dean kept two public days every week; and though the circle of his vifitors is faid at firft to have been ſmall, yet it foon increafed, and always confifted of the best company. D. S. p. 91, 180. Thofe who were more particularly the companions of his choice, were fuch as would have done honcur to any charac- ter. They were the Grattons, feven brothers, the fons of Dr. Gratton, a venerable and hofpitable clergyman, who gave them all a liberal education. The eldeſt was a juftice of peace, and lived reputably on his pa- trimony in the country; another was a phyfician, and another a merchant, both eminent in their profef- fions; three others were clergymen, who .had a competent provifion in the church; and the young- eft was fellow of Dublin college, and master of the great free-fchool at Enniskilling. They were all per- fons of great merit, as generally acquainted, and as much beloved as any in the kingdom. The Jack- fons, a family of which both men and women were genteel, agreeable, and well bred, fuch companions as no wife man ever wanted, if they could be had; George Rochford, and Peter Ludlow, men of for- tune, Ixvi OF AN ACCOUNT tune, learning, wit, humour, and virtue; and Mr. Matthew Lord, deemed the beſt lay fcholar of his time: Thefe, with the fellows of the college, Dr. Walmefley, Dr. Helfham, Dr. Delany, Dr. Stopford, now Bishop of Cloyne, and Dr. Sheridan; Lady Euftace, Mrs. Moore, Lady Betty Rochford, and Mrs. Ludlow, with Mrs. Johnſon, and her friends, were the perfons with whom Swift fpent his leiſure hours, from the year 1714 to the year 1720, J. R. p. 90, &c. a period in which it has been injuriouſly faid, that his choice of companions fhewed him of a depraved tafte.* There was indeed among his companions one person who could derive no honour from his lineage. a found- ling, whom Swift therefore uſed to call Melchifedek, becauſe Melchifedek is faid to have neither father nor mother. This gentleman's name was Worral; he was a clergyman, a maſter of arts, a reader, and a vicar of his cathedral, and mafter of the fong. He was nearly of the Dean's own ftanding in the college, had good ſenſe, and much humour. He was married to a woman of great fpritelinefs, good-nature, and generofity; remarkably cleanly and elegant in her perfon, in her houfe, and at her table. But there is another particular in Mr. Worral's character which generally contributed to his intimacy with the Dean : he was a good walker. The Dean uſed this exerciſe in an immoderate degree, under the notion of its be- ing abfolutely neceffary, not to health only, but to cleanliness, by keeping the pores of the skin clear, and throwing off impurities by perfpiration. Mr. Worral's fituation in the church naturally engag- ed his frequent attendance upon the Dean. This at- tendance commonly ended in a walk; and the walk in their dining together, either at Mr. Worral's, or at the * It is matter of aſtoniſhment to find the fame perfon, who had enjoyed the higheft and the beſt converſation, equally delighted with the lowest and the worst and yet it is certain, that from Swift's fettlement in Dublin as Dean of St. Patrick's, his choice of companions in general fhewed him of a very depraved taſte. let, 6. 0. THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. lxvii the deanery. The Dean, being a fingle man, was oftener a gueſt to Mr. Worral, than Mr. Worral was a guest to him. And this brought on an agreement, that the Dean fhould dine with him whenever he would at a certain rate, and invite as many friends as he pleaſed upon the fame terms. This gentleman is lately dead, and left a large fum of money to be difpofed of to public charities, at the difcre- tion of his executors; 500 l. of which was appro- priated to the Dean's hofpital. 'The Dean, when he firſt ſettled at Dublin, was in debt; a fituation which ill fuited his fpirit, and deter- mined him to a fevere economy, with which this agreement with Worral well fuited. J. R. p. 92. On his public days, however, the dignity of his fta- tion was fuftained with the utmost elegance and deco- rum, under the direction of Mrs. Johnſon, who yet appeared in the circle without any character dif- tinct from the rest of the company. She was how- ever frequently invited with the Dean, whether to en- tertainments, or parties of pleafures, though not for generally as if he had been his wife. She vifited, and received vifits, as far as the practice is a mere ri- tual of good breeding. Her friendſhips feem to have been fill among the men, but he was treated with great politeness by the ladies. D. S. p. 92. 'The Dean's mind had been now fo filled with po- litics, that he found it impracticable to excel as a preacher, his firft and most laudable ambition; and frequently declared, that though he fometimes at- tempted to exert him himſelf in the pulpit, yet he could never rife higher than preaching pamphlets.- [J. R. p. 42. ]· He was however ftill a good Dean, and a good pricft: He applied himfelf to the care of his deanery, his cathedral, its regu- lations, its income and economy, with great di- ligence; he renewed the primitive practice of cele- brating the holy communion every Sunday; and at this facrament he was not only conftantly prefent, but he confecrated and adminiſtered it with his own hands, in a manner equally graceful and devout; he attended at lxviii OF AN ACCOUNT at church every morning, and generally preached in his turn; he alio conftantly attended the performance of the anthem on a Sunday night, though he did not un- deſtand muſic, to fee that the choir did not neglect their duty. D. S. p. 370, 1. As to his employment at home, he feems to have had no heart to apply himself to ſtudy of any kind, but to have refigned himſelf wholly to fuch amuſements as offered, that he might not think of his fituation, the misfortune of his friends, and the diſappointment of his hope. Such at least is the account that he gives to Mr. Gay, in his letter dated January 8, 1722-3. "I was three years," fays he, "reconciling myfelf to the ſcene and bufinels to which fortune hath con- "demned me; and ftupidity was what I had re- "courie to." t It has been fuggefted, that the acquaintance he fell into with men of learning made it neceffary for him about this time to review his Greek and Latin, and obtain fome acquaintance with church-history. J. R. p. 101. But furely he who had ftudied eight hours a day for feven years, or, according to Mr. Deane Swift, D. S p. 271, 272, 276, ten hours a-day for nine years; he who had read and extracted the fathers more than fixteen years before, had little occafion to review his Latin and Greek, or acquaint himself with church hiftory, left he thould not fuftain his character among learned men for except it be pretended that others were + From 1714, till he appeared, in 1720, a champion for Ire- land against Wood's halfpence, his fpirit of politics and of patriot- iſm was kept almoſt cloſely confined within his own breaſt. Idle- nefs and trifles ingroffed too many of his hours; fools and lyco- phants too much of his converfation. However, it may be ob- ferved, that the treatment which he received after the death of Q Anne, was almoft a fufficient reafon to justify a contempt, if not an abhorrence, of the human race. He had bravely withftood all hoi- tile indignities, during the lifetime of that princefs; but when the whole army of his friends were not only routed, but taken prifon- ers, he dropt his fword, and retired into his fortification at Dublin, from whence he feldom ftirred beyond the limits of his own garden, unleſs in great indulgence to fome particular favourites. O. let. 6. THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. lxix were able to acquire more knowledge in lefs time and with lefs labour, it must be allowed that Swift was likely to be always the moft knowing of his compa- ny. Lord Orrery fays, that he was little acquainted with the mathematics, and never confidered the fci- ence except as an object of ridicule:* but the author of the Obfervations affirms, on the contrary, that he had acquired confiderable mathematical knowledge; and that he had ſeen him more than once undertake to folve an algebraic problem by arithmetic. J. R. p. 101. The first remarkable cvent of his life that occurred after his fettlement at the deanery, was his marriage to Mrs. Johnfon, after a moft intimate friendship of more than fixteen years. This was in the year 1716; and the ceremony was performed by Dr. Ashe, then Bishop of Clogher, to whom the Dean had been a pupil in Trinity college, Dublin. But whatever were the motives of this marriage, the Dean and the lady continued to live afterwards juft in the fame man- ner as they had lived before. † Mrs. Dingley was * See the notes, above, p. xxxvi. ftill Though it is admitted, that Dr. Swift was married to Mrs. Johnſon in 1716, yet it may be afferted with great truth, that he never had any ferious thoughts of marriage after he was one and twenty. Some time indeed before, while he was a firipling in the univerfity of Dublin, he had a paffion for Mifs Warren, the fifter of his chamber-fellow. But whatever attachments he had to that lady, upon his going to live in England, where he applied himſelf clofe to politics and learning at Sir William Temple's, his paſſions quickly fubfided, and he forgot his armour. Neither do I believe, further than common forms, that he ever paid his court, through- out his whole life, to any woman befides, in the character of a profeffed lover. D. S. F. 93, 94. + Mrs. Johnfon, with regard to her manners, her virtues, her mind, and her perfon, was not undeferving to have been married to the greateft prince in Europe: but her defcent was from a fer- vant of Sir William Temple; and therefore ſhe was by no means worthy to have been the acknowledged wife of Dr. Swift, —If Dr. Swift had acknowledged his marriage even with this improv- ed, this adorable creature, he would, in fpite of his genius, and all the reputation he had acquired in the days of K. William and Q. Anne, have immediately funk in the esteem of the world. For among ixx ACCOUNT OF AN ftill the infeparable companion of Stella where-ever fhe went; and ſhe never refided at the deanery, except when the Dean was feized with violent fits of giddi- nefs which ſometimes lafted near a month. Till this time he had continued his vifits to Vaneffa; who, though she had fuffered very great pecuniary loff- es, had yet preferved her reputation, and her friends: for ſhe was vifited by many perfons of rank, character and fortune, of both fexes; particularly Mrs. Conolly, a lady of very high reputation; Dr. Berkeley, the late moft excellent Bishop of Cloyne; the late Judge Lind- fay, and the Lord Chief Justice Marley. D.S.p.262. The Dean among the rest of his enemies, (and theſe were not few) there were fome that were not unacquainted with the ſtory of Mrs. Johníon's birth and education, who, on account of fome particular difobli- gations they had received from the Doctor, would have been glad of an opportunity of expofing him to contempt and ridicule for the meannnefs of his ſpirit; and as in that cafe they would have had it full in their power, as well as ſtrong in their inclination, they would have publiſhed and confirmed the obfcurity of Mrs. John- fon's birth and education among all their acquaintance. They would have declared, among other particulars, that Mrs. Johnſon, when ſhe was about ten or eleven years old, was appointed to wait upon the Doctor's fiſter in the character of her little fervant, during the fummer that ſhe ſpent at Moorpark in 1692. Neither can we fuppofe, that even the Doctor's fifter, with whom he had quarreled to fuch a degree as never to fee her face, on account of a match he thought greatly beneath her acceptance. [above p. xlvii,] would have stifled her indignation, or with any patience have forborn to retaliate the feverities of her brother upon his own back, when he himſelf had married and acknowledged a wife ſo very meanly extracted, and particularly that individual perſon whom she deſpiſed and hated beyond all the inhabitants on earth. In one word, if Dr. Swift, whofe ambition was not to be gratified without ſome uncom- mon degree of admiration, had acknowledged Mrs. Johnſon for a wife, he would on all fides have been ſo perfecuted with contempt and derifion, (as half mankind were in 1716 his profeffed enemies) that, unable to fupport himself under the burthen of his afflicti- on, he would have loft his fpirits, broken his heart, and died in a twelvemonth. And accordingly we find he had more wildom than to acknowledge this beautiful, this accomplished woman, for his wife. D. S. p. 80, 83, 84, 85, THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. lxxi Dean appears ſtill to have preferved the character of her preceptor, to have directed her progrefs in literature, and explained and illuftrated the authors fhe had read. But foon after his marriage he visited her on another account; he went as an advocate for Mr. Dean Winter, whom he took with him, a gentleman who was a profeſſed admirer of Vaneſſa, and had made her fome overtures of marriage: but though he had an eſtate of near 800l. a-year, befides 300l. a-year preferment in the church; yet Vaneſſa rejected the propofal in fuch terms, as that it was never repeated. She was alfo addreffed by Dr. Price, who was after- wards Archbishop of Cafhel, but without fuccefs. [D. S. p. 263. 265.] From this time the Dean's vifits were much lefs frequent. In the year 1717 her fifter died; and the whole remains of the family-for- tune being then centred in Vaneffa, fhe retired to Selbridge, a ſmall houſe and eſtate, about twelve miles diftance from Dublin, which had been purchaſed by her father. From this place fhe wrote frequently to the Dean, and he anſwered her letters. In thefe letters fhe ftill preffed him to marry her; and in his letters he ftill rallied, and ftill avoided a pofitive denial. At length, however, the infifted with great ardour, and great ten- derness, upon his pofitive or immediate acceptance or refufal of her as a wife. The Dean wrote an anſwer, and delivered it with his own hand. As this letter of Vaneffa's, which was written in 1723, is a demonſtration that he was then utterly ignorant of the Dean's marriage with Stella, and as the appears to have known it almoft immediately afterwards, it is probable that the Dean's anſwer communicated the fa- tal fecret, which at once precluded all her hopes, and accounted for his former conduct: it is probable too, that the refentment which he felt at having it thus ex- torted from him, was the caufe of the manner in which he delivered the letter; for having thrown it down upon her table, he hafted back to his horfe, and re- turned immediately to Dublin. [D. S. p. 264. O. let. 9.] This Ixxii OF AN ACCOUNT This letter the unhappy lady did not furvive many weeks. However, fhe was fufficiently compofed to cancel a will that ſhe had made in the Dean's favour, and to make another, in which fhe left her fortune, which long retirement and frugality had in a great meaſure reſtored, to her two executors, Dr. Berkeley, the Bishop of Cloyne, and Mr. Marſhall, one of the King's ferjeants at law, gentlemen whofe characters are excellent in the higheſt degree.* Such was the fate of Vaneffa. And, furely, thoſe whom pity could not reftrain from being diligent to load her memory with reproach, to conftrue appear- anccs in the worst fenfe, to aggravate folly into vice, and diſtreſs into infamy, have not much exalted their own character, or ftrengthened their claim to the can- dour of others. If Vaneffa, by her fondneſs for the gaieties of life, encouraged by the example, and per- haps influenced by the authority of a mother, leffened her fortune at an age when few have been diſcreet; it cannot be denied, that ſhe retrieved it by prudence and œconomy, at an age when many have continued diffolute; and was frugal, after the habit of expence had made frugality difficult. If the could not fub- due a paffion which has tyrannized over the ſtrongeſt and pureft minds, fhe does not appear to have known that it was criminal, or to have deſired that it might be unlawfully gratified. She preffed a perfon whom fhe believed fingle, to marry her; but it does not therefore follow, that he was his concubine; much lefs that the defired to be reputed fo, and was then folicitous to incur the infamy which has been fince thrown upon her. It cannot ſurely be believed, that the fhameleſs and reputed concubine, even of Swift, would have been vifited by ladies of credit and faſhion, or folicited in marriage by two clergymen of eminence and fortune, to whom her story and character must have been well known. Befides, Dr. Berkeley, after having carefully perufed all the letters that paffed between them • Sec vol. 6. p. 12, 13. THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. lxxiji them, which Vaneffa directed to be publiſhed, with the poem, found, that they contained nothing that could bring the leaft difgrace upon the Dean. Hers, indeed, were full of paflionate declarations of her love; his contained only compliments, excufes, apo- logies, and thanks for trifling prefents. There was not in either the leaft trace of a criminal commerce; which, if there had been any fuch, it would, in fo long an intercourfe, have been extremely difficult to avoid and if the defired to be reputed his concu- bine, it cannot be fuppofed that the concealed any letter which would have proved that fhe was ſo, ef- pecially as it would have gratified her refentient against him, for refusing to make her his wife. [J. R. p. 121. 122. 123.] If it appears, therefore, that there was no crimi- nal commerce between them, and that he did not defire the world fhould believe there had been any; it follows, from her directing the publication of the poem, of which perhaps fhe poffeffed the only copy, that, in her fenfe of the verfes, none of them impli- ed a fact which would dishonour her memory. And this appears alfo to have been the opinion of her ex- ecutors, who, though they fuppreffed the letters, be- cauſe they contained nothing that could do her honour, yet publiſhed the poem; by which it must therefore be fuppofed they did not think she would be diſgrac- ed. [7. R. p. 123.] It has indeed been faid, that Vaneffa, from the time ſhe was deferted, "devoted herfelf, like Ari- adne, to Bacchus," and perhaps it is true, that in the anguifh of difappointed defire, the had re- courſe to that dreadful opiate, which never fails to complicate difeafe with trouble, to leave the fuffer- er more wretched when its operation is at an end; to divide life into frenzy and defpair, and at once to haften the approach, and increaſe the terrors of death. But it cannot be thought, that when ſhe made her will, fhe was either intoxicated or deliri- VOL. I. d * See vol. 6. p. 11. ous, lxxiv AN ACCOUNT OF } ous, becauſe the perfect exerciſe of reafon is effen- tial to the validity of the act. No particular of her diftrefs, therefore, can weaken the arguments drawn from the direction in her will to publish the poem and the letters, of which the gratification of her vanity was fo evidently the motive, that it is difficult to conceive how it could be overlooked. From 1716 to 1720 is a chaẩm in the Dean's life, which it has been found difficult to fill up. That he had no need to repeat his college-exercifes, has been fhewn already; and that, in this interval, he went through a voluminous courfe of ecclefiaftical hiftory [J. R. p. 101.], feems farther improbable, by a letter to Lord Bolingbroke, dated April 5. 1729, in which it appears, that he was then reading Baronius, and Baronius was the only piece of church-hiſtory that was found in his library. Lord Orrery thinks, with great reafon, that he employed this time, upon Gul- liver's Travels. 0.let. 16. The author of the Obfervations indeed fuppofes the Dean's genius to be verging towards a decline in the year 1723, and that Gulliver's Travels were written. after that time: but in both theſe fuppofitions he is probably miſtaken; though in the former he ſeems to be favoured by a paffage in a letter written by the Dean himself to Mr. Pope, dated Sept. 20. 1723. That his genius was not declining in 1723, appears by the Drapier's Letters, which were not written till 1724; and of theſe the Obfervator himſelf fays "his : genius never fhone out in greater ftrength than on "that and the fubfequent occafions ;" a truth which is univerfally acknowledged. That Gulliver's Tra- vels were written before that time, is equally evi- dent for Swift went into the north of Ireland early in the fpring of 1725; and, in a letter to Dr. Sheri- dan, during his refidence there, he puts him in mind of his defcription of the Yahoos. So that Sheridan muft have feen the Travels in manufcript, at leaſt in the year 1724. The Dean alfo, in a letter to Mr. Pope, dated Sept. 29. 1725, fays, "Oh if the "world had but a dozen of Arbuthnotts in it, I I "would THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. lxxv "would burn my Travels." It may reaſonably be concluded, therefore, that his Travels were then all written, and that at this time he was reviewing and retouching them for the prefs; efpecially as they were publiſhed in 1726; and as he was otherwife employed in 1724, they muſt have been written at leaft before 1723. Upon the whole, perhaps, it is not an extravagant conjecture, that having, according to his own ac- count, wholly neglected his ftudies for the first three years of his refidence at the deanery, and indulged the refentment which his diſappointments had produ- ced, till it could be contained no longer, he conceiv- ed the first notion of expreffing it in fuch a manner as might correct the enormities which he expofed; and with this view immediately began his Travels, of which the first copy was probably finiſhed before the year 1720. About this time, the Dean, who had already ac- quired the character of a humourist and a wit, was first regarded with general kindnets, as the patriot of Ireland. He wrote a propofal for the univerfal uſe of Iriſh manufactures [vol. 3. p. 3.]; a tract which as it was apparently calculated for the fervice of Ire- land, and zealously condemned a facrifice of intereft to England, made him very popular *. But this fer- vice dz In the year 1720, Swift began to reaffume, in fome degree, the character of a political writer. A fmall pamphlet in defence of the Irish manufactures, was, I believe, his first effay, in Ire- land, in that kind of writing; and to that pamphlet he owed the turn of the popular tide in his favour. His fayings of wit and hu- mour had been handed about, and repeated from time to time a- mong the people. They had the effect of an artful preface, and had pre-engaged all readers in his favour. They were adapted to the understanding, and pleafed the imagination of the vulgar: and he was now looked upon in a new light, and diſtinguiſhed by the title of the THE DEAN. The flux and reflux of popular love and hatred are equally violent. They are often owing to accidents but fometimes to the return of reafon, which, unaffifted by educa- tion, may not be able to guide the lower clafs of people into the right tract at the beginning, but will be fufficient to keep them in it, when experience has pointed out the road. The pamphlet pro- poling lxxvi AN ACCOUNT OF vice would not perhaps have been fo long and fo zealouſly remembered, if a profecution had not been commenced against the printer. As foon as this meaſure was taken, the importance of the work was eftimated by the diligence of the government to fup- prefs it; and the zeal and integrity of the writer were meaſured by the danger he had incurred. No public notice, however, was taken of the Dean on this occafion ; and Waters, the printer, after hav- ing been long haraffed and imprifoned, at length ob- tained a Noli profequi. The Dean did not again appear in his political character till the year 1724. A patent having been iniquitouſly obtained by one Wood to coin 180,000l. in copper for the ufe of Ireland, by which he would have acquired exorbitant gain, and proportionably impoverished the nation, the Dean in the character of a Drapier, wrote a feries of letters to the people, urging them not to receive this copper money. Thefe letters united the whole nation in his praife, filled every ſtreet with his effigies, and every voice with acclamations; and Wood, though he was long fup- ported by thofe who proſtituted the highest delegat- ed authority to the vileft purpofes, was at length compelled to withdraw his patent, and his money was totally fuppreffed.* Upon pofing the univerſal uſe of Iriſh manufactures within the kingdom, had captivated all hearts. Some little pieces of poetry to the fame purpoſe were no leſs acceptable and engaging. The attachment which the Dean bore to the true intereft of Ireland, was no long- er doubted. His patriotifm was as manifeft as his wit. He was looked upon with pleaſure and reſpect, as he paffed through the ftreets and he had attained ſo high a degree of popularity, as to become an arbitrator in the difputes of property among his neigh- bours; nor did any man dare to appeal from his opinion, or to murmur at his decrees, 0. let. 6. * The popular affection which the Dean had hitherto acquired, may be faid not to have been univerfal, till the publication of the Drapier's letters, which made all ranks and all profeffions unani- mous in his applaufe. The occafion of thoſe letters was a ſcarcity of copper coin in Ireland, to fo great a degree, that for fome time past the chief manufacturers throughout the kingdom were oblig- cd THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. lxxvii 1 Upon the arrival of Lord Carteret, foon after the publication of the fourth letter, feveral paffages were felected as fufficient ground for a profecution; and his excellency and council publifhed a proclama- mation, offering 300l. reward for a difcovery of the author. This proclamation gave the Dean a remark- able opportunity to illuftrate his character. It hap- pened, that his butler, whom he had employed as his amanuenfis, and who alone was trufted with the fecret, went out in the afternoon of the day of the proclamation without leave, and ftaid abroad the whole night, and part of the next day. There was great reafon to fufpect that he had made an informa- tion; and having received his reward, would never return. The man however came home in the even- ing and the Dean was adviſed by his friends to take no notice of his fault, left he should be provok- ed to a breach of truft, from the dread of which his return had juft delivered them. But the Dean re- jected this counfel with the utmoſt difdain, and con- manding the man into his prefence, ordered him im- mediately ed to pay their workmen in pieces of tin, or in other tokens of fuppofitious value. Such a method was very disadvantageous to the lower parts of traffick, and was in general an impediment to the commerce of the ftate. To remedy this evil, the late King grant- ed a patent to William Wood, to coin, during the term of four- teen years, farthings and halfpence in England for the fe of Ire- land, to the value of a certain fum fpecified. Theſe halfpence and farthings were to be received by thofe perfons who would volunta- rily accept them. But the patent was thought of fuch dangerous confequence to the public, and of ſuch exorbitant advantage to the patentee, that the Dean, under the character of M. B. Drapier, wrote a letter to the people, warning them not to accept of Wood's halfpence and farthings as current coin. This first letter was fuc- ceeded by feveral others to `the fame purpoſe; all which are inferted in his works. At the found of the Drapier's trumpet, &c. [ice vol. 3. p. 23. in the notes.]- in the notes.]This is the moſt fuccinct account that can be given of an affair, which alarmed the whole Irish na- tion to a degree, that in a lefs loyal kingdom must have fomented a rebellion but the ſtedfaſt loyalty of the Iriſh, and their true de- votion to the prefent royal family, is immoveable; and although. this unfortunate nation may not hitherto have found many diftin- guishing marks of favour and indulgence from the throne, yet it is to be hoped in time they may meet with their reward. 0. let. 6. lxxviii AN ACCOUNT OF mediately to ftrip off his livery, and leave the houſe, You villain," faid he, "I know I am in your power, and for that very reafon I will the lefs "bear with your infolence or neglect. I fuppofe by "this time you are rewarded, or at least in a fair way of being rewarded for your treachery." AC The man, in very fubmiffive terms, confeſſed that he had been drinking all night, and intreated to be forgiven; but Swift was inexorable. He then beg- ged that he might be confined in fome part of the houfe fo long as the proclamation could intitle him to any reward, left, when he was driven from his fer- vice, and deftitute of another, the temptation might be too strong for his virtue, and his diftrefs might involve him in a crime which he most abhorred. Swift however was ftill inexorable; and the man was difmiffed. During all the time of danger, Swift obftinately refufed to contribute one farthing towards. his fupport, nor could he be perfuaded to fee his face; but when the time limited in the proclamation was expired, he was permitted to return to his fer- vice. Soon afterwards he was called haftily up by the Dean; who, without any preface, again order- ed him to ftrip off his livery, put on his own cloaths, and then come to him again. The butler ſtared with furprife, wondering for what crime he had de- ferved to be turned out of his place. His mafter ob- ferving this, aſked him if he had no cloaths of his own to put on? he told him he had. Then go your ways, faid the Doctor, and as foon as you have thrown off your livery, and dreffed yourfelf, come back to me again. The poor fellow, though he was greatly aftonished at this proceeding, knew Swift too well to expoftulate; and therefore, with what- ever reluctance, did as he had been commanded. When he returned, the Dean ordered the other fer- vants to be called up; who immediately attended, expecting that the butler was to be difmiffed in ter- rorem, and that they fhould be warned in very fevere terins of his offence. Swift, as foon as they had ranged themſelves before him, ordered them to take notice, that Robert was no longer his fervant; he is now, 4 THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. lxxix now, faid the Dean, Mr. Blakely, the verger of St. Patrick's cathedral, a place which I give him as a reward for his fidelity. The value of this place is between thirty and forty pounds a year. However, Robert would not quit his mafter, but continued to be his butler fome years afterwards. [D. S. p. 190, 1] In this inftance the Dean exercifed his pride, his fortitude, and his equity, in a manner peculiar to himfelf; and though there are many who would equally have rewarded fuch fidelity, there are few who would have ventured to wait the flue of fo fe- vere and dangerous a probation. From this time the Dean's influence in Ireland was almoſt without bounds. He was confulted in what- ever related to domeftic policy, and, in particular, to trade. The weavers always confidered him as their patron and legiflator, after his propofal for the uſe of Irith manufactures, and came frequently in a body to receive his advice in fettling the rates of their ſtuffs, and the wages of their journeyinen; and when elections were depending for the mix of Dub lin, many corporations refufed to declare themfelves, till they knew his fentiments and inclinations. Over the populace he was the most abfolute monarch that ever governed men; and he was regarded by per- fons of every rank with veneration and efteem.* It The name of Auguftus was not beſtowed upon Octavius Cæfar with more univerfal approbation, than the name of the Drapier was bestowed upon the Dean. He had no fooner affumed his new gr men, than he became the idol of the people of Ireland, to a degree of devotion, that in the most fuperftitious country fearce any idol ever obtained. Libations to his health, or, in plain English, bum- pers, were poured forth to the Drapier, as large and as fequent as to the glorious and immortal memory of K. William III. His ef- figies were painted in every street in Dublin. Acclamations and vows for his profperity attended his footsteps where-ever he paſſed. He was confulted in all points relating to domeftic policy in general, and to the trade of Ireland in particular: but he was more imme- diately looked upon. as the legislator of the weavers, who frequently came in a body, confifting of fifty or fixty chieftains of their trade, to receive his advice, in fettling the rates of their manufactures, and the wages. of their journeymen. He received their addreffes with lefs majesty than fternefs, and ranging his fubjects in a circle round 1xxx AN ACCOUNT OF It appears by many of his writings, that he lived in great friendship and familiarity with Lord Carte- ret during his lieutenancy, notwithstanding his Lord- fhip had figned the proclamation to difcover him as the writer of the Drapier's letters. Swift indeed re- monftrated against this proceeding; and once aſked his Lordship, how he could concur in the profecu- tion of a poor honeft fellow, who had been guilty of no other crime than that of writing three or four let- ters for the inftruction of his neighbours, and the good of his country? To this question his Excellency elegantly replied, in the words of Virgil, Regni novitas me talia cogit Moliri. ·[D. S. p. 270.] He was equally diligent to recommend his friends to Lord Carteret as he had been to recommend them to Lord Oxford, and he did it with the fame dig- nity and freedom. "Pray, my Lord," faid he one day, have you the honour to be acquainted with the Grattons?" My Lord anfwcred, he had not; Why then, pray, my Lord," faid Swift, "take care to obtain it; it is of great confequence: the Grattons, my Lord, can raife ten thousand "men." [7. R. p. 95.] He obtained a living for bis friend Dr. Sheridan; and he recommended feve- ial others, of whom he knew nothing, but that they were good men. He uſed alfo to remonftrate with great freedom againſt fuch meafures as he difapproved; and Lord Carteret having gained the advantage of him in fcme difpute concerning the diftreffes of Ireland, he cried out in a violent paffion, "What the vengeance * brought you among us? Get you gone, get you gone; pray God almighty fend us our boobies "back found his parlour, fpoke as copioufly, and with as little difficulty and heſitation, to the feveral points in which they fupplicated his affiftance, as if trade had been the only fludy and employment of his life. When elections were depending for the city of Dublin, many corporations refufed to declare them felves, till they had confulted his fentiments and inclinations, which were punctually followed with equal chearfulness and fubmiffion. In this ſtate of power, and popular love and admiration, he remained till he loft his fenfes. O, let. 6, THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. lxxxi "back again." [J. R. p. 25.]; a reply which ſhewed at once the turn, the ftrength, aad the vir-- tue of his mind; as it was a fine compliment to the force of reafon, by which he had been juft foiled, and was expreffed with all the vehemence of his temper, and all the peculiarity of his wit. • He was feveral times in England, on a vifit to Mr. Pope, after his fettlement at the deanery, particu- larly in the years 1726 and 1727. There is a paffage in one of his letters to Dr: Sheri- dan, during his vifit in 1726, by which it appears, that he then had fuch an offer of a fettlement, in the midft of his friends, within twelves miles of Lon- don, as if he had been ten years younger, he would gladly have accepted: "but I am now," fays he, too old for new fchemes, and eſpecially fuch as ** would bridle me in my freedoms and liberalities.' He had alſo an invitation from Lord Bolingbroke to (pend a winter with him at his houfe on the banks of the Loire in France; and this he would have ac- cepted, but that he received an account from Ire- land, that Mrs. Johnfon was dangerously ill.. Mrs. Johnfon's conftitution was tender and deli- cate; and, as the Dean himſelf fays, he had not the ftamina vite. In the year 1724, fhe began vifi- bly to decay; and, in the year 1726, was thought to be dying, The Dean received the news with agonies not to be felt but by the tendereft and moſt ardent friendship, nor conceived but by the moſt lively imagination; and immediately hafted back into Ireland. It happened, however, that Mrs. Johnfon, cor- trary to the opinion of her phyfician, recovered a moderate fhare of health; and the Dean, probab y to complete fome defign, which in his hafte he h di left unfinished, returned again to England in 1727. From England he was once more about to fet out for France, upon Lord Bolingbroke's invitation, when news arrived of the King's death.. He had attended the late Queen, while fhe ·WOS Princefs, in his former excurfions to England;, ar di d 5: Le 湘 ​lxxxii AN ACCOUNT OF he had ſeen her twice in one week by her Royal Highness's command in this. She had always treat- ed the Dean with great civility, and the Dean had treated her with his ufual and peculiar frankneſs. The third day after the news of the late King's death, he attended at court, and kiffed the King and the Queen's hand upon their acceffion, and was blamed by his friends for deferring it fo long. What profpect he had of a change in public af- fairs on this event, or of any advantage which fuch a change might produce to himſelf or his friends, does not appear; but he was earnestly intreated to delay his journey. And when he had again deter- mined to fet out, he was, upon fome new incidents, again prevailed upon not to go, by the vehement perfuafion of fome perfons, whom, he fays, he could not difobey. Many fchemes were propofed, in which he was eagerly folicited to engage; but he receiv ed them coldly; not, as it appears, becauſe he was determined no more to enter into public life, but be- cauſe the ſchemes themfelves were fuch as he did not approve. However, in the fame letter in which he fays, that if the King had lived ten days longer, he fhould not have dated it from London, but Paris, he fays, that his fhare in the hurry of the time. would not be long, and that he fhould foon return. He was foon after feized with one of his fits of giddinefs and deafnefs; a calamity which was greatly aggravated by the news that Mrs. Johnſon was again fo ill, that the physicians defpaired of her life. Upon this occafion he relapfed into the agonies of mind which he had felt the year before. He expected by the next poft to hear that he was dead; and intreated that he might be told no particulars, but the event in general; for that, his age being then within three months of fixty, his weakneſs and his friendship would bear no more. As he defpair- ed of feeing her alive, he determined, not to return to Ireland fo foon as he had intended, but to pafs the winter either near Saliſbury-plain, or in France. That he might not be interrupted by company, and condemned THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. lxxxiii condemned to the torment of fuppreffing his forrow, to preſerve the rules of good- breeding, he quitted the houfe of Mr. Pope at Twickenham, and retired to a village near London, with a female relation for his nurfe. The next letter that he received, he kept an hour in his pocket, before he could fufficiently forti- fy himfelf against the fhock which he expected when he fhould open it. However, as Stella's life ebbed by flow degrees, and fometimes feemed at a fand, if not to flow, his hope of a parting interview re- vived, and he fet out for Ireland as foon as he was able to travel. He found her alive; but, after having languished about two months longer, the expired on the 28th of January 1727-8, in the 44th year of her age, re- gretted by the Dean with fuch excels of affection and efteem, as the keeneft fenfibility only could feel, and the most excellent character cxcite. Beauty, which alone has been the object of uni- verial admiration and defire, which alone has ele- vated the poffeffor from the lowest to the higheſt fla- tion, has given dominion to folly, and armed ca- price with the power of life and death, was in Stella only the ornament of intellectual greatnefs; and wit, which has rendered deformity lovely, and con- ferred honour upon vice, was in her only the deco- ration of fuch virtue, as without either wit or beau- ty would have compelled affection, etteem, and re-. verence. Her ftature was tall, her hair and eyes black, her complexion fair and delicate, her features regular, foft, and animated, her fhape eafy and elegant, and her manner feminine, polite, and graceful, there was a natural mufic in her voice, and a pleafing complacency in her afpect when he spoke. As to her wit, it was confeffed by all her acquaint- ance, and particularly by the Dean, that the never failed to fay the best thing that was faid whenever he was in company, though her companions were ufually perfons of the beft understanding in the kingdom. But [xxxiv AN ACCOUNT OF But this dangerous power was under the direction of ſuch ſweetnefs of temper, fuch general kindness, and reluctance to give pain, that he never indulged it at the expence of another. Neither was her wit merely of the colloquial kind. She had great force of poetical fancy, could range. her thoughts in a regular compofition, and exprefs them in correct and harmonious verfe. Of her wit in converfation fome inftances will be found under the name of Bons mots; and two fpecimens of her poetry are to be found. Her virtue was founded upon humanity, aad her religion upon reafon. Her morals were uniform, but not rigid; and her devo- tion was habitual, but not oftentatious. Why the Dean did not fooner marry this moft ex- cellent perfon; why he married her at all; why his marriage was fo cautiously concealed; and why he was never known to meet her but in the prefence of a third perfon, are inquiries which no man can an- fwer, or has attempted to anfwer, without abſurdity and are therefore unprofitable objects of fpeculation.* HIS * If any one should ask, why this renunciation of marriage- rites? I shall answer that question by asking another. Why did not Swift marry this adorable creature in or about the year 1702? was he not exactly at that æra thirty-five, juft rifing into the meridian of his abilities; and Mrs. Johnſon nineteen, in the full ſplendor of the moſt attractive beauty, furrounded with every grace, and bleſſed with every virtue, that could allure the affections and cap- tivate the foul of the moft ftubborn philoſopher? And, without diſpute, if the meanness of her birth, like an evil genius, had not ftood in the way to oppoſe her felicity, not all the Dr. Swifts upon earth could have refifted the force of her inchantments.- -As the prime intention of Mrs. Johníon's going over to Ireland was to captivate the affections of Dr. Swift, in all probability the ſecretly hoped, from time to time, to complete her conqueft. But finding upon the Queen's demife, when all the Doctor's hopes to gratify his ambition were totally at an end, that although her Patonic lover had quitted the noile and tumult of a political world, and had retired, like a fober honeft clergyman, within the pre- cincts of his deanery, he thought no more upon the ſubject of wedlock than he had done for the preceding fourteen years; her ſpirits might have become dejected, by her frequent r velving in her mind the oddneſs of her fituation. If we fuppofe this to have been h: cafe, it is not unresfonable to imagine, that Swift tho- roughly THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. lxxxv His peculiar connection with Mrs. Johnſon does indeed appear to have been fufpected, if not known, by his particular acquaintance: one of whom had the courage indirectly to blame his conduct feveral times, by fetting before him the example of a cler- gyman of diftinguifhed merit, who married nearly in the fame circunftances; but, inftead of conceal- ing his marriage, retired into thrifty lodgings till he had made a provifion for his wife, and then return- ed to the world, and became eminent for his hofpi- tality and charity. [J. R. p. 63.] The Dean, whether moved by thefe reprefenta- tions, or whether by any other motive, did at length earnestly defire, that he might be publicly owned as his wife: but as her health was then declining, and his economy become micre fevere, fhe faid it was too late; and infifted that they should continue to live as they had lived before. To this the Dean in his turn, confented; and fuffered her to difpofe entirely of her own fortune, by her own name, to a public charity when he died. [J. R. p. 56, 288.] It appears by feveral little incidents, that Stella regretted and c.fapproved the Dean's conduct, and that the ſometimes reproached him with unkindneſs ; for to fuch regret and reproach he certainly alludes in the following verfes on her birth-day, in 1726. O then, whatever heaven intends, Take pity on your pitying friends! Nor let your ills affe&t your mind, To fancy they can be unkind. Me furely me, you ought to ipare, Who gladly would your fuff'rings thare. {Vol. 6. p. 119. It ſeems indeed to be generally agreed, that Stella was deftroyed by the peculiarity of her circumftan- ces; roughly and fincerely her friend, and almoft her lover, was unable to endure the leaſt abatement in her chearfulneſs and vivacity: and therefore, to raiſe her ſpirits, and to fecure the fame of her inno- cence from all pofiibility of reproach, relolved to gratify her with the confcioufnels of being his legal wife. And this indeed, or fomewhat very like it, how ſtrange foever and chimerical it may found in the ears of the world, was certainly the reaſon that he ever married her at all. D. S. p. 93⋅ 94 95. ixxxvi AN ACCOUNT OF ces; and that the fabrick, however weak, by the delicacy of its compofition, would not have fallen fo foon, if the foundation had not been injured by the flow minings of regret and vexation. : But it is alfo generally allowed, that, in this in- ſtance, as in every other, the Dean's intention was upright, though his judgment might be erroneous; and, whatever cenfure his behaviour to Stella may draw upon him, it muſt infure him fome praife, and fecure him againſt fome calumny for it is a demon- ftration, that he was the abfolute mafter of thoſe paffions by which the greatest have been inflaved, and the beſt ſometimes corrupted; and if he could abstain from gratifying thefe paflions with a lady whom he moft admired, after the gratification was become lawful, he cannot, with any appearance of reaſon, be fuppofed to have indulged the fame paf- fon where there was lefs beauty to attract, and lefs affection to urge, where it would have been attended with guilt and infamy, where the motives were lefs and the obſtacles more. [above, p. 84.] From the death of Stella, his life became much more retired, and the austerity of his temper natu- rally increaſed. He could not join in the focial chearfulneſs of his public days, or bear fuch an in- trufion upon his own melancholy as the chearfulneſs of others. Thefe entertainments therefore were difcontinued; and he fometimes avoided the com- pany of his moft intimate friends.* But when the lenient hand of time had allayed the anguish of his mind, * Dr. Swift generally spent his time from noon till he went to bed, which was ufually about eleven o'clock, in the pleafures of converfation among a fet of companions either felect or mixed: a courfe of life in which he continued for about thirteen years after the change of times, until the deceaſe of Mrs. Johnfon in 1727-8. But when he loft that companion, whofe genius he himſelf had been improving and cultivating for at least five and twenty years, he could no longer endure thofe pleafutes and amufements which on his public days were conducted, under the eyes and direction of his beloved Stella, with the greatest elegance and decorum. And accordingly, having facrificed to her manes thefe polite and 1ati- onal entertainments, he renounced his public days, and lived du- ring the whole remainder of his life abundantly more retired, D. S. p. 181. THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. lxxxvii mind, he feems to have regretted the effects of its first violence, and to wish for the return of thofe whom his impatience had banished. In the year 1732, he complains, in a letter to Mr. Gay, that he had a large houfe, and fhould hardly find one vifitor, if he was not able to hire them with a bottle of wine. "I generally," fays he, "dine alone; and am "thankful if a friend will pafs the evening with "me." He complains alfo about the fame time, in a letter to Mr. Pope, that he was in danger of dying poor and friendless, even his female friends having forfaken him; which, as he fays, was what vexed him moft. Thefe complaints were afterwards repeated in a ſtrain of yet greater fenfibility and ſelf- "have forfaken pity. All my friends," fays he, me." เ Vertiginofus, inops, ſurdus, malè gratus amicis. Deaf, giddy, helplefs, left alone, To all my friends a burden grozn. [vol. 7. p. 155.] Yet he confeffes, that, though he was lefs patient in folitude, he was harder to be pleafed with com- pany; fo that even now perhaps his behaviour did not much invite thofe whom before it had driven away.* His complaint of being forfaken by his female friends fhews, that at this time his houfe was not a conſtant feraglio of very virtuous women, who attended him from morning till night, as my Lord Orrery has af- ferted [vol. 6. p. 4.]; and it feems to imply, that the Obfervator is alfo miftaken, when he fays, that fe- males were rarely admitted into his houfe, and never came but upon very particular invitations. The ab- fence *Thefe feveral caufes, added to the death of fome, the difper- fion of others, and the ingratitude of those who forfook the Doc- tor's acquaintance, after they had made their fortunes under the fhelter of his patronage, gave occafion to thofe melancholy, thoſe tender complaints, of that once great and admired perſon; whoſe converfation, even in his latter days, after the vigour and fprite- line's of his genius had greatly fubfided, had fome what in it ftrangely uncommon, which was not to be remarked in the reft of human-kind. D. S. p. 309. [xxxviii AN ACCOUNT OF fence of perfons whom he kept at fuch a diſtance, and fo rarely admitted, could fcarce be fuppofed to vex him moſt: nor is it easy to conceive, in what fenſe they could be faid to forfake him, who never came but upon particular invitation. However, as to the feraglio, the Obfervator affirms, in the moſt folemn manner, and from frequent intercourfe with the Dean, and long intimacy with his moft intimate friends, that Lord Orrery was grofsly misinformed, and that no fuch ever fubfifted; Mrs. Whiteway, a near relation, who came to live with him fome time after Stella's death, being the only female in his fa- mily, except fervar ts. As he lived much in folitude, he frequently ann- fed himſelf with writing; as appears by the dates of many of his pieces, which are fubfequent to this time. And it is very remarkable, that although his mind was certainly greatly depreffed, and his prin- cipal enjoyment at an end, when Mrs. Johnfon died; yet there is an air of trifling and levity in fome of the pieces which he wrote afterwards, that is not to be found in any other. Such, in particular, are his di- rections to fervants, [vol. 7.] and feveral of his letters to Dr. Sheridan. As he was undoubtedly much more tenderly and ſtrictly connected with Stella than with any other woman, fo his friendship feems to have been more intimate and unreferved with Dr. Sheridan lan with any other man; his letters to him are evidently the ipontaneous effufious of his heart, whether he was chearful or fad, and feem to imply a perfect ac- quaintance with every peculiarity of his circum- ftances.* Dr. Sheridan was a clergyman of confiderable parts and great learning. He had in particular an extenfive and critical knowledge of the language and hiftory of the ancient Greeks and Romans, which he taught with great fuccefs in a grammar-fchool of which he was mafter; and it was remarked, that his • See his letters on Stella's ficknefs, and from Sir Arthur Ache- fon's. THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. lxxxix his fcholars brought to the univerfity, not only much learning, but good morals. This gentleman was by nature fuited to Swift as a companion in the higheſt degree. He had a vein of humour that was a con- ſtant occafion of merriment; he had an abfence of mind, which rendered him a perpetual object of raillery, and an indolent good nature, which made him unapt to take offence; he was always difpoſed to be chearful, and therefore readily concurred in the entertainment of Swift's hours of pleafantry; and could, without much pain or difpleafure, give way to his petulance or his coldness, in his parox- iſms of fretfulneſs and referve: he alfo greatly con- tributed to Swift's amufement, by little fpritely pieces of the inferior kind of poetry, which he was always writing, and yet more to his employment, by hints and materials which he was every moment throwing out. With this eafy, negligent, contented creature, Swift paffed much of his time, as well during Mrs. Johnſon's life as afterwards. And though there is in general an air of fuperiority in his letters, and might be fometimes, in his behaviour, a want of that complacency which no familiarity ſhould ex- clude; yet it appears that the Dean did not hold Sheridan cheap. Sheridan he loved for his own merit, and was content to have deferved his love by the intereft of another. Stella, fays he, loved you well; and a great fhare of the little merit I "have with you, is owing to her folicitations." In the year 1733, when an attempt was made to repeal the teſt-act in Ireland, the diffenters often af- fected to call themselves brother Proteftants, and fel- low Chriftians, with the members of the eſtabliſhed church. Upon this occafion the Dean wrote a fhort copy of verfes, [vol. 7. p. 29. Jin which there is a paffage that fo provoked one Bettefworth, a lawyer, and mem- ber of the Irish parliament, that he fwore, in the hear- ing of many perfons, to revenge himſelf either by murdering or maiming the author: and, for this purpoſe, he engaged his footman with two ruffians, to fecure the Dean wherever he could be found. As XC OF AN ACCOUNT As foon as this oath and attempt of Bettefworth were known, thirty of the nobility and gentry of the liberty of St. Patrick's waited upon the Dean in formi, and prefented a paper, fubfcribed with their names, in which they folemrly engaged, in behalf of them- felves and the reſt of the liberty, to defend his per- fon and fortune, as the friend and benefactor of his country. Such was the reverence and affection with which Swift was treated in his old age; not by domeftics or dependents, whom the hope of fome future ad- vantage night induce to diffemble, but by perfons of rank and fortune, with whom he had no connec- tion, but as a benefactor to the public, and who, as they had nothing future to hope, could be prompted only by gratitude for the paft; fuch gratitude as was never yet excited but by characters very different from actual mifanthropy, or fordid felfishness. When this paper was delivered, Swift was in bed, giddy and deaf, having been fome time before feiz- ed with one of his fits; but he dictated an answer, in which there is all the dignity of habitual pre- eminence, and all the refignation of humble piety. Though he acknowledged the kindness of his friends, yet he declared his truft to be in God. He bewail- ed his incapacity to receive and thank them, as in juftice and gratitude he ought; and concluded with a fhort but pathetic prayer for their temporal and eternal happiness. Theſe fits of giddinefs and deafnefs, which were the effects of his furfeit before he was twenty years old, became more frequent and more violent in pro- portion as he grew into years. And in 1736, while he was writing a fatire on the Irish parliament, which he called The legion-club, [vol. 7. P. 45.] he was feized with one of thefe fits; the effect of which was fo dreadful, that he left the poem unfinished, and ne- ver afterwards attempted a compofition, either in verfe or profe, that required a courfe of thinking, or perhaps more than one fitting to finish. From this time his memory was perceived gradu- ally to decline, and his paffions to pervert his under- ſtanding; THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. xci ftanding; a calamity to which many particulars ſeem to have concurred. His folitude, which has been already accounted for, prevented the diverfion of his mind by conver- fation from brooding over his difappointments, and aggravating every injury that he had fuffered, by all the circumflances which ingenious refentment, if it does not find, is apt to create; a refolution which he had taken, and to which he obftinately adhered, not to wear ſpectacles, precluded the entertainment which he might otherwife have found in books; and his giddinefs, though it was a mere corporal difor- der, prevented the employment of bis mind in com- pofition. In this fituation, his thoughts feem to have been confined to the contemplation of his own mifery, which he felt to be great, and which in this world he knew to be hopeles. The fenfe of his prefent condition was neceffarily complicated with regret of the paft, and with refentment both againſt thoſe by whom he had been banished, and thoſe who had de- ferted him in his exile. A fixed attention to one ob- ject, long continued, is known to deftroy the balance of the mind; and it is not therefore ftrange, that Swift ſhould by degrees become the victim of out- rageous madneſs. That he was weary of life, appears by many paf- fages in his letters and expreffions to his friends. * In 1739, three years after his memory firft declined, he had been ſtanding with a clergyman under a very large heavy pier glafs, which, juft as they moved to another part of the room, fell down, and broke to pieces. The clergyman, ftruck with a fenfe of the danger from which they had efcaped, turned to Swift, and cried out, "What a mercy it is that we "moved for * It was, many years before the Doctor had loft his memory, a common faying of his, at the time of his parting in the evening with an intimate friend, that uſed to vifit him twice or thrice a- week, "Well; God bless you; good night to you; but I hope I "fhall never ſee you again." In this manner he would frequently express the defire he had to get rid of the world, after a day ſpent in chearfulneſs, without any provocation from anger, melancholy, or diſappointment. D. S. p. 217. xcii AN ACCOUNT OF "moved the moment we did! for if we had not, t we ſhould certainly have been killed." The Dean replied, that, as to himſelf he was forry he had changed ground, and wished the glafs had fallen upon him. D. S. p. 217. Till about the time of this accident, though his memory was become very defective, and his paflions more violent, yet his converfation was ftill fpritely and fenfible, but mingled with more fatire, and that fatire was more bitter. He alfo continued to cor- refpond by letter with his friends in England; par- ticularly Mr. Pope, with whom he had contracted an early friendship, which continued till his death. It has been faid, that towards the end of their lives it grew cold but the Dean, in a letter to Lord Or- rery, which he wrote a fhort time before his inca- pacity, fays" When you fee my dear friend Pope, tell him, I will anfwer his letter foon; I love him "above all the rest of mankind." He has also called Mr. Pope his dearest friend in his will; and Mr. Pope, in a letter which was written about the fame time, makes this requeft, "Affure him (the Dean), "the world has nothing in it I admire ſo much, no- thing the lofs of which I fhould regret ſo much, as "his GENIUS and his VIRTUES. In the beginning of the year 1741, his underſtand- ing was fo much impaired, and his paffions fo much increaſed, that he was utterly incapable of conver- fation. Strangers were not permitted to approach him, and his friends found it neceffary to have guardians appointed of his perfon and eftate. Early in the year 1742, his reafon was wholly fubverted, and his rage became abfolute madness. The laſt perſon whom he knew was Mrs. Whiteway; and the fight of her, when he knew her no more, threw him into fits of rage fo violent and dreadful, that fhe was forced to leave him; and the only act of kindneſs that remained in her power, was to call once or twice a-week at the deanry, inquire after his health, and fee that proper care was taken of him. Some- times fhe would fteal a look at him when his back was towards her, but did not dare to venture into his THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. xciii his fight. He would neither eat nor drink while the fervant who brought him his provifions ftaid in the room his meat, which was ferved up ready cut, he would fometimes fuffer to ftand an hour on the table before he would touch it, and at last he would eat it walking; for, during this deplorable ſtate of bis mind, it was his conftant cuftom to walk ten hours a-day. In October 1742, after this frenzy had continued feveral months, his left eye fwelled to the fize of an egg, and the lid appeared to be fo much inflamed and difcoloured, that the furgeon expected it to mortify; feveral large boils alfo broke out on his arms and his body. The extreme pain of this tu- mour kept him waking near a month; and, during one week, it was with difficulty that five perfons kept him, by mere force, from tearing out his own eyes. It has been obferved, that corporal pain, whether by forcing the mind from that object which has in- groffed it, or by whatever means, has restored lu- natics to the uſe of reaſon; and this effect, in a great degree, it produced upon the Dean: for just before the tumour perfectly fubfided, and the pain left him, he knew Mrs. Whiteway, took her by the hand, and ſpoke to her with his former kindneſs. That day, and the following, he knew his phyfician and furgeon, and all his family, and appeared to have fo far recovered his underſtanding and temper, that the furgeon was not without hopes he might once more enjoy fociety, and be amufed by the company of his old friends. This hope, however, was but of fhort duration; for a few days after- wards he funk into a ftate of total infenfibility, flept much, and could not, without great difficulty, be prevailed upon to walk cross the room. This was the effect of another bodily diſeaſe, his brain being loaded with water. Mr. Stevens, an ingenious cler- gyman of Dublin, pronounced this to be the cafe during his illness; and, upon opening his body, it appeared that he was not mistaken: but though he often intreated the Dean's friends and phyficians that his bead might be trepanned, and the water difcharged, x civ AN ACCOUNT OF diſcharged, no regard was paid to his opinion or his intreaty. J. R. p. 149. After the Dean had continued filent a whole year in this ſtate of helpleſs idiocy, his houfekeeper went into his room on the 30th of November, in the morn- ing, and told him that it was his birth-day, and that bonfires and illuminations were preparing to celebrate it as ufual. To this he immediately replied, It is all folly, they had better let it alone. Some other inftances of fhort intervals of fenfibi- lity and reafon, after his madneſs had ended in ſtu- por, feem to prove that his diſorder, whatever it was, had not destroyed, but only fufpended the pow- ers of his mind. He was fometimes vifited by Mr. Deane Swift, a relation; and about Chriſtmas 1743, he feemed de- firous to ſpeak to him. Mr. Swift then told him he came to dine with him ; and Mrs. Ridgeway, the houſekeeper, immediately faid, Won't you give Mr. Swift a glass of wine, Sir? To this he made no an- fwer, but fhewed that he undertood the question, by fhrugging up his fhoulders, as he had been uſed to do when he had a mind a friend ſhould ſpend the evening with him; and which was as much as to fay, You will ruin me in line. Soon after he again endeavoured, with a good deal of pain, to find words: but at last, after many efforts, not being able, he fetched a deep figh, and was afterwards filent. A few months afterwards, upon his houfe- keeper's removing a knife as he was going to catch at it, he ſhrugged up his fhoulders, and faid, "I am what I am, I am what I am; " and in about fix minutes repeated the fame words two or three times. k ; In the year 1744, he now and then called his fer- vant by his name and once attempting to ſpeak to him, but not being able to exprefs his meaning, he fhewed figns of much uneafinefs, and at laft faid, "I am a fool." Once, afterwards, as his fervant was taking away his watch, he ſaid, Bring it here; and when the fame fervant was breaking a large hard THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. XCV hard coal, he faid, "That is a ſtone, you block- "head." From this time he was perfectly filent till the lat- ter end of October 1745; and then died, without the least pang or convulfion, in the 78th year of his age. By his will, which is dated in May 1740, juſt be- fore he ceaſed to be a reaſonable being, he left about 12001. in fpecific legacies, and the rest of his for- tune, which amounted to about 11,000l. to erect and endow an hofpital for idiots and lunatics. He was buried in the great ifle of St. Patrick's ca- thedral, under a ftone of black marble, infcribed with an epitaph in Latin, written by himſelf. From this narrative of his life, and from his works, to which it is prefixed, the ftriking peculiarities of his character may eaſily be collected; but there are fome incidents which relate to his converfation, and fome which refpect his perfon and private economy, which should by no means be omitted. In company he neither wrapped himſelf up in his own importance, without deigning to communicate. his knowledge, or exert his wit; nor did he ingrofs the converfation by perpetual and overbearing lo- quacity. His rule was, never to fpeak more than a minute at a time, and then to wait at leaft as long for others to take up the converfation; after which he had a right to ſpeak again. His colloquial ftyle, like that of his writings, was clear, forcible, and concife. [D. S. p. 366. J. R. p. 203.] He greatly excelled in punning; a talent which, he faid, no man affected to defpife, but thoſe that were without it; and his converfation would have furniſhed a more excellent compendium of this fpecies of wit, than was ever yet compiled, or perhaps ever will. Some of thefe fallies of his imagination are fill re- membered; and among others the following; which may ſerve for examples. He happened to be at the caftle, in the lieutenancy of the Earl of Pembroke, when a learned phyfician was haranguing his Excellency upon the nature and qualities of bees, which he was perpetually calling a nation xcvi OF AN ACCOUNT a nation and commonwealth : Yes, my Lord," fays Swift," they are a nation, and of great anti- "quity; you know, my Lord, Mofes takes notice "of them; he numbers the Hivites among the na- tions which Joshua was appointed to conquer." He was another time in company with a lady, whofe long train happened to fweep down a fine fid- dle, and break it; upon which he immediately cried out, Mantua væ miferæ nimium vicina Cremona. But his converfation abounded with turns of wit of a higher kind. Being one day at a ſheriff's feaft, who, after feveral other toafts had been drank, called out to him," Mr. Dean, The Trade of Ireland :" the Dean turned about, and immediately anfwered, Sir, I drink no memories.” * [J. R. p. 214.] 66 He greatly admired the talents of the late Duke of Wharton, and hearing him, one day, recount many of his frolics, Ay, my Lord," ſaid he, "you have had many frolics: but let me recommend one more to you, take a frolic to be virtuous. I af- "fure you it will do you more honour than all the "reft." [J. R. [J. R. p. 216.] The Dean alfo greatly excelled in telling a ſtory: and though in the latter part of his life he was very apt to tell his ftories too often, yet his wit, as well as his virtue, was always fuperior to the wretched expedients of thoſe defpicable babblers, who are per- petually attempting to put off double entendre and profaneneſs for humour and wit. His converſation was in the highest degree chafte, and wholly free from the leaſt tincture of irreligion. [J. R. p. 218.] As he was zealous to preferve all the delicacies of converfation, he was always beſt pleaſed when ſome of the company were ladies. And in a letter to Lord Oxford, he fays, "Since women have been left out "of all meetings, except parties at play, or where "worfe * Dr. Brown, Bishop of Cork, had just then printed two pam- phlets, and preached feveral fermons, in which drinking to memo- ries was zealouЛfly condemned. Hawkf. THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. cxvii "worſe deſigns are carried on, our converfation has very much degenerated." + And in this inſtance his example is a reproof to thofe pedants, who fup- poſe that women are never in their proper fphere, but in the dreffing-room or the nurſery. If the converfation turned upon ferious fubjects, he was neither petulant in the debate, nor negligent of the iffue. He would liften with great attention to the arguments of others; and whether he was or was not engaged as a difputant himfelf, he would recapitulate what had been ſaid, ſtate the queſtion with great clearness and precifion, point out the con- troverted particular, and appeal to the opinion ei- ther of fome neutral perfon, or of the majority. [D. S. p. 363.] It is, however, true, that he kept his friends in fome degree of awe and ; yet he was more open to admonition than flattery, if it was offered without arrogance, and by perfons of whofe ability and ho- nefty he had no doubt. [J. R. p. 19.] In his poem of Baucis and Philemon [vol. 6. p. 42.], which does not confift of quite two hundred verſes, Mr. Addiſon made him blot cut fourícore, add fourfcore, and alter four- fcore. It was cuftomary with his friends to make him fome little annual prefent on his birth-day; fomething, according to his own definition of a pre- fent, which was of no great value, but which could not be bought: and Dr. Delany, foon after he was admitted to fome degree of intimacy, fent him, with fuch a memorial of his efteem, fome verfes, in which he upbraids him, though with great delicacy, for mifapplying his talents; and admonishes him to turn the force of ridicule, of which he was fo great a maſter, upon thoſe who had laboured to employ it against the facred doctrines of Chriftianity. The Dean, as he had fuffered Addifon's correction with approbation, received this admonition with kind- nefs: he fighed, and faid, with great appearances of regret, that it was too late and from that day VOL. I. e ; took + Propofal for correcting the Engliſh tongue, in vol. 4. p. 366. xcviii OF AN ACCOUNT A took all cccafions to diftinguish Delany by the name of friend. He had indeed no fkill in mufic, and fo was not able to entertain his company with a fong, to which fome men of great dignity, and great parts, have condefcended; but his power of ridicule extended even to muſic, of which he gave an inſtance too fin- gular to be forgotten. 46 Dr. Pratt, who was then provoft of Dublin col- lege, had acquired much of the Italian tafte for mufic in his travels; and Tom Roffengrave, a cele- brated performer, being juft returned from Italy, played a voluntary at St. Patrick's cathedral, where Dr. Pratt heard him, and Swift was alfo prefent. The Doctor happened to dine at the deanery the fame day, and was fo extravagant in his encomiums on Roffengrave's voluntary, that feveral of the com- pany faid they wished they had heard it. "Do you ?" faid Swift ; "then you fhall hear it ftill;' and immediately he fung out fo lively, and yet fo ridiculous an imitation of it, that all the company were kept in continual laughter till it was over, ex- cept one old gentleman, who fat with great compo- fure; and though he liftened, yet fhewed neither curiofity nor approbation. After the entertainment, he was afked by fome of the company, How it hap- pened that he had been no more affected by the mu- fic? To which he anſwered with great gravity, That he had heard Mr. Roffengrave himfelf play it before. Such was Swift as a companion. As a mafter he was not lefs remarkable or meritorious. As he expected punctual, ready and implicit obe- dience, he always tried his fervants when he hired them by fome teft of their humility. Among other queftions, he always afked whether they understood cleaning fhoes; becaufe, faid he, my kitchen-wench bas a cullion that does her drudgery, and one part of the bufinefs of my groom and footman is conftantly to clean her fhoes by turns. If they fcrupled this, the treaty was at an end; if not, he gave them a farther bearing His THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. xcix His kitchen-wench, however, was his cook, a woman of a large fize, robuft conftitution, and coarſe features, whofe face was very much feamed with the fmall-pox, and furrowed by age. This woman he always diftinguished by the name of Sweetheart. [vol. 6. p. 191.] ; upon It happened one day, that Sweetheart greatly over-roafted the only joint he had for dinner which he fent for her up, and with great coolness and gravity, "Sweetheart," fays he, "take this "down into the kitchen, and do it lefs." She re- plied, that was impoffible. Pray then," faid he, if you had roafted it too little, could you have "done it more ?" Yes, fhe faid,. fhe could eaſily "have done that." << Why then, Sweetheart," re- plied the Dean, "let me adviſe you, if you muſt com- mit a fault, commit a fault that can be mended.” To the rest of his fervants indeed he appeared to be churlish and auftere; but in reality was one of the best mafters in the world. He allowed them board-wages at the highest rate then known; and if he employed them about any thing out of the or- dinary courfe of their fervice, he always paid them to the full value of the work as he would have paid another. With theſe emoluments, and the frag- ments from his table, he expected they fhould find themſelves in victuals, and all other neceffaries, ex- cept the liveries which he gave them. If, in this fituation, their expences were greater than their in- come, it was judged a fufficient reafon to diſcharge them ; but, on the contrary, as foon as they had faved a full year's wages, he conftantly paid them legal intereft for it, and took great pleature in feeing it accumulated to a fum which might fettle them in fome employment if he fhould die, or if they found it adviſable to quit his fervice, which feldom hap- pened. And he, with whom his fervants live long, has indubitable witneffes that he is a good mafter. It is alfo certain, that, notwithstanding the appa- rent aufterity of his temper, he did not confider his fervants as poor flaves, to whofe fervice he had a right, in confidèration merely of his money, and - owed them no reciprocal obligation. e 2 Hc C OF AN ACCOUNT He had a fervant whom he ufed to call Saunders, that lived long with him, and at length fell fick and died. In his fickneſs, which lafted many months, Swift took care that all poffible relief and affiftance fhould be afforded him; and when he died, he bu- ried him in the fouth ifle of his cathedral, and erect- ed a fall piece of Statuary to his memory, with this infcription: Here lieth the body of Alexander Magee, fervant to Doctor Swift, Dean of St. Patrick's. His grateful mafter caused this monument to be erected in memory of his difcretion, fidelity, and diligence, in that bumble flation. Ob. Mar. 24, 1721, ætat. 29. In the original copy, which the author of the Ob · fervations faw in the Dean's own hand, the expreffion was ftill ftronger, and more to the Dean's honour, thus : His grateful friend and maſter. But a perſon of the Dean's acquaintance, who is much more diftinguiſhed for vanity than wiſdom, pre- vailed upon him to leave out friend, even in oppofi- tion to his own well-known maxim, That a faithful fervant should always be confidered, not as a poor ſlave, but an humble friend. Of this perfon the name is not told; but to conceal it, is rather injuftice than mercy; for he ought, on this occafion, to inherit a difgrace at leaft proportionate to the honour which he found means to withhold from Swift. As a member of civil fociety, he was a zealous advocate for liberty, the detector of fraud, and the fcourge of oppreffion. In his private capacity he was not only charitable, but generous; and what- ever mifanthropy may be found in his writings, there does not appear to have been any in his life. His writings in defence of the poor infatuated pec- ple of Ireland are well known, and that he might nol THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. ci not be wanting himſelf while he pleaded their caufe with others, he constantly lent cut a large fum of money in fmall portions to honeft, diligent, and ne- ceffitous tradefmen, who paid it with a fmall gratui- ty by way of intereft to the perfon who kept the ac- count of the difburſements and weekly payments; for he received back theſe loans by a certain fum cut of the weekly profit of the borrower's trade, in ſuch proportions that the whole ſhould be repaid in a year. [J. R. p. 203. 4.] Befides this he frequently gave away 5 and ol when proper objects offered, without any parade. He was indeed diligent to relieve the poor, and at the fame time to encourage induftry, even in the loweft ftation; and ufed regularly to vifit a great number of poor, chiefly women, as well in the pub- lic ſtreets, as in the by-alleys ; and under the arches of Dublin. Some of thefe fold plums, fome hobnails, others tape, and others ginger-bread; fome knitted, fonic darned ftockings, and others. cobbled fhoes: thefe women were most of them old, deformed, or crippled, and fome were all three. He faluted them with great kindness, afked how they throve, and what ftock they had? if the ware of any of them was fuch as he could poffibly uſe, or pretend to uſe, he bought fome, and paid for every halfpenny worth fix pence; if not, he always add- ed fomething to their ftock, and ſtrictly charged them to be induftrious and honeft. [J. R. p. 132 133.] It muſt be confeffed, that theſe acts of bounty did not appear to be the effects of compaflion: for of the foft fympathy with diftrefs that fometimes fparkles in the eye, and femetimes glows upon the cheek, he thewed no fign; and he may therefore be fuppofed to have wanted it. However, it is certain, that he was wholly free from ill-nature; for a man can have no complacence in that evil which he is continually bufy to remove. His bounty had not indeed the indifcriminating ar- dour of blind inſtinct; and, if it had, it would not have been cii AN ACCOUNT OF been the inftrument of equal happinefs. To feed idleness, is to propagate mifery, and difcourage vir- tue but to infure the reward of induftry, is to be- ſtow a benefit at once upon the individual and the public; it is to preferve from defpair thofe who truggle with difficulty and difappointment; it is to fupply food and reft to that labour which alone can make food tasteful and reſt ſweet, and to invigorate the community by the full uſe of thoſe members, which would otherwife become not only uſeleſs, but hurtful; as a limb in which the vital fluid ceafes to circulate, will not only wither, but corrupt. In this view, then, the bounty of Swift was, like every o- ther Chriſtian duty, a reaſonable ſervice. And that he felt no fecret pleaſure in the calamities of others may be fairly concluded, not only from this general practice, but from many particularly facts, in which he appears to have been watchful and zealous to al- leviate diftrefs by unfolicited and unexpected li- berality. It happened, that a young gentleman of his choir, being abroad with his gun, fuffered irreparable hurt by its going off accidentally. When the Dean heard of it, he expreffed great concern; and, having pauf- ed a little, Well," faid he, this will be a good "time at once to reward merit and alleviate dif- "trefs; I will make him a vicar:" which he did accordingly the fame hour. ( There are fome infirmities to which the mind as well as the body naturally becomes fubject in the decline of life. The defire of accumulating wealth almoſt always increaſes in proportion as it becomes inore abfurd; and thofe are moft tenacious of money to whom money can be of leaft ufe. It has been generally faid, that this weakness is the effect of long acquaintance with mankind, who are found to deferve less confidence and lefs kindneſs as they are more known. And indeed, though this opinion fhould not haftily be admitted, it must yet he confeffed, that the first article in which men leffen their ex- pences, is generally the money they have been uſed to THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. ciii to give away, and that they gradually lose the in- clination to do good as they acquire the power. But Swift, if he was not exempt from the infirmity, was yet clear of the vice. If his œconomy degenerated into avarice, it must be confeffed that his avarice did not contract his bounty; and he fuffers no degrada- tion in his moral character, who, when the practice of any virtue is become more difficult, is yet able to exert it in the fame degree. Swift turned all the vil of exceffive frugality upon himfelf. It induced him to walk when he had been uſed to ride; and he would then fay he had earned a fhilling or eighteen pence, which he had a right to do what he pleafed with, and which he conftantly applied to his ufual charities; which by this expe- dient he could continue, and yet expend lets upon the whole than before. But the diftribution of this charity even was marked with the peculiarity of his character; for that he might proportion his bounty to the neceflities and the merit of various objects, and yet give but one piece of money at a time, be conftantly kept a pocket full of all forts of coin, from a filver three-pence to a crown-piece. [J. R. P. 13.] But as his defire of immediate gain was not grati- fied at the expence of the poor, to whofe diftrefs he was a witnefs, neither was it gratified at the ex- pence of thofe whom it was impoffible he should know, though he had many opportunities of doing it. He once refolved never to renew a certain leaſe be- longing to the deanery, without raifing the rent 30l. a year. The tenant had often folicited him, inftead of raising the rent, to take a larger fine: and this man, a very fhort time before the dean loft his memory, urged him with a very large fum, fup- pofing, that as raifing the rent could only enrich the Dean's fucceffor, and a large fine would come into his own coffer, he should certainly fucceed. The Dean however maintained his integrity, refuſed the offer with indignation, and fulfilled his purpofe of raifing civ AN ACCOUNT OF raifing the rent; though at this time his memory was to bad, that the next day he did not remember what he had done, and his love of and his love of money fo predo- minant over every thing but his virtue, that, though he complained of being deferted, yet he banished his best friends, merely to fave the expence of en- tertaining them; and would fometimes refufe them a fingle bottle of wine. J. R. p. 208. 145.] As an ecclefiaftic, he was fcrupulously exact in the exercife of his function, as well with regard to fpi- ritual as temporal things.* As to his cathedral, he expended more money to fupport and adorn it, than had been applied to the fame ufe in any period fince it was first built f. He was extremely exact and con- fcientious * Great coolness of temper, gentlencfs of deportment, and a profound respect to his fuperiors in the church, were the diftin- Eufhing characteriſtics of Dr. Swift. The following ſtory may not Le improper here. Bp. ***, who had been lately tranflated from Bangor to the fee of Meath, had not only the misfortune, in the violent days of party, to reflect with fome degree of afperity on the Reverend Mr. one of his own clergy; but also to recom- mend unto his whole diocefe the wearing of numms, or fcraps of linen to cover dirty fhirts. This behaviour in the Bishop, and ef- pecially this recommendation of numms, fired the indignation of Swift to the uttermoft. He fell upon the Bishop, when he got him into the fynod, with outrageous ſeverity; and after he had fpoken in defence of Mr. ***, "What," faid he, "do you think you have gotten among your Welch clergy? I would have you to know,!" faid he, ftripping up his caffock from his arms, and tearing open the breaft of his waiſtcoat, "that you have gotten in- to a dioceſe of gentlemen, who "abhor dirt, and filth, and naſti- nefs. And thus he drove on, lafhing the Bishop, and making him feel his farcafms. Two gentlemen lay concealed in the church of Trim during the time of the fynod, not without the conni- vance of Dr. Swift, who had in a great meaſure invited them to the feaft. D. S. p. 272, 3. In all buſineſs relating to his chapter, he purfued their public intereft with firmness and conftancy. He befides took as much care to regulate his choir, as if he himself had really fome regard for mufic. But in this he was always guided by the opinion of thofe who were ſuppoſed to have been judges of harmony. And that his choir might do their duty, particularly on Sunday nights, when variety of the better fort ufually came to hear the anthem, he con- ftantly went to the church himfelf. This puts me in mind of an anecdote which happened in thofe times. An idle, careleſs fel- low, but an excellent finger, and one of the best performers be- longing THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. cr fcientious in promoting the members of his choir ac- cording to their merit, and never advanced any per- fon to a vicarage who was not qualified in all refpects and in the highest degree, whatever their intereft, or however recommended; and he once refuſed a vi- carage to a perfon for whom the Lady Carteret was very importunate; though he declared to her Lady- fhip, that if it had been in his power to have made the gentleman a Dean or a Bishop, he would have obliged her willingly; becaufe, he faid, deaneries and bishopricks were preferments in which meric had no concern, though the merit of a vicar would be brought to the teft every day. Nor would he fuf- fer one fhilling of the cathedral-money to be aliena - ed from its proper ufe, even for the purpofe of cha- nity. When any perfon folicited fuch an alienation, he uſed to tell them that this money was appropriat- ed; but, fays he, as you declare the perfon to be relieved is an object of Chriftian charity, I will give out of my private purfe any fum proportioned to my revenue, if you will contribute a fum in the fame proportion to yours. My deanery is worth feven hundred pounds, your income is two if you will give two fhillings, I will give feven, or any larger fum after the fame rate. [7. R. p. 192.] : As to the poor in the liberty of his own cathedral, they were better regulated than any other in the kingdom; they were all badged, and were never found begging out of their diftrict: for thefe he built and furniſhed a little alms-houfe, being affifted by fome voluntary contributions; and preferved a- mong them uncommon cleanlinefs and decency, by conftantly vifiting them in perfon. [J. R. p. 8.] e s It longing to his cathedral, having laboured for fome time under the higheſt diſpleaſure of the Dean, was fored to abſent himſelf from the church, and keep entirely out of his fight. But at last, one Sunday evening having ventured into the finging loft, full in the view of the Dean, he began that particular anthem, Whitler ſhall I go, whither fall I go, whither fall I fly, frem thy prefence? "To jail, you dog you, to jail,” ſaid the Doctor, in a voice loud enough to be heard by many that were about him. But the next morning he forgave the poor finner, on his promife of arcndment P. S. #.37 1. cvi AN ACCOUNT OF It has already been remarked, that though he did not himſelf underſtand muſic, yet he always attend- ed at the performance of the anthem, that the choir. might do their duty. But he had another practice yet more fingular and more uſeful. As foon as the preacher mounted the pulpit, he pulled out a pencil and piece of paper, and carefully noted whatever was wrong, both in the expreffions, and the manner in which they were delivered, whether they were too fcholaftic to be generally understood, or fo coarfe and vulgar as to lofe their dignity; and he never failed to make thefe the fubject of an admonition to the preacher as foon as he came into the chapter- houſe. [See letter to a young clergyman, in vol. 7. p. 171.] He improved even his living of Laracor, though he continued there but a fhort time, and left both the houſe and glebe a convenient and agreeable re- treat to his fucceffor at a confiderable expence, for which he knew no return would be made to his exe- cutcts; and he determined to affert his right of ab- fence againſt the Archbishop of Dublin, at the ex- pence of feveral hundred pounds, at a time when he did not believe he ſhould ever more claim the privilege for himſelf, becauſe he would not endan- ger the liberty of his fucceffor by an injurious prece- dent. There is no act of virtue which men have fo often ſubſtituted for the peculiar pofitive duties of Chrifti- ans as liberality to the poor, nor any by which they have ſo often hoped to atone for the breach of every other moral obligation. But the Dean, though he abounded in charity, was not lefs diligent in the practice of other virtues, or lefs devout and conftant in the folemnities of reli- gion. He was remarkably temperate both in eating and drinking; he was not only juft, but punctual in his dealings, and he had an inviolable regard for truth. As he conftantly attended divine worship when he was at home, fo he uſed always to go early to church when he was in Londo and never to n; Aleep, THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. cvii leep, without affembling his family in his own chamber to prayers. It has often been remarked, that virtue in excefs becomes vitious; and not only precludes the reward of the poffeffor, but produces rather mifchief than good to others. An abhorrence of hypocrify was a ftriking particular in Swift's character: but it is di- ficult to determine whether it was more a virtue than a vice; for it brought upon him the charge of irre- ligion, and encouraged others to be irreligious. In proportion as he abhorred hypocrify, he dreaded the imputation of it, and therefore concealed his picty with as much diligence as others conceal thofe vices which cuſtom has not made reputable. His conſtant altendance at curch, when he was at the deanery, he knew would be confidered as the duty of his fta- tion; but whatever had the appearance of voluntary devotion, he always took care to hide. When he went to church in London, it was early in the morn- ing; fo that, though he was conftantly at prayers, and at the facrament, yet he appeared to neglect both, as he was at home when others were at church, And when he went to prayers in his family, the fer- vants affembled at the appointed hour as it were by tealth, without any notice from a bell, or any other call, except the ftriking of the clock; fo that Dr. Delany was fix months in his family before he fuf- pected him of this unfafhionable practice. The fame principle upon which he thus ftudiouſly avoided the appearances of good, made him frequently incur the appearances of evil, efpecially when an opportunity of- fered of indulging his peculiar vein of humour, and gratifying his natural difpofition. One inftance of this has already been given, in his folemn addrefs to his clerk from the defk by the name of Roger, [above p. xxxv;] but there are others which are lefs excu- fable. Soon after he was made Dean of St. Patrick's, he had dined one Sunday with Dr. Raymond, vicar of Trim, a little town near Dublin. When the bell had rung, the people were affembled to even ng prayers; and Dr. Raymond was preparing to go to the church, which was not diftant more than two Lundred cviii AN ACCOUNT OF " hundred yards: "Raymond," faid the Dean, "I "will lay you a crown that I begin prayers before you this afternoon:" Dr. Raymond accepted the wager; and immediately both ran as fast as they could towards the church. Raymond, who was much nimbler than Swift, arrived firft at the door: and when he entered the church, walked decently towards the reading-defk. Swift never flackened his pace, but, running up the ifle, left Dr. Raymond be- hind him in the middle of it, and ſtepping into the deſk, without puting on a furplice, or opening the prayer-book, began the fervice in an audible voice, and thus won his wager. [O. let. 16.]. H It has been common among the pretenders to wit, to affect great contempt for every kind of regularity; to live, or pretend to live, in a ftate of continual diffipation, without regard to the return of thoſe feafons which have been generally allotted to parti- cular purpoſes, without fleeping or waking, or eat- ing or drinking, like the reft of mankind. To reco- ver thefe unhappy wretches from a condition ſo de- plorable as to fupprefs indignation, and yet fo con- temptible as fcarce to excite pity, it is here record- ed, that the life of Swift was in the highest degree uniform and regular; his hours of walking and reading, of exerciſe and amuſement, never varied and that he might keep the revolution of his em- ployment's with greater exactnefs, his watch was al- moft conftantly either in his hand, or on the table before him. ; As his abhorrence of hypocrify exempted him from affectation, the natural equity of his mind fecured him against envy. Envy feems to be a defire of equality, gratified by degrading others; as emula- tion is a defire of equality, gratified by advancing ourfelves. It does not appear that Swift, upon a fuppofition that he had no fuperior, was without emulation; but by his ready affiftance to advance the reputation and circunftances of others, he ap- pears to have been free from envy. He cultivated genius where-ever he found it, and in whatever degree, with great zeal and affiduity, and THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. cix and would carefully ſpend much time in correcting and improving any literary compofition that had the leaft appearance of ingenuity. Nor was this kind- nefs confined to thoſe whofe parts could never come in competition with his own. He started many hints to Mr. Gay, which he purfued with great fuccefs; and he recommended Congreve, Addifon, Parnel, and many others, to thofe whofe favour was moſt likely to render them confpicuous. Among his fingularities, were his refolution never to wear ſpectacles; and his obftinate prefeverance in the uſe of too much exercife. His want of spec- tacles made it difficult to read, and his immoderate exerciſe waſted his flesh, and produced a poornefs in his blood, as he was often told by his friends and phyficians. Dr. Helfham and Dr. Grattan, and as afterwards appeared by experiment; for when he was reduced to a ftate of idiotifm, and ceafed from walking, he recovered his flesh in a fhort time. He was cleanly even to fuperftition; his nails were always pared to the quick, to prevent the leaft gathering of dirt under them; and he never dreffed without a bafon of water by him, with which he carefully cleanfed his feet. In his perfon he was ro- buſt and maſculine, his deportment was command- ing, and his walk erect. His voice was fharp and high-toned, especially when he read prayers, but not effeminate; and there was a natural feverity in his afpect, which even his fmiles could ſcarce foften, nor his utmoſt gaiety relax. [O. let. 9.] His manner was without ceremony, but not ruf- tic; for he had a perfect knowledge of all the modes and variations of politenefs and complaifance, which he practifed in a manner peculiar to himfelf; and the respect that was due to him by thefe rules, he took care to exact without the leaft abatement. [D. S. p. 360, 65.] It will readily be admitted, that every man has fome appetite, affection, or difpofition, which ei- ther in kind or in degree is irregular, and which it is the province of reafon to order and reftrain. As it will CX AN ACCOUNT OF will always happen, that in fome inftances paflion will predominate, and reafon in others, it follows, that there muſt be fome diffimilitude in every cha- racter; from which Swift's could not therefore be exempt but, upon the whole, it will be found un- commonly ſteady and uniform; though fome, to fcreen their own fcattered and inconfiftent reprefenta- tions of it from cenfure, have pretended, that it was capricious, various, and contradictory. Swift appears to have been naturally temperate and chaſte, it was therefore eafy for him to be fru- gal; but he was alfo naturally high-fpirited: and therefore, as wealth is the pledge of independence, it is not ftrange his frugality fhould verge towards excefs. However, as he acted upon principles, not only of general virtue, but of the nobleft mora! fyftem of Christianity, he did not deliver himfelf up to natural propenfities, when they were contrary to his duty; and therefore his love of money did not contract his charity to the poor, or defraud his fuc- ceffors to enrich bimfelf. The fame fpirit which fe- cured his integrity, by difdaining the meanness of a lie, produced that dread of hypocrify which con- cealed his piety, and betrayed him into appearances of evil and the fame want of natural tendernefs, which made him appear obdurate and auftere, rranf- ferred the diftribution of his liberality from inftinct to religion, and made that, which in others is an ex- ercife of felf love, in him an act of obedience to God. : Such was Dr. Jonathan Swift, whofe writings ei- ther ftimulate mankind to fuftain their dignity as ra- tional and moral beings, by fhewing how low they ftand in mere animal nature; or fright them from indecency, by holding up its picture before them in its native deformity: and whofe life, with all the advantages of genius and learning, was a fcale of infelicity gradually afcending, till pain and anguiſh destroyed the faculties by which they were felt : while he was viewed at a distance with envy, he became a burthen to himſelf; he was forfaken by his friends, THE LIFE OF DR. SWIFT. cxi friends, and his memory has been loaded with un- merited reproach: his life therefore does not afford lefs inftruction than his writings, fince to the wife it may teach humility, and to the fimple content. Some particulars in Dr. SWIFT'S CHARAC- TER, extracted from Lord ORRERY'S Remarks, and Mr. SWIFT's Eſſay. D From LORD ORRER Y. R. Swift was in the decline of life when I knew him. His friendship was an honour to ne; and, to fay the truth, I have even drawn ad- vantage from his errors. I have beheld him in all humours and difpofitions; and I have formed vari- ous fpeculations from the feveral weakneſſes to which I obferved him liable. His capacity and trength of mind were undoubtedly equal to any taſk whatever. His pride, his fpirit, or his ambi- tion, call it by what name you pleafe, was bound- lefs: but his views were checked in his younger years, and the anxiety of that difappointment had a visible effect upon all his actions. He was four and fevere, but not abfolutely ill-natured. He was fo- ciable only to particular friends, and to them only at particular hours. He knew politenefs more than he practifed it. He was a mixture of avarice and generofity: the former was frequently prevalent; the latter feldom appeared, unless excited by com- paſſion. He was open to adulation; and could not or would not diftinguish between low flattery and juſt applauſe. His abilities rendered him fuperior to envy. He was undifguifed, and perfectly fincere. I am induced to think, that he entered into orders, more from fome private and fixed refolution, than from abfolute choice. Be that as it may, he per- formed the duties of the church with great pun&tua- lity, and a decent degree of devotion. He read prayers rather in a strong nervous voice, than in a graceful manner and although he has been often accuſed of irreligion, nothing of that kind appeared in cxii CHARACTERS OF DR. SWIFT. in his converfation or behaviour. His caſt of mind induced him to think and ſpeak more of politics than of religion. His perpetual views were directed to- wards power; and his chief aim was to be removed into England but when he found himſelf entirely difappointed, he turned his thoughts to oppofition, and became the patron of Ireland. : Few characters have afforded fo great a variety of faults and beauties. Few men have been more known and admired, or more envied and cenſured, than Dr. Swift. From the gifts of nature he had great powers, and from the imperfection of huma- nity he had many failings. I always confidered him as an abftract and brief chronicle of the times; no man being better acquainted with human nature, both in the highest and in the loweft fcenes of life. His friends and correfpondents were the greatest and most eminent men of the age. The fages of antiquity were often the companions of his clofet: and al- though he induftrionfly avoided an oftentation of learning, and gencrally chofe to draw his materials from his own flore; yet his knowledge in the an- cient authors evidently appears from the ftrength of his fentiments, and the claffic correctnefs of his ftyle. His attendance upon the public ſervice of the church was regular and uninterrupted. And indeed. regularity was peculiar to him in all his actions, even in the greatest trifles. His hours of walking and reading never varied. His motions were guided by his watch, which was fo conftantly held in his hand, or placed before him upon his table, that he feldom deviated many minutes, in the daily revolution of his exercifes and employments. From Mr. DEANE SWIFT. The character of Dr. Swift is fo exceedingly ftrange, various, and perplexed, that it can never be drawn up with any degree of accuracy. I fhall, however, remark fome few particulars, without ven- turing to attempt the delineation of a character, which CHARACTERS OF DR. SWIFT. cxiii which hath entirely baffled all endeavours hitherto made, either by friends or enemies. Swift's natural temper feems to have been a mira- culous compound of the placid and the fevere. The placid frequently had the fuperiority in his breaft ; and the fevere in its turn, when excited by the fol- lies and corruptions of human kind, as frequently, the predominance. He was by nature of a fpirit wonderfully exalted. His pride, if pride it must be called, was of a turn peculiar to himself. His whole deportment was of a piece. He would not have ftooped to converfe with the greatest monarch in Europe, upon any terms lower than equality. He knew to a point the refpect that was due to him which he took care to exact without any fort of abatements. It will appear from the following inftance, with what quicknefs he refented any fai- lure in good manners. An English clergyman, ap- pointed a Bishop in Ireland, fent his fervant one morning to the Dean, to beg the favour of him to order St. Patrick's cathedral to be got ready againft the next Sunday for his confecration. The Doctor would by no means grant his requeft; but faid, he would order the church to be in readineſs againſt the Sunday following. When the fervant was gone, the Doctor told a friend, then with him, that he could as well have had the church ready againſt the next, as against the following Sunday: but, faid he, my reafon for refufing to grant that gentleman's request was, becauſe he ought to have come him- ſelf, and not ſent his fervant to me upon fuch a meffage. Neither could he endure to be treated with any fort of familiarity, or that any man living (his three or four old acquaintances in England only excepted) thould rank himſelf in the number of his friends. A young perfon of quality, upon fome occafion or other, once ventured to addrefs Dr. Swift in the ftyle of Dear Swift, and call himſelf the Doctor's friend. When the Dean opened his letter which was de- figned as a compliment, his indignation took inftant fire. cxiv CHARACTERS OF DR. SWIFT. pa- fire. Dear Swift! faid he; what monftrous famili arity is here! But when he found the letter writer had called himſelf his friend, he was out of all tience. "My friend! my friend!" ſaid he; "pifh, "pha; my friend! But-" (faid he, recollecting himſelf)—“ he is a Lord, and fo let it pafs." Swift's fpirit was formed with a strong reluctance to fubmiſſion of any kind, and particularly he paid no regard to the monitions of his friends and phyfi- cians, who had frequently admonished him of his over-exercife. This was not owing to his being weary of life. It was from an old fettled principle, confirmed and rivetted in his mind, when he was in the height of his glory, and the meridian of his life: A principle indeed, which he maintains, or at leaſt endeavours to maintain, with infinite wit and hu- mour, in a letter to Mrs. Johnfon, Nov. 3, 1711, who had adviſed him to take phyfic upon the fall of the leaf."A "A fig," (faith he) "Madam, for your phyfic. If I grow worfe, I will; otherwife I will "trust to temperance and exercife. Your fall of a "leaf? What care I when the leaves fall? I am forry to fee them fall with all my heart; but why fhould I take phyfic becaufe leaves fall off from trees? That won't hinder them from falling. If a man falls off a horſe, muft I take phyfic for that? This arguing makes you mad; but it is true right. reaſon, not to be difputed." He was not only above all tincture of envy in his compofition; but his talents were fo great, that he was totally fuperior to the emulation of all inferior wits. They every one of them bowed down to him as to the viceroy of Apollo. The dæmon of malice was alfo a ſtranger to his heart and well it might; for if at any time he was attacked with injurious treatment, he never fmo- thered his revenge, like a way-laying coward, until a fafer opportunity; but, like a brave and generous fpirit, knocked down his adverfary directly on the fpot. The common vices and foibles of human-kind he laſhed with great feverity, in order to reſtrain their influence, CHARACTERS OF DR. SWIFT. CXV influence, and, if it were poffible, to hinder the contagion from fpreading in the community; yet ftill without making examples of particular perfons. But flaves to party, and traitors to the public intereſt, he expofed without mercy to the derifion of the world. It may be thought perhaps that private ani- mofity frequently gave an edge to his fatire. I can- not tell but in fome cafes it might. But then it ſhould be confidered, that Dr. Swift never looked upon himſelf in the character of a private perfon. He knew that a patriot, like an Afiatic prince, muft make himſelf dreaded. If he be once foiled, his power is at end. And, without controverfy, domi- nior, abfolute dominion, he had refolved to poffefs over the minds of men, efpecially over the minds of his countrymen; and accordingly he did poffefs it. Swift was certainly a man of great ambition, though he denies it in his writings. But his ambi- tion, ever directed by the rules of honour, was of a noble, exalted ſtrain, worthy to be cheriſhed in the breaſt of an angel. In his private character he was a man of fine ad- drefs, and perfectly well bred. He knew to a point all the modes and variations of complaifance and po- litenefs. And yet his manners were not framed like thofe of any other mortal; but, corrected by gene- ral obfervation, and adapted to his own peculiar turn of genius, they fhone forth, always enlivened more or lefs with fome fpirit of dominion, in a blaze of politenefs, fo inimitably, and fo determinately in his own, that in effect they feemed to be the reſult of pure nature, uncopied from any the brighteſt or the faireft original. Swift talked a great deal in all companies, with- out ingroffing the converfation to himfelf, [above, p. xcvi.] In the character of a tete à tete companion, he rather excelled himſelf. Few that are equal to him in that refpect, perhaps none that are his fuperiors, can be found upon earth. He was by no means in the claſs with thoſe who pour down their eloquence like a torrent, driving all before it. Far from any defires of that fort, he equally loved to fpeak, and loved cxvi CHARACTERS OF DR. SWIFT. loved to hearken. Like Falſtaff, he not only had wit himfelf, but frequently was the caufe of wit in others. However, that univerfal reverence which was paid to his great abilities, frequently ftruck a damp on the fpirits of thofe who were not perfectly well acquainted with him: an effect of modesty, which however did not always happen to be con- ftrued to their advantage, unlefs in the cafe of very young people. For when fuch perfons were gone, if none but his intimates were prefent, he would ex- prefs himſelf with fome degree of emotion, and cry, Such a one, I have heard, is a very great man; or, Such a cne, they fay, has abundance of learning; or, Such a one, I have been told, has an excellent underſtanding; but God deliver me from fuch com- panions! If we confider Swift as a divine and a chriftian, we ſhall find him, although not fo grave, yet at leaſt as perfect, as the most famous of his contemporaries. His first fetting out in the world may be thought fomewhat fingular, in this profane, hypocritical, cor- rupted age. We are affured from his own accounts, that his ideas of religion were fo extremely delicate, that he could not but entertain fome fcruple, not- withstanding his fortune was very ſmall, of entering into the church merely for fupport; although it is plain, that he had early feparated himſelf to the work of the miniftry. He was of a genius thorough- ly well adapted for the improvement of any congre- gation whatever, his arguiments being always clear, cogent, and fatisfactory. But furely thofe improved, extenfive abilities, which rendered him at once the delight and the admiration of the world, were never defigned by his Creator to be confined within the narrow limits of any parifh or diocefe. In his private character as a man of religion, he appears to have been a great and fhining example of Christian faith and morals. In himfelf, he was chaste, fober, and temperate. I remember he once told me occafionally, that he never had been drunk in his life. In his general behaviour, he was open, free, difengaged, and cheerful. In his dealings with the world, CHARACTERS OF DR. SWIFT. cxvii world, he was honeft and fincere. In relieving the poor and the diftreffed, he was liberal to profufion; if denying himſelf, and throwing upon the waters above a third part of his income, will intitle him to the character of being exceedingly generous. With regard to his faith, he was truly orthodox. More- over, he was regular, exceedingly regular, in all his duties to God, especially in attending the public worship; yet ftill without any parade, or colour of oftentation. But to crown his whole character as a man of religion, and to fhew how much he deteſted that fatanical vice of hypocrify, I fhall tranfcribe a paragraph from a fermon of his, not yet publiſhed, On the excellency of the Chriftian religion, oppofed to Hea- then philofophy. "Chriftian wiſdom (faith he) is without partiality. It is not calculated for this or that nation or people, but the whole race of man- kind; not to the philofophical fchemes, which were narrow and confined, adapted to their pecu- "liar towns, governments, or fects; but in every "nation, he that feareth God, and worketh righ- مام teouſneſs, is accepted with him. Laftly, It is "without hypocrify: It appears to be what it really is; it is all of a piece. By the doctrines of the "the gofpel, we are fo far from being allowed to publiſh to the world thofe virtues we have not, that we are commanded to hide even from our- "felves thoſe we really have, and not to let our right hand know what our left hand does; unlike "feveral branches of the Heathen wifdom, which pretended to teach infenfibility and indiffer- ence, magnanimity and contempt of life, while at the fame time in other parts it belied its own doctrines." · Several other particulars in Swift's character, and various anecdotes concerning him, will be found in the notes throughout all the firft eight volumes of this work, particularly in the Criticiims prefixed to vols. 1. and 6. Some cxviii Some particulars concerning Dr. SWIFT. Taken from Mrs. PILKINGTON'S Memoirs. MRS RS Pilkington's acquaintance with Dr. Swift commenced from ſending him the lines on his birth-day, vol. 7. p. 162. Theſe the Dean received very kindly, and faid, he would fee her whenever the pleaſed. A few days after, fhe was introduced to the Dean in Dr. Delany's garden at Delville, by a gentlewo- man. He faluted her, and aſked the lady, if fhe was her daughter? The lady fmiled, and faid, fhe was Mrs. Pilkington. "What," fays he, this ry. poor little child married! God help her, fhe is early engaged to trouble." The Dean engaging Mr. Pilkington to preach for him at the cathedral next Sunday, invited her, with the reft of the com- pany, to dinner. As the communion is adminiftered every Sunday in St. Patrick's church, Mrs. Pilking- ton was charmed to fee with what a becoming piety the Dean performed that holy fervice, which he had fo much at heart, that he wanted not the affiftance of the liturgy, but went quite through it without ever looking in the book. He bowed at the table; which behaviour was cenfured, as favouring of Pope- But this circumftance may vindicate him from the wicked afperfion cf being deemed an unbeliever, fince it is plain he had the utmoft reverence for the eucharift. Service being ended, the Dean was fur- rounded at the church-door, by a croud of poor all of whom he gave charity, except an old woman, who held out a very dirty hand to him. He told her, very gravely, That though fhe was a beggar, water was not fo fcarce but he might have washed her hands. When they came to the deanery, the Dean kindly faluted Mrs. Pilkington, and, without allowing her time to fit down, bade her come and fee his l- brary; but merrily told Mr. Pilkington, who was for following them, that he did not defire his con pany. to "Well," ACCOUNTS OF DR. SWIFT. cxix " Well," faid he to her, "I have brought you here to fhew you all the money I got when I was in the miniftry; but don't steal any of it." "I won't indeed, Sir" faid fhe. So opening a cabinet, he ſhewed her a parcel of empty drawers: "Blefs me," fays he, "the money is flown." He then opened his bureau, wherein he had a great number of curi- ous trinkets of various kinds, fome of which were preſented to him by the Earl and Countefs of Ox- ford, Lady Maſham, and Lady Betty Germain. At laft coming to a drawer filled with medals, he bade her chufe two for herſelf; but he could not help fmiling, when she began to poize them in her hands, chuling them by weight rather than antiquity. At dinner the Dean's behaviour was very humo- rous. He placed himſelf at the head of his table, oppofite to a great pier glafs, fo that he could fee in the glaſs whatever the fervants did behind him. He was ferved entirely in plate, with great elegance. But the beef being over-roafted, put the company all in confufion. The Dean called for the cook-maid, and ordered her to take the beef down ftairs, and do it lefs. She anſwered, very innocently, that the could not. Why, what fort of a creature are you," fays he, to commit a fault which cannot be << amended?" And turning to Mrs. Pilkington, he faid very gravely, "That he hoped, as the cook was a woman of genius, he fhould, by this man- ner of arguing, be able in about a year's time to convince her he had better fend up the meat too "little than too much done;" charging the men fervants, whenever they imagined the meat was ready, they fhould take it fpit and all, and bring it up by force, promifing to aid them in cafe the cook refifted. Then turning his eye on the looking-glais, he efpied the butler cpening a bottle of ale and helping himself to the firft glais, he very kindly jumb- led the reft together, that his matter and guests might all fare alike. "Ha! friend," faid the Dean, Sharp's the word, I find; you drank my ale, for which I ftop two fhillings of your board-wages this cxx ACCOUNTS OF DR. SWIFT "this week; for I fcorn to be outdone in any thing, "even in cheating. Dinner being ended, the Dean thanked Mr. Pilk- ington for his fermon: "Inever," ſaid he, "preach- "ed but twice in my life, and then they were not "fermons, but pamphlets." Mrs. Pilkington aſked him, what might be the fubject of them? He told her, they were againſt Wood's halfpence. Having aſked Mr. and Mrs. Pilkington if they could ſmoke? and being anſwered, that they did not; "'Tis a fign," faid he, "you were neither of you bred in the university of Oxford; for drinking and fimok- ing are the first rudiments of learning taught "there; and in thofe two arts no univerfity in "Europe can outdo them." Having aſked Mrs. Pilkington, if he had any faults? Pray, Mr. Dean," faid Dr. Delany, why will you be ſo un- .< polite as to ſuppoſe Mrs. Pilkington has any faults?” "I'll tell you," replied the Dean; "whenever I "ſee a number of agreeable qualities in any perfon, "I am always fure they have bad ones fufficient to poize the fcale." Mrs. Pilkington bowed, and told him, he did her great honour; in that copying Bishop Berkeley, whom he had frequently heard declare, That when ary fpeech was made to him, which might be conftrued either into a compliment or an affront, or that had two handles, he always took hold of the beſt. "A "Why The Dean then aſked Mrs. Pilkington, if he were a Queen, what ſhe would chufe to have after din- ner? She anſwered, "Your converfation, Sir," "Pooh! faid, he, “I mean, what regale. "difh of coffee, Sir," anfwered the. "then," faid he, "I will fo far make you as hap- py as a Queen; you fhall have fome in perfection: "for when I was chaplain to the Earl of Berkeley, "who was in the government here, I was fo poor, "I was obliged to keep a coffee-houfe, and all the nobility reforted to it to talk treafon." The Dean then fet about making the coffee: but the fire fcorching his hand, he called to Mrs. Pilkington to reach him his glove; and changing the coffee pot to his BY MRS. PILKINGTON. сххі his left hand, held out his right one, ordering her to put the glove on it; which accordingly he did; when taking up part of his gown to fan himſelf with, and acting in character of a prudish lady, he faid, Well, I don't know what to think: women may be honeſt that do fuch things; but, for my pait, I never could bear to touch any man's flefli -except my husband's; whom, perhaps," (faid he,) the wished at the devil.” 66 ་་ Mr. Pilkington," faid he, you would not tell me your wife's faults; but I have found her out "to be a d-n'd, infolent, proud, unmannerly flut." "What has the done now "faid Mr. Pilkington. 't Done," faid the Dean; "why nothing, but fat "there quietly, and never once offered to inter- rupt me in making the coffee; whereas a lady of "modern good breeding would have ftruggled with me for the coffee-pot, till fhe had made me fcald myſelf and her, and make me throw the coffee in "the fire, or perhaps at her head, rather than permit me to take to much trouble for her." Mrs. Pilkington flaid at home with the Dean during the time of the afternoon's fervice; and he made her read his hiflory of the four last years of Q. Anne, afking her at the conclufion of every peri- od, whether the understood it? for I would, faid he, have it intelligible to the meanest capa- city; and if you comprehend it, 'tis poffible every body may. '' She accompanied the Dean to evening-prayer; and on their return to the deanery, he told Mr. and Mrs. Pilkington, that he gave them leave to ftay to fupper; which from him was a ſufficient invitation. The Dean then decanted a bottle of wine; and the laft glafs being muddy, he called to Mr. Pilkington to drink it; for," fays he, "I always keep fome poor parfon to drink the foul wine for me." Pilkington entering into his humour, thanked him, and told him, he did not know the difference, but was glad to get a glafs at any rate. Why then," faid the Dean, you fhan't; for I'll drink "it myſelf. Why p-x take you, you are wifer VOL. I. "than f Mr. cxxii ACCOUNTS OF DR. SWIFT t than a paltry curate whom I aſked to dine with me a few days ago; for upon my making the fame fpeech to him, he told me he did not underſtand * fuch ufage; and fo walked off without his dinner. By the fame token, I told the gentleman who re- · commended him to me, that the fellow was a blockhead, and I had done with him." { The Dean then milling his golden bottle-fcrew, told Mrs. Pilkington very iternly, he was fure fhe had tolen it. She affirmed very ferioutly, fhe had not. Upon which he looked for it, and found it where he hintelf had laid it: "Tis well for you," faid he, "that I have got it, or I would have charged you with theft." "Why, pray, Sir," faid he, "fhould I be fufpected more than any other perion "in the company?" "For a very good reafon," faid he, "becauſe you are the pooreft." At their going away, the Dean handed Mrs. Pilk- ington down all the fteps to the coach, thanking them for the honour of their company, at the fame time flipping into her hand as much money as Mr. Pilkington and he had given at the offering in the morning, and coachhire alfo; which the durſt not refufe, left the fhould have been deemed as great a blockhead as the parfon who refufed the thick wine, << * In one of the Dean's periodical fits of deafnefs, he fent for Mrs. Pilkington; who having come, he brought out to her a large book, finely bound in turkey leather, and handfomely gilt: This," faid he, is a tranflation of the epiftles of Horace, a pre- "fent to me from the author; 'tis a fpecial good .cover; but I have a mind there fhould be fome- thing valuable within fide of it." So, taking out his penknife, he cut out all the leaves clofe to the inner margin. Now," faid he, I will give "theſe what they greatly want ;" and put them all into the fire. "Your talk, Madam, is to pafte in thefe letters, in this cover, in the order I fhall "give them to you: I intended to do it myſelf, but that I thought it might be a pretty amufement for a child; fo I fent for you." She told him, the was extremely proud to be honoured with his com- mands; (C 3 BY MRS. PILKINGTON. CXX14 CC L.L mands-; but requested to have leave to read the let-- ters as ſhe went on. Why," faid the Dean, provided you will acknowledge yourſelf amply re- "warded for your trouble, I don't much care if I indulge you fo far." In reading the letters, fhe could not avoid re- marking to the Dean, that, notwithstanding the friendship Mr. Pope profeffed for Mr. Gay, he could not forbear a great many fatirical, or, if the might be allowed to fay fo, envious remarks on the fuccefs of the Beggar's Opera. The Dean very frankly own- ed, he did not think Mr. Pope was fo candid to the merit of other writers as he ought to be. She then ventured to afk the Dean, whether he thought the lines Mr. Pope addreffes him with in the beginning of the Dunciad, were any compliment to him, viz. O thou! whatever title pleaſe thine ear. "I believe," faid he," they were meant as fuch,. "but they are very ftiff." Indeed, Sir," ſaid fhe, "he is fo perfectly a mafter of harmonious num-- bers, that, had his heart been the least affected with his fubject, he muſt have writ better. C.C ' How cold, how forced, are his lines to you, compared. with yours to him! ; ‹ PIL and Hail, happy. Pope! whofe gen'rous mind, &c. vol. 6. p. 325- "Here we fee the mafterly poet, and the warm, finceré, generous friend while he, according to "the character he gives of Mr. Addifon, damns with faint praife."—"Well," replied the Dean, "thew you a late letter of his." He did fo Mrs. Pilkington was furpriſed to find it filled with low and ungentleman-like reflections, both on Mr. Gay, and the two noble perions who honoured him with their patronage after his difappointment at court.. "Well, madam," faid the Dean, "what "do you think of that letter?" (feeing the had gone quite through it.) "Indeed, Sir," (re- plied fhe), "I am forry I have read it; for it gives me reaſon to think there is no fuch thing as a fin- RE cere € cxxiv ACCOUNTS OF DR. SWIFT "cere friend to be met with in the world.” Why," replied he, "authors are as jealous of "their prerogative as kings; and can no more bear a rival in the empire of wit, than a monarch "could in his dominions." Mrs. Pilkington then cbferving a Latin fentence writ in Italics, defired the Dean to explain it. "No," replied he, fmil ing, "I'll leave that for your hufband to do. I'll fend for him to dine with us, and in the mean time we'll go and take a walk in Naboth's vine- yard.' "Where may that be, pray, Sir?" faid fie. Why, a garden," faid the Dean, "I cheat- "> ed one of my neighbours out of." When they entered the garden, or rather the field, which was fquare, and incloſed with a ftone wall, the Dean aſked her how he liked it? Why, pray, Sir," faid the, "where is the garden?" "Look behind you," "faid he. She did fo; and obferved the fouth wall was lined with brick, and a great number of fruit trees planted againſt it, which being then in bloffom, looked very beautiful. What are you fo "intent on ?" faid the "The opening Dean. "bloom,” replied the; which brought Waller's lines to her remembrance. Hope waits upon the flow'ry prime. "Oh !" replied he " you are in a poetical vein; I "thought you had been taking notice of my wall. "'Tis the beft in Ireland. When the mafons were building it, (as mòft tradefmen are rogues), I "watched them very clofe, and as often as they "could, they put in a rotten ftone; of which how- "ever I took no notice, till they had built three or "four perches beyond it. Now, as I am an abſo- "lute monarch in the liberties, and king of the mob, my way with them was, to have the wall thrown "down to the place where I obferved the rotten "ftone; and, by doing fo five or fix times, the "workmen were at laft convinced it was their in- "tereft to be honeft:"- "Or elfe, Sir," faid Mrs. Pilkington, your wall would have been as tedious "a piece of work as Penelope's web, if all that was "done BY MRS. PILKINGTON. Chay done in the day was to be undone at night." "Well," anſwered the Dean, "I find you have poetry for every occafion; but as you cannot keep pace with me in walking, I would have you fit "down on that little bank, till you are refted, or I "tired, to put us more upon a par." She feated herſelf, and away the Dean walked, or rather trotted as hard as ever he could drive. She could not help fmiling at his odd gait; for fhe thought to herſelf, he had written fo much in praiſe- of horses, that he was refolved to imitate them as nearly as he could.. As ſhe was indulging this fan- cy, the Dean returned to her, and gave her a ftrọng confirmation of his partiality to thoſe animals. “ C * I have been confidering, Madam, as I walked" faid he, "what a fool Mr. Pilkington was to marry you; for he could have afforded to keep a horfe "for lefs money than you coſt him; and that, you "muft confefs, would have given him better exer- "cife and more pleaſure than a wife. -Why you laugh, and don't anſwer me- you are is not it truth?" "I muft anſwer you, Sir," replied ſhe, "with another queſtion: Pray how can a batchelor judge "of this matter?" "I-find," ſaid he, "vain enough to give yourſelf the preference." "I do, Sir," replied fhe, to that fpecies here; to a: Houyhnhnm I would, as becomes me, give prefer- ence. But, Sir, 'tis going to rain." "I hope. not, "faid he," for that will coft me fixpence for "a coach for you," (the garden being at fome dif- tance from the houſe). Come, hafte; O how the "tefter trembles in my pocket!" She obeyed; and they got in a doors juft time enough to eſcape a heavy thower. "Thank God," faid the Dean, "T· have faved my money. Here, you fellow," (to the fervant), carry this fixpence to the lame old man that fells gingerbread at the corner, becauſe "he tries to do fomething, and does not beg,' >> Mrs. Pilkington was fhewed into a little ftreet- - parlour, where was Mrs. Brent, his houfe-keeper. Here," fays he, "Mrs. Brent, take care of this "child, while I take my walk out within. doors.” f 3 The. CRV ACCOUNTS OF DR. SWIFT } The Dean then ran up the great ftairs, down one pair of back-ftairs, up another, in fo violent a man- ner, that Mrs. Pilkington could not help expreffing her uneafinefs to Mrs. Brent, left he fhould fall, and be hurted. Mrs. Brent faid, it was a cuſtomary exercife with him, when the weather did not per- mit him to walk abroad. Mrs. Brent then told Mrs. Pilkington of the Dean's charity; of his giving above half of his yearly in- come in private penfions to decayed families; and keeping 500l. in the conftant fervice of induftrious poor, which he lent out 51. at a time, and took the payment back at 1 s. a-week; which, fhe obſerved, did them more fervice than if he gave it to them en- tirely, as it obliged them to work, and at the fame time kept up this charitable fund for the affiftance of many. "You cannot imagine," ſaid fhe, "what numbers of poor tradefinen, who have even want- "ed proper tools to carry on their work, have, by "this final loan, been put into a profperous way, "and brought up their families in credit. The t t tr Dean, added fhe, has found out a new method "of being charitable, in which, however, I be- lieve, he will have but few followers; which is, to debar himſelf of what he calls the fuperfluities "of life, in order to adminifter to the neceffities of "the diftreffed. You just now faw an inftance of it; the money a coach would have coft him, he gave to a poor man unable to walk. When he "dines alone, he drinks a pint of beer, and gives away the price of a pint of wine. And thus he acts in numberless inftances." The Dean came to dine with Mr. and Mrs. Pilk- ington at their Lilliputian palace, as he called it; and, who could have thought it? he juft looked in- to the parlour, and ran up into the garret, then into Mrs. Pilkington's bedchamber and library, and from thence down to the kitchen; and the houfe being very clean, he complimented her upon it, and told her, that was his custom; and that it was from the cleanlinefs of the garret and kitchen, he judged of the good houſewifery of the miftrefs of the houfe; for BY MRS. PILKINGTON. cxxvii for no doubt but a flut would have the room clean where the guests were to be entertained. ; He was fometimes very rude, even to his fuperi- ors of which the following flory related to Mrs. Pilkington by himſelf, may ferve as one inftance amongit a thousand others. The last time he was in London, he went to dine with the Earl of Burlington, who was then but new- ly married. The Earl being willing, 'tis fuppoſed, to have fome diverfion, did not introduce him to his lady, nor mention his name. It is to be obſerved, that his gown was generally very rufty, and his per- fon no way extraordinary. After dinner, faid the Dean, "Lady Burlington, I hear you can fing; fing me a fong." The lady looked on this unceremo- nious manner of cfking a favour with diftate, and pofitively refuſed him. He faid, the should fing, or he would make her. Why, Madam, I fuppofe you take me for one of your poor English hedge parfons; fing when I bid you." As the Earl did nothing but laugh at this freedom, the lady was fo vexed, that the burst into tears, and retired. His first compliment to her when he faw her again, was, "Pray, Madani, are you as proud and as ill- "natured now, as when I faw you lat?" To which The answered, with great good humour, "No, Mr. " Dean; I'll ing for you, if you pleafe." From which time he conceived great efteem for her. But who that knew him would take offence at his blunt- nefs. Mrs. Pilkington could not recollect that ever fhe faw the Dean laugh; perhaps he thought it beneath him; for when any pleafantry paffed which might have excited it, he ufed to fuck his cheeks to avoid rifibility He uted frequently to put her in mind of Shakespear's defcription of Caffius. He is a great difcerner, and he looks Quite through the deeds of men Seldom he finiles, and fmiles in fuch a fort As if he mock'd himſelf, and ſcorn'd his fpirit, That could be mov'd to fimile at any thing. Jul. Cafur. Mrs. cxxviii ACCOUNTS OF DR. SWIFT. Mrs. Pilkington believed the Dean's early youth did not promife that bright day of wit which has fince enlightened the learned world. Whilft he was at the univerſity of Dublin, he was fo far from being diftinguished for any fuperiority of parts or learning, that he was ſtopped of his degree as a dunce. When fhe heard the Dean relate this circumftance, fhe told him, fhe fuppofed he had been idle: but he affirmed to the contrary, affuring her he was really dull. Which, if true, is very furpriſing- tr "I have," fays fhe, "often been led to look on "the world as a garden, and the human minds as "fo many plants, fet by the hand of the great Cre- "ator for utility and ornament. Thus fome, we ſee, early produce beautiful bleffoms, and as foon fade away; others, whofe gems are more flow in un- folding, but more permanent when blown; and others again, who, though longer in arriving at "perfection, not only blefs us then with fhade and "odour, but alſo with delicious wholeſome fruit." He was a perpetual friend to merit and learning; and utterly incapable of envy; for, in true genuine wit, he could fear no rival. It has been often obferved, that where great ta- lents are beſtowed, there the ſtrongeſt paffions are likewife given. This great man did but too often let them have dominion over him, and that on the moft trifling occafions. During meal times he was evermore in a ftorm; the meat was always too much or too little done, or the fervants had offended in fome point, imperceptible to the rest of the company: however, when the cloth was taken away, he made his guests rich amends for the pain he had given them. For then Was truly mingled in the friendly bowl The feaſt of reafon, and the flow of foul. Pope. Yet he preferved ftrict temperance: for he never drank above half a pint of wine, in every glaſs of which he mixed water and fugar: yet, if he liked his company, would fit many hours over it, unlock-. ing BY MRS. PILKINGTON. cxxix ing all the springs of policy, learning, true humour, and inimitable wit. The following story the Dean told to Mrs. Pilk- ington. A clergyman, who was a moft learned fine gentle- man, but, under the fofteft and politeft appearance, concealed the moſt turbulent ambition, having made his merit as a preacher too eminent to be overlook- ed, had it early rewarded with a mitre. Dr. Swift went to congratulate him on it; but told him, he hoped, as his Lordship was a native of Ireland, and had now a feat in the houfe of Peers, he would em- ploy his powerful elocution in the fervice of his dif- treffed country. The prelate told him, the bishoprick was but a very fmall one, and he could not hope for a better, if he did not oblige the court. Very well," fays Swift, "then it is to be hoped, when you have a better, you will become an honest "man." Ay, that I will, Mr. Dean," fays he. "Till then, my Lord, farewel," anfwered Swift. This prelate was twice tranflated to richer fees; and on every tranflation, Dr. Swift waited on him to re- mind him of his promife; but to no purpofe; there was now an archbishoprick in view, and till that was obtained, nothing could be done. Having in a fhort time likewife got this, he then fent for the Dean, and told him, "I am now at the top of my 4 preferment: for I well know no Irishman will ever "be made primate; therefore, therefore, as I can rife no higher in fortune or ftation, I will zealously pro- mote the good of my country." And from that time he commenced a most outrageous patriot. A CRITICISM A CRITICISM O N SWIFT'S PROSE WRITINGS. By the Earl of ORRERY. F we confider Swift's profe works, we fall find a certain I matterly concilencis in their ftyle, that hath never been equalled : by any other writer. The truth of this affertion will more evi- dently appear, by comparing him with fome of the authors of his own time. Of theſe Dr. Tillotson and Mr. Addifon are to be numbered among the moft eminent. Addifon hath all the powers that can captivate and improve his diction is eafy, his periods are well turned, his expreffions are flowing, and his humour is de- licate. Tillotfon is nervous, grave, majeftic, and perfpicuous. We must join both theſe characters together to form a true idea of Dr. Swift: yet as he outdoes Addiſon in humour, he excels Til- lotfon in perfpicuity. The Archbishop indeed confined himſelf to ſubjects relative to his profeffion: but Addiſon and Swift are more diffufive writers. They continually vary in their manner, and treat different topics in a different ftyle. When the writings of Ad- difon terminate in party, he lofes himſelf extremely, and from a delicate and juft comedian, deviates into one of the loweft kind. * Not fo Dr. Swift. He appears like a masterly gladiator. He wields the fword of party with cafe, juftnefs, and dexterity: and while he entertains the ignorant and the vulgar, he draws an equal at- tention from the learned and the great. When he is f rious, his gravity becomes him; when he laughs, his readers must laugh with him. But what shall be faid for his love of trifles, and his want of delicacy and decorum? errors, that if he did not contract, at least he increaſed in Ireland. They are without a parallel, I hope they will ever remain fo.. The firft of them arofe merely from his love of flattery, with which he was daily fed in that king- dom: the fecond proceeded from the mifanthropy of his difpofi- tion, which induced him peevishly to debafe mankind, and even to ridicule human nature itſelf. Politics were his favourite to- pic, as they gave him an opportunity of gratifying his ambition, and thirst of power: yet in this road he has feldom continued long in one path. He has written mifcellancoufly, and has choſen rather to appear a wandering comet, than a fixed ftar. Had he applied the faculties of his mind to one great and uſeful work, he muſt have ſhined more gloriously, and uright have enlightened a whole planetary fyftem in the political world. * See the papers called the Freeholder. There A CRITICISM. CXXXI There are fome pieces in his works that I defpife, others that I loath, but many more that delight and improve me. The former are not worthy of notice. They are of no further ufe than to fhew us, in general, the errors of human nature; and to convince us, that neither the height of wit nor genius can bring a man to fuch a degree of perfection, as vanity would often prompt him to believe. In a difquifition of this fort, I fhall avoid as much as poffible any annotations upon that kind of fatire in which the Dean in- dulged himſelf against particular perfons: most of whom it is probable provoked his rage by their own mifconduct, and confe- quently owed to their own raſhneſs the wounds which they re- ceived from his pen. But I have no delight in thofe kinds of writings, except for the fake of the wit, which either in general or in particular fatire, is equally to be admired. The edge of wit will always remain keen, and its blade will be bright and fhining when the ftone upon which it has been whetted, is worn out, or thrown afide and forgotten. Perſonal ſatire against evil magiftrates, corrupt minifiers, and thofe giants of power, who gorge themselves with the entrails of their country, is different from that perional fa- tire, which too often proceeds merely from felf-love, or ill-nature. The one is written in defence of the public, the other in defence of ourſelves. The one is armed by the fword of juftice, and en- couraged not only by the voice of the people, but by the principles of morality; the other is dictated by paffion, fupported by pride and applauded by flattery. At the fame time that I fay this, I think every man of wit has a right to laugh at fools, who give of- fence, or at coxcombs, who are public nuifances. Swift indeed has left no weapon of farcalm untried, no branch of fatire uncul- tivated but while he has maintained a perpetual war against the mighty men in power, he has remained invulnerable, if not vic- torious. * See the criticism prefixed to vol. 6. A TALE OF A TUB. Written for the univerfal improvement of mankind. Diu multumque defideratum. To which are added, An Account of a BATTLE between the AN- CIENT and MODERN BOOKS in St. James's Library; and, A Difcourfe concerning the MECHANICAL OPE- RATION of the SPIRIT. With the Author's APOLOGY; and Explanatory notes, by W. Wotton, B. D. and others. Bafyma cacabafa canaa, irraumifta diarbada cocota bafo- bor camelanthi. Iren. lib. 1. c. 18. Juvatque novos decerpere flores, Infignemque meo capiti petere inde coronam, Unde prius nulli velarunt tempora mufæ. IF The AUTHOR'S APOLOGY. Lucret. F good and ill nature equally operated upon man- kind, I might have faved myſelf the trouble of this apology; for it is manifett, by the reception the fol- lowing difcourfe hath met with, that thofe, who approve it, are a great majority among the men of talte. Yet there have been two or three treatifes written expreisly against it, befides many others that have flirted at it oc- cafionally, without one fyllable having been ever pub- lifhed in its defence, or even quotation to its advantage, that I can remember; except by the polite author of a late difcourfe between a Deift and a Socinian. Therefore, fince the book feems calculated to live at leaft as long as our language and our taſte admit no VOL. I. B great 2 A TALE OF A TUB. great alterations, I am content to convey fome apology along with it. The greateſt part of that book was finiſhed about thirteen years fince, 1696; which is eight years before it was publiſhed. The author was then young, his in - vention at the height, and his reading freſh in his head. By the affiftance of fome thinking, and much converfa- tion, he had endeavoured to ftrip himſelf of as many real prejudices as he could I fay real ones; becauſe, under the notion of prejudices, he knew to what dan- gerous heights fome men have procceded. Thus pre- pared, he thought the numerous and grofs corruptions in religion and learning might furnish matter for a fa- tire, that would be uſeful and diverting. He refolved to proceed in a manner that ſhould be altogether new; the world having been already too long naufeated withend- lefs repetitions upon every fubje&. The abufes in reli- gion he propofed to fet forth in the allegory of the coats, and the three brothers; which was to make up the bo- dy of the difcourfe: thofe in learning he chofe to in- troduce by way of digreffions. He was then a young gentleman much in the world; and wrote to the talte of thoſe who were like himfelf: therefore, in order to allure them, he gave a liberty to his pen, which might not fuit with maturer years, or graver characters; and which he could have eafily corrected with a very few blots, had he been maſter of his papers for a year or two before their publication. Not that he would have governed his judgment by the ill-placed cavils of the four, the envious, the ftupid, and the taftelefs; which he mentions with difdain. He acknowledges there are feveral youthful fallies, which, from the grave and the wife, may deferve a rebuke. But he defires to be anfwerable no farther than he is guilty; and that his faults may not be multiplied by the igno- rant, the unnatural and uncharitable applications of thofe, who have neither candor to fuppofe good mean- ings, nor palate to diſtinguiſh true ones. After which, he will forfeit his life, if any one opinion can be fairly deduced from that book, which is contrary to religion or morality. Why should any clergyman of our church be angry to THE AUTHOR'S APOLOGY. 3 to fee the follies of Fanaticifm and Superftition expofed, though in the most ridiculous manner? fince that is per- haps the most probable way to cure them, or at leaſt to hinder them from farther fpreading. Besides, though it was not intended for their perufal, it rallies nothing but what they preach againft. It contains nothing to provoke them by the leaft fcurrility upon their perfons or their functions. It celebrates the church of England as the most perfeet of all others in difcipline and doctrine; it advances no opinion they reject, nor condemns any they receive. If the clergy s refentments lay upon their hands, in my humble cpinion, they might have found more proper objects to employ them on. Nondum tibi defuit hoftis; I mean thofe heavy, illiterate fcribblers, proftitute in their reputations, vitious in their lives, and ruined in their fortunes; who, to the face of good fence as well as piety, are greedily read, merely upon the ftrength of bold, falfe, impious affertions, mixed with unmannerly reflections upon the priclihood, and openly intended against all religion; in short, full of fuch principles as are kindly received, becauf: they are le- velled to remove thofe terrrors, that religion tells men will be the conſequence of immoral lives. Nothing like which is to be met with in this diſcourſe, though fome of them are pleafed fo freely to cenfure it. And I wifh there were no other inftance of what I have too frequent- ly obferved, that many of that Reverend body are not always very nice in ditinguishing between their ene- mies and their friends. Had the author's intentions met with a more candid interpretation from fome, whom out of refpect he for- bears to name, he might have been encouraged to an examination of books written by fome of thofe authors above deſcribed; whoſe errors, ignorance, dulnefs, and villainy, he thinks he could have detected and expofed in fuch a manner, that the perfons who are moft con- ceived to be infected by them, would foon lay them a- fide, and be ashamed. But he has now given over thofe thoughts; fince the weightieft men in the weightieft ftations, are pleafed to think it a more dangerous point, B 2 to Alluding to Dr. Sharp the Archbishop of York's repreſentation of the author. Hawkefworth. 4 OF A TUB. A TALE to laugh at thofe corruptions in religion which they themſelves muſt diſapprove, than to endeavour pulling up thofe very foundations wherein all Chriftians have agreed. He thinks it no fair proceeding, that any perfon fhould offer determinately to fix a name upon the au- thor of this difcourie, who hath all along concealed himſelf from moft of his nearest friends: yet feveral have gone a farther ftep, and pronounced another book* to have been the work of the fame hand with this ; which the author directly affirms to be a thorough mif- take, he having yet never fo much as read that dif courfe: A plain inftance how little truth there often is in general furmifes, or in conjectures drawn from a fimilitude of ftyle, or way of thinking. Had the author written a book to expofe the abufes in law, or in phyfic, he believes the learned profeffors in either faculty would have been fo far from refenting it, as to have given him thanks for his pains ; eſpecially if he had made an honourable reſervation for the true practice of either fcience. But religion, they tell us, ought not to be ridiculed; and they tell us truth: yet furely the corruptions in it may, for we are taught by the triteft maxim in the world, that religion being the beft of things, its corruptions are likely to be the worſt. There is one thing which the judicious reader cannot but have obferved, that fome of thoſe paffages in this difcourfe which appear moſt liable to objection are what they call parodies, where the author perfonates the flyle and manner of other writers, whom he has a mind to expofe. I fhall produce one inftance; it is in fect, 1. parag. 3. from the end, p. 47. Dryden, L'Etrange, and fome others I thall not name, are here levelled at; who, having ſpent their lives in faction, and a poftafics, and all manner of vice, pretended to be fufferers for loyalty and religion. So Dryden tells us, in one of his prefaces, of his merits and fufferings; thanks God, that he poffeffes his foul in patience; in other places he talks at the fame rate; and L'Etrange often uſes the like ſtyle; and I believe the reader may find more per- fons to give that paffage an application. But this is * Letter concerning enthufiafm. enough THE AUTHOR'S APOLOGY. 5 enough to direct thoſe who may have overlooked the author's intention. There are three or four other paffages, which preju- diced or ignorant readers have drawn by great force to hint at ill meanings; as if they glanced at fome tenets in religion. In anfwer to all which, the author fo- lemnly protefts he is entirely innocent; and never had it once in his thoughts, that any thing he faid would in the least be capable of fuch interpretations; which he will engage to deduce full as fairly from the most inno- cent book in the world. And it will be obvious to every reader, that this was not any part of his ſcheme or de- fign; the abufes he notes, being fuch as all church-of- England men agree in: nor was it proper for his fubject to meddle with other points, than fuch as have been perpetually controverted fince the reformation. To inftance only in that paffage about the three wooden machines mentioned in the introduction: In the original manufcript there was a defcription of a fourth, which thoſe, who had the papers in their power, blotted out, as having fomething in it of fatire, that, I fuppofe, they thought was too particular; and therefore they were forced to change it to the number three; from whence fome have endeavoured to fqueeze out a dan- gerous meaning, that was never thought on. And in- deed the conceit was half fpoiled by changing the num- bers; that of four being much more cabaliſtic, and therefore better expoling the pretended virtue of num- bers; a fuperftition there intended to be ridiculed. Another thing to be obferved, is, that there general- ly runs an irony through the thread of the whole book; which the men of tafte will obferve and diftinguiſh, and which will render fome objections, that have been made, very weak and infignificant. This apology being chiefly intended for the fatisfac- tion of future readers, it may be thought unneceffary to take any notice of fuch treatiſes as have been written a- gainst the enfuing difcourfe; which are already funk into wafte-paper and oblivion, after the ufual fate of common anfwerers to books which are allowed to have any merit. They are indeed like annuals, that grow about a young tree, and ſeem to vie with it for a fum- mer; 6 TALE OF A TUB. A mer; but fall and die with the leaves in autumn, and are never heard of any more. When Dr. Echard writ his book about the contempt of the clergy, numbers of thoſe anfwerers immediately started up, whofe memory if he had not kept alive by his replies, it would now be ut- terly unknown, that he were ever answered at all. There is indeed an exception, when any great genius thinks it worth his while to expofe a foolish piece. So we ftill read Marvel's anfwer to Parker with pleaſure, though the book it anſwers be funk long ago; ſo the Earl of Orrery's remarks will be read with delight, when the differtation he expofes will neither be fought nor found +. But theſe are no enterpriſes for common hands, nor to be hoped for above once or twice in an age. Men would be more cautious of lofing their time in fuch an undertaking, if they did but confider, that to anfwer a book effectually, requires more pains and fkill, more wit, learning and judgment, than were employed in the writing it. And the author affures thofe gentle- men, who have given themfelves that trouble with him, that his difcourfe is the product of the ſtudy, the obſer- vation, and the invention of feveral years; that he oft- en blotted out much more than he left; and, if his pa- . pers had not been a long time out of his poffeflion, they must have ftill undergone mere fevere corrections. And do they think fuch a building is to be battered with dirt-pellets, however invenomed the mouths may be that difcharge them? He hath feen the productions. but of two anſwerers; one of which at firft appear- ed as from an unknown hand, but fince avowed by a perfon †, who upon fome occafions hath diſcovered no ill vein of humour. It is a pity any occafion fhould put * Parker, afterwards Bishop of Oxford, wrote many treatiſes a- gainst the diffenters, with infolence and contempt, fays Burnet, that enraged them beyond meature; for which he was chaftifed by An- drew Marvel, under-fecretary to Milton, in a little book called, The Rehearsal tranfprofed. Harukif Boyle's remarks upon Bentley's differtation on the epiftles of Phalaris. Hawkef. Suppofed to be Dr. William King, the civilian, author of an ac- count of Denmark, a diſſertation on famplais and other pieces of burlefque on the Royal Society, and the art of cookery in imitation of Horace's art of poetry, &c. Harykef, THE AUTHOR'S APOLOGY. 7 put him under a neceffity of being fo hafty in his pro- ductions, which otherwife might often be entertaining. But there were other reafons obvious enough for his mifcarriage in this; he writ against the conviction of his talent, and entered upon one of the wrongest attempts in nature, to turn into ridicule, by a week's labour, a work, which had coft fo much time, and met with fo much fuccefs in ridiculing others. The manner, how he handled his fubject, I have now forgot; having jult looked it over, when it first came out, as others did, merely for the fake of the title *. The other anfwer is from a perfon of a graver cha- racter, and is made up of half invective, and half anno- tation † ; in the latter of which he hath generally fuc- ceeded well enough. And the project at that time was not amifs to draw in readers to his pamphlct; feveral hav- ing appeared defirous, that there might be fome expli- cation of the more difficult pallages. Neither can he be altogether blamed for offering at the invective part; becauſe it is agreed on all hands, that the author had given him fufficient provocation. The great objection is against his manner of treating it, very unfuitable to one of his function. It was determined by a fair majo- rity, that this anſwer had, in a way not to be pardon- ed, drawn his pen against a certain great man then alive, and univerfally reverenced for every good quality that could poffibly enter into the compofition of the most ac- compliſhed perfon. It was obferved, how he was pleaf- ed, and affected to have that noble writer called his adverfary; and it was a point of fatire well directed; for I have been told, Sir William Temple was fufficient- ly mortified at the term. All the men of wit and po- litenefs were immediately up in arms through indigna- tion, This we cannot recover at prefent, it being fo abfolutely forgot- ten, the oldeſt bookſellers in trade remember nothing of it. Hawkef. + Wotton's defence of his reflections upon ancient and modern learning. From the annotations are felected the notes figned, W. Wotton. Thus Wotton appears bufied to illuftrate a work, which he laboured to condemn, and adds force to a fatire pointed against him- felf as captives were bound to the chariot-wheel of the victor, and compelled to increase the pomp of his triumph, whom they had in vain attempted to defeat. Harukef. 8 A TALE OF A TUB. In tion, which prevailed over their contempt, by the con- fequences they apprehended from fuch an example; and it grew Porfenna's cafe; idem trecenti juravimus. fhort, things were ripe for a general infurrection, till my Lord Orrery had a little laid the fpirit, and fettled the ferment. But his Lordship being principally en- gaged with another antagoniſt*, it was thought ne- ceffary, in order to quiet the minds of men, that this oppofer fhould receive a reprimand, which partly oc- cafioned that difcourfe of the battle of the books; and the author was farther at the pains to infert one or two remarks on him in the body of the book. This anfwerer has been pleaſed to find fault with about a dozen paffages, which the author will not be at the trouble of defending, farther, than by affuring the reader, that, for the greater part, the reflecter is entirely miſtaken, and forces interpretations which never once entered into the writer's head, nor will (he is fure) into that of any reader of tafte and candor. He allows two or three at moft, there produced, to have been deliver- ed unwarily; for which he defires to plead the excufe offered already, of his youth, and franknefs of fpeech, and his papers being out of his power at the time they were published. But this anfwerer infifts, and fays, what he chiefly dif likes, is the defign. What that was, I have already told; and I believe there is not a perfon in England who can underfland that book, that ever imagined it to have been any thing elfe, but to expofe the abufes and corruptions in learning and religion. But it would be good to know what defign this re- flecter was ferving, when he concludes his pamphlet with a caution to the reader, to beware of thinking the author's wit was entirely his own. Surely this muſt have had fome allay of perfonal animofity, at leaft mixed with the defign of ferving the public by ſo uſeful a dif- covery; and it indeed touches the author in a tender point; who infills upon it, that, through the whole book he has not borrowed one fingle hint from any writer in the world; and he thought, of all criticifms, Bentley, concerning Phalaris and fop. Harukef: that THE AUTHOR'S APOLOGY. 9 that would never have been one. He conceived, it was never difputed to be an original, whatever faults it might have. However, this anſwerer produces three in- ftances, to prove this author's wit is not his own in many places. The firft is, that the names of Peter, Martin and Jack, are borrowed from a letter of the late Duke of Buckingham *. Whatever wit is contained in thoſe three names the author is content to give it up, and de- fires his readers will fubtract as much as they placed up- on that account; at the fame time proteſting folemnly, that he never once heard of that letter, except in this paffage of the anſwerer: fo that the names were not borrowed, as he affirms, though they ſhould happen to be the fame; which however is odd enough, and what he hardly believes; that of Jack being not quite fo obvious as the other two. The fecond inftance to fhew the author's wit is not his own, is Peter's banter (as he calls it in his Alfatia phrafe) upon tranfubftantiation, which is taken from the fame Duke's conference with an Iriſh prieft, where a cork is turned into a horſe. This the author confeffes to have feen about ten years after his book was written, and a year or two after it was publiſhed. Nay, the anfwerer overthrows this himſelf; for he allows the tale was written in 1697; and I think, that pamphlet was not printed in many years after. It was neceffary, that corruption fhould have fome al- legory as well as the reft; and the author invented the propereft he could, without inquiring what other people had written; and the commoneft reader will find, there is not the leaft reſemblance between the two ftories. The third inftance is in thefe words: I have been affured, that the battle in St. James's library is, mu- tatis mutandis, taken out of a French book, intitled, Com-. bat des livres, If I mifremember not. In which paffage there are two clauſes obfervable: 1 have been affured; and, If I mifremember not. Idefire first to know, whe-.. ther, if that conjecture proves an utter falfehood, thoſe two claufes will be a fufficient excufe for this worthy critic. The matter is a trifle.: but would he venture to pronounce at this rate upon one of greater mo- ment? I know nothing more contemptible in a writer, B 5. - than * Villers.. 10 A TALE OF A TUB. than the character of a plagiary; which he here fixes at a venture; and this not for a paffage, but a whole dif- courſe, taken out from another book, only mutatis mu- tandis. The author is as much in the dark about this, as the anſwerer; and will imitate him by an affirmation at random; that if there be a word of truth in this re- flection, he is a paultry, imitating pedant, and the an- fwerer is a perfon of wit, manners, and truth: He takes his boldneſs, from never having feen any fuch treatiſe in his life, nor heard of it before, and he is fure it is impoffible for two writers of different times and coun- tries, to agree in their thoughts after fuch a manner, that two continued difcourfes fhall be the fame, only mutatis mutandis. Neither will he infift upon the miſtake in the title. But let the anſwerer and his friend pro- duce any book they pleaſe, he defies them to fhew one fingle particular, where the judicious reader will affirm he has been obliged for the fmalleft hint; giving only allowance for the accidental encountering of a fingle thought, which he knows may fometimes happen; though he has never yet found it in that diſcourſe, nor has heard it objected by any body elfe. So that if ever any defign was unfortunately executed, it must be that of this anfwerer; who when he would have it obferved, that the author's wit is none of his own, is able to produce but three in flances, two of them mere trifles, and all three manireilly falſe. If this be the way thefe gentlemen deal with the world in thoſe criti- cifms, where we have not leiſure to defeat them, their readers had need be cautious, how they rely upon their credit; and whether this proceeding can be reconciled to humanity or truth, let thofe, who think it worth their while, determine. It is agreed, this anfwerer would have fucceeded much better, if he had ſtuck wholly to his bufinefs, as a com- mentator upon the Tale of a tub, wherein it cannot be denied, that he hath been of fome fervice to the public, and hath given very fair conjectures towards clearing up fome difficult paffages. But it is the frequent error of thofe men, (otherwife very commendable for their labours,) to make excurfions beyond their talent and their office, by pretending to point out the beauties and THE AUTHOR'S APOLOGY. II and the faults; which is no part of their trade, which they always fail in, which the world never expected from them, nor give them any thanks for endeavouring at. The part of Minellius, or Farnaby *, would have fallen in with his genius, and might have been fervice- able to many readers, who cannot enter into the ab- ftrufer parts of that difcourfe. But optat ephippia bos piger: The dull, unwieldly, ill-fhaped ox would needs put on the furniture of a horfe, not confidering he was born to labour, to plough the ground for the fake of ſu- perior beings; and that he has neither the fhape, met- tle, nor ſpeed of that noble animal he would affect to perfonate. It is another pattern of this anfwerer's fair dealing, to give us hints that the author is dead, and yet to lay the fufpicion upon fome-body, I know not who, in the country. To which can only be returned, that he is abfolutely mistaken in all his conjectures; and furely conjectures are, at beft, too light a pretence to allow a man to affign a name in public. He condemns a book, and confequently the author, of whom he is utterly ig- norant; yet at the fame time fixes, in print, what he thinks a difadvantageous character upon thofe who never deferved it. A man, who receives a buffet in the dark, may be allowed to be vexed; but it is an odd kind of revenge, to go to cuffs in broad day with the firit he meets, and lay the laſt night's injury at his door. And thus much for this difereet, candid, pious, and inge-- nious anfwerer. How the author came to be without his papers, is a ftory not proper to be told, and of very little ufe, be- ing a private fact, of which the reader would believe as little, or as much, as he thought good. He had how- ever a blotted copy by him, which he intended to have written over with many alterations; and this the pub- liſhers were well aware of, having put it into the book- feller's preface, that they apprehended a furreptitious copy, which was to be altered, &c. This, though not regarded by readers, was a real truth; only the furreptitious copy was * Low commentators, who wrote notes upon claffic authorrs of the ufe of fchoolboys. Husof, 12 A TALE OF A TU B. was rather that which was printed; and they made all the haſte they could; which indeed was needleſs, the author not being at all prepared. But he has been told, the bookſeller was in much pain, having given a good fum of money for the copy. In the author's original copy there were not fo many chafms as appear in the book; and why fome of them were left, he knows not. Had the publication been. truſted to him, he would have made feveral corrections of paffages againſt which nothing hath been ever ob- jected. He would likewife have altered a few of thoſe that feem with any reafon to be excepted againft; but, to deal freely, the greateſt number he fhould have left untouched, as never fufpecting it poffible any wrong interpretations could be made of them. The author obferves, at the end of the book there is a difcourfe, called, 4 fragment; which he more won- dered to ſee in print, than all the reft: having been a moſt imperfect ketch, with the addition of a few loofe hints, which he once lent a gentleman, who had de- figned a difcourfe on fomewhat the fame fubject. He never thought of it afterwards; and it was a fufficient furpriſe to fee it pieced up together, wholly out of the me- thod and ſcheme he had intended; for it was the ground- work of a much larger difcourfe, and he was forry to obferve the materials fo foolishly employed. * There is one farther objection made by thofe who have anſwered this book, as well as by fome others, That Peter is frequently made to repeat oaths and curfes. Every reader obſerves, it was neceffary to know that Pe- ter did fwear and curfe. The oaths are not printed out, but only ſuppoſed; and the idea of an oath is not im- moral, like the idea of a profane or immodeft fpecch. A man may laugh at the Popish folly of curting people to hell, and imagine them fwearing, without any crime; but lewd words, or dangerous opinions, though printed. by halves, fill the reader's mind with ill ideas and of thefe the author cannot be accufed. For the judicious reader will find, that the fevereſt it okes of fatire, in his book, are levelled againſt the modern cuſtom of em- ploying wit upon thoſe topics; of which there is a re- markable inftance in fect. 7. parag. 7. as well as in fe- veral THE AUTHOR'S APOLOG Y. 13 veral others, though perhaps once or twice expreffed in too free a manner, excufeable only for the reaſons al- ready alledged. Some overtures have been made, by a third hand, to the bookfeller, for the author's altering thofe paffages which he thought might require it. But it feems the bookfeller will not hear of any fuch thing, being apprehenſive it might ſpoil the fale of the book. The author cannot conclude this apology, without making this one reflection, That as wit is the nobleſt and moft ufeful gift of human nature, fo humour is the moſt agreeable; and where thefe two enter far into the compofition of any work, they will render it always ac- ceptable to the world. Now the greater part of thoſe, who have no ſhare or tafte of either, but by their pride, pedantry, and ill manners, lay themfelves bare to the lafhes of both, think the blow is weak, becauſe they are infenfible; and where wit hath any mixture of raillery, it is but calling it banter, and the work is done. This polite word of theirs was firft borrowed from the bul- lies in White-Friers, then fell among the footmen, and at laft retired to the pedants; by whom it is applied as properly to the productions of wit, as if I fhould apply it to Sir Ifaac Newton's mathematics. But if this ban- tering, as they call it, be fo defpifable a thing, whence comes it to pafs they have fuch a perpetual itch towards it themſelves? To inftance only in the anfwerer al- ready mentioned: It is grievous to fee him, in fome of his writings, at every turn going out of his way to be waggish, to tell us of a cow chat pricked up her tail; and in his anfwer to this difcourfe, he fays, It is all a farce and & hdle; with other paffages equally thining. One may fay of thefe impedimenta literarum, that wit owes them a fhane; and they cannot take wifer counfel, than to keep out of harm's way, or at least not to come till they are fure they are called. To conclude: With thofe allowances above required this book fhould be read; after which, the author con- ceives, few things will remain, which may not be ex- cuſed in a young writer. He wrote only to the men of wit and talte; and he thinks he is not miſtaken in his accounts, when he fays, they have been all of his fide, enough to give him the vanity of telling his name; wherein 14 A TALE OF A TUB. wherein the world, with all its wife conjectures, is yet very much in the dark: which circumftance is no dif agreeable amufement either to the public or himſelf. The author is informed, that the bookfeller has pre- vailed on feveral gentlemen to write fome explanatory notes; for the goodneſs of which he is not to anſwer, having never ſeen any of them, nor intending it till they appear in print; when it is not unlikely he may have the pleaſure to find twenty meanings, which never entered into his immagination. June 3, 1709. POST SCRIPT. SINCE INCE the writing of this, which was about a year ago, a proſtitute bookfeller hath publiſhed a fooliſh paper, under the name of Notes on the Tale of a Tub, with fome account of the author; and with an infolence, which I fuppofe is punishable by law, hath prefumed to affign certain names. It will be enough for the author to affure the world, that the writer of that paper is ut- terly wrong in all his conjectures upon that affair. The author farther afferts, that the whole work is entirely of one hand; which every reader of judgment will eafily difcover the gentleman who gave the copy to the bookfeller, being a friend of the author, and ufing no other liberties, befides that of expunging certain paffa- ges, where now the chafms appear under the name of defiderata. But if any perfon will prove his claim to three lines in the whole book, let him ftep forth, and tell his name and titles; upon which the bookſeller fhall have orders to prefix them to the next edition, and the claimant fhall from henceforward be acknowledged the undisputed author. Treatifes ( 15 ) Treatifes written by the fame author, most of them mention- ed in the following difcourfes, which will be speedily published. A Character of the prefent fet of wits in this ifland. A panegyrical effay upon the number THREE. A differtation upon the principal productions of Grub-freet. Lectures upon a diſſection of human nature. A panegyric upon the world. An analytical difcourfe upon zeal, hiftori-theo-phyfi- logically confidered. A general hiſtory of ears. A modeſt defence of the proceedings of the rabble in all ages. A deſcription of the kingdom of abfurdities. A voyage into England, by a perfon of quality in Terra auftralis incognita, tranflated from the original. A critical effay upon the art of canting, philofophi- cally, and mufically confidered. To ( 16 ) To the Right Honourable JOHN LORD SOMMERS, My LORD, A LTHOUGH the author has written a large dedi- cation, yet that being a dreffed to a prince, whom I am never likely to have the honour of being known to; a perfon, befides, as far as I can obſerve, not at all re- garded, or thought on by any of our prefent writers; and being wholly free from that flavery which book- fellers ufually lie under to the caprices of authors; I think it a wife piece of prefumption, to infcribe theſe papers to your Lordship, and to implore your Lord- hip's protection of them. God and your Lordship know their faults, and their merits: for as to my own particular, I am altogether a ranger to the matter; and though every body elfe fhould be equally ignorant, I do not fear the fale of the book, at all the worie, up- on that ſcore. Your Lordship's name on the front in capital letters, will at any time get off one edition: nei- ther would I defire any other help to grow an alderman, than a patent for the fole privilege of dedicating to your Lordship. I fhould now, in right of a dedicator, give your Lordship a lift of your own virtues, and at the fame time be very unwilling to offend your modefty; but, chief- ly, I should celebrate your liberality towards men of great parts and mall fortunes, and give you broad hints, that I mean myfelf. And I was just going on, in the ufual method, to perufe a hundred or two of dedicati- ons, and tranfcribe an abſtract, to be applied to your Lordflip; but I was diverted by a certain accident. For, upon the covers of thefe papers, 1 cafually obſerv- ed, written in large letters, the two following words, DETUR DIGNISSIMO; which, for aught I knew, might contain fome important meaning. But it un- luckily fell out, that none of the authors I employ un- derstood Latin; (though I have them often in pay, to tranflate out of that language.) I was therefore com- pelled to have recourfe to the curate of our parish, who Englished The Bookfeller's Dedication. 17 Engliſhed it thus, Let it be given to the worthieft. And his comment was, that the author meant his works fhould be dedicated to the fublimeft genius of the age, for wit, learning, judgment, eloquence, and wifdom. I called at a poet's chamber (who works for my ſhop) in an ally hard by, fhewed him the tranflation, and defired his opinion, who it was that the author could mean. He told me, after fome confideration, that va- nity was a thing he abhorred; but, by the defcription, he though himſelf to be the perfon aimed at; and, at the fame time, he very kindly offered his own affiftance gratis towards penning a dedication to himfelf. I de- fired him, however, to give a fecond guefs. Why then, faid he, it muſt be I, or my Lord Sommers. From thence I went to feveral other wits of my acquaintance, with no fmall hazard and wearinefs to my perfon, from a prodigious number of dark, winding fairs; but found them all in the fame ftory, both of your Lordship and themſelves. Now, your Lordship is to underſtand, that this proceeding was not of my own invention; for I have fome where heard, it is a maxim, That thoſe, to whom every body allows the fecond place, have an un- doubted title to the firft. This infallibly convinced me, that your Lordship was the perfon intended by the author. But, being very unacquainted in the ftyle and form of dedications, I employed thoſe wits aforefaid, to furniſh me with hints and materials towards a panegyric upon your Lordship's virtues. In two days they brought me ten theets of paper, fill- ed up on every fide. They fwore to me, that they had ranfacked whatever could be found in the characters of Socrates, Ariftides, Epaminondas, Cato, Tully, Atti- cus, and other hard names, which I cannot now recol- lect. However, I have reaſon to believe, they impofed upon my ignorance; becauſe, when I came to read over their collections, there was not a fyllable there, but what I and every body elfe knew as well as themſelves. Therefore I grievoufly fufpect a cheat; and that thefe au- thors of mine ftole and tranfèribed every word from the univerfal report of mankind. So that I lock upon my- felf, 18 A TALE OF A TUB. felf, as fifty fhillings out of pocket to no manner of purpoſe. If, by altering the title, I could make the fame mate- rials ferve for another dedication, (as my betters have done,) it would help to make up my lofs: but I have made feveral perfons dip here and there in thofe papers; and before they read three lines, they have all affured me plainly, that they cannot poffibly be applied to any perfon beĥides your Lordſhip. I expected indeed, to have heard of your Lordship's bravery at the head of an army; of your undaunted courage, in mounting a breach, or fcaling a wall; or to have had your pedigree traced in a lineal defcent from the houfe of Auftria; or of your wonderful talent at drefs and dancing; or your profound knowledge in algebra, metaphyfics, and the oriental tongues. But to ply the world with an old beaten tory of your wit, and eloquence, and learning, and wildom, and juftice, and politeneſs, and candor, and evenefs of temper in all fcenes of life; of that great difcernment in difco- vering and readineſs in favouring deferving men ; with forty other common topics; I confefs, I have neither conſcience, nor countenance to do it: because there is no virtue, either of a publick or a private life, which fome circumftances of your own have not often pro- duced upon the ftage of the world; and thofe few, which, for want of occafions to exert them, might otherwife have paffed unfeen or unobferved by your friends, your enemies * have at length brought to light. It is true, I thould be very loth, the bright example of your Lordship's virtues fhould be lot to after ages, both for their fake and your own; but chiefly becaufe they will be fo very neceffary to adorn the hiftory of a late reign and that is another reaſon why I would forbear to make a recital of them here; becauſe I have been told by wife men, that, as dedications have run for * In 1701, Lord Sommers was impeached by the Commons, who, either finding their proofs defective, or for other reaſons, delayed coming to a trial; and the Lords thereupon proceeded to the trial without them, and acquitted him. Hawkef. + K. William's; whofe memory he defended in the houfe of Lords againſt ſome invidious reflections of the Earl of Nottingham. Hawkef. The Bookfeller's Dedication. 19 for fome years paft, a good hiftorian will not be apt to have recourſe thither, in fearch of characters. There is one point, wherein I think we dedicators would do well to change our meaſures; I mean, initead of running on fo far upon the praiſe of our patron's li- berality, to fpend a word or two in admiring their pa- tience. I can put no greater compliment on your Lord- fhip's, than by giving you fo ample an occafion to ex- ercife it at prefent. Though perhaps I fhall not be apt to reckon much merit to your Lordship upon that fcore, who having been formerly uſed to tedious ha- rangues*, and fometimes to as little purpoſe, will be the readier, to pardon this; efpecially when it is offer- ed by one, who is, with all refpect and veneration, MY LORD, Your Lordship's moft obedient, and moſt faithful fervant, The Bookfeller. * Sir John Sommers was Attorney-General; then made Lord Keeper of the Seals in 1692, and Lord High Chancellor and Baron of Eveſham in April 1697. Hawkef, The ( 20 ) IT The BOOKSELLER to the READER. T is now fix years* fince thefe papers came firſt to my hand, which feems to have been about a twelve- month after they were written: for the author tells us in his preface to the firſt treatiſe, that he hath calcu- lated it for the year 1697; and in ſeveral paffages of that diſcourſe, as well as the fecond, it appears they were written about that time. As to the author, I can give no manner of fatisfac- tion. However I am credibly informed, that this pub- lication is without his knowledge; for he concludes the copy is loft, having lent it to a perfon, fince dead, and being never in poffeffion of it after: fo that whe- ther the work received his laft hand, or whether he in- tended to fill up the defective places, is like to remain a fecret. If I fhould go about to tell the reader, by what acci- dent I became matter of thefe papers, it would, in this unbelieving age, pafs for little more than the cant or jargon of the trade. I therefore gladly fpare both him and myfelf fo unneceffary a trouble. There yet remains a difficult queſtion, Why I publiſhed them no fooner? I forbore upon two accounts: first, becauſe I thought I had better work upon my hands; and, fecondly, be- cauſe I was not without fome hope of hearing from the author and receiving his directions. But I have been lately alarmed with intelligence of a furreptitious co- py which a certain great wit had new polished and re- fined; or as our prefènt writers exprefs themselves, fit- ted to the bumour of the age; as they have already done with great felicity, to Don Quixote, Boccalini, La Braycie, and other authors. However, I thought it fairer dealing to offer the whole work in its naturals. If any gentleman will pleafe to furnish me with a key, in order to explain the more difficult parts, I fhall very gratefully acknowledge the favour, and print it by itfelf. * The Tale of a Tub was firſt publiſhed in 1704. Hawkef, +See the Apology, p. 11. The ( 21 ) The EPISTLE DEDICATORY, To his Royal Highness PRINCE POSTERIT Y. I SIR, HERE prefent your Highnefs with the fruits of a very few leifure-hours, ftolen from the fhort intervals of a world of Buſineſs, and of an employment quite alien from fuch amuſements as this; the poor production of that refufe of time which has lain heavy upon my hands, during a long prorogation of parliament, a great dearth of foreign news, and a tedious fit of rainy weather. For which, and other reafons, it cannot chufe ex- tremely to deferve fuch a patronage as that of your High- neſs, whoſe numberlefs virtues, in fo few years, make the world look upon you as the future example to all princes. For although your highneſs is hardly got clear of infancy, yet has the univerfal learned world already refolved upon appealing to your future dictates with the lowest and most refigned fubmiffion; fate having de- creed you fole arbiter of the productions of human wit, in this polite and moft accomplished age. Methinks, the number of appellants were enough to thock and ftartle any judge of a genius lefs unlimited than yours. But, in order to prevent fuch glorious trials, the perfon, it feems, to whofe care the education of your Highness is committed, has refolved (I am told) to keep you in almoſt an univerfal ignorance of our studies, which it is your inherent birthright to infpect. It The citation out of Irenæus in the title-page, which feems to be all gibberish, is a form of initiation ufed anciently by the Marcofian beretics. W. Wotton. It is the ufual ſtyle of decried writers, to appeal to Pofterity; who is here reprefented as a prince in his nonage, and Time as his gover- nor; and the author begins in a way very frequent with him, by perfonating other writers, who fometimes offer fuch reafons and ex- cufes for publiſhing their works, as they ought chiefly to conceal, and be ashamed of, 22 A TALE OF A TUB. It is amazing to me, that this perfon fhould have af- furance, in the face of the fun, to go about perfuading your Highnefs, that our age is almoft wholly illiterate, and has hardly produced one writer upon any fubject. I know very well, that when your highnefs fhall come to riper years, and have gone through the learning of antiquity, you will be too curious to neglect inquiring into the authors of the very age before you. And to think that this infolent, in the account he is preparing for your view, defigns to reduce them to a number fo infignificant as I am afhamed to mention; it moves my zeal and my ſpleen for the honour and intereſt of our vaft flouriſhing body, as well as of myſelf, for whom I know, by long experience, he has profeffed, and ſtill continues a peculiar malice. It is not unlikely, that when your Highneſs will one day perufe what I am now writing, you may be ready to expoftulate with your governor upon the credit of what I here affirm, and command him to fhew you fome of our productions. To which he will anfwer, (for I am well informed of his defigns,) by afking your High- nefs, Where they are? and, What is become of them? and pretend it a demonftration that there never were any, becauſe they are not then to be found. Not to be found! Who has miflaid them? Are they funk in the abyfs of things? It is certain, that in their own nature they were light enough to fwim upon the furface for all eternity. Therefore the fault is in him, who tied weights fo heavy to their hecls, as to deprefs them to the centre. Is their very effence deftroyed? who has annihilated them? were they drowned by purges, or martyred by pipes? who adminiſtered them to the po- fteriors of ? But that it may no longer be a doubt with your highnefs, who is to be the author of this uni- verfal ruin; I befeech you to obſerve that large and ter- rible ſcythe, which your governor affects to bear conti- nually about him. Be pleafed to remark the length and ftrength, the fharpnefs and hardnefs of his nails and teeth; confider his baneful, abominable breath, enemy to life and matter, infectious and corrupting; and then reflect, whether it be poffible for any mortal ink and paper of this generation to make a fuitable refiftance. Oh! The Dedication to Prince Pofterity. 23 Oh! that your Highness would one day refolve to difarm this ufurping maitre du palais * of his furious engines, and bring your empire hors de page †. It were endless to recount the feweral methods of ty- ranny and deftruction which your governor is pleaſed to practiſe on this occafion. His inveterate malice is fuch to the writings of our age, that of feveral thou- fands produced yearly from this renowned city, before the next revolution of the fun there is not one to be heard of: Unhappy infants, many of them barbaroudly deftroyed, before they have fo much as learned their mother tongue to beg for pity. Some he ftifles in their cradles; others he frights into convulfions, whereof they fuddenly die': fome he flays alive, others he tears. limb from limb: great numbers are offered to Moloch; and the reft, tainted by his breath, die of a languishing confumption. But the concern I have moft at heart, is for our cor- poration of pocts; from whom I am preparing a peti- tion to your highnefs, to be fubfcribed with the names of one hundred and thirty fix of the firſt rate; but whoſe immortal productions are never likely to reach your eyes, though each of them is now humble and an ear- neft appellant for the laurel, and has large comely vo- lumes ready to fhew for a fupport to his pretenfions. The never-dying works of thefe illuftrious perfons, your governor, Sir, has devoted to unavoidable death; and your Highness is to be made believe, that our age has never arrived at the honour to produce one fingle poet. We confefs Immortality to be a great and powerful goddeſs but in vain we offer up to her our devotions and our facrifices, if your Highness's governor, who has ufurped the priesthood, muft, by an unparalied ambi- tion and avarice, wholly intercept and devour them. : To affirm that our age is altogether unlearned, and devoid of writers in any kind, feems to be an affertion fo * Comptroller. The kingdom of France had a race of kings, which they call les roys faineans, [from their doing nothing,] who lived la- zily in their apartments, while the kingdom was adminiftered by the mayor de palais; till Charles Martel the lift mayor put his master to death, and took the kingdom into his own hand. "Hawkef, + Out of guardianship. 1 24 A TALE OF A TUB. fo bold and fo falfe, that I have been fometime think- ing, the contrary may almoſt be proved by uncontroul- able demonftration. It is true indeed, that although their numbers be vaft, and their productions numerous in proportion; yet are they hurried fo haftily off the fcene, that they eſcape our memory, and elude our fight. When I first thought of this addreſs, I had pre- pared a copious lift of titles to prefent your Highneſs, as an undisputed argument for what I affirm. The originals were pofted freſh upon all gates and corners of ſtreets; but, returning in a very few hours to take a review, they were all torn down, and freſh ones in their places. I enquired atter them among readers and bookfellers; but I enquired in vain; the memorial of them was lofi among men, their place was no more to be found and I was laughed to fcorn for a clown and a pedant, without all tafte and refinement, little verfed in the courfe of prefent affairs, and that knew no- thing of what had paffed in the beſt companies of court and town. So that I can only avow in general to your Highneſs, that we do abound in learning and wit; but to fix upon particulars, is a tafk too flippery for my flender abilities. If I fhould venture in a windy day to affirm to your Highnefs, that there is a large cloud near the horizon, in the form of a bear, another in the zenith, with the head of an aſs, a third to the weftward, with claws like a dragon; and your Highness thould in a few minutes kink fit to examine the truth; it is certain, they would all be changed in figure and pofition; new ones would arife; and all we could agree upon, would be, that clouds there were, but that I was grofsly mif- taken in the zoography and topography of them. But your governor perhaps may still infiit, and put the queftion, What is then become of thofe immenfe bales of paper, which muft needs have been employed in fuch numbers of books? Can theſe allo be wholly annihilate, and fo of a fudden, as I pretend? What shall I fay in re- turn of fo invidious an objection? It ill befits the dif tance between your Highness and me, to fend you for ocular conviction to a jakes, or an oven; to the win- dows of a bawdy-houfe, or to a fordid lantern. Books, like men, their authors, have no more than one way of coming The Dedication to Prince Poſterity. 25 coming into the world; but there are ten thouſand to go out of it, and return no more. I profefs to your Highnefs, in the integrity of my heart, that what I am going to fay is literally true this minute I am writing. What revolutions may hap- pen before it ſhall be ready for your perufal, I can by no means warrant: however, I beg you to accept it as a fpecimen of our learning, our politenefs, and our wit. I do therefore affirm, upon the word of a fincere man, that there is now actually in being a certain poet, called John Dryden, whofe tranflation of Virgil was lately printed in a large folio, well bound, and if diligent fearch were made, for aught I know, is yet to be ſeen. There is another, called Nahum Tate, who is ready to make oath, that he has caufed many reams of verfe to be published, whereof both himſelf and his book feller (if lawfully required) can ftill produce authentic co- pies; and therefore wonders, why the world is pleaſed to make fuch a fecret of it. There is a third, known by the name of Tom Durfey, a poet of a vaſt compre- henfion, an univerfal genius, and most profound learn- ing. There are alfo one Mr. Rymer, and one Mr. Dennis, most profound critics. There is a perfon ftyled Dr. Bentley, who has written near a thouſand pages of im- menfe erudition, giving a full and true account of a certain fquabble of wonderful importance between him- felf and a bookfeller *. He is a writer of infinite wit and humour ; no man rallies with a better grace, and in more fprightly turns. Farther, I vow to your Highness, that with thefe eyes I have beheld the perfon of Wil- liam Wotton, B. D. who has written a good fizeable volume againſt a friend of your governor† (from whom, alas, he must therefore look for little favour) in a mot gentlemanly ftyle, adorned with the utmo po- liteness and civility replete with difcoveries, equally valuable for their novelty and ufe; and imbelliſhed with C traits Bentley, in his controverfy with Lord Orrery upon the genuine- nefs of Phalaris's epiftles, has given, in a preface, a long account of his dialogues with a book feller, about the loan and reftitution of a M. S. Hawkef. ↑ Sir William Temple. 26 A TALE OF A TUB. traits of wit, ſo poignant and ſo appofite, that he is a worthy yokemate to his forementioned.friend. Why fhould I go upon farther particulars, which might fill a volume with the juft elogies of my contem- porary brethren? I fhall bequeath this piece of justice to a larger work; wherein I intend to write a character of the preſent ſet of wits in our nation. Their perfons I fhall defcribe particularly, and at length; their ge- nius and underſtanding in miniature. In the mean time, I do here make bold to preſent your highneſs with a faithful abſtract drawn from the univerfal body of all arts and ſciences, intended wholly for your ſervice and inſtruction. Nor do I doubt in the leaft, but your highneſs will perufe it as carefully, and make as confiderable improvements, as other young princes have already done by the many volumes of late years written for a help to their ftudies *. That your Highnefs may advance in wiſdom and virtue, as well as years, and at laſt outſhine all your royal anceſtors, fhall be the daily prayer of, SIR, Decemb. 1697. Your Highness's Moft devoted, &c. There were innumerable books printed for the uſe of the Dau- phin of France. Hawkef. The 27 T The PREFACE. ; HE wits of the prefent age being fo very nume- rous and penetrating, it feems the grandees of church and ſtate begin to fall under horrible apprehen- fions, left thefe gentlemen, during the intervals of a long peace, fhould find leiſure to pick holes in the weak fides of religion and government. To prevent which, there has been much thought employed of late upon cer- tain projects for taking off the force and edge of thoſe formidable inquirers, from canvaffing and reafoning upon fuch delicate points. They have at length fixed upon one, which will require fome time as well as coſt to per- fect. Men while, the danger hourly increafing, by new levies of wits all appointed (as there is reafon to fear) with pen, ink, and paper, which may, at an hour's warning, be drawn out into pamphlets, and other offenfive weapons, ready for immediate execution it was judged of abfolute neceffity, that fome preſent expedient be thought on, till the main defign can be brought to maturity. To this end, at a grand com- mittee, fome days ago, this important difcovery was made by a certain curious and refined obferver, That fcamen have a custom, when they meet a whale, to Aling him out an empty tub by way of amufement, to divert him from laying violent hands upon the fhip. This pa- rable was immediately mythologiſed. The whale was interpreted to be Hobbes's Leviathan; which toffes and plays with all fchemes of religion and government, whereof a great many are hollow, and dry, and empty, and noify, and wooden, and given to rotation. the Leviathan, from whence the terrible wits of our age are faid to borrow their weapons. The hip in danger, is eafily understood to be its old antitype, the common- wealth. But how to analyte the tub, was a matter of difficulty; when, after long inquiry and debate, the li- teral meaning was preferved: and it was decreed, that, in order to prevent thefe Leviathans from tolling and fporting with the commonwealth, which of itſelf is too apt to fluctuate, they fhould be diverted from that game C 2 This is by. 23 A TALE OF A TUB. by a Tale of a Tub. And my genius being conceived to lie not unhappily that way, I had the honour done.me to be engaged in the performance. This is the fole defign in publifhing the following treatiſe; which I hope will ferve for an interim of ſome months to employ thofe unquiet fpirits, till the perfecting of that great work into the fecret of which, it is rea- fonable the courteous reader fhould have fome little light. It is intended, that a large academy be erected, capa- ble of containing nine thousand feven hundred forty and three perfons; which, by modeft computation, is reckoned to be pretty near the current number of wits in this iſland. Theſe are to be diſpoſed into the ſeveral ſchools of this academy, and there purfue thofe ftudies to which their genias moft inclines them. The under- taker himſelf will publifh his propofals with all conve- nient fpeed; to which I fhall refer the curious reader for a more particular account, mentioning at prefent only a few of the principal fchools. There is, firft, a large pæderaftic ſchool, with French and Italian mafters: there is, alfo, the fpelling fchool, a very spacious building; the fchool of looking-glaſſes; the fchool of wearing; the fchool of critics; the fchool of falivation; the fchool of hobby-borfes; the fchool of poetry; the ſchool of tops ; † the fchool of Spleen; the fchool of gaming; and many others too tedious to recount. No perfon to be admitted member into any of theſe ſchools, without an attefta- tion under two fufficient perfons hands, certifying him to be a wit. But to return: I am fufficiently inftructed in the prin- cipal duty of a preface, if my genius were capable of ar- riving at it. Thrice have I forced my imagination to make the tour of my invention, and thrice it has return- ed empty; the latter having been wholly drained by the following treatiſe. Not fo my more fucceſsful brethren the moderns, who will by no means let flip a preface or dedication This I think the author fhould have omitted, it being of the very fame nature with the fchool of hobby-borfes, if one may venture to cenfure one, who is fo fevere a cenfurer of others, perhaps with too little diſtinction, THE PREFACE. 29 . dedication without fome notable diftinguiſhing ſtroke to furprife the reader at the entry, and kindle a won- derful expectation of what is to enfue. Such was that of a moft ingenious poet, who, foliciting his brain for fomething new, compared himfelf to the hangman, and his patron to the patient. This was infigne, recens, indic- tum ore alio. * When I went through that neceffary and noble courſe of ſtudy, † 1 had the happineſs to obſerve - many fuch egregious touches; which I fhall not injure the authors by tranfplanting; becauſe I have remarked, that nothing is fɔ very tender as a modern piece of wit, and which is very apt to fuffer fo much in the carriage. Some things are extremely witty to-day, or fafting, or in this place, or at eight a clock, or over a bottle, or ſpoke by Mr. What d'y call' m, or in a fummer's morning; any of the which, by the fmalleft tranfp fal or nifapplication, is utterly annihilate. Thus, Wit has its walks and pur- lieus, out of which it may not ftray the breadth of an hair, upon peril of being loft. The moderns have art- fully fixed this mercury, and reduced it to the circum- ftances of time, place, and perfon. Such a jeft there is, that will not pass out of Covent-garden; and fuch a one, that is no where intelligible but at Hyde-park cor- ner. Now, though it fometimes tenderly affects me, to confider, that all the towardly paffages I fhall deli- ver in the following treatife will grow quite out of date and relish with the firft fhifting of the prefent fcene; yet I muſt needs fubfcribe to the juftice of this proceed- ing; becauſe I cannot imagine why we ſhould be at ex- pence to furnish wit for fucceeding ages, when the for- mer have made no fort of provifion for ours: wherein I fpeak the fentiment of the very neweft, and confe-- quently the moſt orthodox refiners, as well as my own. However, being extremely folicitous, that every accom- plished perfon, who has got into the taste of wit cal- culated for this prefent month of Auguft 1697, ſhould defcend to the very bottom of all the ſublime throughout this treatife; I hold fit to lay down this general maxim Whatever reader defires to have a thorough comprehen- fion C 3 *Hor. Something extraordinary, new, and never hit upon before. Reading prefaces, &c. 30 A TALE OF A TU B. fion of an author's thoughts, cannot take a better me- thod, than by putting himſelf into the circumftances and poſtures of life, that the writer was in upon every im- portant paffage, as it flowed from his pen: for this will introduce a parity and strict correfpondence of ideas between the reader and the author. Now, to affift the diligent reader in fo delicate an affair, as far as brevity will permit, I have recollected, that the fhrewdeft pieces of this treatife were conceived in bed, in a garret. At other times, for a reafon best known to myſelf, I thought fit to fharpen my invention with hunger; and, in general, the whole work was begun, continued, and ended, under a long courſe of phyſick, and a great want of money. Now, I do affirm, it will be abfolutely im- poffible for the candid perufer to go along with me in a great many bright paffages, unleſs, upon the feveral dif- ficulties emergent, he will pleaſe to capacitate and pre- pare himſelf by thefe directions. And this I lay down as my principal poftulatum. Becauſe I have profeffed to be a moſt devoted fervant of all modern forms, I apprehend fome curious wit may object against me, for proceeding thus far in a preface, without declaiming, according to the cuftom, against the multitude of writers; whereof the whole multitude of writers moft reafonably complain. I am just come from perufing fome hundreds of prefaces, wherein the authors do at the very beginning addrefs the gentle reader concerning this enormous grievance. Of thefe I have preferved a few examples, and fhall fet them down as near as my memory has been able to retain them. One begins thus: For a man to set up for a writer, when the prefs fwarms with, &c. Another : The tax upon paper does not leffen the number of ſcribblers, who daily peſter, &c. Another : When every little would-be-wit takes pen in hand, 'tis in vain to enter the lifts, &c. Another: To obferve what trash the prefs fwarms with, &c. Another : THE PREFACE. 31 Another: Sir, It is merely in obedience to your commands, that I venture into the public; for who, upon a lejs confideration, would be of a party with ſuch a rabble of ſcribblers? &c. Now, I have two words in my own defence againſt this objection. First, I am far from granting the num- ber of writers a nuifance to our nation, having ftrenu- oufly maintained the contrary in feveral parts of the fol- lowing diſcourſe. Secondly, I do not well underſtand the juftice of this proceeding; becauſe I obferve many of thefe polite prefaces to be not only from the fame hand, but from thofe who are moſt voluminous in their feveral productions. Upon which I fhall tell the reader a fhort tale.. A mountebank, in Leiceſter-fields, had drawn a huge affembly about him. Among the reit, a fat unwieldy fellow, half ſtifled in the prefs, would be every fit crying out, Lord! what a filthy croud is here? Pray, good people, give way a little. Blefs me! what a devil has raked this rabble together! Z-ds, what ſqueezing is this! Honest friend, remove your elbow. At laft, a weaver, that ſtood next him, could hold no longer: A plague confound you (faid he) for an overgrown floven; and who, in the devil's name, I wonder, helps to make up the croud half ſo much as yourfelf? Don't you.con- fider, with a pox, that you take up more room with that carcafe than any five here? Is not the place as free for us as for you? Bring your own guts to a reaſonable com- pafs, and be d---n'd; and then I'll engage we ſhall have room enough for us all. There are certain common privileges of a writer, the benefit whereof, I hope, there will be no reaſon to doubt; particularly, that, where I am not understood, it fhall be concluded, that fomething very uſeful and profound is couched underneath; and again, that what- ever word or fentence is printed in a different character, fhall be judged to contain fomething extraordinary either of wit or fublime. As for the liberty I have thought fit to take of prai fing myſelf, upon fome occafions or none; I am fure it will need no excufe, if a multitude of great examples be allowed fufficient authority. For it is here to be noted, that 32 A TALE OF A TU B. that praife was originally a penfion paid by the world: but the moderns, finding the trouble and charge too great in collecting it, have lately bought out the fee fimple; fince which time, the right of preſentation is wholly in ourfelves. For this reafon it is, that when an author makes his own elogy, he uſes a certain form to declare and infift upon his title; which is commonly in thefe or the like words, Ifpeak without vanity: which I think plainly fhews it to be a matter of right and juſtice. Now, I do here once for all declare, that in every en- counter of this nature, through the following treatiſe, the form aforefaid is implied; which I mention, to ſave the trouble of repeating it on fo many occafions. * It is a great cafe to my confcience, that I have written fo elaborate and uſeful a difcourfe without one grain of fatire intermixed; which is the fole point wherein I have taken leave to diffent from the famous originals of our age and country. I have obſerved fome fatiriſts to ufe the public, much at the rate that pedants do a naughty boy ready horfed for difcipline: firft, expoftu- late the cafe, then plead the neceffity of the rod, from great provocations, and conclude every period with a laſh. Now, if I know any thing of mankind, theſe gentlemen might very well fpare their reproof and cor- rection for there is not, through all nature, another ſo callous and infenfible a member as the world's pofteriors, whether you apply to it the toe or the birch. Beſides, most of our late fatyrifts feem to lie under a fort of mistake, that because nettles have the prerogative to fting, therefore all other weeds muſt do ſo too. I make not this compariſon out of the leaft defign to detract from thefe worthy writers: for it is well known among mythologifts, that weeds have the preheminence over all other vegetables; and therefore the first monarch of this iſland, whoſe taſte and judgment were fo acute and refined, did very wifely root the roses from the col- lar of the order, and plant the thistles in their ftead, as the nobler flower of the two. For which reafon it is conjectured by profounder antiquaries, that the fatirical itch, fo prevalent in this part of our island, was firſt brought among us from beyond the Tweed. Here may it long flourish and abound. May it furvive and neglect the THE PREFACE. 33 the fcorn of the world, with as much eaſe and contempt as the world is infenfible to the lafhes of it. May their own dulnefs, or that of their party, be no difcourage- ment for the authors to proceed; but let them remem- ber, it is with wits as with razors, which are never fo apt to cut thofe they are employed on, as when they have lost their edge. Befides, thofe, whofe teeth are too rotten to bite, are beft of all others qualified to revenge that defect with their breath. I am not, like other men, to envy or undervalue the talents I cannot reach; for which reafon I muft needs bear a true honour to this large eminent fect of our Bri- tish writers. And I hope, this little panegyric will not be offenfive to their ears, fince it has the advantage of being only defigned for themfelves. Indeed, Nature herfelf has taken order, that fame and honour ſhould be purchaſed at a better pennyworth by fatire, than by any other productions of the brain; the world being fooneft provoked to praiſe by tafbes, as men are to love. There is a problem in an ancient author, why dedications, and other bundles of flattery, run all upon ftale mufty topics, without the fmalleft tincture of any thing new; not only to the torment and naufeating of the Chriftian reader, but, if not fuddenly prevented, to the univer- fal fpreading of that peftilent diſeaſe, the lethargy, in this island whereas there is very little fatire which has not fomething in it untouched before. The defects of the former are ufually imputed to the want of in- vention among thoſe who are dealers in that kind; but, I think, with a great deal of injuftice; the folution be- ing eafy and natural. For the materials of panegyric, being very few in number, have been long fince exhauft- ed. For as health is but one thing, and has been always the fame; whereas diſeaſes are by thouſands, befides new and daily additions: fo all the virtues that have been ever in mankind, are to be counted upon a few fingers; but his follies and vices are innumerable, and time adds hourly to the heap. Now, the utmoſt a poor poet can do, is to get by heart a lift of the cardi- nal virtues, and deal them with his utmoft liberality to his hero or his patron. He may ring the changes as far as it will go, and vary his phraſe till he has talked C5 round; 34 A TALE OF A TUB. round: but the reader quickly finds it is all pork, * with a little variety of fauce. For there is no inventing terms of art beyond our ideas; and when our ideas are ex- hauſted, terms of art muſt be ſo too. But though the matter for panegyric were as fruitful as the topics of fatire, yet would it not be hard to find out a fufficient reafon, why the latter will be always better received than the first. For this being beſtowed only upon one, or a few perfons at a time, is fure to raiſe envy, and confèquently ill words, from the rest, who have no ſhare in the bleffing. But fatire, being le- velled at all, is never refented for an offence by any; fince every individual perfon makes bold to underſtand it of others, and very wifely removes his particular part of the burthen upon the fhoulders of the world, which are broad enough, and able to bear it. To this pur- pofe, I have fometimes reflected upon the difference be- tween Athens and England with refpect to the point be- fore us. In the Attic commonwealth, it was the pri- vilege and birthright of every citizen and poet, to rail aloud, and in public, or to expofe upon the ftage by name, any perfon they pleafed, though of the greatelt figure, whether a Creon, an Hyperbolus, an Alcibiades, or a Demofthenes. But, on the other fide, the least re- flecting word let fall against the people in general, was immediately caught up, and revenged upon the authors, however confiderable for their quality or their merits. Whereas in England it is juſt the reverfe of all this. Here, you may fecurely diſplay your utmoſt rhetoric a- gainſt mankind, in the face of the world; tell them, That all are gone aftray; that there is none that doth good, no not one; that we live in the very dregs of time that knavery and Atheism are epidemic as the pox; that bonefty is fled with Aftree; with any other common places, equally new and eloquent, which are furniſhed by the fplendida bilis. And when you have done, the whole audience, far from being offended, fhall return you thanks, as a deliverer of precious and uſeful truths. Nay farther, it is but to venture your lungs, and you may preach in Covent-garden againſt foppery and for- nication, • Plutarch. I vid. Xenoph. ↑ Hor. Spleen, THE PREFACE. 35 nication, and fomething elſe; againſt pride, and diffimu- lation, and bribery, at White-hall: you may expofe rapine and injuſtice in the inns of court chapel; and in a city-pulpit, be as fierce as you pleaſe againſt avarice, hy- pocrify, and extortion. It is but a ball bandied to and fro, and every man carries a racket about him to ſtrike it from himſelf among the rest of the company. But, on the other fide, whoever fhould miſtake the nature of things fo far, as to drop but a fingle hint in public, how Such a one ſtarved half the fleet, and half-poiſoned the reft; how such a one, from a true principle of love and honour, pays no debts but for wenches and play; how ſuch a one has got a clap, and runs out of his eltate; how Paris, bribed by Juno and Venus, * loth to offend either party, flept out the whole cauſe on the bench; or, how Such an orator makes long fpeeches in the fenate with much thought, little fenfe, and to no purpoſe: whoever, I fay, ſhould venture to be thus particular, muft expect to be imprisoned for fcandalum magnatum; to have chal- lenges fent him; to be fued for defamation; and to be brought before the bar of the house. But I forget that I am expatiating on a ſubject where- in I have no concern, having neither a talent nor an inclination for fatire! On the other fide, I am fo entirely fatisfied with the whole prefent procedure of human things, that I have been fome years preparing materials towards A panegyric upon the world, to which I intended to add a fecond part, intitled, A modest defence of the pro- ceedings of the rabble in all ages. Both thefe I had thoughts to publiſh, by way of appendix to the following trea- tife; but, finding my common-place book fill much flower than I had reaſon to expect, I have chofen to defer them to another occafion. Befides, I have been unhappily prevented in that defign by a certain domeftic misfor- ture in the particulars whereof, though it would be very feaſonable, and much in the modern way, to inform the gentle reader, and would alſo be of great affiftance towards Juno and Venus, are money and a mistress; very powerful bribes to a judge, if fcandal fays true. I remember fuch reflections were cat about that time, but I cannot fix the perfon intended here. 36 A TALE OF A TUB. towards extending this preface into the fize now in vogue, which by rule ought to be large, in proportion as the fubfequent volume is fmall; yet I fhall now diſmiſs our impatient reader from any farther attendance at the porch; and, having duly prepared his mind by a preli- minary difcourfe, fhall gladly introduce him to the ſub- lime myfteries that enfue, 1 A TALE 37 A TALE OF A TU B. * SECT. I. The INTRODUCTION. HOEVER hath an ambition to be heard in a W croud, muft prefs, and ſqueeze, and thruft, and climb, with indefatigable pains, till he has ex- alted himſelf to a certain degree of altitude above them. Now, in all affemblies, though you wedge them ever fo clofe, we may obferve this peculiar property, *The Tale of a Tub has made much noife in the world. It was one of Swift's earlieſt performances, and has never been excelled in wit and ſpirit by his own, or any other pen. The cenfures that have paffed upon it are various. The most material of which were fuch as reflected upon Dr. Swift, in the character of a clergyman, and a Chriſtian. It has been one of the misfortunes attending Chriftianity, that many of her fons, from a miftaken filial piety, have indulged themſelves in too reftrained and too melancholy a way of thinking. Can we wonder, then, if a book compofed with all the force of wit and humour, in derifion of facerdotal tyranny, in ridicule of grave hypocrify, and in contempt of flegmatic ftiffness, fhould be wilfully mifconftrued by fome perfons, and ignorantly miſtaken by others, as a ſarcaſm and reflection upon the whole Chriſtian church? Swift's ungovernable ſpirit of irony has fometimes carried him into very unwarrantable flights of wit. In the ftyle of truth, I muſt look up- on the Tale of a Tub, as no intended inſult againſt Chriſtianity, but as a fatire against the wild errors of the church of Rome, the ſlow and incomplete reformation of the Lutherans, and the abfurd and affected zeal of the Prefbyterians. Orrery. || The Introduction abounds with wit and humour. But the au- thor never lofes the leaft opportunity of venting his keeneſt ſatire against Mr. Dryden, and confequently loads with infults the greateft, although the leaſt profperous, of our Engliſh poets. Yet who can a- void ſmiling, when he finds the Hind and Panther as a complete abſtract of fixteen thousand fiboolmen, and when Tommy Pots is fuppofed written by the fame band, as a fupplement to the former work? I am willing to imagine, that Dryden, in fome manner or other, had offended Swift, who, otherwife, I hope, would have been more indulgent to the errors of a man oppreffed by poverty, driven on by party, and bewildered 38 A TALE OF A TUB. property, that over their heads there is room enough; but how to reach it, is the difficult point; it being as hard to get quit of number, as of hell: evadere ad auras, Hoc opus, hic labor eft. || To this end, the philofopher's way in all ages has been by erecting certain edifices in the air. But, whatever practice and reputation thefe kinds of ftructures have for- merly poffeffed, or may ftill continue in, not excepting even that of Socrates, when he was fufpended in a baf- ket to help contemplation; I think, with due fubmiflion, they ſeem to labour under two inconveniencies. First, That the foundations being laid too high, they have been often out of fight, and ever out of hearing. Sc- condly, That the materials, being very tranfitory, have fuffered much from inclemencies of air, efpecially in thefe north-west regions. Therefore, towards the just performance of this great work, there remain but three methods that I can think on; whereof the wifdom of our anceſtors being highly fenfible, has, to encourage all afpiring adventurers, thought fit to erect three wooden machines for the ufe of thofe orators, who defire to talk much without interruption. Theſe are, the pulpit, the ladder, and the ftage itinerant. For, as to the bar, though it be compounded of the fame matter, and defigned for the fame ufe, it cannot however be well' allowed the ho- nour of a fourth, by reafon of its level or inferior fitua- tion, expofing it to perpetual interruption from collate- rals. Neither can the bench itſelf, though raiſed to a proper eminency, put in a better claim, whatever its advocates bewildered by religion-But although our fatirical author, now and then, may have Indulged himfelf in fome perfonal animofities, or may have taken freedoms not ſo perfectly confiftent with that folemn de- cency which is required from a clergyman; yet, throughout the whole piece, there is a vein of ridicule and good humour, that laughs pedantry and affectation into the lowest degree of contempt, and ex- poſes the character of Peter and Jack in fuch a manner, as never will be forgiven, and never can be answered. Orrery. But to return and view the cheerful ſkies; In this the task and mighty labour lies. Sect. 1. 39 THE INTRODUCTION. advocates infift on. For, if they pleaſe to look into the original defign of its erection, and the circumſtances or adjuncts fubfervient to that defign, they will foon ac- knowledge the prefent practice exactly correfpondent to the primitive inftitution; and both to answer the etymo- logy of the name, which in the Phonician tongue is a word of great fignification, importing, if literally inter- preted, the place of fleep; but in common acceptation, feat well bolstered and cushioned, for the repoſe of old and gouty limbs: Senes ut in otia tuta recedant: Fortune being indebted to them this part of retaliation, that, as for- merly they have long talked, whilft others flept, ſo now they may fleep as long, whilſt others talk. But if no other argument could occur, to exclude the bench and the bar from the lift of oratorial machines, it were fufficient, that the admiffion of them would over- throw a number which I was reſolved to eſtabliſh, what- ever argument it might coft me; in imitation of that prudent method obferved by many other philofophers and great clerks, whofe chief art in divifion has been to grow fond of fome proper myſtical number, which their imaginations have rendered facred, to a degree, that they force common reaſon to find room for it in every part of nature; reducing, including, and adjuſt- ing every genus and Species, within that compafs, by cou- pling fome against their wills, and banishing others at any rate. Now, among all the reft, the profound num- ber THREE is that which hath most employed my fublimeft fpeculations, nor ever without wonderful de- light. There is now in the prefs, and will be publiſhed next term, a panegyrical eſſay of mine upon this num- ber; wherein I have, by moft convincing proofs, not only reduced the fenfes and the clements under its banner, but brought over feveral deferters from its two great ri- vals, SEVEN and NINE. Now, the firſt of theſe oratorial machines in place, as well as dignity, is the pulpit. Of pulpits there are in this ifland feveral forts; but I efteem only that made of timber from the fylva Caledonia, which agrees very well with our climate. If it be upon its decay, it is the better, both for conveyance of found, and for other rea- fons to be mentioned by and by. The degree of per- fection 40 A TALE OF A TU B. fection in ſhape and fize, I take to confift in being ex- tremely narrow, with little ornament, and beſt of all without a cover, (for, by ancient rule, it ought to be the only uncovered veffel in every affembly, where it is right- fully ufed ;) by which means, from its near reſemblance to a pillory, it will ever have a mighty influence on hu- man ears. Of ladders I need fay nothing. It is obferved by fo- reigners themſelves, to the honour of our country, that we excel all nations in our practice and underſtanding of this machine. The afcending orators do not only oblige their audience in the agreeable delivery, but the whole world in the early publication of their fpecches; which I look upon as the choiceft treaſury of our Britiſh elo- quence, and whereof, I am informed, that worthy citizen and bookfeller, Mr. John Dunton, hath made a faithful and a painful collection, which he fhortly de- figns to publish in twelve volumes in folio, illuftrated with copper-plates: A work highly uſeful and curious, and altogether worthy of fuch a hand. The laft engine of orators is the ſtage-itinerant, * erect- ed with much fagacity, Sub Jove pluvio, in triviis et quadriviis. I It is the great feminary of the two former, and its orators are fometimes preferred to the one, and fometimes to the other, in proportion to their deferv- ings, there being a ſtrict and perpetual intercourfe be- tween all three. From this accurate deduction it is manifeft, that for obtaining attention in public, there is of neceflity re- quired a fuperior pofition of place. But although this point be generally granted, yet the caufe is little agreed in; and it feems to me, that very few philofophers have fallen into a true, natural folution of this phænomenon. The deepeſt account, and the moft fairly digefted of any I have yet met with, is this, That air being a heavy body, and therefore, according to the fyftem of Epicu rus, continually defcending, muft needs be more fo, when loaden and preſſed down by words; which are al- fo * Is the mountebank's stage, whofe orators the author determines either to the gallows or á conventicle. In the open air, and in streets where the greateſt reſort is. Lucret. lib. 2, Sect. 1. THE INTRODUCTION, t fo bodies of much weight and gravity, as it is manifeft from thoſe deep impreſſions they make and leave upon us; and therefore must be delivered from a due altitude, or elfe they will neither carry a good aim, nor fall down with a fufficient force. Corpoream quoque enim vocem conftare fatendum eft, Et fonitum, quoniam poſſunt impellere fenfus. Lucr. lib. 4, And I am the readier to favour this conjecture, from a common obfervation, that, in the feveral affemblies of theſe orators, nature itſelf hath inftructed the hearers to ſtand with their mouths open, and erected parallel to the horizon, ſo as they may be interfected by a perpen- dicular line from the zenith to the centre of the earth. In which poſition, if the audience be well compact, every one carries home a fhare, and little or nothing is loft. I confefs, there is fomething yet more refined in the contrivance and ſtructure of our modern theatres. For, firſt, the pit is funk below the ſtage, with due regard to the inftitution above deduced; that whatever weighty matter ſhall be delivered thence, whether it be lead or gold, may fall plum into the jaws of certain critics, as I think they are called, which ſtand ready opened to de- vour them. Then, the boxes are built round, and raif- ed to a level with the fcene, in deference to the ladies; becauſe that large portion of wit, laid out in raifing pruriences and protuberances, is obſerved to run much upon line, and ever in a circle. The whining paf- fions, and little ftarved conceits, are gently wafted up, by their own extreme levity, to the middle region; and there fix, and are frozen by the frigid understandings of the inhabitants. Bombaftry and buffoonry, by nature lofty and light, foar higheft of all; and would be loft in the roof, if the prudent architect had not with much forefight contrived for them a fourth place, called the twelve-penny gallery, and there planted a fuitable colony, who greedily intercept them in their paffage. * 'Tis certain then, that voice, that thus can wound, Is all material; body every found. Now, 42 A TALE OF A TUB. } Now, this phyfico-logical ſcheme of oratorial recep- tacles or machines, contains a great mystery; being a type, a fign, an emblem, a fhadow, a fymbol, bearing analogy to the fpacious commonwealth of writers, and to thoſe methods by which they muft exalt themſelves to a certain eminency above the inferior world. By the pulpit are adumbrated the writings of our modern jaints in Great Britain, as they have fpiritualiſed and refined them from the drofs and groffness of fenfe and human reaſon. The matter, as we have ſaid, is of rotten wood; and that upon two confiderations; becauſe it is the quality of rotten wood to give light in the dark and, fecondly, becauſe its cavities are full of worms; which is a type with a pair of handles, I having a respect to the two principal qualifications of the orator, and the two different fates attending upon his works. : The ladder is an adequate fymbol of faction, and of poetry; to both of which fo noble a number of authors are indebted for their fame. Of faction, becauſe * 濒 ​* * * * * || Hiatus in MS. * of poetry, because its orators do perorare with a fong; and, be- caufe, climbing up by flow degrees, Fate is fure to turn them off before they can reach within many fteps of the top; and becauſe it is a preferment attained by transfer- ring of property, and a confounding of meum and tuum. Under the Stage-itinerant are couched thoſe produc- tions defigned for the pleaſure and delight of mortal man; fuch as Sixpenny-worth of wit, Westminster drol- leries, Delightful tales, Complete jeſters, and the like; by which the writers of and for GRUB-STREET have in The two principal qualifications of a fanatic preacher, are, his inward light, and his head full of maggots; and the two different fates of his writings are, to be burnt or worm eaten. Here is pretended a defect in the manufcripts; and this is very frequent with our author, cither when he thinks he cannot fay any thing worth reading; or when he has no mind to enter on the fub- ject; or when it is a matter of little moment; or perhaps to amuſe. his reader, whereof he is frequently very fond; or, laſtly, with fome fatirical intention. Sect. I. 43 THE INTRODUCTION. in theſe latter ages fo nobly triumphed over Time; have clipped his wings, pared his nails, filed his teeth, turned back his hour-glafs, blunted his fcithe, and drawn the hobnails out of his fhoes. It is under this claſs I have prefumed to lift my prefent treatife, being juft come from having the honour conferred upon me, to be adopt- ed a member of that i luſtrious fraternity. Now, I am not unaware, how the productions of the Grub-street brotherhood have of late years fallen under many prejudices; nor how it has been the perpetual employment of two junior ſtart-up focieties, to ridicule them and their authors, as unworthy their eftabliſhed poft in the commonwealth of wit and learning. Their own confciences will eafily inform them, whom I mean. Nor has the world been fo negligent a looker-on, as not to obferve the continual efforts made by the focieties of Greſhain and of Will's † to edify a name and repu- tation upon the ruin of OURS. And this is yet a more feeling grief to us, upon the regards of tenderneſs as well as of juftice, when we reflect on their proceedings not only as unjuft, but as ungrateful, undutiful, and unnatural. For how can it be forgot by the world, or themſelves, to fay nothing of our own records, which are full and clear in the point, that they both are femi- naries, not only of our planting, but our watering toọ? I am informed, our two rivals have lately made an offer to enter into the lifts with united forces, and chal- lenge us to a comparifon of books, both as to weight and number. In return to which, with licence from our prefident, I humbly offer two anfwers. First, we fay, the propofal is like that which Archimedes made upon a ſmaller affair, ‡ including an impoffibility in the practice; for where can they find fcales of capacity enough for the first, or an arithmetician of capacity enough for the fecond? Secondly, we are ready to accept the challenge; but with this condition, that a third indif- ferent * Gresham college was the place where the Royal fociety then met, from whence they removed to Crane court in Fleet-ſtreet. + Will's coffeehouse in Covent-garden was formerly the place where the poets ufually met; which, though it be yet fresh in memory, in fome years may be forgotten, and want this explanation, il. About moving the earth. 44 A TALE OF A TU B. ferent perfon be affigned, to whofe impartial judgment it fhould be left to decide, which fociety each book, trea- tife, or pamphlet, do moft properly belong to. This point, God knows, is very far from being fixed at pre- fent: for we are ready to produce a catalogue of fome thouſands, which in all common juftice ought to be in- titled to our fraternity, but by the revolted and new- fangled writers moſt perfidiouſly afcribed to the others. Upon all which, we think it very unbecoming our pru- dence, that the determination ſhould be remitted to the authors themſelves; when our adverfaries, by briguing and caballing, have cauſed ſo univerfal a defection from us, that the greateſt part of our fociety hath already de- ferted to them, and our nearest friends begin to ſtand aloof, as if they were half-aſhamed to own us. This is the utmoſt I am authoriſed to ſay, upon ſo un- grateful and melancholy a ſubject; becauſe we are ex- tremely unwilling to inflame a controverfy, whofe conti- nuance may be fo fatal to the interefts of us all; defiring much rather that things be amicably compofed: and we fhall fo far advance on our fide, as to be ready to receive the two prodigals with open arms, whenever they fhall think fit to return from their bufks and their harlots which, I think, from the prefent courfe of their ſtudies,‡ they moſt properly may be faid to be engaged in; and, like an indulgent parent, continue to them our affection and our blefling. But the greateſt maim given to that general reception which the writings of our fociety have formerly received, (next to the tranfitory ftate of all fublunary things,) hath been a ſuperficial vein among many readers of the prefent age, who will by no means be perfuaded to in- ſpect beyond the ſurface and the rind of things: Where- as, wifdom is a fox, who, after long hunting, will at laft cost you the pains to dig out: it is a cheeje, which, by how much the richer, has the thicker, the homelier, and the coarfer coat; and whereof, to a judicious palate, the maggots are the beft: it is a jack-poffct, where- in the deeper you go, you will find it the fweeter. Wisdom is a hen, whofe cackling we muft value and con- Virtuofo experiments, and modern comedies. fider, Sect. I. 45 THE INTRODUCTION. fider, becauſe it is attended with an egg. But, then, laftly, it is a nut, which, unless you chufe with judg- ment, may coft you a tooth, and pay you with nothing but a worm. In confequence of thefe momentous truths, the Grubæan fages have always chofen to convey their precepts and their arts fhut up within the vehicles of types and fables; which having been perhaps more care- ful and curious in adorning, than was altogether necef- fary it has fared with thefe vehicles, after the ufual fate of coaches over-finely painted and gilt, that the tranfitory gazers have to dazzled their eyes, and filled their imagi- nations with the outward luftre, as neither to regard or confider the perfon or the parts of the owner within: A misfortune we undergo with fomewhat lefs reluctancy, becauſe it has been common to us with Pythagoras, Efop, Socrates, and other of our predeceffors." However, that neither the world nor ourſelves, may any longer fuffer by fuch mifunderstandings, I have been prevailed on, after much importunity from my friends, to travel in a complete and laborious differtation upon the prime productions of our fccicty; which, befides their beautiful externals for the gratification of fuperficial readers, have darkly and deeply couched under them the moſt finiſhed and refined fyflems of all fciences and arts; as I do not doubt to lay open by untwifling or unwind- ing, and either to draw up by exantlation, or difplay by incifion. This great work was entered upon fome years ago by one of our molt eminent members. He began with the history of Reynard the fox; but neither lived to pub- lifh his effay, nor to proceed farther in fo ufeful an at- tempt; which is very much to be lamented, becauſe the diſcovery he made, and communicated with his friends, is now univerfally received; nor do I think, any of the learned will diſpute that famous treatrife to be a com- plete body of civil knowledge, and the revelation, or ra- ther the apocalypfe of all ſtate arcana. But the progreſs I have made is much greater, having already finiſhed my annotations The author feems here to be mistaken; for I have feen a Latin edition of Reynard the fox above a hundred years old, which I take to be the original; for the reft, it has been thought by many people to contain fome fatirical defign in it. 46 A TALE OF A TUB. annotations upon ſeveral dozens; from fome of which I fhall impart a few hints to the candid reader, as far as will be neceffary to the conclufion at which I aim. The firft piece I have handled, is that of Tom Thumb, whofe author was a Pythagorean philofopher. This dark treatiſe contains the whole fcheme of the metem- pfychofis, deducing the progress of the foul through all her ſtages. * The next is Dr Faustus, penned by Artephius, an au- thor bonæ notæ, and an adeptus. He publifhed it in the nine-hundred.h-eighty-fourth year of his age. This writer proceeds wholly by reincrudation, or in the via humida: and the marriage between Fauftus and Helen does moſt conſpicuouſly dilucidate the fermenting of the male and female dragon. Whittington and his cat is the work of that myſterious Rabbi, Jenuda Hannafi; containing a defence of the Gemara of the Jerufalem Mifna, I and its juft preference to that of Babylon, contrary to the vulgar opinion. The Hind and Panther. This is the mafter-piece of a famous writer now living, || intended for a complete ab- ftract of fixteen thouſand ſchoolmen from Scotus to Bellarmin. Tommy Pots. Another piece fuppofed by the fame hand, by way of fupplement to the former. The wife men of Goatham, cum appendice. This is a treatife of immenfe erudition; being the great original and fountain of thofe arguments, bandied about both in France and England, for a juft defence of the moderns learning and wit againft the prefumption, the pride, and ignorance of the ancients. This unknown author hath fo exhauſted the fubject, that a penetrating reader will eafily diſcover whatever hath been written fince upon that difpute to be little more than repetition. An abſtract *The chymifts fay of him in their books, that he prolonged his life to a thousand years, and then died voluntarily. Hawkef. The Gemara is the decifion, explanation, or interpretation of the Jewish rabbies: and the Mifua is properly the code or body of the Jewish civil or common law. Hawkef. I viz. in 1698. Sect. 1. 47 THE INTRODUCTION. abſtract of this treatiſe hath been lately publiſhed by a worthy member of our fociety. * Thefe notices may ferve to give the learned reader an idea, as well as a tafte, of what the whole work is likely to produce; wherein I have now altogether circum- fcribed my thoughts and my ftudies; and, if I can bring it to a perfection before I die, fhall reckon I have well employed the poor remains of an unfortunate life. † This indeed is more than I can juſtly expect from a quill worn to the pith in the fervice of the ſtate, in pro's and con's upon Popish plots, and meal-tubs, ‡ and exclufion-bills, and paffive obedience, and addreſſes of lives and fortunes ; and prerogative, and property, and liberty of confcience, and letters to a friend: from an understanding and a con- fcience thread-bare and ragged with perpetual turning; from a head broken in a hundred places by the malig- nants of the oppofite factions; and from a body ſpent with poxes ill cured, by truiting to bawds and furgeons, who, as it afterwards appeared, were profeffed enemies to me and the government, and revenged their party's quarrel upon my nofe and fhins. Fourfcore and eleven pamphlets have I written under three reigns, and for the fervice of fix and thirty factions. But, finding the flate has no farther occafion for me and my ink, I retire willingly to draw it out into fpeculations more becoming a philofopher; having, to my unſpeakable comfort, paf- fed a long life with a confcience void of offence. + But to return: I am affured from the reader's candor, that the brief fpecimen I have given, will eaſily clear all the rest of our fociety's productions from an afper- fion grown, as it is manifeft, out of envy and igno- rance, That they are of little farther ufe or value to mankind beyond the common entertainments of their wit and their ftyle; for thefe I am fure have never yet been This I fuppofe to be underfood of Mr. Wotton's difcourfe of ancient and modern learning. + Here the author feems to perfonate L'Etrange, Dryden, and fome others, who, after having paffed their lives in vices, faction, and falsehood, have the impudence to talk of merit, and innocence, and fufferings. In King Charles II.'s time, there was an account of a Preſbyteri- an plot, found in a tub, which then made much noiſe. 48 A TALE OF A TUB. been diſputed by our kecneft adverfaries: in both which as well as the more profound and myſtical part, I have throughout this treatife clofely followed the moſt ap- plauded originals. And to render all complete, I have, with much thought and application of mind, fo ordered, that the chief title prefixed to it, I mean, that under which I deſign it fhall pass in the common converſations of court and town, is modelled exactly after the manner peculiar to our fociety. ተ I confefs to have been ſomewhat liberal in the buſineſs of titles, having obferved the humour of multiplying them to bear great vogue among certain writers, whom I exceedingly reverence. And indeed it feems not un- reaſonable, that books, the children of the brain, ſhould have the honour to be chriſtened with variety of names, as well as other infants of quality. Our famous Dry- den has ventured to proceed a point farther, endeavour- ing to introduce alfo a multiplicity of godfathers; † which is an improvement of much more advantage, upon a very obvious account. It is a pity this admirable in- vention has not been better cultivated, fo as to grow by this time into general imitation, when fuch an authority ferves it for a precedent. Nor have my endeavours been wanting to fecond fo ufeful an example: but it ſeems, there is an unhappy expence ufually annexed to the call- ing of a godfather, which was clearly out of my head as it is very reaſonable to believe. Where the pinch lay, I cannot certainly affirm; but having employed a world of thoughts and pains to fplit my treatife into for- ty ſections, and having intreated forty lords of my ac- quaintance, that they would do me the honour to ſtand, they all made it a matter of confcience, and fent me their excufes. SECT. The title-page in the original was fo torn, that it was not poffi ble to recover feveral titles, which the author here ſpeaks of. + See Virgil tranflated, &c. He dedicated the different parts of Virgil to different patrons. 49 O SECT. II. NCE upon a time, there was a man who had three fons by one wife, * and all at a birth; neither could the midwife tell certainly which was the eldeſt. Their father died while they were young; and upon his deathbed, calling the lads to him, fpoke thus, Sons, Becauſe I have purchaſed no eftate, nor was born to any, I have long confidered of fome good legacies to bequeath you; and at last, with much care as well as expence, have provided each of you (here they are) a new coat. † Now, you are to understand, that theſe coats have two virtues con- tained in them. One is, that, with good wearing, they will last you fresh and found as long as you live. The other is, that they will grow in the fame proportion with your bodies, lengthening and widening of themselves, ſo as to be always fit. Here, let me fee them on you before I die. So, very well pray, children, wear them clean, and bruſh them often. You will find in my will (here it is) full inftructions in every particular concerning the wearing and management of your coats; wherein you must be very exact, to avoid the penaltics I have appointed for every tranfgreffion or neglect, upon which your future fortunes will entirely depend. I have al- fo commanded in my will, that you should live together in one houſe like brethren and friends; for then you will be fure to thrive, and not otherwife. VOL. I. D Here, By thefe three fons, Peter, Martin, and Jack; Popery, the Church of England, and our Proteftant Diffenters are defigned. W. Votton. In the character of Peter, we fee the Pope, ferted on his pontifical throne, and adorned with his triple crown. In the picture of Mar- tin, we view Luther and the first reformers. And in the defcription of Jack, we behold John Calvin and his difciples. The author's arrows are chiefly directed against Peter and Jack. To Martin he hews all the indulgence that the laws of allegory will permit. Orrery. By his coats, which he gave his fons, the garments of the Ifrae- IV. Wotton. lites. An eiror (with fubmiffion) of the learned commentator; for by the coats are meant the doctrine and faith of Chriſtianity, by the wiſdom of the divine founder, fitted to all times, places, and cir- cumftances. Lambin. I The New Testament, " 50 A TALE OF A TUB. Here, the story fays, this good father died, and the three fons went all together to feek their fortunes I ſhall not trouble you with recounting what adven- tures they met for the firft feven years, any farther than by taking notice, that they carefully obferved their fa- ther's will, and kept their coats in very good order that they travelled through feveral countries, encoun- tered a reaſonable quantity of giants, and flew certain dragons. Being now arrived at the proper age for producing themſelves, they came up to town, and fell in love with the ladies; but eſpecially three, who about that time were in chief reputation; the Duchefs d' Argent, Ma- dame de Grands Titres, and the Countefs d'Orgueil. I On their first appearance, our three adventurers met with a very bad reception; and foon with great fagacity gueffing out the reafon, they quickly began to improve in the good qualities of the town. They writ, and rallied, and rhymed, and fung, and faid, and faid no- thing; they drank, and fought, and whored, and flept, and fwore, and took fnuff; they went to new plays on the first night, haunted the chocolate-houfes, beat the watch, lay on bulks, and got claps; they bilked hack- ney-coachmen, ran in debt with fhopkeepers, and lay with their wives; they killed bailiffs, kicked fidlers down ftairs, eat at Locket's, loitered at Will's; they talked of the drawing-room, and never came there; dined with lords they never faw; whispered a duchefs, and ſpoke never a word; expofed the fcrawls of their laundrefs for billetdoux of quality; came ever juſt from court, and were never ſeen in it; attended the levee fub dio; got a lift of peers by heart in one company, and with great familiarity retailed them in another. Above all, they conſtantly attended thofe committees of fena- tors, who are filent in the house, and loud in the coffeehouſe ; where they nightly adjourn to chew the cud of poli- tics; and are encompaffed with a ring of difciples, who lie in wait to catch up their droppings. The three Their mistreffes are, the Duchefs d'Argent, Mademoiſelle de Grands Titres, and the Counteſs d'Orgueil; i. e. covetouſneſs, am- bition, and pride; which were the three great vices that the ancient fathers inveighed against, as the firft corruptions of Chriſtianity. W. Wotton, A TALE OF A TUB. 51 three brothers had acquired forty other qualifications of the like ftamp, too tedious to recount, and, by confe- quence, were juſtly reckoned the moft accompliſhed per- fons in the town. But all would not fuffice, and the la- dics aforefaid continued ftill inflexible. To clear up which difficulty, I muft, with the reader's good leave and patience, have recourfe to fome points of weight, which the authors of that age have not fufficiently illuf trated. For about this time it happened, a fect arofe, whoſe tenets obtained and fpread very far, efpecially in the grand monde, and among every body of good faſhion. || They worshipped a fort of idol, † who, as their doc- trine delivered, did daily create men by a kind of ma- nufactory operation. This idol they placed in the high- eft parts of the houſe, on an altar erected about three foot. He was fhewn in the poſture of a Perſian Empe- ror, fitting on a fuperficies, with his legs interwoven un- der him. This god had a goofe for his enfign; whence it is, that fome learned men pretend to deduce his origi- nal from Jupiter Capitolinus. At his left hand, beneath the altar, hell feemed to open, and catch at the animals. the idol was creating: to prevent which, certain of his prieſts hourly flung in pieces of the uninformed maſs or fubftance, and fometimes whole limbs already enliven- ed; which that horrid gulf infatiably fwallowed, terri- ble to behold. The goofe was alſo held a fubaltern di- vinity, or deus minorum gentium; before whofe fhrine was facrificed that creature, whofe hourly food is human gore, and who is in fo great renown abroad for being the delight and favourite of the Egyptian Cercopithecus.‡ Millions of thefe animals were cruelly flaughtered eve- ry day, to appeale the hunger of that confuming deity. The chief idol was also worshipped as the inventor of the yard and reedle; whether as the god of feamen, or on account of certain other myilical attributes, hath not been fufficiently cleared. D 2 The This is an occafional fatire upon drefs and faſhion, in order to introduce what follows. + By this idol is meant a tailor. very The Egyptians worshipped a monkey; which animal is fond of eating lice, ftyled here creatures that feed on human gore. 52 A TALE OF A TUB. The worshippers of this deity had alio a fyftem of their belief, which feemed to turn upon the following fundamentals. They held the univerfe to be a large juit of cloaths, which invests every thing. that the earth is invested by the air; the air is invelled by the flars; and the stars are invefted by the primum mobile. Look on this globe of earth, you will find it to be a very complete. and faſhionable drefs. What is that which fome call land, but a fine coat faced with green? or the fea, but a waiſtcoat of water-tabby? Proceed to the parti- cular works of the creation, you will find how curious journeyman Nature hath been, to trim up the vegetable beaux: oberve how fparkifh a periwig adorns the head of a beech, and what a fine doublet of white fattin is worn by the birch. To conclude from all, what is man himſelf but a micro-coat; || or rather a complete ſuit of cloa hs, with all its trimmings? As to his body, there can be no difpute. But examine even the acquirements of his mind, you will find them all contribute in their or- der towards furnishing out an exact drefs. To inftance no more; is not religion a clonk; honefly a pair of fhoes, worn out in the dirt; felf-love a furtout; vanity a fpirt; and confcience a pair of breeches, which, though a cover for lewdness as well as naftinefs, is cafily flipt down for the fervice of both? Theſe poflulata being admitted, it will follow in due courſe of reaſoning, that thofe beings, which the world calls improperly ſuits of cloaths, are in reality the moſt refined fpecies of animals; or, to procced higher, that they are rational creatures, or men For is it not mani- feft, that they live, and move, and talk, and perform all other offices of human life? Are not beauty and wit, and mein, and breeding, their infeparable proper- ties? In fhort, we fee nothing but them, hear nothing but them. Is it not they who walk the ſtreets, fill up parliament, coffee, play, bawdy boujes ? It is true indeed, that theſe animals, which are vulgarly called fuits of cloaths, or dreffes, do, according to certain compofitions, receive different appellations. If one of them Alluding to the word microccfm, or a little world, as man hath teen called by philofophers, A TALE OF A TU B. 53 them be trimmed up with a gold chain, and a red gown, and a white rod, and a great horfe, it is called a Lord Mayor; if certain ermins and furs be placed in a certain pofition, we ſtyle them a Judge; and fo, an apt con- junction of lawn and black fattin, we intitle a Bishop Others of theſe profeffors, though agreeing in the. main fyftem, were yet more refined upon certain branches of it; and held, that man was an animal compounded of two drefes, the natural and the celeftial uit; which were the body and the foul; that the foul was the out- ward, and the body the inward cloathing; that the latter was ex tradu.e. but the former of daily creation and circumfufion. This laft they proved by ſcripture, becauſe in them we live, and move, and have our being: as likewife by philoſophy; becauſe they are all in all, and all in every part. Befides, faid they, feparate thefe two, and you will find the body to be only a ſenſeleſs unfavoury carcale. By all which it is manifeft, that the outward dreſs muſt needs be the foul. To this fyftem of religion were tagged ſeveral ſubal- tern doctrines, which were entertained with great vogue; as, particularly, the faculties of the mind were deduced by the learned among them in this manner. Embroidery was ſheer wit; gold fringe was agreeable converſation; gold lace was repartee; a huge long peri- wig was bamour; and a coat full powder was very gocit * The first part of the tale, is the hiftory of Peter. Thereby Pope. ry is expoſed. Every body knows, the Papifts have made great ad- ditions to Chriſtianity; that indeed is the great exception which the church of England makes againt them: accordingly Peter begins his pranks with adding a ſhoulder-knot to his coat. W. Werten. The actions of Peter are the actions of a man intoxicated with pride, power, rage, tyranny, and felf conceit. Thele paffions are placed in the moſt ridiculous light: and the effects of them produce to us the tenets and doctrines of papal Rome, fuch as purgatorv, pe- nance, images, ingulgen cs, auricular confeffion, tranfubitantiation, and thofe dreadful monfters, the pontifical bulls, which, according to this ludicrous author, derived their original from the famous bulls of Colchis, defcribed by Ovid. Terribiles vulius, præfixaque cornua ferro; Pulvereumque folum pede puha vere bifulco; J Fum ficiffus locum mugitibus impleverë. Met. i. vi. V. 112. 54 A TALE OF A TUB, good raillery. All which required abundance of fineffe and delicatee to manage with advantage, as well as a ftrict obfervance after times and faſhions. I have, with much pains and reading, collected out of ancient authors this fhort fummary of a body of philofo- phy and divinity; which feems to have been compofed by a vein and race of thinking, very different from any other ſyſtems, either ancient or modern. And it was not merely to entertain or fatisfy the reader's curiofity, but rather to give him light into ſeveral circumſtances of the following ſtory; that, knowing the ftate of difpofiti- ons and opinions in an age fo remote, he may better comprchend thofe great events which were the iſſue of them. I advife therefore the courteous reader, to per- uſe, with a world of application, again and again, what- ever I have written upon this matter. And leaving theſe broken ends, I carefully gather up the chief thread of my ftory, and proceed. Thefe opinions therefore were ſo univerſal, as well as the practices of thein, among the refined part of court and town, that our three brother-adventurers, as their circumftances then flood, were ſtrangely at a lofs. For, on the one fide, the three ladies they addreffed them- felves to, whom we have named already, were ever at the very top of the faſhion, and abhorred all that were below it but the breadth of a hair. On the other fide their father's will was very precife; and it was the main pre- cept in it, with the greateſt penaltics annexed, not to add to, or diminish from their coats, one thread, without a pofitive command in the will. Now, the coats their father had left them, were, it is true, of very good cloth; and, befides, fo neatly fown, you would ſwear they were all of a piece; but at the fame time very plain, and with little or no ornament. And it happened, that, before His defcription of the cloth of which the coat was made, has a farther meaning than the words may feem to import : The coats, "their father had left them, were of very good cloth; and, befides, "fo neatly fown, you would ſwear they were all of a piece; but at "the fame time very plain, with little or no ornament. This is the diftinguishing character of the Chriftian religion. Chriftiana re- ligio abfoluta et fimplex, was Ammianus Marcellinus's defcription of it, who was himself a fleathen. IV". IV'otton, A TALE OF A TU B. 55 ; before they were a month in town, great jhoulder-knots came up: * ftraight all the world wore shoulder-knots no approaching the ladies ruelles, without the quota of Shoulder-knots. That fellow, cries one, has no foul; where is his shoulder-knot? Our three brethren foon difco- vered their want by fad experience, meeting in their walks with forty mortifications and indignities. If they went to the playhouse, the door-keeper fhewed them into the twelve penny gallery. If they called a boat, fays a waterman, I am first feuller. If they ftepped to the Roſe to take a bottle, the drawer would cry, Friend, we fell no ale. If they went to vifit a lady, a footman met them at the door, with Pray send up your message. In this unhappy cafe they went immediately to confult their father's will; read it over and over, but not a word of the boulder-knot. What fhould they do? What temper fhould they find? Obedience was abfolutely neceffary, and yet fhoulder knots appeared extremely requifite. Af- ter much thought, one of the brothers, who happened to be more book-learned than the other two, ſaid, he had found an expedient. It is true, faid he, there is nothing bere in this will, totidem verbis, ‡ making mention of fhoulder-knots but I dare conjecture, we may find them inclufive, or totidem fyllabis. This diſtinction was im- mediately approved by all; and fo they fell again to examine. But their evil ftar had fo directed the matter, that the firſt fyllable was not to be found in the whole writing. Upon which difappointment, he, who found the former evalion, took heart, and faid, Brothers, there is yet hope; for though we cannot find them totidem ver- bis, nor totidem fyllabis, I dare engage we shall make them eut tertio modo, or totidem literis. This difcovery was alfo highly commended: upon which they fell once more to By this is understood the first introducing of pageantry, and un- neceffary ornaments in the church, fuch as were neither for con- venience nor edification; as a ſhoulder-knot, in which there is nei- ther fymmetry nor uſe. When the Papifts cannot find any thing which they want in fcripture, they go to oral tradition. Thus Peter is introduced difĩa - tisfied with the tedious way of looking for all the letters of any word, which he has occafion for in the will; when neither the conftituent fyllables, nor much lefs the whole word, were there in terminis. Ty'. IVotton. 56 A TALE OF A TUB. to the fcrutiny, and picked out S, H, O, U, L, D, E, R, when the fame planet, enemy to their repofe, had won- derfully contrived, that a K was not to be found. Here was a weighty difficulty! But the diftinguifhing bro- ther, for whom we fhall hereafter find a name, now his hand was in, proved, by a very good argument, that K was a modern illegitimate letter, unknown to the learned ages, nor any where to be found in ancient ma- nuſcripts. ""Tis true" (faid he) "the word Calenda " hath in Q. V. C. ‡ been fometimes written with a "K; but erroneously; for in the best copies it has been ever ſpelt with a C. And, by confequence, it was a grofs miſtake in our language to fſpell knot with a K; "but that from henceforward he would take care it "fhould be written with a C." Upon this all farther difficulty vanished; ſhoulder-knots were made clearly out to be jure paterno; and our three gentlemen fwaggered with as large and as flaunting ones as the beſt. << What But as human happineſs is of a very ſhort duration, fo in thoſe days were human faſhions, upon which it en-- tirely depends. Shoulder-knots had their time; and we muft now imagine them in their decline: for a certain lord came juſt from Paris, with fifty-yards of gold-lace upon his coat, exacly trimmed after the court-fashion of that month. In two days all mankind appeared clof- ed up in bars of gold-lace. § Whoever durft peep abroad without his complement of geld lace, was a fcandalous as a, and as ill received among the women. ſhould our three knights do in this momentous affair? They had fufficiently trained a point already, in the af fair of boulder-knots. Upon recourfe to the will, no- thing appeared there but altum filentium. That of the boulder-knots was a loofe, flying, circumftantial point; but this of gold-lace feemed too confiderable an altera- tion without better warrant; it did aliquo modo effentia adhærere, and therefore required a pofitive precept. But about this time it fell out, that the learned brother afore- faid had read Ariftotelis dialectica; and eſpecially that wonderful ↑ Quibuflam veteribus codicibus: Some ancient manufcripts. I cannot tell, whether the author means any new innovation by this word, or whether it be only to introduce the new methods of forcing and perverting fcripture, A TALE OF A TUB. ST wonderful piece de interpretatione which has the faculty of teaching its readers to find out a meaning in every thing but itflf; like commentators on the Revelations, who proceed prophets without underſtanding a fyllable of the text Brothers, faid he, you are to be informed, that of wills duo funt genera, nuncupatory † and jcriptory. That in the fcriptory will here before us, there is no precept or mention about gold-lace, conceditur: but, fi idem affir- metur de nuncupatoria, negatur. For, brothers, if yoil remcmber, we heard a fellow fay, when we were boys, that he heard my father's man fay, that he heard my father fay, that he would advije his fons to get gold-lace on their coats, as foon as ever they could procure money to buy it. By G- that is very true, cries the other; I remember it perfectly well, faid the third. And fo, without more ado, they got the largest gold-lace in the parish, and walked about as fine as lords. A while after, there came up, all in faſhion, a pretty fort of flame-coloured fattin ‡ for linings; and the mercer brought a pattern of it immediately to our three gentle- men: An' pleaſe your Worships, faid he, my Lord C—, and Sir J. W. bad linings out of this very piece last night. It takes wonderfully; and I shall not have a remnant left, e- nough to make my wife a pin-cushion, by to-morrow morning at ten a clock. Upon this they fell again to rummage the will, becauſe the prefent cafe alfo required a poſi- tive precept, the lining being held by orthodox writers to be of the effence of the coat. After long fearch, they D5 By this is meant tradition, allowed to have equal authority with the fcripture, or rather greater. This is purgatory, whereef he ſpeaks more particularly here- after; but here, only to show how fcripture was perverted to prove it; which was done, by giving equal authority, with the canen, to Apocrypha, called here a cocicil annexed. It is likely the author, in every one of thefe changes in the bro- thers dreſſes, refers to fome particular error in the church of Rome; though it is not eafy, I think, to apply them all. But by this of fame- coloured fattin, is manifefly intended purgatory; by gold-lace may perhaps be understood, the lofty ornaments and plate in the churches. The boulder-knots and filver fringe are not to obvious, at least to me. But the Indian figures of men, women, and children, plainly relate to the pictures in the Romith churches, of God like an old man, of the virgin Mary, and our Saviour as a child.. 58 A TALE OF A TUB. they could fix upon nothing to the matter in hand, ex- cept a fhort advice of their father in the will, to take care of fire, and put out their candles before they went to fleep. This, though a good deal for the purpoſe, and helping very far towards ſelf-conviction, yet not feeming wholly of force to eſtabliſh a command; (be- ing refolved to avoid farther fcruple, as well as future occafion for fcandal,) fays he that was the ſcholar, I re- member to have read in wills, of a codicil annexed; which is indeed a part of the will; and what it contains, hath equal authority with the reft. Now, I have been confidering of this fame will here before us; and I cannot reckon it to be complete for want of fuch a codicil. I will therefore faßten one in its proper place very dextrofy I have had it by mc fome time. It was written by a dog-keeper of my grandfa- ther's; and talks a great deal, as good luck would have it, of this very flame-coloured fattin. The project was im- mediately approved by the other two; an old parchment fcroll was tagged on according to ait, in the form of a codicil annexed, and the fattin bought and worn. Next winter, a player, hired for the purpoſe by the corporation of fringe-makers, acted his part in a new co- medy, all covered with filver fringe; † and, according to the laudable cuftom, gave rife to that fashion. Upon which, the brothers conful.ing their father's will, to their great aftonishment found thefe words: Item, I charge and command my faid three fons, to wear no fort of filver fringe upon or about their faid coats, &c. with a pc- nalty, in cafe of difobedience, too long here to infert. However, after fome paufe, the brother fo often menti- oned for his erudition, who was well killed in criti- cifins, had found in a certain author, which he ſaid fhould be nameless, that the fame word, which in the will is called fringe, does alfo fignify a broom-flick; § and doubtless That is, to take care of hell; and, in order to do that, to ſub- due and extinguiſh their lufts. I believe this refers to that part of the Apocrypha, where men- tion is made of Tobit and his dog. This is certainly the farther introducing the pomps of habit and ornament. § The next fubje&t of our author's wit, is the gloffes and inter- pretations of fcripture, very many abfurd ones of which are allowed in the moſt authentic books of the church of Rome. W. Wotton. A TALE OF A TUB. 59 doubtles ought to have the fame interpretation in this paragraph. This another of the brothers diſliked, be- caufe of that epithet filver; which could not, he humbly conceived, in propriety of fpeech, be reaſonably applied to a broom-flick. But it was replied upon him, that this epithet was understood in a mythological and allegorical fenfe. However, he objected again, why their father ſhould forbid them to wear a broom-flick on their coats; a caution that feemed unnatural and impertinent. Upon which he was taken up ſhort, as one that ſpoke irreve- rently of a mystery; which doubtlefs was very ufeful and fignificant, but ought not to be over-curiously pried into or nicely reaſoned upon. And, in fhort, their father's authority being now confiderably funk, this expedient was allowed to ferve as a lawful difpenfation for wearing their full proportion of filver-fringe. A while after, was revived an old fashion, long anti- quated, of embroidery with Indian figures of men, wo- men, and children. Here they remembered but too well, how their father had always abhorred this faſhion; that he made feveral paragraphs on purpofe, importing his utter deteftation of it, and beftowing his everlaſting curfe to his fons, whenever they fhould wear it. For all this, in a few days, they appeared higher in the fa- fhion than any body elfe in the town. But they folved the matter, by faying that theſe figures were not at all the fame with thofe that were formerly worn, and were meant in the will. Belides, they did not wear them in the fenfe as forbidden by their father; but as they were a commendable cuftoin, and of great ufe to the public. That theſe rigorous claufes in the will did therefore re- quire fome allowance, and a favourable interpretation, and ought to be understood cum grano falis. But faſhions perpetually altering in that age, the fcho- laftic brother grew weary of fearching farther evafions, and folving everlasting contradictions. Refolved there- fore, at all hazards, to comply with the modes of the world, they concerted matters together, and agreed infant. The images of faints, the bleed virgin, and our Saviour an Ibid. Images in the church of Rome give him but too fair a handle, The brothers ren: mbered, &c. The allegory here is direct, W. Wotton. 60 A TALE OF A TU B. + agreed unanimously, to lock up their father's will in a Strong box, brought out of Greece or Italy, I have for- gotten which; and trouble themfelves no farther to ex- amine it, but only refer to its authority whenever they thought fit. In conſequence whereof, a while after, it grew a general mode to wear an infinite number of points, most of them tagged with filver. Upon which, the ſcholar pronounced ex cathedra, || that points were abſo- lutely jure paterno, as they might very well remember. It is true, indeed, the faſhion preſcribed fomewhat more than were directly named in the will; however, that they, as heirs general of their father, had power to make and add certain claufes for public emolument, though not deducible, totidem verbis, from the letter of the will; or elſe multa abfurda fequerentur This was underfood for canonical; and therefore on the following Sunday they came to church all covered with points. The learned brother, fo often mentioned, was reckon- ed the belt fcholar in all that, or the next freet to it; infomuch, as having run fomething behind-hand in the world, he obtained the favour of a certain lord, † to receive him into his houfe, and to teach his children. A while after, the lord died; and h, by long practice of his father's will, found the way of contriving a deed of conveyance of that houſe to himſelf and his heirs. Upon which he took poffeflion, turned the young 'fquires out, and received his brothers in their ftead. أر SECT. The Papifts formerly for bade the people the uſe of fcripture in a vulgar tongue; Peter therefore locks up his father's will in a ftrerg box, brought out of Greece or Italy. Thefe countries are named, be- cauſe the New Teftament is written in Greek; and the vulgar La- tin, which is the authentic edition of the Bible in the church of Rome, is in the language of old Italy. W. Wotton. || The Popes in their decretals and bulls, have given their fan&ion to very many gainful doctrines, which are now received in the church of Rome, that are not mentioned in fripture, and are unknown to the primitive church. Peter acordingly pronounces ex cathedra, that points tagged with filver were abfolutely jure paterno; and ſo they wore them in great numbers. IV. Wotton. This was Conftantine the Great, from whom the Popes pretend a donation of St. Peter's patrimony, which they have been never able to produce. § Ibid. The biſhops of Rome enjoyed their privileges in Rome at first Sect. 3. 6₂ A digreſſion concerning critics. A SECT. III. A digreffion concerning critics. * to should, Lthough I have bee hitherto as cautious as I could, upon all occafions, molt nicely to follow the rules and methods of writing laid down by the example of our illuftrious moderns; yet has the unhappy fhortness of my memory led me into an error, from which I muſt ex- tricate myself, before I can decently purfue my princi- pal fubject. I confefs with fhame, it was an unpardon- able omiflion to proceed fo far as I have already done, before I had performed the due difcourfes, expoftula- tory, fupplicatory, or deprecatory, with my good lords the critics. Towards fome atonement for this grievous neglect, I do here make humbly bold to prefent them with a fhort account of themselves and their art, by looking into the original and pedigree of the word as it is generally understood among us, and very briefly con- fidering the ancient and prefent ſtate thereof. By the word critic, at this day fo frequent in all con- verfations, there have fometimes been diftinguifhed three. very different fpecies of mortal men, according as I have read in ancient books and pamphlets. For, first, by this term was underſtood fuch perfons as invented or drew up rules for themselves and the world; by obferving which, a careful reader might be able to pronounce up- on the productions of the learned, form his tafte to a true relifh of the fublime and the admirable, and divide every beauty of ma.ter or of ftyle from the corruption. that apes it in their common perufal of books, fingling out the errors and defects, the naufeous, the fulfome, the dull, and the impertinent, with the caution of a man firft by the favour of the emperors, whom at laft they fhut out of their own capital city, and then forged a donation from Conftantine the Great, the better to juſtify what they did. In imitation of this, Peter, having run ſomething behind-band in the world, obtained leave of a certain lord, &c. W. Wotton. The feveral digreffions are written in ridicule of bad critics, dull commentaters, and the whole fraternity of Grubfireet philofophers. Oivery. 62 A TALE OF A T U B. man that walks through Edinburgh flrects in a morn ing; who is indeed as careful as he can, to watch dili- gently, and ſpy out the filth in his way, not that he is curious to obferve the colour and complexion of the or- dure, or take its dimenfions, much lefs to be paddling in, or talling; but only with a deſign to come out as cleanly as he may. Thefe men ſeem, though very er- roneouſly, to have underflood the appellation of critic in a literal fenfe; that one principal part of his office was to praiſe and acquit; and that a critic, who fets up to read only for an occafion of ceniure and reproof, is a creature as barbarcus, as a judge, who fhould take up a refolution to hang all men that came before him upon a trial. Again, by the word critic have been meant the refo- rers of ancient learning from the worms, and graves, and duft of manufcripts. Now, the races of those two have been for fome agcs utterly extinct; and befides, to difcourfe any farther of them, would not be at all to my purpoſe. The third, and nobleft fort, is that of the TRUE CRITIC, whoſe original is the most ancient of all. Every true critic is a hero born, defcending in a dire& live from a celestial ftem by Mūmus and Hybris, who begat Zoilus, who begat Tigellius, who begat Etca tera the elder, who begat Bentley and Rymer, and Wotton, and Perrault, and Dennis, who begat Etcetera the younger. But And theſe are the critics from whom the common- wealth of learning has in all ages received fuch immenſe benefits, that the gratitude of their admirers placed their origin in heaven, among thofe of Hercules, Thefeus, Perfeus, and other great defervers of mankind. heroic virtue itſelf hath not been exempt from the oblo- quy of evil tongues. For it hath been objected, that thoſe ancient heroes, famous for their combating fo many giants, and dragons, and robbers, were in their own perſons a greater nuifance to mankind, than any of thoſe monſters they fubdued; and therefore, to render their obligations more complete, when all other vermin were deſtroyed, ſhould in conſcience have concluded with the fame juftice upon themſelves; as Hercules moſt genc- roufly Sect. 3. 63 I digreffion concerning critics. rouſly did; and hath, upon that ſcore, procured to him- felf more temples and votaries, than the beſt of his fel- lows. For theſe reaſons, I fuppofe, it is, why fome have conceived, it would be very expedient for the pub- lic good of learning, that every true critic, as foon as he had finiſhed his task affigned, fhould immediately deliver himself up to ratfbane, or hemp, or from fome convenient altitude; and that no man's pretenfions to fo illuftrious a character ſhould by any means be received, before that operation were performed. Now, from this heavenly deſcent of criticiſm, and the cloſe analogy it bears to heroic virtue, it is eaſy to affign the proper employment of a true ancient genuire critic; which is, to travel through this vast world of writings; to purfue and hunt thofe nonftrous faults bred within them; to drag out the lurking errors, like Cacus from his den; to multiply them like Hydra's heads; and rake them together like Augeas's dung: or elfe drive away a fort of dangerous fowl, who have a per- verfe inclination to plunder the belt branches of the tree of knowledge, like thoſe Stymphalian birds that eat up the fruit. Theſe reaſonings will furnith us with an adequate de- finition of a true critic; that he is a diſcoverer and colle&tor of writers faults; which may be farther put beyond difpute by the following demonftration: That who- ever will examine the writings in all kinds, wherewith this ancient fect has honoured the world, fhall imme- diately find, from the whole thread and tenor of them, that the ideas of the authors have been altogether con- verſant and taken up with the faults, and blemiſhes, and overfights, and mistakes of other writers; and, let the fubject treated on be whatever it will, their imaginati- ons are fo entirely poffeffed and replete with the defects of other pens, that the very quinteffence of what is bad dots of neceflity diftil into their own; by which means the whole appears to be nothing else but an abstract of the criticijns themfelves have made. Having thus briefly confidered the original and office of a critic, as the word is understood in its moft noble and univerſal acceptation; I proceed to refute the ob- jections of thofe who argue from the filence and pre- termillion 04 A TALE OF A TUB. termiffion of authors; by which they pretend to prove; that the very art of criticiſm, as now exerciſed, and by me explained, is wholly modern; and confequently, that the critics of Great Britain and France have no title to an original fo ancient and illuftrious as I have deduced. Now, if I can clearly make out, on the contrary, that the moſt ancient writers have particularly deſcribed both the perfon and the office of a true critic, agreeable to the definition laid down by me; their grand objection, from the filence of authors, will fall to the ground.. I confefs to have for a long time borne a part in this general error; from which I'fhould never have acquitted myſelf, but through the affiftance of our noble moderns; whoſe moſt edifying volumes I turn indefatigably over night and day, for the improvement of my mind, and the good of my country. Theſe have with unwearied pains made many ufeful fearches into the weak fides of the ancients, and given us a comprehenfive lift of them. Befides, they have proved beyond contradiction, that the very fineſt things, delivered of old, have been long fince invented, and brought to light by much later pens; and that the nobleſt diſcoveries, thoſe ancients ever made of art or nature, have all been produced by the tran- fcending genius of the prefent age. Which clearly fhews, how little merit thoſe ancients can justly pretend to; and takes off that blind admiration paid them by men in a corner, who have the unhappinets of converfing too little with prefent things. Reflecting naturely upon all this, and taking in the whole compafs of human na- ture, I eaſily concluded, that theſe ancients, highly fen- fible of their many imperfections, muft needs have en- deavoured, from fome paffages in their works, to ob- viate, ſoften, or divert the cenforious reader, by jatire or panegyric upon the true critics; in imitation of their mafters the moderns. Now, in the common places of both thete, t I was plentifully inftructed, by a long courſe of uſeful fudy in prefaces and prologues; and therefore immediate- ly refolved to try what I could difcover of either, by a diligent perufal of the moft ancient writers, and cipe- 1 cially See Wotton of ancient and modern learning. + Satire and panegyric upon uitics. Sect. 3. A digreffion concerning critics. 65 cially thoſe who treated of the earliest times. Here I found, to my great furprife, that although they all en- tered, upon occafion, into particular defcriptions of the true critic, according as they were governed by their fears or their hopes; yet whatever they touched of that kind, was with abundance of caution, adventuring no farther than mythology and hieroglyphic. This, I fuppoſe, gave ground to fuperficial readers, for urging the filence of authors against the antiquity of the true critic; though the types are fo appofite, and the applications fo neceffary and natural, that it is not eafy to conceive, how any reader of a modern eye and taffe could overlook them. I ſhall venture, from a great number to produce a few, which, I am very confident, will put this question be- yond difpute. It well deferves confidering, that theſe ancient writ- ters, in treating ænigmatically upon the fubject, have generally fixed upon the very fame bieroglyph; varying only the ftory, according to their affections, or their wit. For, firit, Paufanias is of opinion, that the per- fection of writing correct was entirely owing to the in- flitution of critics. And that he can poffibly mean no other than the true critic, is, I think, manifeſt enough from the following defcription. He fays, they were a race of men who delighted to nibble at the fuperfluities and excrefcences of books; which the learned at length obſerving, took warning of their own accord to lop the luxuriant, the rotten, the dead, the faples, and the overgrown branches from their works. But now, all this he cunningly fhades under the following allegory: That the Nauplians in Argos learned the art of pruning their vines, by obferving, that when an ASS had brewjed upon one of them, it thrived the better, and bere fairer fruit. But Herodo tus, holding the very fame bieroglyph, ſpeaks much plainer, and almoſt in terminis. He hath been ſo bold as to tax the true critics of ignorance and malice; tell- ing us openly, for I think nothing can be plainer, that in the western part of Libya there avere ASSES with horns. Upon which relation Ctelias || yet refines, men- tioning ↑ Lib. 4. * Lib. 1.de excerpta ex eo apud Photium, 66 A TALE OF A TU B. • * 藏 ​tioning the very fame animal about India; adding, that whereas all other ASSES wanted a gall, thefe horned ones were fo redundant in that part, that their flesh was not to be eaten, becauſe of its extreme bitterneſs. } L H Now, the reaſon why thoſe ancient writers treated this fubject only by types and figures, was, becauſe they durft not make open attacks against a party fo potent and terrible, as the critics of thofe ages were; whofe very voice was ſo dreadful, that a legion of authors would tremble, and drop their pens at the found: for fo Herodotus tells us exprefly in another place, ‡ how a vast army of Scythians was put to flight in a panic terror by the braying of an ASS. From hence it is conjectured by certain profound philologers, that the great awe and reverence paid to a true critic by the writers of Britain, have been derived to us from thofe our Scythian ancef- tors. In fhort, this dread was fo univerfal, that, in procefs of time, thoſe authors who had a mind to publiſh their fentiments more freely, in defcribing the true cri- tics of their feveral ages, were forced to leave off the uſe of the former hieroglyph, as too nearly approaching the prototypes and invented other terms inftead thereof, that were more cautious and myftical. So Diodorus, fpeak- ing to the fame purpoſe, ventures no farther than to ſay, that, in the mountains of Helicon, there grows a certain weed, which bears a flower of ſo damned a feent, as to poi- for those who offer to jmell it. Lucretius gives exactly the fame relation: Eft etiam in magnis Heliconis montibus arbos, Floris odore bominem tetro confueta necare. † Lib. 6. } But Ctefias, whom we lately quoted, hath been 1 great deal bolder. He had been ufed with much feveri- ty by the true critics of his own age, and therefore could not forbear to leave behind him, at leaſt, one deep mark of his vengeance against the whole tribe. His mean- ing is fo near the Turface, that I wonder how it poffibly came to be overlooked by thofe who deny the antiquity I Lib. 4. † Lib. Near Helicon, and round the learned hill, Grow trees, whofc bloffoms with their odour kill. Sect. 3. A digreffion concerning critics. 67 antiquity of the true critics. For, pretending to make a defcription of many strange animals about India, he hath fet down theſe remarkable words. Amongst the reft, fays he, there is a ferpent that wants teeth, and confequently cannot bite; but if its vomit, to which it is much addicted, happens to fall upon any thing, a certain rottenneſs or cor- ruption enfues. Thefe ferpents are generally found among the mountains where jewels grow, and they frequently emit poiſonous juice; whereof whoever drinks, that perſon's brains fly out of his noftrils. There was alfo among the ancients a fort of critics, not diſtinguiſhed in fpecie from the former, but in growth or degree, who feem to have been only the tyro's or junior ſcholars; yet, becauſe of their differing employ- ments, they are frequently mentioned as a fect by them- felves. The ufual exercife of thefe younger ftudents was, to attend conftantly at theatres, and learn to fpy out the worst parts of the play, whereof they were oblig- ed carefully to take note, and render a rational account to their tutors. Fleſhed at theſe fmaller fports, like young wolves, they grew up in time to be nimble and Itrong enough for hunting down large game. For it hath been obferved, both among ancients and moderns, that a true critic hath one quality in common with a tohore and an alderman, never to change his title or his nature; that a gray critic has been certainly a green one, the perfections and acquirements of his age being only the improved talents of his youth; like hemp, which fome naturalifts inform us is bad for fuffocations, though taken but in the feed. I efteem the invention, or at leaſt the refinement of prologues, to have been owing to thefe younger proficients, of whom Terence makes frequent and honourable mention, under the name of malevoli. Now, it is certain the inftitution of the true critics was of abfolute neceflity to the commonwealth of learning. For all human actions feem to be divided, like Themit- tocles and his company: one man can fiddle, and ano- ther can make a ſmall town a great city; and he that can- not do either one or the other, deferves to be kicked out of the creation. The avoiding of which penalty has doubtless given the first birth to the nation of critics; and 68 A TALE OF A TUB. and withal, an occafion for their fecret detractors to report, that a true critic is a fort of mechanic, ſet up with a ſtock and tools for his trade at as little expence as a taylor; and that there is much analogy between the utenfils and abilities of both that the taylor's-hell is the type of a critic's common-place-book, and his wit and learning held forth by the goofe; that it requires at least as many of theſe to the inaking up of one ſcholar, as of the others to the compofition of a man; that the va lour of both is equal, and their weapons near of a ſize. Much may be faid in anfwer to thofe invidious reflec- tions and I can poſitively affirm the first to be a falfe- hood for on the contrary, nothing is more certain, than that it requires greater layings out to be free of the critic's company, than of any other you can name. For, as to be a true beggar, it will coft the richest candidate every groat he is worth; fo, before one can commence a true critic, it will coit a man all the good qualities of his mind; which perhaps for a lefs purchafe would be thought but an indifferent bargain. : * Having thus amply proved the antiquity of criticiſm, and defcribed the primitive flate of it; I fhall now ex- amine the prefent condition of this empire, and fhew how well it agrces with its ancient felf. A certain author, whofe works have many ages fince been en- tirely loll, does, in his fifth book, and eighth chapter, fay of critics, that their writings are the mirrors of learx- ing. This I underſtand in a literal fenfe; and ſuppoſe our author mult incan, that whoever defigns to be a perfect writer, mult infpect into the books of critics, and correct his invention there, as in a mirror. Now, who- ever confiders, that the mirrors of the ancients were made of bras, and fine mercurio, may prefently apply the two principal qualifications of a true modern critic; and confequently mult needs conclude, that thele have al- ways been, and must be for ever the fame For bras is an emblem of duration, and, when it is fkilfully bur- nifhed, will caft reflections from its own fuperficies, with- out any affistance of mercury from behind. All the o- ther * A quotation after the manner of a great author. Vide Bentley's differtation, &i. Sect. 4. A TALE OF A TUB. 69 ther talents of a critic will not require a particular men- tion, being included, or eafily reducible to thefe. How- ever, I fhall conclude with three maxims, which may ferve both as characteristics to diftinguiſh a true modern critic from a pretender, and will be allo of admirable ufe to thofe worthy fpirits who engage in fo uſeful and honourable an art. The first is, That criticism, contrary to all other fa- culties of the intellect, is ever held the trueft and beft, when it is the very firſt reſult of the critic's mind: as fewlers reckon the firit aim for the fureft, and feldom fail of miffing the mark, if they ftay for a fecond. Secondly, The true critics are known by their talent of warming about the nobleft writers, to which they are carried merely by inſtinct, as a rat to the beſt cheeſe, or a wafp to the fairest fruit. So when the king is on horfeback, he is fure to be the dirtiest perfon of the com- pany; and they that make their court beft, are fuch as bepatter him moft. Laftly, A true critic in the perufal of a book is like a deg at a feaſt, whofe thoughts and ſtomach are wholly fet upon what the gueſts fiing away; and confequently is apt to fearl moft when there are the feweft bones. Thus much, I think, is fufficient to ferve by way of addreſs to my patrons, the true modern critics; and may very well atone for my paft filence, as well as that which I am like to obſerve for the future. I hope I have de- ferved fo well of their whole body, as to meet with gene- rous and tender ufage from their hands. Supported by which expectation, I go on boldly to purſue thoſe adven- tures already fo happily begun. I SECT. IV. A TALE OF A TUB, Have now with much pains and ſtudy conducted the reader to a period, where he muft expect to hear of great revolutions. For no fooner had our learned brother, fo often mentioned, got a warm houfe of his own over his head, than he began to look big, and take mightily 7༠ A TALE OF A TU B. mightily upon him; infomuch that, unless the gentle reader, out of his great candour, will pleaſe a little to exalt his idea, I am afraid he will henceforth hardly know the hero of the play, when he happens to meet him; his part, his dress, and his mien being fo much altered. He told his brothers, he would have them to know that he was their elder, and confequently his father's fole heir; nay, a while after he would not allow them to call him brother, but MR. PETER; and then he muft be styled FATHER PETER, and fometimes MY LORD PETER. To fupport this grandeur, which he foon be- gan to confider could not be maintained without a better fonde than what he was born to; after much thought, he caft about at laſt to turn projector and virtuofo; where- in he fo well fucceeded, that many famous diſcoveries, projects, and machines, which bear great vogue and practice at prefent in the world, are owing entirely to LORD PETER's invention. I will deduce the beft ac- count I have been able to collect of the chief amongſt them; without confidering much the order they came out in; becauſe, I think, authors are not well agreed as to that point. I hope, when this treatiſe of mine fhall be tranſlated into foreign languages, (as I may without vanity affirm, that the labour of collecting, the faithfulneſs in recount- ing, and the great uſefulneſs of the matter to the public, will amply deferve that juftice,) that the worthy mem- bers of the feveral academies abroad, efpecially thofe of France and Italy, will favourably accept theſe humble offers for the advancement of univerfal knowledge. I do alfo advertiſe the Moft Reverend fathers the caftern millionaries, that I have, purely for their fakes, made ufe of fuch words and phrafes as will beft admit an eaſy turn into any of the oriental languages, efpecially the Chineſe. And fo I proceed, with great content of mind, upon reflecting how much emolument this whole globe of the earth is like to reap by my labours. The firſt undertaking of Lord Peter was, to purchafe a large continent, || lately faid to have been difcovered That is purgatory. in Sect. 4. A TALE OF A TUB, 71 in Terra Auftralis Incognita. This tract of land he bought at a very great pennyworth from the difcoverers them- felves, (though fome pretended to doubt whether they had ever been there, and then retailed it into feveral cantons to certain dealers, who carried over colonies, but were all ſhipwrecked in the voyage. Upon which Lord Peter fold the faid continent to other cuftomers again, and again, and again, and again, with the fame fucceis. The fecond project I fhall mention was his fovereign remedy for the worms, eſpecially thofe in the spleen. The patient was to eat nothing after fupper for three nights. † As foon as he went to bed, he was care- fully to lie on one fide; and when he grew weary, to turn upon the other. He must alfo duly confine his two eyes to the fame object; and by no means break wind at both ends together, without manifeft occafion. Theſe preſcriptions diligently obferved, the worms would void infenfibly by perſpiration, afcending through the brain. A third invention was the erecting of a whiſpering- office, for the public good and eaſe of all fuch as are hypochondriacal, or troubled with the colic; as likewife of all eves droppers, phyficians, midwives, fmall politicians, friends fallen out, repeating poets, lovers happy or in defpair, bawds, privy-counfellors, pages, paralites, and buffoons: in fhort, of all fuch as are in danger of bursting with too much wind. An afs's head was placed fo conveniently, that the par- ty affected might eafily with his mouth accoit either of the animal's ears; to which he was to apply ciofe for a certain space, and by a fugitive faculty, peculiar to the ears 1 Penance and abfolution are played upon under the notion of a ſo- vereign remedy for the worms, especially in the fpleen; which, by obferving Peter's prefcription, would void infenfibly by prefpiration, afcending through the brain, &c. W. Wotton. + Here the author ridicules the penances of the church of Rome; which may be made as eafy to the finner as he pleates, provided he will pay for them accordingly. By bis zubifpering-office, for the relief of eves-droppers, phy- ficians, bawds, and privy counfellors, he ridicules auricular confef- fion; and the priest, who takes it, is defcribed by the afs's head. W'. Wotton. 72 A TALE OF A TU B. cars of that animal, receive immediate benefit, either by eructation, or expiration, or evomition. Another very beneficial project of Lord Peter's was an office of inſurance for tobacco-pipes, martyrs of the modern zeal; volumes of poetry, fhadows,- and rivers: that. thefe, nor any of theſe, ſhall receive damage by fire. From whence our friendly focieties may plainly find themſelves to be only tranfcribers from this original; though the one and the other have been of great benefit to the undertakers, as well as of equal to the public. 3 Lord Peter was alfo held the original author of pup- pets and raree-shows; † the great uſefulneſs whereof be- ing fo generally known, I fhall not enlarge farther up- on this particular. + But another difcovery, for which he was much re- nowned, was his famous univerfal pickle. ‡ For having remarked how your common pickle, in ufe among houſewifes, was of no farther benefit than to preferve dead fleſh, and certain kinds of vegetables; Peter, with great coft, as well as ait, had contrived a pickle proper for houſes, gardens, towns, men, women, chil- dren, and cattle; wherein he could preferve them as found as infects in amber. Now, this pickle to the taſte, the fmell, and the fight, appeared exactly the fame with what is in common fervice for beef, and butter, and herrings, and has been often that way applied with great fuccefs; but for its many fovereign virtues, was a quite different thing. For Peter would put in a certain quantity of his powder pimperlimpimp, after which it never *** This I take to be the office of indulgences, the gross abuſe whereof first gave occafion for the reformation. + I believe are the monkeries and ridiculous proceffions, &c. a- mong the Papis. Holy water he calls an univerſal pickle, to preferve houſes, gar- dens, towns, men, women, children, and cattle, wherein he could preferve them as found as infects in amber. W. Wotton. This is easily understood to be holy water, compofed of the fame ingredients with many other pickles. And becaufe holy water differs only in confecration from com- mon water, therefore he tells us, that his pickle by the powder of pimperlimpimp receives new virtues, though it differs not in fight nor Imell from the common pickles, which preferve beef, and butter, and herrings. W. Wotton. Sect. 4. 73 A TALE OF A TU B. The never failed of fuccefs. The operation was performed by Ipargefaction † in a proper time of the moon. patient, who was to be pickled, if it were a house, would infallibly be preferved from all fpiders, rats, and weazels; if the party affected were a dog, he should be exempt from mange, and madness, and hunger. In alfo infallibly took away all ſcabs and lice, and fcall- heads from children; never hindering the patient from any duty, either at bed or board. But of all Peter's rarities he moft valued a certain fet of bulls, whofe race was by great fortune preſerv- ed in a lineal defcent from thofe that guarded the golden fleece: though fome, who pretended to obferve them curiouſly, doubted the breed had not been kept entirely chafte; becauſe they had degenerated from their anceſtors in fome qualities, and had acquired o- thers very extraordinary, but a foreign mixture. The bulls of Colchos are recorded to have brazen feet. But whether it happened by ill paſture and running, by an allay from intervention of other parents, from ſtolen intrigues; whether a weakneſs in their progenitors had impaired the feminal virtue, or, by a decline neceffary through a long courfe of time, the originals of nature being depraved in theſe latter finful ages of the world: whatever was the cauſe, it is certain, that Lord Peter's bulls were extremely vitiated by the ruft of time in the metal of their feet, which was now funk into common lead. However, the terrible roaring peculiar to their lineage, was preferved; as likewife that faculty of breathing out fire from their noftrils; which notwith- ſtanding many of their detractors took to be a feat of art, and to be nothing fo terrible as it appeared, proceed- VOL. I. + Sprinkling. E ing The Papal bulls are ridiculed by name; fo that here we are at no lofs for the author's meaning. W. Wotton. Ibid. Here the author has kept the name, and means the Pope's bulls, or rather his fulminations, and excommunications of heretical princes, all figned with lead, and the feal of the fiſherman; and therefore ſaid to have leaden feet and fiſhes tails. § Theſe paffages, and many others, no doubt, muſt be conſtrued as antichriftian, by the church of Rome. When the chief minifter and his minions are expofed, the keener the fatire, the more liable is it to be interpreted into high treaſon againſt the King. Orrery, 74 A TALE OF A TU B. ing only from their ufual courfe of diet, which was of Squibs and crackers. † However, they had two peculiar marks, which extremely diftinguifhed them from the bulls of Jafon, and which I have not met together in the deſcription of any other monster, befide that in Horace, Varias inducere plumas ; and Atrum definit in piſcem. For theſe had fishes tails; yet upon occafion could out-fly any bird in the air. Peter put theſe bulls upon feveral employs. Sometimes he would fet them a roaring to fright naughty boys, and make them quiet. Some- times he would fend them out upon errands of great importance; where it is wonderful to recount, and perhaps the cautious reader may think much to believe it; an appetitus fenfibilis deriving itſelf through the whole family, from their noble anceſtors, guardians of the golden fleece: they continued fo extremely fond of gold, that if Peter fent them abroad, though it were only upon a compliment, they would roar, and spit, and belch, and pifs, and fart, and fnivel out fire, and keep a perpetual coil, till you flung them a bit of gold; but then, pulveris exigui ja&tu, they would grow calm and quiet as lambs. In fhort, whether by fecret connivance, or encouragement from their mafter, or out of their own liquorifh affection to gold, or both; it is certain they were no better than a fort of ſturdy, fwaggering beg- gars; and, where they could not prevail to get an alms, would make women mifcarry, and children fall into fits; who to this very day ufually call fprights and hob- goblins by the name of bull-beggars. They grew at laft to very troublefome to the neighbourhood, that fome gentlemen of the north-west got a parcel of right English bull dogs, and baited them fo terribly, that they felt it ever after. 1 I muſt needs mention one more of Lord Peter's pro- jects, which was very extraordinary, and difcovered him + Thefe are the fulminations of the Pope, threatening hell and damnation to thofe princes who offend him. 1 That is, kings who incurred his difpleaſure. Sect. 4. A TALE OF A TUB. 75 him to be maſter of a high reach, and profound inven- tion. Whenever it happened that any rogue of New- gate was condemned to be hanged, Peter would offer him a pardon for a certain fum of money; which when the caitiff had made all ſhifts to ſcrape up, and ſend, poor his Lordship would return a piece of paper in this form. I CC Tliffs, hymen, tee. Whereas we are inform- O all mayors, fheriffs, jailors, conftables, bai- “ed, that A. B. remains in the hands of you, or fome "of you, under the fentence of death; we will and "command you, upon fight hereof, to let the faid pri- "foner depart to his own habitation, whether he ftands "condemned for murder, fodomy, rape, facrilege, in- ceft, treaſon, blafphemy, &c. for which this fhall be "your fufficient warrant. And if you fail thereof, G-d d- -mn you and yours to all eternity. And fo we bid "you heartily farewel. << Your most bumble Man's man, EMPEROR PETER." The wretches, trufting to this, loft their lives and mo- ney too. I defire of thofe whom the learned among poſterity will appoint for commentators upon this elaborate treatiſe, that they will proceed with great caution upon certain dark points, wherein all who are not verè adepti, may be in danger to form raſh and hafty conclufions; eſpecially in fome myſterious paragraphs, where certain arcana are joined for brevity's fake, which in the operation must be divided. And I am certain, that future fons of art will return large thanks to my memory, for fo grateful, fo ufeful an innuendo. It will be no difficult part to perfuade the reader, that fo many worthy diſcoveries met with great fuccefs in the E 2 world; This is a copy of a general pardon, figned Servus fervorum. Ibid. Abfolution in articulo mortis; and the tax camera apoftolicæ, are jeſted upon in Emperor Peter's letter. W. Wotton. 76 A TALE OF A TUB. world, though I may juftly affure him, that I have re- lated much the ſmalleſt number; my defign having been only to fingle out fuch as will be of moft benefit for public imitation, or which beft ferved to give ſome idea of the reach and wit of the inventor. And therefore it need not be wondered, if by this time Lord Peter was become exceeding rich. But, alas! he had kept his brain fo long and fo violently upon the rack, that at laft it book itself, and began to turn round for a little eaſe. In fhort, what with pride, projects, and knavery, poor Peter was grown diftracted, and conceived the ftrangeft imaginations in the world. In the height of his fits, as it is ufual with thoſe who run mad out of pride, he would call himſelf God Almighty, * and fometimes monarch of the universe. I have feen him (fays my author) take three old high-crowned hats, † and clap them all on his head, three ftory high, with a huge bunch of keys at his girdle, and an angling rod in his hand. In which guife, whoever went to take him by the hand in the way of falutation, Peter with much grace, like a well-educated fpaniel, would prefent them with his foot; and if they refufed his civility, then he would raife it as high as their chaps, and give them a damned kick on the mouth; which hath ever fince been called a falute. Whoever walked by without paying him their compliments, having a wonderful trong breath, he would blow their hats off into the dirt. Mean time his affairs at home went upfide down, and his two brothers had a wretched time; where his firit boutade The Pope is not only allowed to be the vicar of Chrift, but by feveral divines is called God upon earth, and other blafphemous titles are given him. The triple crown. The keys of the church.. -The church is here taken for the gate of heaven; for the keys of heaven are affumed by the Pope in confequence of what our Lord faid to Peter, I will give unto thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven. Hawkef. Ibid. The Pope's univerfal monarchy, and his triple crown, and fifher's ring. W. Wotton. Neither does his arrogant way of requiring men to kifs his flip- per fcape reflection. W. Wotton. Sect. 4. 77 A TALE OF A TUB. boutade * was, to kick both their wives one morning out of doors, and his own too; and, in their ftead, gave orders to pick up the first three ftrollers could be met with in the ftreets. A while after he nailed up the cel- lat-door; and would not allow his brothers a drop of drink to their victuals. || Dining one day at an alder- man's in the city, Peter obferved him expatiating, after the manner of his brethren, in the praifes of his firloin of beef. Beef, ſaid the faid magistrate, is the king of meat beef comprehends in it the quintessence of partridge, and quail, and venijon, and pheaſant, and plum-pudding, and custard. When Peter came home, he would needs. take the fancy of cooking up this doctrine into ufe, and apply the precept, in default of a firloin, to his brown loaf, Bread, fays he, dear brothers, is the staff of life; in which bread is contained, inclufivè, the quintessence of beef, mutton, veal, venifon, partridge, plum-pudding, and cuftard: and to render all complete, there is intermingled a due quantity of water, whofe crudities are alſo corrected by yeast or barm, through which means it becomes a wholeſome fermented liquor, diffused through the mass of the bread. Up- on the ftrength of theſe conclufions, next day at dinner, was the brown loaf ferved up in all the formality of a city-feaft. Come, brothers, ſaid Peter, fall to, and Spare not; here is excellent good mutton: † or hold, new my hand is in, I will help you. At which word, in much cere- mony, with fork and knife he carves out two good flices of a loaf, and prefents each on a plate to his brothers. The elder of the two, not fuddenly entering into Lord Peter's conceit, began with v ry civil language to examine the mystery. My Lord, faid he, I doubt, with great fubmiffion, there may be jame mistake. What, fays This word properly fignifies a fudden jeik, or lafh of an horfe, when you do not expect it. The celibacy of the Romish clergy is ftruck at in Peter's beating his own and brothers wives out of doors. W. Watton. The Pope's refufing the cup to the laity, perfuading them that the blood is contained in the bread, and that the bread is the real and entire body of Chrift. + Tranfubftantiation. Peter turns his bread into mutton, and, ac- cording to the Popish doctrine of concomitants, his wine too, which in his way he calls palming his damned.crufts upon the brothers for mut-- W. Wotton. Lon. 78 A TALE OF A TUB. fays Peter, you are pleaſant; come then, let us hear this jeft your head is ſo big with. None in the world, my Lord; but, unless I am very much deceived, your Lordſhip was pleaſ- ed a while ago to let fall a word about mutton, and I would be glad to ſee it with all my heart. How, faid Peter, ap- pearing in great furprife, I do not comprehend this at all. -Upon which, the younger interpofing to ſet the bu- finefs aright; My Lord, faid he, my brother Ifuppofe is hun- gry, and longs for the mutton your Lordship hath promiſed us to dinner. Pray, faid Peter, take me along with you. Either you are both mad, or diſpojed to be merrier than I ap- prove of. If you there do not like your piece, I will carve you another; though I should take that to be the choice bit of the whole shoulder. What then, my Lord, replied the first, it ſeems this is a ſhoulder of mutton all this while. Pray, Sir, fays Peter, eat your victuals, and leave off your imper- tinence, if you please; for I am not difpofed to relifh it at prefent. But the other could not forbear, being over-pro- voked at the affected ferioufnefs of Peter's countenance. By G-, my Lord, faid he, I can only fay, that, to my eyes, and fingers, and teeth, and nofe, it feems to be nothing but a crust of bread. Upon which the fecond put in his word: I never saw a piece of mutton in my life fo nearly re- Sembling a flice from a twelve-penny loaf. Look ye, Gentle- men, cries Peter in a rage, to convince you, what a couple of blind, pofitive, ignorant, wilful puppies you are, I will uſe but this plain argument: By G-, it is true, good, na- tural mutton, as any in Leadenhall market; and G— con- found you both eternally, if you offer to believe otherwife. Such a thundering proof as this left no further room for objection. The two unbelievers began to gather and foc- ket up their miſtakes as haftily as they could. Why, truly, faid the firft, upon more mature confideration-Ay, lays the other, interrupting him, now I have thought better on the thing, your Lordship feems to have a great deal of reafon. Very well, faid Peter. Here, boy, fill me a beer-glaſs of claret; here's to you both with all my heart. The two brethren, much delighted to fee him fo readily appealed, returned their mot humble thanks, and faid, they would be glad to pledge his Lordship. That you shall, faid Peter. I am not a perſon to refuse you any thing that is reaſonable. Wine, moderately taken, is a cordial. Here is a glaſs A TALE OF A TU B. 79 a glass a-piece for you; it is true natural juice from the grape, none of your damned vintners brewings. Having ipoke thus, he prefented to each of them another large dry cruft, bidding them drink it off, and not be bafh- ful; for it would do them no hurt. The two brothers, after having performed the ufual office in fuch delicate conjunctures, of staring a fufficient period at Lord l'eter, and each other; and finding how inatters were like to go, reſolved not to enter on a new difpute, but let him carry the point as he pleaſed: for he was now got into one of his mad fits; and to argue or expoftulate further, would only ferve to render him a hundred times more untractable. I have chofen to relate this worthy matter in all its circumſtances, becauſe it gave a principal occaſion to that great and famous rupture, * which happened about the fame time among theſe brethren, and was never af- terwards made up. But of that I fhall treat at large in an other ſection. However, it is certain, that Lord Peter, even in his lucid intervals, was very lewdly given in his common converſation, extreme wilful and pofitive; and would at any time rather argue to the death, than allow himſelf once to be in an error. Befides, he had an abominable faculty of telling huge palpable yes upon all occafions; and not only fwearing to the truth, but curfing the whole company to hell, if they pretended to make the leaft fcruple of believing him. One time he fwore he had a cow at home, which gave as much milk at a meal as would fill three thoufand churches; and, what was yet more extraordinary, would never turn four. t Another time he was telling of an old fign-post || that belonged to his father, with nails and timber enough in it to build fixteen large men of war. ing one day of Chineſe waggons, which were made fo By this rupture is meant the reformation. Talk- light + The ridiculous multiplying of the virgin Mary's milt among the Papiſts, under the allegory of a cow, which gave as much milk at a meal a would fill three thoufand churches. IV. IVotton. || By this fign eft is meant the croſs of our bleſſed Saviour;—and if all the wood that is thewn for parts of it, was collected, the quan- tity would fufficiently juftify this farcalin. Hawke 80 A TALE OF A TUB. light as to fail over mountains: Z-ds, faid Peter, where's the wonder of that? By G-, I jaw a large house of line and ftone travel over fea and land, granting that it Stopped fometimes to bait, above two thouſand German leagues.|| And that which was the good of it, he would fwear def- perately all the while, that he never told a lye in his life; and every word, By G-, Gentlemen, I tell you nothing but the truth; and the d--l broil them eternally that will not believe me. In short, Peter grew fo fcandalous, that all the neigh- bourhood began in plain words to fay, he was no better than a knave. And his two brothers, long weary of his ill uſage, refolved at laft to leave him; but firſt they humbly defired a copy of their father's will, which had now lain by neglected time out of mind. Instead of granting this requeft, he called them damned fons of whores, rogues, traitors, and the rest of the vile names he could mufter up. However, while he was abroad one day upon his projects, the two youngsters watched their opportunity, made a fhift to come at the will, and took a copia vera; * by which they preſently faw how grossly they had been abuſed; their father having left them equal heirs, and ſtrictly commanded, that what- ever they got fhould lie in common among them all. Purſuant to which, their next enterpriſe was, to break open the cellar-door, and get a little good drink to ſpirit and comfort their hearts. In copying the will, they had met another precept againſt whoring, di- vorce, and feparate maintenance: upon which their next work was, to diſcard their concubines, and fend for their wives. § Whilft all this was in agitation, there The chapel of Loretto. He falls here only upon the ridiculous. inventions of Popery. The church of Rome intended by theſe things to gull filly, fuperftitious people, and rook them of their money. The world had been too long in flavery; but our ancestors gloriously redeemed us from that yoke. The church of Rome therefore ought to be expoſed; and he deſerves well of mankind that does ex- poſe it. W. Wotton. Ibid. The chapel of Loretto, which travelled from the Holy Land to Italy. Tranflated the fcriptures into the vulgar tongues. Adminiſtered the cup to the laity at the communion. Allowed the marriages of priests. Sect. 5. A digreffion in the modern kind. 81 there enters a folicitor from Newgate, defiring Lord Pe- ter would pleaſe to procure a pardon for a thief that was to be hanged to-morrow. But the two brothers told him, he was a coxcomb, to feek pardons from a fellow who deſerved to be hanged much better than his client; and diſcovered all the method of that impofture, in the fame form I delivered it a while ago; adviſing the foli- citor to put his friend upon obtaining a pardon from the king In the midſt all this clutter and revolution, in comes Peter with a file of dragoons at his heels; || and gathering from all hands what was in the wind, he and his gang, after ſeveral millions of fcurrilities and curſes, not very important here to repeat, by main force very fairly kicks them both out of doors, t and would never let them come under his roof from that day to this. SECT. V. A digreffion in the modern kind. WE, whom the world is pleaſed to honour with the title of modern authors, should never have been able to compafs our great defign of an everlaſting remembrance, and never-dying fame, of our endeavours had not been fo highly ferviceable to the general good of mankind. This, O Universe, is the adventurous at-- tempt of me thy fecretary; --Quemvis perferre laborem Suadet, et inducit noctes vigilare ferenas. To this end, I have fome time fince, with a world of pains and art, diffected the carcafe of human nature, and read many uſeful lectures upon the feveral parts, both containing and contained; till at last it melt fo ftrong, E 5 Directed penitents not to trust to pardons and abfolutions pro- cured for money; but fent them to implore the mercy of God, from whence alone remiffion is to be obtained. By Peter's dragoons is meant the civil power, which thofe princes, who were bigotted to the Romish fuperftition, employed against the reformers. + The Pope ſhuts all who diffent from him out of the church,. 82 A TALE OF A TU B. ftrong, I could preferve it no longer. Upon which, I have been at a great expence to fit up all the bones with exact contexture, and in due fymmetry; fo that I am ready to thew a very complete anatomy thereof to all cu- rious gentlemen and others. But, not to digreſs farther in the midst of a digreffion, as I have known fome au- thors inclofe digreffions in one another, like a neft of boxes; I do affirm, that having carefully cut up human nature, I have found a very ftrange, new, and important difcovery; that the public good of mankind is per- formed by two ways, inftruction and diverfion. And I have farther proved in my faid feveral readings, (which perhaps the world may one day fee, if I can prevail on any friend to ſteal a copy, or on any certain gentleman of my admirers, to be very importunate,) that, as man- kind is now difpofed, he receives much greater advan- tage by being diverted than inftructed; his epidemical dif eafes being faftidiofity, amorphy, and ofcitation; whereas, in the prefent univerfal empire of wit and learning, there feems but little matter lett for inftruction. However, in compliance with a leffon of great age and authority, I have attempted carrying the point in all its heights; and accordingly, throughout this divine treatife, have fkil- fully kneaded up both together, with a layer of utile, and a layer of dulce. When I confider how exceedingly our illuftrious mo- derns have eclipfed the weak glimmering lights of the ancients, and turned them out of the road of all fafhion- able commerce, to a degree, that our choice town-wits, of moft refined accompliſhments, are in grave difpute, whether there have been ever any ancients or no; in which point we are like to receive wonderful fatisfaction from the moſt uſeful labours and lucubrations of that worthy modern, Dr. Bentley: 1 fay, when I confider all this, I cannot but bewail, that no famous modern hath ever yet attempted an univerfal fyftem, in a ſmall port- able volume, of all things that are to be known, or be- lieved, or imagined, or practifed in life. I am however forced The learned perfon here meant by our author, hath been en- deavouring to annihilate fo many ancient writers, that, until he is pleafed to stop his hand, it will be dangerous to affirm, whether there have been any ancients in the world. Sect. 5. 83 A digreffion in the modern kind. forced to acknowledge, that fuch an enterprize was thought on fome time ago, by a great philofoper of O. Brazil. * The method, he propofed, was by a certain curious receipt, a noftrum, which, after his untimely death, I found among his papers; and do here, out of my great affection to the modern learned, prefent them with it; not doubting, it may one day encourage fome worthy un- dertaker. You take fair correct copies, well bound in calf-ſkin, and lettered at the back, of all modern bodies of arts and jei- ences whatſoever, and in what language you pleaſe. Theſe you diftil in balneo Mariæ, infufing quinteffence of poppy q. f. together with three pints of lethe, to be had from the apothecaries. You cleanse away carefully the fordes and caput mortuum, letting all that is volatile evaporate. You preferve only the first running, which is again to be distilled feventeen times, till what remains will amount to about two drams. This you keep in a glass vial hermetically jealed, for one and twenty days; then you begin your catholic trea- tife, taking every morning fafting, firft fhaking the vial, three drops of this elixir, fnuffing it ſtrongly up your noſe. It will dilate itself about the brain (where there is any) in fourteen minutes, and you immediately perceive in your head an infinite number of abstracts, fummaries, compendiums, extracts, collections, medulla's, excerpta quædam's, flo- rilegia's, and the like, all diſpoſed into great order, and re- ducible upon paper. I mult needs own, it was by the affiftance of this ar canum, that I, though otherwiſe impar, have adventured upon fo daring an attempt; never atchieved or under- taken before, but by a certain author, called Homer; in whom, though otherwife a perfon not without fome. abilities, and, for an ancient, of a tolerable genius, I have diſcovered many grofs errors, which are not to be for- given his very afhes, if by chance any of them are left. For whereas we are affured, he defigned his work for a complete body + of all knowledge, human, divine, po- litical, *This is an imaginary island, of kin to that which is called the painters wives iſland, placed in fome unknown part of the ocean, merely at the fancy of the map-maker. + Homerus omnes res humanas poematis complexus eft. Xenoph. in conviv. 84 A TALE OF A TUB. litical, and mechanic; it is manifeft, he hath wholly neglected ſome, and been very imperfect in the reft. For, firſt of all, as eminent a cabaliſt as his difciples would re- preſent him, his account of the opus magnum is extremely poor and deficient; he feems to have read but very fu- perficially either Sendivogus, Behmen, or Anthropofo- phia Theomagica. I He is alfo quite miftaken about the Sphæra pyroplastica, a neglect not to be atoned for; and, if the reader will admit fo fevere a cenfure, cix cre- derem autorem bunc unquam audiviffe ignis vocem. His fail- ings are not less prominent in feveral parts of the mecha- nics. For, having read his writings with the utmoſt ap- plication ufual among modern wits, I could never yet dif cover the leaft direction about the ftructure of that ufe- ful inftrument, a fave-all. For want of which, if the moderns had not lent their affiftance, we might yet have wandered in the dark. But I have ftill behind a fault, far more notorious to tax this author with; I mean, his grofs ignorance in the common laws of this realm, and in the doctrine, as well as difcipline of the church of Eng- land: A defect indeed, for which both he and all the ancients ftand moft juftly cenfured by my worthy and ingenious friend, Mr. Wotton, Bachelor of Divinity, in his incomparable treatife of ancient and modern learning; a book never to be fufficiently valued, whether we con- Lider the happy turns and flowings of the author's wit, the great uſefulneſs of his fublime difcoveries upon the fubject of flies and Spittle, or the laborious eloquence of his ſtyle. And I cannot forbear doing that author the juftice of my public acknowledgments, for the great helps and liftings I had out of his incomparable piece, while I was penning this treatiſe. But, befides theſe omithions in Homer, already men- tioned, A treatise written about fifty years ago, by a Welsh gentleman of Cambridge. His name, as I remember, was Vaughan ;us appears by the anſwer written to it by the learned Dr. Henry Moor. It is a piece of the most unintelligible fuftian, that perhaps was ever pub- lished in any language. Mr. Wotton, (to whom our author never gives any quarter,) in his comparifon of ancient and modern learning, numbers divinity, law, &c. among thofe parts of knowledge wherein we excel the an- tients, Sect. 5. A digreffion in the modern kind. 85 tioned, the curious reader will alfo obferve feveral de- fects in that author's writings, for which he is not alto- gether fo accountable. For whereas every branch of knowledge has received fuch wonderful acquirements fince his age, eſpecially within thefe last three years, or thereabouts; it is almoſt impoffible, he could be ſo very perfect in modern difcoveries, as his advocates pretend. We freely acknowledge him to be the inventor of the compass, of gunpowder, and the circulation of the blood. But I challenge any of his admirers, to fhew me in all his writings a complete account of the pleen. Does he not alfo leave us wholly to feek in the art of political wagering? What can be more defective and unfatisfac- tory than his long differtation upon tea? And as to his method of ſalivation without mercury, fo much celebrated of late, it is, to my own knowledge and experience, a thing very little to be relied on. It was to fupply fuch momentous defects, that I have been prevailed on, after long folicitation, to take pen in hand; and I dare venture to promife, the judicious reader ſhall find nothing neglected here, that can be of ufe upon any cmergency of life. I am confident to have included and exhauited all that human imagination can rife or fall to. Particularly, I recommend to the perufal of the learned, certain difcoveries that are wholly un- touched by others; whereof I fhall only mention, among a great many more, My new help for jmatterers; or, The art of being deep-learned, and ſhallow-read:-A curious in- vention about moufe-traps :—An univerſal rule of reafon; or, Every man his own carcer; together with a moft ufe- ful engine for catching of owls. All which the judicious. reader will find largely treated on in the feveral parts of this difcourfe. I hold myſelf obliged to give as much light as is poffi- ble, into the beauties and excellencies of what I am writing, becauſe it is become the faſhion and humour moſt applauded among the first authors of this polite and learned age, when they would correct the ill-nature of critical, or inform the ignorance of courteous readers. Befides, there have been feveral famous pieces lately publiſhed, both in verfe and profe; wherein, if the wri- ters had not been pleafed, out of their great humanity and 86 A TALE OF A TUB. and affection to the public, to give us a nice detail of the fublime and the admirable they contain, it is a thou- fand to one, whether we ſhould ever have diſcovered one grain of either. For my own particular, I cannot deny, that whatever I have faid upon this occafion, had been more proper in a preface, and more agreeable to the mode, which ufually directs it thither. But I here think fit to lay hold on that great and honourable privilege of being the last writer; I claim an abfolute authority in right, as the fresheft modern, which gives me a defpotic power over all authors before me, In the ftrength of which title, I do utterly difapprove and declare againſt that pernicious cuftom, of making the preface a bill of fare to the book. For I have always looked upon it as a high point of indifcretion in monster-mongers, and other retailers of strange fights, to hang out a fair large picture over the door, drawn after the life, with a moft eloquent defcription underneath. This hath faved me many a three-pence; for my curiofity was fully fatisfied, and I never offered to go in, though of- ten invited by the urging and attending orator, with his last moving and standing piece of rhetoric, Sir, upon my word, we are just going to begin. Such is exactly the fate, at this time, of Prefaces, Epifiles, Advertiſements, In- troductions, Prolegomena's, Apparatus's, To the readers. This expedient was admirable at first. Our great Dryden has long carried it as far as it would go, and with incredi- ble fuccefs. He hath often faid to me in confidence, that the world would have never fufpected him to be fo great a poet, if he had not affured them fo frequent- ly in his prefaces, that it was impoffible they could either doubt or forget it. Perhaps it may be fo: how- ever, I much fear, his intructions have edified out of their place, and taught men to grow wifer in certain points, where he never intended they fhould: for it is lamentable to behold, with what a lazy fcorn many of the yawning readers of our age do now-a-days twirl over forty or fifty pages of preface and dedication, (which is the ufual modern ftint,) as if it were fo much Latin. Though it must be alfo allowed, on the other hand, that a very confiderable number is known to proceed critics and wits, by reading nothing elfe. Into which two Sect. 6. A TALE OF A TUB. 87 two factions, I think, all prefent readers may juftly be divided. Now, for myfelt, I profefs to be of the for- mer fort and therefore having the modern inclination to expatiate upon the beauty of my own productions, and diſplay the bright parts of my difcourfe, I thought beft to do it in the body of the work; where, as it now lies, it makes a very confiderable addition to the bulk of the volume; a circumstance by no means to be neglected by a Skilful writer. Having thus paid my due deference and acknowledg- ment to an eſtabliſhed cuſtom of our neweſt authors, by a long digreffion unfought for, and an univerſal cenfure un- provoked; by forcing into the light, with much pains and dexterity, my own excellencies, and other men's defaults, with great juftice to myſelf, and candour to them; I now happily refume my fubject, to the infinite fatisfacti- on both of the reader and the author. SECT. VI. A TALE OF A TU B. E left Lord Peter in open rupture with his two brethren; both for ever difcarded from his houle, and refigned to the wide world, with little or no- thing to trul to. Which are circumſtances that render them proper fubjects for the charity of a writer's pen to work on; fcenes of mifery ever affording the fairest harvelt for great adventures. And in this the world. may perceive the difference between the integrity of a generous author, and that of a common friend. The latter is obferved to adhere clofe in profperity, but, on the decline of fortune, to drop fuddenly off: whereas the generous author, juft on the contrary, finds his hero on the dunghil, from thence hy gradual fteps raiſes him to a throne, and then immediately with- draws, expecting not fo much as thanks for his pains. In imitation of which example, I have placed Lord Peter in a noble houſe, given him a title to wear, and mo- ney to spend. There I fhall leave him for fome time; returning where common charity directs me, to the alliſtance 88 A TALE OF A TU B. affiftance of his two brothers at their loweſt ebb. How. ever, I fhall by no means forget my character of am hiftorian, to follow the truth ftep by step, whatever hap- pens, or where-ever it may lead me. The two exiles, fo nearly united in fortune and inte- reſt, took a lodging together; where, at their firſt lei- fure, they began to reflect on the numberlefs misfortunes and vexations of their life paſt; and could not tell, on the fudden, to what failure in their conduct they ought to impute them; when, after fome recollection, they called to mind the copy of their father's will, which they had ſo happily recovered. This was immediately produced, and a firm refolution taken between them, to alter whatever was already amifs, and reduce all their future meaſures to the strictest obedience pre- fcribed therein. The main body of the will (as the reader cannot eafily have forgot) confifted in certain ad- mirable rules about the wearning of their coats in the perufal whereof, the two brothers at every period duly comparing the doctrine with the practice, there was never ſeen a wider difference between two things; horrible, downright tranfgreffions of every point. Up- on which they both refolved, without further delay, to fall immediately upon reducing the whole exactly after their father's model. But here it is good to ftop the hafty reader, ever im- patient to fee the end of an adventure, before we wri- ters can duly prepare him for it. I am to record, that thefe two brothers began to be diftinguiſhed at this time by certain names. One of them defired to be called MARTIN, † and the other took the appellation of JACK. Theſe two had lived in much friend- ſhip and agreement, under the tyranny of their bro- ther Peter; as it is the talent of fellow-fufferers to do; men in misfortune being like men in the dark, to whom all colours are the fame. But when they came forward into the world, and began to diſplay them- felves to each other, and to the light, their com- plexions appeared extremely different; which the pre- fent + Martin Luther. || John Calvin, Sect. 6. A TALE OF A TUB. 89 fent poſture of their affairs gave them fudden opportunity to diſcover. But here the fevere reader may justly tax me as a writer of short memory; a deficiency to which a true modern cannot but, of neceflity, be a little fubject: becauſe memory being an employment of the mind upon things paſt, is a faculty, for which the learned in our il- luſtrious age have no manner of occafion, who deal en- tirely with invention, and ftrike all things out of them- felves, or at least by collifion from each other; upon which account we think it highly reaſonable to produce our great forgetfulness, as an argument unanfwerable for our great wit. I ought, in method, to have inform- ed the reader about fifty ages ago, of a fancy Lord Peter took, and infufed into his brothers, to wear on their coats whatever trimmings came up in faſhion; never pulling off any as they went out of the mode, but keeping on all together; which amounted in time. to a medley, the most antic you can poffibly conceive : and this to a degree, that, upon the time of their falling out, there was hardly a thread of the original coat to be feen; but an infinite quantity of lace, and ribbands, and fringe, and embroidery, and points; (I mean only thofe tagged with filver, || for the reft fell off) Now, this material circumftance having been forgot in due place; as good fortune hath ordered, comes in very properly here, when the two bro hers are just going to reform their veftures into the primitive ftate, prefcribed by their father's will. They both unanimously entered upon this great work, looking fometimes on their coats, and fometimes on the will. Martin laid the firſt hand; at one twitch brought off a large handful of points; and, with a fecond pull, ftripped away ten dozen yards of fringe. But when he had gone thus far, he demurred a while. He knew very well, there yet remained a great deal more to be done. However, the first heat being over, his violence began to cool, and he refolved to proceed more mode- rately Points tagged with filver, or those doctrines that promote the greatneſs and wealth of the church, which have been therefore wo- ven deepest in the body of Popery. 90 A TALE OF A TU B. rately in the rest of the work; having already narrowly eſcaped a ſwinging rent in pulling off the points, which, being tagged with filver, (as we have obferved before,) the judicious workman had with much fagacity double fown, to preferve them from falling. Refolving there- fore to rid his coat of a huge quantity of gold lace, he picked up the ſtitches with much caution, and diligent- ly gleaned out all the looſe threads as he went; which proved to be a work of time. Then he fell about the embroidered Indian figures of men, women, and chil- dren ; againſt which, as you have heard in its due place, their father's teftament was extremely exact and fevere: thefe, with much dexterity and application, were, after a while, quite eradicated, or utterly defac- ed. For the reft, where he obferved the embroidery to be worked fo cloſe, as not to be got away without damaging the cloth, or where it ferved to hide or ſtreng- then any flaw in the body of the coat, contracted by the perpetual tampering of workmen upon it; he con- cluded, the wifeft courfe was, to let it remain; re- folving in no caſe whatſoever, that the ſubſtance of the ſtuff ſhould ſuffer injury; which he thought the beſt method for ferving the true intent and meaning of his father's will And this is the neareſt account I have been able to collect of Martin's proceedings upon this great revolution. I But his brother Jack, whofe adventures will be fo extraordinary, The criticisms of the Martinifts (whom we may fuppofe the members of the church of England) were, it is to be hoped, more candid than thoſe contained in the following note: for Martin is treated with a much lefs degree of farcalm than the other two bro- thers. The church of England can fcarce be angry at ſuch a favourable account of Luther; efpecially as we have fince reformed from Luther himſelf, and, ſo far as our judgments can can teach us, have restored our habits fill nearer to the original lafhion, which they bore at the perfection of the teſtament. Orrery. In the character of Jack a fet of people were alarmed, who are easily offended, and who can ſcarce bear the che.rfulneſs of a ſmile. In their dictionary, wit is only another name for wickedness; and the purer or more excellent the wit, the greater and more impious the abomination. However wide, therefore, the difference of Peter and Jack might have been in faſhioning their coats, the two brothers moft fincerely agreed in their hatred of an adverfary fo powerful as this Sect. 6. A TALE OF A TUB. 91 extraordinary as to furnish a great part in the remain- der of this difcourfe, entered upon the matter with other thoughts, and a quite different fpirit. For the memory of Lord Peter's injuries produced a degree of hatred and fpite, which had a much greater fhare of in- citing him, than any regards after his father's com- mands; fince theſe appeared at beft only fecondary and fubfervient to the other However, for this medley of humour he made a fhift to find a very plauſible name, honouring it with the title of zeal; which is perhaps the moft fignificant word that hath been ever yet produced in any language; as, I think, I have fully proved in my excellent analytical difcourfe upon that fubject; wherein I have deduced a hiftori-theo-phifi-logical account of zeal, fhewing how it firft proceeded from a notion into a word, and from thence, in a hot fummer, ripened into a tangible fubftance. This work, containing three large volumes in folio, I defign very ſhortly to publiſh by the modern way of fubfcription; not doubting but the nobility and gentry of the land will give me all poffible encou- ragement, having had already fuch a taste of what I am able to perform. I record therefore, that brother Jack, brimfull of this miraculous compound, reflecting with indignation upon Peter's tyranny, and farther provoked by the de- fpondency of Martin, prefaced his refolutions to this purpoſe. What, faid he, a rogue that locked up his drink, turned away our wives, cheated us of our fortunes, palmed his damned crufts upon us for mutton, and at laſt kicked us out of doors; must we be in his fashions, with a pox! araf- cal, befides, that all the street cries out against. Having thus kindled and inflamed himſelf as high as poffible, and this anonymous author. They fpared no unmannerly reflections upon his character. They had recourſe to every kind of abuſe that could reach him. And fometimes it was the work of Swift and his companions: fometimes not a fyllable of it was his work; it was the work of one of his uncle's fons, a clergyman: and fometimes it was the work of a perfon, who was to be nameless. Each of theſe malicious conjectures reigned in its turn: and it will be found, that bold affertions, however falfe, almoſt conſtantly meet with fuccefs a kind of triumph that would appear one of the fevereſt inſtitutes of fate, if time and truth did not foon obliterate all marks of the victory. Orrery. 92 A TALE OF A TUB. and by confequence in a delicate temper for beginning a reformation, he fet about the work immediately, and in three minutes made more diſpatch than Martin had done in as many hours. For, courteous reader, you are given to underſtand, that zeal is never fo highly obliged, as when you fet it a tearing, and Jack, who doted on that quality in himſelf, allowed it at this time its full fwing. Thus it happened, that ftripping down a parcel of gold lace a little too haftily, he rent the main body of his coat from top to bottom; and whereas his talent was not of the happieft in taking up a fiitch, he knew no better way, than to darn it again with pack- thread and a skewer. But the matter was yet infinite - ly worfe (I record it with tears) when he proceeded to the embroidery: for, being clumfy by nature, and of temper impatient; withal, beholding millions of ftitches that required the niceft hand, and fedateft conftitution, to extricate; in a great rage he tore off the whole piece, cloth and all, and flung it into the kennel, and furiously thus continued his career: Ah, good brother Martin, faid he, do as I do, for the love of God; ftrip, tear, pull, rend, flay off all, that we may appear as un- like the rogue Peter as it is poffible. I would not, for an bundred pounds, carry the leaft mark about me, that might give occafion to the neighbours, of ſuſpecting I was related to fuch a rascal. But Martin, who at this time happen- ed to be extremely flegmatic and fedate, begged his bro- ther, of all love, not to damage his coat by any means; for he never would get fuch another: defired him to con- fider, that it was not their business to form their actions by any reflection upon Peter, but by obſerving the rules prefcrib- ed in their father's will: that he fhould remember, Peter was ftill their brother, whatever faults or injuries he had committed; and therefore they should by all means avoid Juch a thought, as that of taking meaſures for good and evil, from no other rule than of oppofition to him: that it was true, the teſtament of their good father was very exact in what related to the wearing of their coats; yet was it no lefs penal and ftri&t in preferibing agreement, and friendſhip, and affection between them; and therefore, if training a point were at all difpenfable, it would certainly be fo, rather to the advance of unity, than increase of contradiction. Martin Sect. 6. A TALE OF A TUB. 93 Martin had ſtill proceeded as gravely as he began; and doubtless would have delivered an admirable lecture of morality, which might have exceedingly contributed to my reader's repofe, both of body and mind, the true ultimate end of ethics; but Jack was already gone a flight-fhot beyond his patience. And as, in fcholaftic difputes, no- thing ferves to rouſe the ſpleen of him that oppoſes, ſo much as a kind of pedantic affected calmneſs in the re- Spondent; difputants being for the most part like unequal ſcales, where the gravity of one fide advances the light- nefs of the other, and caufes it to fly up, and kick the beam fo it happened here, that the weight of Martin's arguments exalted Jack's levity, and made him fly out and fpurn against his brother's moderation. In fhort, Martin's patience put Jack in a rage. But that which moſt afflicted him, was, to obſerve his brother's coat fo well reduced into the ſtate of innocence; while his own was either wholly rent to his fhirt; or thofe places, which had escaped his cruel clutches, were ftill in Pe- ter's livery: fo that he looked like a drunken beau, half rifled by bullies; or like a fresh tenant in Newgate, when he has refufed the payment of garnish; or like a difcovered fhop-lifter, left to the mercy of Exchange wo- men; or like a bawd in her old velvet petticoat, re- figned into the fecular hands of the mobile. Like any, or like all of theſe, a medley of rags and lace, ard rents and fringes, unfortunate Jack did now appear. He would have been extremely glad to fee his coat in the condition of Martin's, but infinitely gladder to find that of Martin in the fame predicament with his. However, fince neither of theſe was likely to come to país, he thought fit to lend the whole buſineſs another turn, and to dress up neceffity into a virtue. Therefore after as many The galleries over the piazzas in the Royal Exchange were for- merly filled with ſhops, kept chiefly by women. The fame ufe was made of a building called the New Exchange in the Strand. This edifice has been pulled down; the ſhopkeepers have removed from the Royal Exchange into Cornhill, and the adjacent streets; and there are now no remains of Exchange women, but in Exeter 'change, and they are no longer deemed the first miniſters of faſhion. Hawkef. 94 A TALE OF A TUB. many of the fox's arguments as he could muster up, for bringing Martin to reafon, as he called it, or, as he meant it, into his own ragged, bobtailed condition and obſerving he faid all to little purpofe; what, alas! was left for the forlorn Jack to do, but, after a million of fcurrilities against his brother, to run mad with fpleen, and fpite, and contradiction? To be fhort, here began a mortal breach between theſe two. Jack went imme- diately to new lodgings, and in a few days it was for cer- tain reported, that he had run out of his wits. In a fhort time after, he appeared abroad, and confirmed the report by falling into the oddeft whimfies that ever a fick brain conceived. And now the little boys in the ſtreets began to falute him with feveral names. Sometimes they would call him Jack the Bald; fometimes, Jack with the lantern; || fometimes, Dutch Jack; ¶ fometimes, French Hugh; † fometimes, Tom the Beggar; § and fometimes, Knocking Jack of the North. ‡‡ And it was under one, or ſome, or all of thefe appellations, which I leave the learned reader to determine, that he hath given rife to the moſt illuftrious and epidemic fect of Eolifts, who, with ho- nourable commemoration, do ftill acknowledge the re- nowned JACK for their author and founder. Of whoſe original, as well as principles, I am now advan- cing to gratify the world with a very particular account; Melleo contingens cuncta lepore. SECT. *The fox in the fable, who having been caught in a trap, and loft his tail, uſed many arguments to perfuade the reft to cut off theirs; that the fingularity of his deformity might not expofe him to derifion. Hawkef. + That is, Calvin, from calvus, bald. All thofe who pretend to inward light. Jack of Leyden, who gave riſe to the Anabaptifts. The Hugonots. The Gueufes, by which name fome Proteftants in Flanders were called. ‡‡ John Knox the reformer of Scotland. 95 I SECT. VII. A digreffion in praise of digreffions. Have fometimes heard of an Iliad in a nut-fhell; but it hath been my fortune to have much oftner jeen a nut-ſhell in an Iliad. There is no doubt that human life has received moſt wonderful advantages from both; but to which of the two the world is chiefly indebted, I fhall leave among the curious, as a problem worthy of their utmost inquiry For the invention of the latter, I think the cominonwealth of learning is chiefly obliged to the great modern improvement of digreffions: the late refine- ments in knowledge running parallel to thofe of diet in our nation, which, among men of a judicious t.ſte, are dreffed up in various compounds, confifting in foups and olio's, fricaffeés and ragoufts. It is true, there is a fort of morofe, detracting, ill- bred people, who pretend utterly to difrelifh thefe po- lite innovations. And as to the fimilitude from diet, they allow the parallel; but are fo bold to pronounce the ex- ample itſelf, a corruption and degeneracy of talte. They tell us, that the fashion of jumbling fifty things together in a diſh, was at first introduced in compliance to a de- praved and debauched appetite, as well as to a crazy con- ftitution: and to fee a man hunting through an olio after the head and brains of a gooſe, a widgeon, or a woodcock, is a fign he wants a ftomach and digestion for more fub- ftantial victuals. Farther they affirm, that digreffions in a book are like foreign troops in a fate, which argue the nation to want a heart and bands of its own; and of ten either fubdue the natives, or drive them into the moſt unfruitful corners. But, after all that can be objected by thefe fupercili- ous cenfors, it is manifeft, the fociety of writers would quickly be reduced to a very inconfiderable number, if men were put upon making books, with the fatal con- finement of delivering nothing beyond what is to the purpoſe. It is acknowledged, that were the cafe the fame among us, as with the Greeks and Romans, when learning was in its cradle, to be reared,and fed, and cloth- ed 96 A TALE OF A TUB. ed by invention; it would be an eaſy taſk to fill up vo- lumes upon particular occafions, without farther expa- tiating from the ſubject, than by moderate excurfions, helping to advance or clear the main defign. But with knowledge it has fared as with a numerous army, incamp- ed in a fruitful country; which for a few days maintains itſelf by the product of the foil it is on; till, proviſions being spent, they are fent to forage many a mile, a- mong friends or enemies, it matters not. Mean while, the neighbouring fields, trampled and beaten down, be- come barren and dry, affording no fuftenance but clouds of duft. The whole courfe of things being thus entirely chang- ed between us and the ancients, and the moderns wifely fenfible of it; we of this age have diſcovered a fhorter, and a more prudent method, to become ſcholars and wits, without the fatigue of reading and thinking. The most accompliſhed way of ufing books at prefent, is twofold: either, firft, to ferve them as fome men do lords, learn their titles exactly, and then brag of their acquaintance; or, fecondly, which is indeed the choicer, the profound- er, and politer method, to get a thorough infight into the index, by which the whole book is governed and turned, like fishes by the tail For to enter the palace of learning at the great gate, requires an expence of time and forms; therefore men of much hafte and little ce- remony are content to get in by the back-door. For the arts are all in a flying march, and therefore more eaſily fubdued by attacking them in the rear. Thus phyſicians difcover the ſtate of the whole body, by confulting only what comes from behind. Thus inen catch knowledge by throwing their wit on the pofteriors of a book, as boys do fparrows by flinging falt upon their tails. Thus human life is beſt underſtood by the wife man's rule of regarding the end. Thus are the fciences found, like Hercules's oxen, by tracing them backwards. Thus are old fciences unravelled like old flockings, by beginning at the foot. Befides all this, the army of the fciences hath been of late, with a world of martial diſcipline, drawn into its clofe order, fo that a view, or a mufter may be taken of it with abundance of expedition. For this great bleffing we Sect. 7. A digreffion in praiſe of digreffions. 97 we are wholly indebted to ſyſtems and abſtracts, in which the modern fathers of learning, like prudent ufurers, ſpent their fweat for the eaſe of us their children. For la- bour is the feed of idleness, and it is the peculiar happi- neſs of our noble age to gather the fruit. Now, the method of growing wife, learned, and fub- lime, having become fo regular an affair, and fo eſtabliſh- ed in all its forms; the number of writers must needs have increaſed accordingly, and to a pitch that has made it of abfolute neceffity for them to interfere continually with each other. Befides, it is reckoned, that there is not at this prefent a fufficient quantity of new matter left in nature, to furniſh and adorn any one particular fub- ject to the extent of a volume. This I am told by a very fkilful computer, who hath given a full demonftration of it from the rules of arithmetic. This perhaps may be objected againit by thoſe who maintain the infinity of matter, and therefore will not allow that any species of it can be exhauſted. For an- fwer to which, let us examine the nobleft branch of modern wit or invention, planted and cultivated by the prefent age, and which of all others hath borne the moſt, and the fairest fruit. For though fome remains of it were left us by the ancients, yet have not any of thofe, as I remember, been tranflated, or compiled into fyftems for modern ufe. Therefore we may affirm, to our own honour, that it hath, in fome fort, been both in- vented, and brought to a perfection by the fame hands. What I mean, is that highly celebrated talent among the modern wits, of deducing fimilitudes, allufions, and applications, very furprifing, agreeable, and appofite, from the pudenda of either fex, together with their proper ufes. And truly, having obferved how little invention bears any vogue, befides what is derived into theſe chan- nels, I have fometimes had a thought, that the happy genius of our age and country was prophetically held forth by that ancient typical defcription of the Indian Pygmies; whofe ftature did not exceed above two foot; fed quorum pudenda craffa, et ad talos ufque pertingentia.* Now, i have been very curious to inſpect the late productions, VOL. I. F * Ctefiæ fragm, apud Photium. wherein 98 A TALE OF A TU B. wherein the beauties of this kind have most prominently appeared. And although this vein hath bled fo freely, and all endeavours have been used in the power of hu- man breath to dilate, extend, and keep it open; like the Scythians, who had a custom, and an inftrument, to blow up the privities of their mares, that they might yield the more milk: § yet I am under an apprehenfion, it is near growing dry, and paſt all recovery, and that either fome new fonde of wit ſhould, if poffible, be provided, or elſe that we must e'en be content with repetition here, as well as upon all other occafions. This will ſtand as an incontestable argument, that our modern wits are not to reckon upon the infinity of mat- ter, for a conftant fupply. What remains therefore, but that our laſt recourſe muſt be had to large indexes, and little compendiums? Quotations must be plentifully ga- thered, and booked in alphabet. To this end, though authors need be little confulted, yet critics, and commen- tators, and lexicons, carefully muft. But above all, thoſe judicious collectors of bright parts, and flowers, and obfervanda's, are to be nicely dwelt on, by fome called the fieves and boulters of learning; though it is left un- determined, whether they dealt in pearls or meal; and confequently, whether we are more to value that which paffed through, or what fraid behind. By thefe methods, in a few weeks, there ftarts up ma- ny a writer, capable of managing the profoundeft, and moft univerfal fubjects. For what though his head be empty, provided his common place book be full? And if you will bate him but the circumftances of method, and Ayle and grammar, and invention; allow him but the common privileges of tranfcribing from others, and di- greffing from himſelf, as often as he fhall fee occafion; he will defire no more ingredients towards fitting up a treatife, that fhall make a very comely figure on a book- feller's fhelf, there to be prefeived neat and clean for a long eternity, adorned with the heraldry of its title fairly infcribed on a label; never to be thumbed or greaſed by ſtudents, nor bound to everlasting chains of darkneſs in a library; but when the fulness of time is § Herodot. 1. 4.` come, Sect. 8. A TALE OF A TUB. 99 come, fhall happily undergo the trial of purgatory, in order to afcend the sky. Without thefe allowances, how is it poffible we mo- dern wits fhould ever have an opportunity to introduce our collections, lifted under fo inany thoufand heads of a different nature? for want of which, the learned world would be deprived of infinite delight, as well as inftruc- tion, and we ourselves buried beyond redrefs in an in- glorious and undiftinguiſhed oblivion. From fuch elements as thefe, I am alive to behold the day, wherein the corporation of authors can outvie all its brethren in the guild: A happineſs derived to us with a great many others, from our Scythian anceſtors; a- mong whom the number of pens was fo infinite, that the Grecian eloquence had no other way of exprefling it, than by ſaying, that in the region far to the north, it was hard- ly poffible for a man to travel, the very air was fo replete with feathers. * The neceflity of this digreflion will eafily excule the length; and I have cholen for it as proper a place as I could readily find. If the judicious reader can afflign a fitter, I do here impower him to remove it into any other corner he pleaſes. And fo I return with great alacrity to purfue a more important concern. TH SECT. VIII. A TALE OF A TU B. HE learned Eolifts † maintain the original caufe of all things to be wind, from which principle this whole univerfe was at first produced, and into which it muſt at last be refolved; that the fame breath which had kindled, and blew up the flame of nature, fhould one day blow it out. Quod procul a nobis flectot fortuna gubernans. This is what the adepti underſtand by their anima mundi; F 2 * Herodot. 1. 4. All pretenders to infpiration whatsoever. 100 A TALE OF A TUB. mundi; that is to ſay, the ſpirit, or breath, or wind of the world. For examine the whole fyftem by the parti- culars of nature, and you will find it not to be difputed. For whether you pleaſe to call the forma informans of man by the name of fpiritus, animus, afflatus, or anima; what are all theſe but feveral appellations for wind which is the ruling element in every compound, and into which they all refolve upon their corruption. Farther, what is life itſelf, but, as it is commonly called, the breath of our noftrils? Whence it is very juftly obſerved by naturalifts, that wind ftill continues of great emolu- ment in certain myfteries not to be named, giving occafion for thofe happy epithets of turgidus, and inflatus, appli- ed either to the emittent, or recipient organs. By what I have gathered out of ancient records, I find the compaſs of their doctrine took in two and thirty points, wherein it would be tedious to be very particu- lar. However, a few of their most important precepts, deducible from it, are by no means to be omitted; a- mong which the following maxim was of much weight. 'That fince vind had the maſter-thare, as well as opera- tion in every compound, by confequence, thofe beings must be of chief excellence, wherein that primordium ap- pears moft prominently to abound; and therefore man is in highest perfection of all created things, as having, by the great bounty of philofophers, been endued with three diftinct anima's or evinds, to which the fage Æo- lifts, with much liberality, have added a fourth, of equal neceflity, as well as ornament, with the other three; by this quartam principium, taking in our four corners of the world; which gave occalion to that renowned ca- baliſt, Bumbaſtus, of placing the body of men in due pontion to the four cardinal points. In confequence of this, their next principle was, That man brings with him into the world a peculiar portion or grain of wind, which may be called a quinta effentia, extracted from the other four. This quintefence is of a catholic uſe upon all emergencies of life, is improvable into all arts and fciences, and may be wonderfully refin- ed, This is one of the names of Paracelfus. He was called ChriЯo- phorus Theophrastus Paracelius Bumbaſtus, Sect. 8. A TALE OF A TU B. IOI ed, as well as enlarged, by certain methods in educa- tion. This, when blown up to its perfection, ought not to be covetoufly hoarded up, ftifled, or hid under a bufhel, but freely communicated to mankind. Upon theſe reaſons, and others of equal weight, the wife E- olifts affirm the gift of BELCHING to be the noblest act of a rational creature. To cultivate which art, and render it more ſerviceable to mankind, they made ufe of feveral methods. At certain feafons of the year, you might behold the priests among them in vaft numbers,with their mouths gaping wide enough against a form. At other times were to be feen feveral hundred linked together in a cir- cular chain, with every man a pair of bellows applied to his neighbour's breech, by which they blew up each other to the ſhape and fize of a tun; and for that rea- fon, with great propriety of fpeech, did ufually call their bodies their vefels. When, by theſe and the like performances, they were grown fufficiently replete, they would immediately depart, and difembogue, for the pub- lic good, a plentiful ſhare of their acquirements into their disciples chaps. For we muſt here obſerve, that all learning, was eſteemed among them to be compound- ed from the fame principle: Becaufe, firft it is gene. rally affirmed, or confeffed, that learning puffeth men up: and, fecondly, they proved it by the following, fyllo- gifm: Words are but wind; and learning is nothing but words; ergo, learning is nothing but wind. For this rea- fon, the philofophers among them did, in their ſchools, deliver to their pupils, all their doctrines and opinions by eructation, wherein they had acquired a wonderful elo- quence, and of incredible variety. But the great cha- racteristic by which their chief fages were beft diftin- guifhed, was a certain pofition of countenance, which gave undoubted intelligence to what degree or propor- tion the spirit agitated the inward mafs. For, after cer- tain gripings, the wind and vapours iffuing forth; hav- ing firtt, by their turbulence and convulfions within, caufed an earthquake in man's little world; diſtorted the mouth, bloated the cheeks, and gave the eyes a tenible This is meant of there feitious preachers, who llew up the feeds of rebellion. 8.c. 102 A TALE OF A TUB. t terrible kind of relievo. At which junctures, all their belches were received for facred, the fourer the better, and ſwallowed with infinite confolation by their meagre devotees. And to render thefe yet more complete; be- cauſe the breath of man's life is in his noftrils, there- fore the choiceft, moft edifying, and moft enlivening belches were very wifely conveyed through that vehicle, to give them a tincture as they paffed. Their gods were the four winds, whom they wor- fhipped, as the fpirits that pervade and enliven the uni- verfe, and as thofe from whom alone all inspiration can properly be faid to proceed. However, the chief of thefe, to whom they performed the adoration of latria, ‡ was the almighty North; an ancient deity, whom the inhabitants of Megalopolis in Greece, had likewife in the higheſt reverence: Omnium deorum Boream maxime ecle- brant. This god, though endued with ubiquity, was yet fuppofed by the profounder Æolifts to poffefs one peculiar habitation, or (to fpeak in form) a cælum empyreum, wherein he was more intimately preſent. This was fituated in a certain region, well known to the ancient Greeks, by them called Exoría, or, the land of darkness. And although many controverfies have a- rifen upon that matter; yet ſo much is undifputed, that, from a region of the like denomination, the moſt refined Æolifts have borrowed their original; from whence, in every age, the zealous among their priesthood have brought over their choiceſt inſpiration; fetching it with their own hands from the fountain head, in certain bladders, and diſploding it among the fectaries in all na- tions; who did, and do, and ever will, daily gaſp and pant after it. Now, their myfteries and rites were performed in this manner. It is well known among the learned, that the virtuofo's of former ages had a contrivance for carrying and preferving winds in caſks or barrels, which was of great afliftance upon long fea voyages; and the lofs of fo uſeful an art at prefent is very much to be lamented, al- though, I know not how, with great negligence o- mitted • ↑ Latria is that worſhip which is paid only to the Supicme Deity. Hawkef. § Paufan, 1. 8. Sect. 8. A TALE OF A TUB. 103 mitted by Pancirollus. It was an invention aſcribed to Æolus himſelf, from whom this fect is denominated; and who, in honour of their founder's memory, have to this day preferved great numbers of thofe barrels, where- of they fix one in each of their temples, firit beating out the top. Into this barrel, upon folemn days, the prieft enters; where, having before duly prepared him- felf by the methods already defcribed, a fecret funnel is alfo conveyed from his pofteriors to the bottom of the barrel, which admits new fupplies of infpiration from a northern chink or crany. Whereupon you behold him fwell immediately to the fhape and fize of his veſſel. In this polture he dimbogues whole tempetts upon his au- ditory, as the pirit from beneath gives him utterance, which, iffuing ex adytis et penetralibus, is not performed without much pain and gripings. And the wind in breaking forth, deals with his face as it does with that of the fea; first blackening, then wrinkling, and at laft burfling it into a foam. † It is in this guife the facred olift delivers his oracular belches to his panting difci- ples; of whom fome are greedily gaping after the fanc- tified breath; others are all the while hymning out the. praiſes of the winds; and, gently wafted to and fro by their own humming, do thus repreſent the foft breezes of their deities appealed. It is from this custom of the priests, that fome authors maintain theſe Æolifts to have been very ancient in the world; becauſe the delivery of their myfteries, which I have just now mentioned, appears exactly the fame with that of other ancient oracles, whofe inſpirations were owing to certain fubterraneous effluviums of wind, delivered with the fame pain to the priest, and much a- bout the fame influence on the people. It is true in- deed, that thefe were frequently managed and directed by female officers, whofe organs were underſtood to be better difpofed for the admiffion of thofe oracular gujts, as entering and paffing up through a receptacle of great- er An author who writ De artibus perditis, &c. of arts loft, and ef arts invented. This is an exact defcription of the changes made in the face by enthufiaftic preachers. 104 A TALE OF A TUB. er capacity, and caufing alfo a pruriency by the way, fuch as, with due management, hath been refined from carnal into a fpiritual ecftafy. And, to ftrengthen this profound conjecture, it is farther infifted, that this cuf- tom of female priefts | is kept up ftill in certain refined colleges of our modern Æolifts, who are agreed to re- ceive their infpiration, derived through the receptacle a- forefaid, like their anceſtors, the Sibyls. And whereas the mind of man, when he gives the fpur and bridle to his thoughts, doth never ſtop, but naturally fallies out into both extremes of high and low, of good and evil; his first flight of fancy commonly tranfports him to ideas of what is moft perfect, finifhed, and exalted; till having foared out of his own reach and fight, not well perceiving how near the frontiers of height and depth border upon each other, with the fame courfe and wing, he falls down plum into the low- eft bottom of things; like one who travels the eaſt into the weft; or like a ftrait line drawn by its own length into a circle. Whether a tincture of malice in our na- tures makes us fond of furniſhing every bright idea with its reverfe; or whether reaſon, reflecting upon the fum of things, can, like the fun, ferve only to enlighten one half of the globe, leaving the other half by neceffity under fhade and darknefs; or whether fancy, flying up to the imagination of what is higheft and beft, be- comes over-ſhort, and fpent, and weary, and fudden- ly falls, like a dead bird of paradiſe, to the ground; or whether, after all thefe metaphyfical conjectures, I have not entirely miffed the true reafon; the propofition, however, which hath ſtood me in fo much circumstance, is altogether true, That, as the mott uncivilized parts of mankind have fome way or other climbed up into the conception of a god, or fupreme power, fo they have feldom forgot to provide their fears with certain ghaftly notions, which, inftead of better, have ferved them pretty tolerably for a devil. And this proceeding feems to be natural enough for it is with inen, whofe imagi- nations are lifted up very high, after the fame rate as with thoſe whofe bodies are fo; that as they are de- : Quakers, who fuffer their women to preach and pray. lighted Sect. 8. A TALE OF A TUB. 105 lighted with the advantage of a nearer contemplation upwards, fo they are equally terrified with the diſmal profpect of the precipice below. Thus, in the choice. of a devil, it hath been the ufual method of mankind, to fingle out fome being, either in act, or in vifion, which was in moſt antipathy to the god they had framed. Thus alfo the fect of Æolifts poffeffed themſelves with a dread, and horror, and hatred of two malignant na- tures, betwixt whom and the deities they adored, per- petual enmity was eſtabliſhed. The firſt of theſe was the chameleon,* fworn foe to inspiration, who, in ſcorn, devoured large influences of their god, without refunding the finalleft blaft by eructation. The other was a huge terrible monſter, called Moulinavent, who, with four ftrong arins, waged eternal battle with all their divinities, dextroufly turning to avoid their blows, and repay them with intereft. Thus furniſhed, and fet out with gods, as well as de- vils, was the renowned fect of Æolifts; which makes at this day ſo illuftrious a figure in the world, and whereof that polite nation of Laplanders, are beyond all doubt, a moſt authentic branch of whom I therefore cannot without injuftice, here omit to make honourable men- tion; fince they appear to be fo cloſely allied in point of intereft, as well as inclinations, with their brother Eolifts among us, as not only to buy their winds by wholeſale from the ſame merchants, but alſo to retail them after the fame rate and method, and to customers much alike. 、 Now, whether the fyftem here delivered was wholly compiled by Jack; or, as fome writers believe, rather copied from the original at Delphos, with certain addi- tions and emendations fuited to the times and circum- ſtances; I fhall not abfolutely determine. This I may affirm, that Jack gave it at least a new turn, and formed it into the fame drefs and model as it lies deduced by me. I have long fought after this opportunity of doing ju- flice to a fociety of men, for whom I have a peculiar honour; • F 5 *I do not well underland what the author aims at here, any more than by the terrible monster mentioned in the following lines, called Aoun, á vent, which is the Freach name for a winomil.. 106 A TALE OF A TU B, honour; and whoſe opinions, as well as practices, have been extremely mifreprefented and traduced by the ma- lice or ignorance of their adverfaries. For I think it one of the greatest and beſt of human actions, to remove prejudices, and place things in their trueft and faircft light; which I therefore boldly undertake, without any regards of my own, befide the confcience, the honour, and the thanks. SECT. IX. A digreffion concerning the original, the ufe, and improve- ment of madneſs in a commonwealth. N OR fhall it any wife detract from the juft reputa- tion of this famous fect, that its rife and inftitu- tion are owing to fuch an author as I have deſcribed Jack to be; a perſon whofe intellectuals were overturn- ed, and his brain fhaken out of its natural pofition; which we commonly fuppofe to be a diftemper, and call by the name of madness, or phrenzy. For, if we take a furvey of the greateft actions that have been performed. in the world under the influence of fingle men; which are, the eſtabliſhment of new empires by conquest; the ad- vance and progress of new fchemes in philofophy; and the contriving, as well as the propagating of new religions; we fhall find the authors of them all to have been per- fons, whofe natural reafon had admitted great revolu- tions from their diet, their education, the prevalency of fome certain temper, together with the particular influence of air and climate. Befides, there is fome- thing individual in human minds, that eafily kindles at the accidental approach and collifion of certain circum- ftances, which, though of paultry and mean appearance, do often flame out into the greatell emergencies of life. For great turns are not always given by ftrong hands, but by lucky adaption, and at proper feafons. And it is of no import, where the fire was kindled, if the vapour has once got up into the brain. For the upper region of man is turniſhed like the middle region of the air; the materials are formed from caufes of the wideft differ- ence, Sect. 9. A digreffion concerning madness. 107 ence, yet produce at laft the fame ſubſtance and effect. Mifts arife from the earth, fteams from dung hills, ex- halations from the fea, and fmoke from fire; yet all clouds are the fame in compofition, as well as confe- quences; and the fumes iffuing from a jakes will furniſh as comely and ufeful a vapour, as incenfe from an altar, Thus far, I fuppofe, will eafily be granted me; and then it will follow, that as the face of nature never produces rain, but when it is overcaft and diſturbed; fo human underſtanding, feated in the brain, muſt be troubled and overspread by vapours, afcending from the lower faculties to water the invention, and render it fruit- ful. Now, although theſe vapours (as it hath been already faid) are of as various original, as thofe of the ſkies; yet the crops they produce, differ both in kind and degree, merely according to the foil. I will produce two in- ftances to prove and explain what I am now advanc- ing. * A certain great prince raiſed a mighty army, filled his coffers with infinite treaſures, provided an invinci- ble fleet; and all this, without giving the leaft part of his deſign to his greatest minifters, or his neareſt favou- rites. Immediately the whole world was alarmed; the neighbouring crowns in trembling expectations, towards what point the ftorm would burft; the fmall politicians every where forming profound conjectures. Some be- lieved, he had laid a fcheme for univerfal monarchy; others, after much infight, determined the matter to be a project for pulling down the Pope, and fetting up the Reformed religion, which had once been his own. Some again, of a deeper fagacity, fent him into Afia, to ſub- due the Turk, and recover Palcftine. In the midt of all there projects and preparations, a certain ftate-ſur- geon, gathering the nature of the difeafe by thefe fymptoms, attempted the cure; at one blow performed the operation, broke the bag, and out flew the capour. Nor did any thing want to render it a complete remedy, only that the prince unfortunately happened to die in the performance. Now, is the reader exceeding curious to learn, from whence this pour took its rile, which This was Harry the Great of France. Ravillac, who ſtabbed Henry the Great in his coach. . had 108 A TALE OF A TU B. had fo long fet the nations at a gaze! what ſecret wheel, what hidden ſpring could put into motion fo wonderful an engine? It was afterwards diſcovered, that the move- ment of this whole machine had been directed by an ab- fent female, whofe eyes had raiſed a protuberancy, and, before emiffion, fhe was removed into an enemy's coun- try. What ſhould an unhappy prince do in fuch tickliſh circumſtances as theſe? He tried in vain the poet's ne- ver-failing receipt of corpora quæque: for, Idque petit corpus mens, unde eft faucia amore; Unde feritur, eo tendit, geflitque coire. Lucr. Having to no purpoſe uſed all peaceable endeavours, the collected part of the femen, raiſed and inflamed be- came aduft, converted to choler, turned head upon the fpinal duct, and afcended to the brain. The very fame principle that influences a bully to break the windows of a whore who has jilted him, naturally ftirs up a great prince to raiſe mighty armies, and dream of nothing but fieges, battles, and victories. Caufa- ·Cunnus teterrimi belli The other inftance is, what I have read fome. where in a very ancient author, of a mighty king, I who, for the ſpace of above thirty years, amufed himſelf to take and loſe towns; beat armies, and be beaten; drive princes out of their dominions; fright children from their bread and butter; burn, lay waſte, plunder, dragoon, maffacre fubject and ftranger, friend and foc, male and female. It is recorded, that the philofophers of each country were in grave difpute upon caufes natu- ral, moral, and political, to find out where they fhould affign an original folution of this phenomenon. At last the vapour or Spirit which animated the hero's brain, being in perpetual circulation, feized upon that region of the human body, fo renowned for furniſhing the zibeta occidentalis, and gathering there into a tumour, left the ** relt This is meant of the prefent French King, Lewis XIV. Paracelfus, who was to famous for chymistry, tried an experi- ment upon human excrement, to make a perfume of it; which when Sect. 9. A digreffion concerning madness. 109 reſt of the world for that time in peace. Of fuch mighty confequence it is, where thofe exhalations fix; and of fo little, from whence they proceed. The fame fpirits, which, in their fuperior progrefs, would conquer a king- dom, defcending upon the anus, conclude in a fiftula. : Let us next examine the great introducers of new ſchemes in philoſophy, and fearch till we can find from what faculty of the foul the difpofition arifes in mortal man, of taking it into his head to advance new ſyſtems, with fuch an eager zeal, in things agreed on all hands impoffible to be known; from what feeds this difpofi- tion fprings, and to what quality of human nature theſe grand innovators have been indebted for their number of difciples becauſe it is plain, that feveral of the chief among them, both ancient and modern, were ufually mif- taken by their adverfaries, and indeed by all, except their own followers, to have been perfons crazed, or out of their wits; having generally proceeded, in the common courſe of their words and actions, by a method very different from the vulgar dictates of unrefined rea- fon; agreeing, for the moſt part, in their ſeveral models, with their preſent undoubted fucceffors in the academy of modern Bedlam; (whoſe merits and principles I ſhall far- ther examine in due place.) Of this kind were Epicu- rus, Diogenes, Apollonius, Lucretius, Paracelfus, Des Cartes, and others; who, if they were now in the world, tied faſt, and ſeparate from their followers, would, in this our undiftinguishing age, incur manifeft danger of phlebotomy, and whips, and chains, and dark chambers, and straw. For what man, in the natural ftate or courfe of thinking, did ever conceive it in his power to reduce the notions of all mankind exactly to the fame length, and breadth, and height of his own? Yet this is the first humble and civil defign of all innovators. in the empire of reafon, Epicurus modeftly hoped, that, one time or other, a certain fortuitous concourfe of all men's opinions, after perpetual juftlings, the fharp with the fmooth, the light and the heavy, the round and the fquare, when he had brought to perfection, he called zibeta occidentalis, or western cruct, the back parts of man (according to his divifion men- tioned by the author, p. 1co.) being the weſt. ΓΙΟ A TALE OF A TUB. fquare, would, by certain clinamina, unite in the notions of atoms and void, as theſe did in the originals of all things. Cartefius reckoned to fee, before he died, the fentiments of all philofophers, like fo many leffer ſtars in his romantic fyftem, wrapped and drawn within his own vortex. Now, I would gladly be informed, how it is poffible to account for fuch imaginations as thefe'in particular men, without recourfe to my phænomenon of vapours, afcending from the lower faculties to overfha- dow the brain, and there diftilling into conceptions, for which the narrowness of our mother-tongue has not yet affigned any other name befides that of madness, or phrenzy. Let us therefore now conjecture, how it comes to pafs, that none of thefe great prefcribers do ever fail providing themfelves and their notions with a number of implicit difciples. And, I think, the rea- fon is eaſy to be affigned; for there is a peculiar ſtring in the harmony of human underſtanding, which in feve- ral individuals is exactly of the fame tuning. This if you can dextroufly ſcrew up to its right key, and then ftrike. gently upon it; whenever you have the good fortune to light among thofe of the fame pitch, they will, by a fecret neceffary fympathy, ftrike exactly at the fame time. And in this one circumftance lies all the ſkill or luck of the matter: for if you chance to jar the ftring among thofe who are either above or below your own height; inſtead of ſubfcribing to your doc- trine, they will tie you faft, call you mad, and feed you with bread and water. It is therefore a point of the niccit conduct, to diftinguifh and adapt this noble. talent with respect to the differences of perfons and of times. Cicero underſtood this very well, when writing to a friend in England, with a caution, among other matters, to beware of being cheated by our backney- coachmen, (who, it feems, in thofe days were as arrant rafcals as they are now,) has theſe remarkable words: Eft quod gaudeas te in ifta loca veniffe, ubi aliqui fapere viderere. * For, to speak a bold truth, it is a fatal inif- carriage, fo ill to order affairs, as to pals for a fool in one company, when in another you might be treated as a philofopher. * Epift. ad Fam. Trebat, Sect. 9. A digreffion concerning madneſs. philofopher. Which I defire fome certain gentlemen of my acquaintance to lay up in their hearts, as a very feaſonable innuendo. This, indeed, was the fatal mistake of that worthy gentleman, my moft ingenious friend, Mr. Wotton; a perfon, in appearance, ordained for great defigns, as well as performances. Whether you will confider his no- tions or his looks, furely no man ever advanced into the public with fitter qualifications of body and mind, for the propagation of a new religion. Oh, had thoſe happy talents, mifapplied to vain philofophy, been turn- ed into their proper channels of dreams and viſions, where distortion of mind and countenance are of fuch fovereign uſe; the baſe detracting world would not then have dar- ed to report, that fomething is amifs, that his brain hath undergone an unlucky fhake; which even his brethren moderniſts themſelves, like ungrates, do whiſper fo loud, that it reaches up to the very garret I am now writing in. Lastly, Whofoever pleaſes to look into the fountains of enthufiafm, from whence, in all ages, have eternally proceeded fuch fattening ftreams, will find the fpring head to have been as troubled and muddy as the current. Of fuch great emolument is a tincture of this vapour, which the world calls madness, that, without its help, the world would not only be deprived of thofe two great blethings, conquefts and systems, but even all mankind would unhappily be reduced to the fame belief in things invi- fible. Now, the former poftulatum being held, that it is of no import from what originals this vapour proceeds, but either in what angles it ftrikcs, and fpreads over the underſtanding, or upon what ſpecies of brain it afcends it will be a very delicate point, to cut the feather, and divide the feveral reafons to a nice and curious reader, how this numerical difference in the brain can produce effects of ſo vaft a difference from the fame vapour, as to be the fole point of individuation between Alexander the Great, Jack of Leyden, and Monfieur Des Cartes. The prefent argument is the most abftracted that ever I en- gaged in it trains my faculties to their higheſt ſtretch: and I defire the reader to attend with utmolt perpenfity; for I now proceed to unravel this knotty point. ; There 112 A TALE OF A TUB. * There in in mankind a certain t * Hic multa defiderantur. * of the matter * * And this I take to be a clear folution Having therefore fo narrowly paffed through this in- tricate difficulty, the reader will, I am fure, agree with me in the conclufion, that if the moderns mean by mad- nefs only a difturbance or tranfpofition of the brain, by force of certain vapours iffuing up from the lower facul- ties, then has this madneſs been the parent of all thoſe mighty revolutions that have happened in empire, in phi- lofophy, and in religion. For the brain, in its natural pofition and ſtate of ferenity, difpofeth its owner to paſs his life in the common forms, without any thoughts of fubduing multitudes to his own power, his reafons, or his vifions: and the more he fhapes his understanding by the pattern of human learning, the lefs he is inclined to form parties after his particular notions; becauſe that instructs him in his private infirmities, as well as in the ftubborn ignorance of the people. But when a man's fancy gets aftride on his reafon; when imagination is at cuffs with the fenfes; and common underſtanding, as well as common fenfe, is kicked out of doors; the first profelyte he makes, is himſelf; and when that is once compaffed, 'the difficulty is not fo great in bringing over others; a trong delufion always operating from without as vigorously as from within. For cant and vifion are to the ear and the eye the fame that tickling is to the touch. Thoſe entertainments and pleaſures we moſt value in life, are fuch as dupe and play the wag with the fenfes. For if we take an examination of what is generally understood by happiness, as it has refpect either to the understanding or the fenfes, we fhall find all its properties and adjuncts will herd under this fhort dehnition, That it is a perpetual tafeffion of be- + ing Here is another defed in the manufcript; but I think the au- thor did wifely, and that the matter, which thus ftrained his facul- ties, was not worth a folution; and it were well if all metaphyfical cobweb problems were no otherwife anfwered, Sect. 9. 113 A digreffion concerning madness. ing well deceived. And, firft, with relation to the mind or underſtanding, it is manifeft, what mighty advan- tages fiction has over truth: and the reaſon is juſt at our elbow; becauſe imagination can build nobler ſcenes, and produce more wonderful revolutions, than fortune or nature will be at expence to furnish. Nor is mankind fo much to blame in his choice thus determining him, if we confider that the debate merely lies between things paft, and things conceived. And fo the queſtion is only this: Whether things that have place in the imagination, may not as properly be faid to exift, as thofe that are feated in the memory? Which may be juftly held in the affirmative and very much to the advantage of the former; fince this is acknowledged to be the womb of things, and the other allowed to be no more than the grave. Again, if we take this definition of happineſs, and examine it with reference to the fenfes, it will be acknowledged wonderfully adapt. How fading and infipid do all objects accoft us that are not conveyed in the vehicle of delufion! How fhrunk is every thing, as it appears in the glafs of nature! So that if it were not for the affiftance of artificial mediums, falfe lights, re- fracted angles, varnish and tinfel, there would be a mighty level in the felicity and enjoyments of mortal men. If this were ſeriouſly confidered by the world, as I have a certain reafon to fufpect it hardly will, men would no longer reckon among their high points of wil- dom, the art of expofing weak fides, and publiſhing in- firmities: An employment, in my opinion, neither bet- ter nor worse than that of unmasking; which, I think, has never been allowed fair ufage, either in the world, or the play-house. In the proportion that credulity is a more peaceful poffeffion of the mind, than curiofity, to far preferable is that wiſdom which converfes about the furface, to that pretended philofophy which enters into the depth of things, and then comes gravely back with informa- tions and diſcoveries, that in the infide they are good for nothing. The two fenfes to which all objects firſt addrefs themſelves, are the fight and the touch. Thefe never examine farther than the colour, the fhape, the fize, and whatever other qualities dwell, or are drawn by 114 A TALE OF A TUB. by art upon the outward of bodies; and then comes reafon officioufly with tools for cutting, and opening, and mangling, and piercing, offering to demonftrate, that they are not of the fame confiftence quite through. Now, I take all this to be the laft degree of perverting nature; one of whofe eternal laws it is, to put her beſt furniture forward. And therefore, in order to fave the charges of all fuch expenſive anatomy for the time to come, I do here think fit to inform the reader, that in fuch conclufions as thefe, reafon is certainly in the right; and that in the moſt corporeal beings which have fallen under my cogniſance, the outſide hath been infinitely preferable to the in. Whereof I have been farther con- vinced from fome late experiments. Last week I faw a woman flayed, and you will hardly believe how much it altered her perfon for the worfe. Yesterday I oider- ed the carcafe of a beau to be ftripped in my prefence; when we were all amazed to find fo many unfufpected faults under one fuit of cloaths. Then I laid open his brain, his heart, and his spleen. But I plainly perceived at every operation, that the farther we proceeded, we found the defects increaſe upon us in number and bulk. From all which I juftly formed this conclufion to my- felf, That whatever philofopher or projector can find out an art to folder and patch up the flaws and imper- fections of nature, will deferve much better of mankind, and teach us a more uſeful fcience, than that ſo much in preſent eſteem, of widening and expofing them, like him who held anatomy to be the ultimate end of phyfic. And he whofe fortunes and difpofitions have placed him in a convenient ſtation to enjoy the fruits of this noble art; he that can, with Epicurus, content his ideas with the films and images, that fly off upon his fenfes from the fuperficies of things; fuch a man, truly wife, creams off nature, leaving the four and the dregs for philofophy and reafon to lap up. This is the fublime and refined point of felicity, called the poffeffion of being well deceived; the ferene peaceful ftate of being a fool among knaves. But to return to madness: It is certain, that, accord- ing to the fyftem I have above deduced, every species thereof proceeds from a redundancy of vapours; there- fore, Sect. 9. 115 A digreffion concerning madneſs. fore, as fome kinds of phrenzy give double ftrength to the finews, fo there are of other fpecies, which add vi- gour, and life, and fpirit to the brain. Now, it ufually happens, that theſe active fpirits, getting poffeffion of the brain, reſemble thofe that haunt other waſte and empty dwellings, which, for want of bufinefs, either va- nifh, and carry away a piece of the houſe, or elfe ſtay at home, and fling it all out of the windows. By which are myftically difplayed the two principal branches of madnels; and which fome philofophers, not confidering fo well as I, have miftaken to be different in their cauſes: over-haftily affigning the first to deficiency, and the other to redundance. I think it therefore manifeft, from what I have here advanced, that the main point of ſkill and addrefs is, to furnish employment for this redundancy of vapour, and prudently to adjuſt the ſeaſon of it; by which means it may certainly become of cardinal and catholic emolu- ment in a commonwealth. Thus one man chufing a proper conjecture, leaps into a gulf, from thence proceeds a hero, and is called the faver of his country: another atchieves the fame enterprife; but, unluckily timing it, has left the brand of madness fixed as a reproach upon his memory. Upon fo nice a diſtinction are we taught to repeat the name of Curtius with reverence and love; that of Empedocles with hatred and contempt. Thus alſo it is uſually conceived, that the elder Brutus only perfo- nated the fool and madman for the good of the public. But this was nothing elfe than a redundancy of the fame vapour long mifapplied, called by the Latins, ingenium par negotiis; or, to tranflate it as nearly as I can, a fort of phrenzy, never in its right element, till you take it up in the buſineſs of the ftate. Upon all which, and many other reafons of equal weight, though not equally curious, I do here gladly embrace an opportunity I have long fought for, of re- commending it as a very noble undertaking to Sir Ed- ward Seymour, Sir Chriftopher Mufgrave, Sir John Bowls, John How, Efq; and other patriots concerned, that they would move for leave to bring in a bill for Tacit. appointing 116 A TALE OF A TUB. appointing commiffioners to infpect into Bedlam, and the parts adjacent; who fhall be impowered to fend for perfons, papers, and records; to examine into the merits and qualifications of every ftudent and profeffor; to ob- ferve with utmoſt exactneſs their ſeveral difpofitions and behaviour; by which means, duly diftinguiſhing and adapting their talents, they might produce admirable inftruments for the feveral offices in a ftate, † **** civil and military; proceeding in fuch methods as I fhall here humbly propofe. And I hope the gentle reader will give fome allowance to my great folicitudes in this important affair, upon account of the high efteem I have borne that honourable fociety, whereof I had fome time the happineſs to be an unworthy member. Is any ftudent tearing his ſtraw in piece meal, fwear- ing and blafpheming, biting his grate, foaming at the mouth, and emptying his pifs-pot in the fpectators faces? let the Right Worshipful the Commiffioners of Inspection give him a regiment of dragoons, and fend him into Flanders among the reft. Is another eternally talking, fputtering, gaping, bawling, in a found without period or article? what wonderful talents are here miflaid! let him be furniſhed immediately with a green bag and papers, and three-pence || in his pocket, and away with him to Westminster-hall. You will find a third gravely taking the dimenfions of his kennel; a perfon of fore- fight and infight, though kept quite in the dark; for why, like Mofes, ecce cornuta erat ejus facics. ‡ He walks duly in one pace; intreats your penny with due gravity and ceremony; talks much of hard times, and taxes, and the whore of Babylon; bars up the wooden window of his cell conftantly at eight o'clock; dreams of fire, and hop lifters, and court-cußomers, and privileged places. Now, what a figure would all theſe acquirements amount to, if the owner were fent into the city among his brethren! Behold a four h, in nuch and deep con- verfation † Ecclefiaftical. Hawkef. A lawyer's coach hire, when four together, from any of the inns of court to Weftumnfter. I Cornutus is either horned or fhining; and by this term Mofes is deſcribed in the vulgar Latin of the Bible. Sect. 9. A digreffion concerning madness. 117 verſation with himſelf; biting his thumbs at properjunc- tures; his countenance checkered with bufinefs and de- fign; fometimes walking very faft, with his eyes nailed to a paper that he holds in his hands; a great faver of time; fomewhat thick of hearing; very fhort of fight, but more of memory; a man ever in haſte, a great hatcher and breeder of buſineſs, and excellent at the famous art of whispering nothing; a huge idolater of mo- nofyllables and procraftination; fo ready to give his word to every body, that he never keeps it; one that has forgot the common meaning of words, but an admirable retainer of the found; extremely fubject to the loofenefs, for his occafions are perpetually calling him away. If you approach his grate in his familiar intervals, Sir, fays he, give me a penny, and I'll fing you a fong; but give me the penny first. (Hence comes the common faying, and com- moner practice, of parting with money for a song.) What a complete fyftem of court-fkill is here defcribed in every branch of it, and all utterly loft with wrong application! Accoft the hole of another kennel, (firft ftopping your nofe,) you will behold a furly, gloomy, nafty, flovenly mortal, raking in his own dung, and dabbling in his urine. The best part of his diet is the reverfion of his own ordure; which, expiring into fteams, whils perpetually about, and at last reinfunds. His complexion is of a dirty yellow, with a thin ſcat- tered beard, exactly agreeable to that of his diet upon its first declination; like other infects, who having their birth and education in an excrement, from thence borrow their colour and their fmell. The ftudent of this apartment is very fparing of his words, but ſome- what over liberal of his breath; he holds his hand out ready to receive your penny, and immediately upon receipt, withdraws to his former occupations. Now, is it not amazing, to think, the fociety of War- wick-lane fhould have no more concern for the re- covery of ſo uſeful a member, who, if one may judge from thefe appearances, would become the greatest ornament to that illuftrious body? Another tudent ftruts up fiercely to your teeth, puffing with his lips, half fqueezing out his eyes, and very graciouſly holds you out his hand to kifs. The keeper defires you not 118 A TALE OF A TUB. not to be afraid of this profeffor, for he will do you no hurt. To him alone is allowed the liberty of the ante- chamber; and the orator of the place gives you to un- derftand, that this folemn perfon is a taylor, run mad with pride. This confidcrable ftudent is adorned with many other qualities, upon which at prefent I fhall not farther enlarge. Hark in your ear. †—I am ſtrang- ly miſtaken, if all his addreſs, his motions, and his airs, would not then be very natural, and in their proper element. I fhall not defcend fo minutely, as to infift upon the vast number of beaux, fidlers, poets, and politicians, that the world might recover by luch a reformation. But what is more material, befides the clear gain redound- ing to the commonwealth, by fo large an acquifition of perfons to employ, whofe talents and acquirements, if I may be fo bold to affirm it, are now buried, or at leaſt mifapplied; it would be a mighty advantage accruing to the public from this inquiry, that all thefe would very much excel, and arrive at great perfection in their feveral kinds which, I think, is manifeft from what I have already fhewn, and fhall enforce by this one plain inftance, That even I myſelf, the author of thefe mo- mentous truths, am a perſon whofe imaginations are hard-mouthed, and exceedingly difpofed to run away with his reafon, which I have obferved, from long ex perience, to be a very light rider, and eafily fhaken off : upon which account, my friends will never truſt me alone, without a folemn promife to vent my fpeculations in this or the like manner, for the univeifal benefit of human kind; which perhaps the gentle, courteous, and candid reader, brimful of that modern charity and ten- dernefs ufually annexed to his office, will be very hardly perfuaded to believe. SECT. I cannot conjecture what the author means here, or how this chafm could be filled, though it is capable of more than one inter- pretation. 119 I' SECT. X. A further digreſſion. ‡ T is an unanſwerable argument of a very refined age, the wonderful civilities that have pafled of late years between the nation of authors, and that of readers. There can hardly pop out a play and pamphlet or a poem, without a preface full of acknowledgment to the world, for the general reception and applauſe they have given it; which the Lord knows where, or when, or how, or from whom it received. | In due deference to fo laudable a cuſtom, I do here return my humble thanks to his Ma- jefty, and both houſes of parliament; to the Lords of the King's Moft Honourable Privy Council; to the Reve- rend the judges; to the clergy, and gentry, and yeomanry of this land: but, in a more especial manner, to my worthy brethren and friends at Will's coffee-houſe, and Gresham-college, and Warwick-lane, and Moor-fields, and Scotland-yard, and Westminster-ball, and Guild-ball: in fhort, to all inhabitants and retainers whatfoever, either in court, or church, or camp, or city, or country, for their generous and univerfal acceptance of this divine treatife. I accept their approbation and good opinion with extreme gratitude; and, to the utmoſt of my poor capacity, ſhall take hold of all opportunities to return the obligation. I am alſo happy, that fate has flung me into fo bleſſed an age for the mutual felicity of bookjellers and authors, whom I may fafely affirm to be at this day the two on- ly fatisfied parties in England. Afk an author, how his last piece has fucceeded: Why, truly, he thanks his fars, the world has been very favourable, and he has not the least reason to complain. And yet, by G—, he writ it in a week at bits and farts, when he could steal an hour from This fection has in former editions been intitled, A Tale of a Tub; but the tale not being continued till fection 11, and this being only a further digreffion, no apology can be thought neceffary for making the title correfpond with the contents. Hawkef. This is literally true, as we may obferve in the prefaces to moſt plays, poems, &c. 120 A TALE OF A TUB. from his urgent affairs; as it is a hundred to one, you may fee farther in the preface, to which he refers you; and for the reft, to the bookfeller. There you go as a cu- ſtomer, and make the fame queftion: He bleffes his God, the thing takes wonderfully; he is juft printing the fecond e- dition, and has but three left in his shop. You beat down the price Sir, we shall not differ; and, in hopes of your cuſtom another time, lets you have it as reaſonable as you pleaſe; and, pray fend as many of your acquaintance as you will, I fall upon your account furnish them all at the Same rate. Now, it is not well enough confidered, to what ac- cident and occafions the world is indebted for the great- eft part of thoſe noble writings which hourly ftart up to entertain it. If it were not for a rainy day, a drunken vigil, a fit of the spleen, a courſe of phyfic, a ſleepy Sunday, an ill run at dice, a long tailor's bill, a beggar's purſe, a faltious head, a bot fun, coftive diet, want of books, and a just contempt of learning, but for thefe events, I fay, and fome others too long to recite, (eſpecially a prudent neglect of taking brimstone inwardly,) I doubt, the num- ber of authors, and of writings, would dwindle away to a degree moft woful to behold. To confirm this opinion, hear the words of the famous Troglodyte phi- lofopher. It is certain, ſaid he, ſome grains of folly are of course annexed as part of the compofition of human nature; only the choice is left us, whether we please to wear them inlaid or imboffed and we need not go very far to ſeek how that is usually determined, when we remember, it is with buman faculties as with liquors, the lightest will be ever at the top. : - There is in this famous ifland of Britain, a certain paultry Scribler, very voluminous, whofe character the reader cannot wholly be a ftranger to. He deals in a pernicious kind of writings, called fecond parts, and u fually paffes under the name of the author of the first. I eafily forefee, that as foon as I lay down my pen, this nimble operator will have ftolen it, and treat me as in- humanly as he hath already done Dr. Blackmore, L'E- trange, and many others who fhall here be nameless. I therefore fly for juſtice and relief, into the hands of that great Sect. 10. 121 A further digreffion. great rectifier of ſaddles, ‡ and lover of mankind, Dr. Bent- ley, begging he will take this enormous grievance into his most modern confideration: and if it fhould ſo hap- pen, that the furniture of an afs, in the fhape of a ſecond part, muſt for my fins be clapped by a miſtake upon my back; that he will immediately pleaſe, in the prefence of the world, to lighten me of the burthen, and take it home to his own houſe, till the true beaſt thinks fit to call for it. In the mean time, I do here give this public notice, that my refolutions are to circumfcribe within this dif courſe the whole ftock of matter I have been fo many years providing. Since my vein is once opened, I am content to exhauft it all at a running, for the peculiar advantage of my dear country, and for the univerfal benefit of mankind. Ther:fore hofpitably confidering the number of my gueſts, they ſhall have my whole en- tertainment at a meal; and I fcorn to fet up the leav ings in the cupboard. What the guest cannot eat, may be given to the poor; and the dogs under the table may gnaw the bones. || This I underftand for a more genc- rous proceeding, than to turn the company's ftomach, by inviting them again to-morrow to a fcurvy meal of fcraps. If the reader fairly confiders the ftrength of what I have advanced in the foregoing fection, I am convinced it will produce a wonderful revolution in his notions and opinions; and he will be abundantly better prepar. ed to receive and to relish the concluding part of this miraculous treatife. Readers may be divided into three claffes; the fuperficial, the ignorant, and the learned: and I have with much felicity fitted my pen to the genius and advantage of each. The fuperficial reader will be ftrangely provoked to laughter; which clears the breaft and the lungs, is fovereign against the pleen, and the most innocent of all diuretics. The ignorant reader, between whom and the former the diftinction is ex- tremely nice, will find himſelf diſpoſed to ſtare; which VOL. I. G is Alluding to the trite phrafe, Place the faddle on the right Larfe. Harvkes. By dogs the author means common injudicious critics, as he ex- plains it himſelf before, in his digreffion upon critics, p. Eg. 122 A TALE OF A TUB. is an admirable remedy for ill eyes, ferves to raiſe and enliven the fpirits, and wonderfully helps perfpiration. But the reader truly learned, chiefly for whofe benefit I wake when others fleep, and fleep when others wake, will here find ſufficient matter to employ his ſpeculati- ons for the reft of his life. It were much to be wished, and I do hereby humbly propofe for an experiment, that every prince in Christendom will take feven of the deepest scholars in his dominions, and fhut them up clofe for seven years, in feven chambers, with a command to write feven ample commentaries on this comprehenſive difcourfe. I fhall venture to affirm, that whatever dif- ference may be found in their ſeveral conjectures, they will be all, without the leaft diftortion, manifeftly de- ducible from the text. Mean time, it is my earnest re- queft, that fo uſeful an undertaking may be entered up- on, if their Majefties pleaſe, with all convenient fpeed; becauſe I have a ſtrong inclination, before I leave the world, to taſte a blefling, which we mysterious writers can feldom reach, till we have gotten into our graves; whether it is, that Fame, being a fruit grafted on the body, can hardly grow, and much less ripen, till the tock is in the earth; or whether the be a bird of prey, and is lured among the reft to purfue after the ſcent of a carcafe; or whether the conceives her trumpet founds beft and fartheft, when fhe ftands on a tomb, by the ad- vantage of a rifing ground, and the echo of a hollow vault. It is true, indeed, the republic of dark authors, after they once found out this excellent expedient of dying, have been peculiarly happy in the variety, as well as extent of their reputation. For, Night being the uni- verfal mother of things, wife philolophers hold all wri- tings to be fruitful in the proportion they are dark; and therefore the true illuminated (that is to fay, the darkeſt of all) have met with fuch numberlefs commenta- tors, A name of the Rofycrucians. -Thefe were Fanatic alchymifts, who, in fearch after the great fecret, had invented a means altoge- ther, proportioned to their end. It was a kind of theological phi- lofophy, made up of almoft equal mixtures of Pagan Platonism, Chri. ftian Quietism, and the Jewish Cabala. Warburton on the Rape of the Lock. Sect. 10. 123 A further digreffion. tors, whofe fcholaftic midwifery hath delivered them of meanings that the authors themſelves perhaps never con- ceived, and yet may very juftly be allowed the lawful parents of them; the words of fuch writers being like feed, which, however fcattered at random, when they light upon a fruitful ground, will multiply far beyond either the hopes or imagination of the fower. † And therefore, in order to promote fo ufeful a work, I will here take leave to glance a few innuendo's, that may be of great affiſtance to thofe fublime fpirits, who fhall be appointed to labour in a univerfal comment upon this wonderful diſcourſe. And, first, I have couch- ed a very profound mystery in the number of O's mul- tiplied by Jeven, and divided by nine. Alſo, if a de- vout brother of the Rofy Grofs will pray fervently for fixty-three mornings, with a lively faith, and then tran- ſpoſe certain letters and fyllables according to prefcrip- tion, in the fecond and fifth fection; they will certain- ly reveal into a full receipt of the opus magnum, Laft- ly, whoever will be at the pains to calculate the whole number of each letter in this treatife, and fum up the difference exactly between the feveral numbers, affign- ing the true natural caufe for every fuch difference; the diſcoveries in the product will plentifully reward his labour. But then he must beware of bythus and ſigé, || and be fure not to forget the qualities of achamoth; a cujus lacrymis humecta prodit fubftantia, a rifu lucida, a tri- G2 G 2 ftitia Nothing is more frequent, than for commentators to force inter- pretations which the author never meant. This is what the Cabalifts among the Jews have done with the Bille, and pretend to find wonderful myfteries by it. I was told by an eminent divine, whom I confulted on this point, that these two barbarous words, with that of achamoth, and its quali- ties, as here ſet down, are quoted from Irenæus. This he difcoveted by fearching that ancient writer for another quotation of our auther: which he has placed in the title page, and refers to the book and chapter. The curious were very inquifitive, whether thoſe barbarous words, bafyma cacabafa, &c. are really in Irenæus; and upon in- quiry, it was found they were a fort of cant or jargon of certain heretics, and therefore very properly prefixed to fuch a book as this of our author. 124 A TALE OF ATU B. ftitia folida, et a timore mobilis; wherein Eugenius Phila- lethes hath committed an unpardonable miſtake. A SECT. XI. A TALE OF A TUB. Fter fo wide a compafs as I have wandered, I do now gladly overtake, and clofe in with my fub- ject; and fhall henceforth hold on with it an even pace to the end of my journey, except fome beautiful profpect appears within fight of my way: whereof though at prefent I have neither warning nor expectation, yet. upon fuch an accident, come when it will, I fhall beg my reader's favour and company, allowing me to con- duct him through it along with myfelf. For in writing, it is as in travelling; if a man is in hafte to be at home, (which I acknowledge to be none of my cafe, having never fo. little bufinefs as when I am there,) if his horje be tired with long riding and ill ways, or be naturally jade, I adviſe him clearly to make the ftraiteft and the commoneft road, be it ever fo dirty. But then fure- ly we must own ſuch a man to be a fcurvy companion at beſt: he spatters himſelf and his fellow-travellers at every step; all their thoughts, and wishes, and conver- fation, turn entirely upon the fubject of their journey's end; and at every fplash, and plunge, and ftumble, they heartily with one another at the devil. On the other fide, when a traveller and his horſe are in heart and plight; when his purfe is full, and the day before him; he takes the road only where it is clean ...and ca, * Vid. Anima magica abfcondita, To the above mentioned treatiſc, called Anthropofophia Theomagi- there is another annexed, called Avima magica abfcondita, written by the fame author, Vaughan, under the name of Eugenius Philale- thes; but in neither of thoſe treatiſes is there any mention of acha- moth, or its qualities: fo that this is nothing but amufement, and a ridicule of dark, unintelligible writers; only the words, a cujus la- crymis, &c. are, as we have faid, tranfcribed from Irenæus, though I know not from what part. I believe one of the author's defigns was, to fet curious men a hunting through indexes, and inquiring for books out of the common road. Sect. 11. 125 A TALE OF A TUB. and convenient; entertains his company there as agree- ably as he can but, upon the firft occafion, carries them along with him to every delightful ſcene in view, whe- ther of art, of nature, or of both; and if they chance to refufe, out of ſtupidity or weariness, let them jog on by themſelves, and be d-n'd: he'll overtake them at the next town; at which arriving, he rides furiously through; the men, women, and children run out to gaze ; a hun- dred noify curs run barking after him; of which if he honours the boldest with a lab of his whip, it is rather out of ſport than revenge: but fhould fome fourer mon- grel dare too near an approach, he receive a falute on the chaps by an accidental ftroke from the courfer's heels, (nor is any ground loft by the blow,) which fends him yelping and limping home. I now proceed to fum up the fingular adventures of my renowned Jack; the ſtate of whofe difpofitions and fortunes the careful reader does, no doubt, moſt exact- ly remember, as I laft parted with them in the conclu- fion of a former fection. Therefore his next care muft be, from two of the foregoing, to extract a fcheme of notions that may beft fit his underſtanding for. a. true: reliſh of what is to enfue. Jack had not only calculated the firft revolution of his brain fo prudently, as to give rife to that epidemic fect of alifts, but fucceeding alfo into a new and ftrange variety of conceptions, the fruitfulness of his imagination led him into certain notions, which, al- though in appearance very unaccountable, were not without their mysteries and their meanings, nor want- ed followers to countenance and improve them. I fhall therefore be extremely careful and exact in recounting. fuch material paffages of this nature, as I have been able to collect, either from undoubted tradition, or indefa- tigable reading; and fhall deſcribe them as graphically as it is poffible, and as far as notions of that height and latitude can be brought within the compafs of a pen. Nor do I at all queftion, but they will furnish plenty of noble matter. for fuch, whofe converting imaginations. difpofe By thefe are meant what the author calls, the true critics, p. 69. 126 A TALE OF A TUB. difpofe them to reduce all things into types; who can make shadows, no thanks to the fun; and then mould them into fubftances, no thanks to philofophy; whoſe peculiar talent lies in fixing tropes and allegories to the letter, and refining what is literal into figure and myſte- ry. Jack had provided a fair copy of his father's will, in- groffed in form upon a large ſkin of parchment; and, re- folving to act the part of a moft dutiful fon, he became the fondeſt creature of it imaginable. For though, as I have often told the reader, it confifted wholly in cer- tain plain, eaſy directions about the management and wearing of their coats, with legacies and penalties in cafe of obedience or neglect; yet he began to entertain a fancy, that the matter was deeper and darker, and there- fore must needs have a great deal more of myſtery at the bottom. Gentlemen, faid he, I will prove this very Skin of parchment to be meat, drink, and cloth; to be the philofopher's Stone, and the universal medicine. In con- fequence of which raptures, he refolved to make uſe of it in the moſt neceffary, as well as the moft paultry oc- cafions of life. He had a way of working it into any fhape he pleaſed; fo that it ferved him for a night-cap when he went to bed, and for an umbrella in rainy weather. He would lap a piece of it about a fore toe; or when he had fits, burn two inches under his nofe or if any thing lay heavy on his ftomach, fcrape off, and fwallow as much of the powder as would lie on a filver penny: they were all infallible remedies. With analogy to thefe refinements, his common talk and con- verſation ran wholly in the phrafe of his will; † and he circumfcribed the utmoſt of his eloquence within that compafs, not daring to let flip a fyllable without autho- rity from thence. Once, at a strange-houfe, he was fuddenly taken fhort upon an urgent juncture, whereon it may not be allowed too particularly to dilate; and being The author here lashes thofe prerenders to purity, who place fo much merit in ufing ſcripture-phraſe on all occafions. + The Protestant diffinters ufe fcripture phrafes in their ferious dif- courſes and compofures, more than the Church of England men. Ac- cordingly Jack is introduced, making his common talk and conver- ſation to run wholly in the phraſe of his WILL. W. Wotion. Sect. 11. A TALE OF A TUB. 127 being not able to call to mind, with that fuddennefs the occafion required, an authentic phraſe for demanding the way to the back-ſide; he choſe rather, as the moſt pru- dent courſe, to incur the penalty in ſuch caſes u´ually an- nexed. Neither was it poffible for the united rhetoric of inankind to prevail with him to make himfelf clean again; becauſe, having confulted the will upon this emergency, he met with a paffage near the bottom (whether foifted in by the tranſcriber, is not known) which feemed to forbid it. * He made it a part of his religion, never to fay grace to his meat; nor could all the world perfuade him, as the common phrafe is, to eat his victuals like a Chri- ſtion. t He bore a ftrange kind of appetite to Snap-dragen, § and to the livid fnuffs of a burning candle; which he would catch and fwallow with an agility wonderful to conceive; and by this procedure maintained a perpetual flame in his belly; which iffued in a glowing ſteam from both his eyes, as well as his noftrils, and his mouth, inade his head appear in a dark night, like the fcull of an afs, wherein a roguifh boy had conveyed a farthing candle, to the terror of his Majefty's liege fubjects. There- fore he made uſe of no other expedient to light himſeif home; but was wont to fay, that a wife man was his own lantern. He * I cannot guefs the author's meaning here, which I would be very glad to know, becauſe it ſeems to be of importance. Ibid. Incurring the penalty in fucb cafes ufually annexed, wants no explanation. He would not make bimfelf clean, because baving confult- ed the wi!!, (i. e. the New Teſtament,; be met with a poſſage near the bottom, i. e. in the 11th verfe of the last chapter of the Revelations, "He which is filthy, let him be filthy ftill," which feemed to forbid Whether faifted in by the tranfcriber, is added; becaufe this para- graph is wanting in the Alexandrian MS. the oldeſt and moſt authen- tic copy of the New Teftament. Harwkef. it. + tics. The fovenly way of receiving the facrament among the fana- This is a common phrafe to exprefs eating cleanly, and is meant for an invective againſt that indecent manner among fome people in receiving the facrament; fo in the lines before, which is to be un- derstood of the diffenters refufing to kneel at the facrament. § I cannot well find out the author's meaning here, unless it be the hot, untimely, blind zeal of enthuſiaſts. 128 A TALE OF A TUB. He would hut his eyes as he walked along the ſtreet and if he happened to bounce his head against a poft, or fall into the kennel, as he feldom miffed either to do one or both, he would tell the gibing apprentices, who looked on, that he fubmitted, with entire refignation, as to a trip, or blow of fate, with whom he found by long ex- perience, how vain it was either to wrestle or to cuff, and whoever durft undertake to do either, would be fure to come off with a fwingeing fall, or a bloody nofe. It was ordain- ed, faid he, fome few days before the creation, that my noje and this very poſt ſhould have a rencounter; and therefore Nature thought fit to fend us both into the world in the jame age, and to make us countrymen and fellow-citizens. Now, had my eyes been open, it is very likely, the business might have been a great deal worſe; for how many a confounded flip is daily got by man, with all his forefight about him? Befides, the eyes of the understanding fee beft, when those of the fenfes are out of the way; and therefore blind men are obferved to tread their steps with much more caution, and conduct, and judgment, than those who rely with too much confidence upon the virtue of the vijual nerve, which every little accident fakes out of order, and a drop or film can wholly dijconcert; like a lamp among a pack of roaring bullies, when they scour the streets; expoling its owner and itself, to outward kicks and buffets, which both might have clcaped, if the vanity of appearing would have ſuffered them to walk in the dark. But farther, if we examine the conduct of these boafted lights, it will prove yet a great deal worje than their fortune. It is true, I have broke my noje against this post, because fortune either forget, or did not think it con- vement to twitch me by the elbow, and give me notice to a- void it. But let not this encourage either the preſent age or pofterity to trust their noles into the keeping of their eyes; which may prove the fairest way of lofing them for good and all. For, O ye eyes, ye blind guides; miferable guardians are ye of our frail nojes; ye, I fay, who faften upon the first precipice in view, and then tow our wretched willing bodies after you, to the very brink of deftruction. brink of destruction. But, alas! that brink is rotten, our feet flip, and we tumble down prone iuto a gulph, without one hoſpitable ſhrub in the way to break the fall; a fall to whi.b not any nefe of mortal make is equal, except that of Sect. 11. 129 A TALE OF A TUB. of the giant Laurcalco, who was lord of the filver bridge. Most properly therefore, O eyes, and with great juſtice, may you be compared to those foolish lights, which conduct men through dirt and darkneſs, till they fall into a deep pit, or a noiſome bog. This I have produced, as a fcantling of Jack's great eloquence, and the force of his reafoning upon fuch abftrufe matters. He was, befides, a perfon of great defign and improve- ment in affairs of devotion, having introduced a new deity, who hath fince met with a vaſt number of wor- fhippers; by fome called Babel, by others, Chaos; who had an ancient temple of Gothic structure upon Saliſbu- ry-plain, famous for its fhrine, and celebration by pil- grims. When he had ſome roguiſh trick to play, he would down with his knees, up with his eyes, and fall to pray- ers, though in the midſt of the kennel. . Then it was that thofe, who underſtood his pranks, would be ſure to get far enough out of his way; and whenever curio- fity attracted strangers to laugh, or to liften, he would of a fudden with one hand out with his gear, and piſs full in their eyes, and with the other all befpatter them with mud. In winter he went always looſe and unbuttoned, and clad as thin as poffible, to let in the ambient heat; and in fummer, lapped himſelf cloſe and thick, to keep it out. t In all revolutions of government, he would make his court for the office of hangman-general; and in the exerciſe of that dignity, wherein he was very dextrous, would make ufe of no other vizor, than a long prayer. § • Vide Don Quixote. G 5 He. The villanies and cruelties, committed by enthufrafts and fama- ties among us, were all performed under the diſguiſe of religion and.. long prayers. + They affected differences in habit and behaviour, tion. They are fevere pe:fecutors, and all in form of cant and devo- Cromwell and his confedrates went, as they called it, to feck Ged, when they refolved to muither the King. 103 A TALE OF A TU B. Had had a tongue fo mufculous and fubtile, that he could twift it up into his nofe, and deliver a ftrange kind of fpeech from thence. He was alfo the firſt in theſe kingdoms who began to improve the Spaniſh ac- compliſhment of braying; and having large ears, perpe- tually expoſed and erected, he carried his art to ſuch a perfection, that it was a point of great difficulty to dif zinguiſh, either by the view or the found, between the original and the copy. He, was troubled with a diſeaſe, reverſe to that called the ſtinging of the tarantula; and would run dog-mad at the noife of mufic, efpecially a pair of bag-pipes. † But he would cure himſelf again, by taking two or three turns in Westminster-hall, or Billingſgate, or in a boarding-ſchool, or the Royal Exchauge, or a ſtate coffee-houſe. He was a perſon that feared no colours, § but mortally bated all; and upon that account bore a cruel averfion against painters, infomuch that in his paroxyfms, as he walked the ſtreets, he would have his pockets loaden with ftones, to pelt at the figns. Having, from this manner of living, frequent occa- fion to wash himſelf, he would often leap over head and ears into water, though it were the midſt of winter; and was always obferved to come out again much dirtier, poffible, than he went in. § if He was the firft that ever found out the fecret of con- triving a foporiferous medicine to be conveyed in at the ears. It was a compound of fulphur and balm of Gilead, with a little pilgrim's falve. || He wore a large plaifter of artificial cauftics on his ftomach, with the fervour of which he could fet himſelf a groaning, like the famous board upon application of a red-hot iron. He would ftand in the turning of a ſtreet; and, call- ing + This is to expofe our diffenters averfion againſt inftrumental mufic in churches. W. Wotton. They quarrel at the most innocent decency and ornament, and defaced the ftatues and paintings on all the churches in England. Baptifm of adults by plunging. Hawkef. Fanatic preaching, compofed either of hell or damnation, or a fulfome deſcription of the joys of heaven; both in ſuch a dirty, naufe- ous style, as to be well refembled to pilgrim's falve. Sect. 11. A TALE OF A TUB. 131 ing to those who paffed by, would cry to one, Iorthy Sir, do me the honour of a good flap in the chaps; to ano- ther, Honest friend, pray favour me with a handſome kick on the arfe. Madam, ſhall I intreat a ſmall box on the ear from your Ladyship's fair hand? Noble Captain, lend a reaſonable thwack for the love of God, with that cane if yours, over these poor fhoulders. And when he had, by ‡ fuch earneſt folicitations, made a ſhift to procure a baſt- ing fufficient to fwell up his fancy and his fides, he would return home extremely comforted, and full of terrible accounts of what he had undergone for the public good. Obferve this ftroke, faid he, fhewing his bare fhoulders, a plaguy janifary gave it me this very morning at ſeven a-clock, as, with much ado, I was driving off the Great Turk. Neighbours, mind this broken head deferves a plaifter. Had poor Jack been tender of his noddle, you would have seen the Pope and the French King, long before this time of day, among your wives and your warehouſes. Dear Chriftians, the Great Mogul was come as far as I'bite-chapel; and you may thank theſe poor fides, that be bath not (God bless us) already fwallowed up man, woman, and child. It was highly worth obferving the fingular effects of that averfion or antipathy which Jack and his brother Peter feemed, even to an affectation, to bear againſt each other. Peter had lately done fome rogueries, that forced him to abfcond; and he feldom ventured to ftir out before night for fear of bailiffs. Their lodgings were at the two moſt diſtant parts of the town, from cach other; and whenever their occafions or humours called them abroad, they would make choice of the oddeft unlikely times, and most uncouth rounds, they could The Fanatics have always had a way of affecting to run into perfecution, and count valt merit upon every little hardship they fufer. The Papifis and Fanatics, though they appear the moſt averſe againſt each other, yet bear a near reſemblance in many things, as hath been obferved by learned men. Ibid. The agreement of our Diffenters and the Papifts, in that which Bishop Stillingflect called, The fanaticism of the church of Rome, is ludicrously defcribed for feveral pages together, by Jack's likeness to Peter, and their being often mistaken for each other, and their frequent meetings when they leaft intended it, W. Wotton. 332 A TALE OF A TUB. could invent, that they might be fure to avoid one ano- ther. Yet, after all this, it was their perpetual fortune to meet. The reaſon of which is eafy enough to appre- hend: for the phrenzy and the spleen of both having the fame foundation, we may look upon them as two pair of compaffes, equally extended, and the fixed foot of each remaining in the fame centre; which though moving contrary ways at firſt, will be fure to encounter fomewhere or other in the circumference. Befides, it was among the great misfortunes of Jack, to bear a huge perfonal refemblance with his brother Peter. Their humour and difpofitions were not only the fame, but there was a clofe analogy in their fhape and fize, and their mien; infomuch as nothing was more frequent, than for a bailiff to feize Jack by the fhoulders, and cry, Mr. Peter, you are the King's prisoner; or, at other times, for one of Peter's neareſt friends, to accolt Jack with open arms, Dear Peter, I am glad to see thee; pray, fend me one of your best medicines for the worms. This, we may ſuppoſe, was a mortifying return of thofe pains and proceedings Jack had laboured in fo long; and finding how directly oppofite all his endeavours had an- fwered to the fole end and intention which he had pro- poſed to himſelf, how could it avoid having terrible effects upon a head and heart fo furniſhed as his? How- ever, the poor remainders of his coat bore all the pu- nishment. The orient fun never entered upon his diur- nal progrefs, without mifling a piece of it. He hired a tailor to stitch up the collar fo clofe, that it was ready to choke him, and fqueezed out his eyes at fuch a rate as one could fee nothing but the white. What little was left of the main fubftance of the coat, he rub- bed every day, for two hours, against a rough-caft wall, in order to grind away the remnants of lace and embroidery; but, at the fame time, went on with fo much violence, that he proceeded a Heathen pbilofopher. Yet, after all he could do of this kind, the fuccefs continued ftill to diſappoint his expectation. For as it is the na- ture of rags, to bear a kind of mock refemblance to finery; there being a fort of fluttering appearance in both, which is not to be diftinguiſhed at a diſtance, in he dark, or by fhort-fighted eyes: fo, in thofe junc- ture Sect. 11. A TALE OF A TUB. 133 tures, it fared with Jack and his tatters, that they of- fered to the firſt view a ridiculous flaunting; which, affi- fting the reſemblance in perfon and air, thwarted all his projects of feparation, and left fo near a fimilitude be- tween them, as frequently deceived the very diſciples and followers of both. * Defunt non- nulla. * * * The old Sclavonian proverb faid well, That it is with men, as with affes; whoever would keep them fast, must find a very good bold at their ears. Yet I think we may affirm, that it hath been verified by repeated experience, that, Effugiet tamen hæc fceleratus vincula Proteus. It is good, therefore, to read the maxims of our an- ceſtors with great allowances to times and perfons. For, if we look into primitive records, we fhall find, that no revolutions have been ſo great, or fo frequent, as thoſe of human ears. In former days, there was a curious invention to catch and keep them; which, I think, we may juſtly reckon among the artes perditæ. And how can it be otherwife, when, in thefe latter centuries, the very ſpecies is not only diminiſhed to a very lamentable degree, but the poor remainder is alfo degenerated fo far, as to mock our fkilfulleft tenure? For if the only flitting of one ear in a ftag hath been found fufficient to propagate the defect though a whole foreft, why fhould we wonder at the greatest confequences, for fo many loppings and mutilations, to which the ears of our fathers, and our own, have been of late fo much expofed? It is true, indeed, that while this island of ours was under the dominion of grace, many endeavours were made to improve the growth of cars once more among us. The pro- portion of largenefs was not only looked upon as an or- nament of the outward man, but as a type of grace in the inward. Befides, it is held by naturaliits, that if there be a protuberancy of parts in the fuperior region of the body, as in the ears and nofe, there mult be a pa- rity 134. A TALE OF A TUB. rity alfo in the inferior. And therefore, in that truly pious age, the males in every affembly, according as they were gifted, appeared very forward in expofing their ears to view, and the regions about them; becauſe Hip- pocrates tells us, that when the vein behind the ear hap- pens to be cut, a man becomes an eunuch. * And the females were nothing backwarder in beholding and edifying by them whereof thoſe who had already uſed the means, looked about them with great concern, in hopes of con- ceiving a fuitable offspring by fuch a profpect. Others, who flood candidates for benevolence, found there a plen- tiful choice, and were fure to fix upon fuch as difcover- ed the largest cars, that the breed might not dwindle between them. Laftly, the devouter filters, who looked upon all extraordinary dilatations of that member, as protrufions of zeal, or fpiritual excrefcences, were fure to honour every head they fat upon, as if they had been marks of grace; but efpecically that of the preacher, whoſe ears were ufually of the prime magnitude; which, up- on that account, he was very frequent and exact in expofing with all advantages to the people; in his rhe- torical paroxyfms turning fometimes to hold forth the one, and fometimes to hold forth the other. From which cuftom, the whole operation of preaching is to this very day, among their profeffors, flyled by the phrafe of hold- ing forth. Such was the progrefs of the faints for advancing the fize of that member; and it is thought, the fuccefs would have been every way anfwerable, if, in procefs of time, a cruel king had not aroſe, who raiſed a bloody perfecution against all ears above a certain ftandard. † Upon which, fome were glad to hide their flourishing ſprouts in a black border; others crept wholly under a periwig; fome were flit, others cropped, and a great number fliced off to the flumps. But of this more here- after in my gencral history of ears; which I defign very ſpeedily to bestow upon the public. From this brief furvey of the falling ftate of ears in * Lib. de aëre, locis, et aquis. the This was K. Charles II. who, at his reſtoration, turned out all the diffenting teachers that would not conform. sect. 11. A TALE OF A TU B. 135 the laſt age, and the final care had to advance their ancient growth in the prefent, it is manifeft, how little reaſon we can have to rely upon a hold fo ſhort, ſo weak, and fo flippery; and that whoever defires to catch mankind faft, muft have recourfe to fome other methods. Now, he that will examine human nature with circumfpection enough, may difcover feveral han- dles, whereof the fix* fenfes afford one a-piece, beſide a great number that are fcrewed to the paffions, and ſome few rivetted to the intellect. Among thefe laft, curiosity is one, and, of all others, affords the firmeft grafp; curiofity, that fpur in the fide, that bridle in the mouth, that ring in the nofe, of a lazy and impatient, and a grunting reader. By this handle it is, that an author ſhould feize upon his readers; which as foon as he hath once compaffed, ali refiftance and ſtruggling are in vain; and they become his prisoners as cloſe as he pleaſes, till wearinefs or dulnefs force him to let go his gripe. * And therefore I, the author of this miraculous treatiſe, having hitherto, beyond expectation, maintained, by the aforesaid handle, a firm hold upon my gentle rea- ders; it is with great reluctance, that I am at length compelled to remit my grafp; leaving them in the ge- rufal of what remains to that natural ofcitancy inherent in the tribe. I can only affure thee, courteous reader, for both our comforts, that my concern is altogether equal to thine, for my unhappineſs in lofing, or miflay- ing among my papers, the remaining part of thefe me- moirs; which confifted of accidents, turns, and adven- tures, both new, agreeable, and furpriſing; and there- fore calculated, in all due points, to the delicate tafte of this our noble age. But, alas! with my utmoft en- deavours, I have been able only to retain a few of the heads. Under which, there was a full account, how Peter got a protection out of the King's-bench; and of a reconcilement between Jack and him, upon a defign they had in a certain rainy night to trepan brother Mar- tin into a ſpunging-houfe, and there ftrip him to the ſkin:† *Including Scaliger's. how In the reign of K. James II. the Prefbyterians, by the King's invitation, 136 A TALE OF A TU B. how Martin, with much ado, fhewed them both a fair pair of heels; how a new warrant came out against Peter; upon which, how Jack left him in the lurch, ftole his protection, and made use of it himself. How Jack's tatters came into fashion in court and city; how he got upon a great horje,* and eat custard. But the particu- ‡ lars of all thefe, with feveral others, which have now flid out of my memory, are loft beyond all hopes of re- covery. For which misfortune, leaving my readers to condole with each other, as far as they fhall find it to agree with their feveral conftitutions; but conjuring. them by all the friendship that hath paffed between us from the tide-page to this, not to proceed fo far as to injure their healths for an accident paft remedy: I now go on to the ceremonial part of an accomplished writer; and therefore, by a courtly modern, leaft of all others to be omitted. G THE CONCLUSION. OING too long is a caufe of abortion as effectual though not fo frequent, as going too short; and holds true eſpecially in the labours of the brain. Well fare the heart of that noble Jefuit † who firſt adven- tured to confefs in print, that books, muſt be ſuited to their feveral feafons, like drefs, and diet, and diver- fions and better fare our noble nation, for refining up- on this, among other French modes. I am living faſt to fee the time, when a book that miffes its tide, fhalt be. invitation, joined with the Papifis, againſt the church of England, and addreffed him for repeal of the penal laws and teſt. The King, by his difpenfing power, gave liberty of confcience, which both Pa- pifts and Prefbyterians made uſe of. But, upon the revolution, the Papifts being down of course, the Prefbyterians freely continued their affemblies, by virtue of K. James's indulgence, before they had a toleration by law. This, I believe, the author means by Jack's ftealing Peter's protection, and making uſe of it himſelf. * Sir Humphrey Edwyn, a Prefbyterian, was fome years ago Lord, Mayor of London, and had the infolence to go in his formalities to a conventicle, with the enfigns of his office. Cuſtard is a famous diſh at a Lord Mayor's feaſt, ↑ Pere d'Orleans. The Conclufion. 137 be neglected, as the moon by day, or like mackarel a week after the ſeaſon. No man hath more nicely obferved our climate, than the bookfeller who bought the copy of this work. He knows to a tittle, what ſubjects will beſt go off in a dry year, and which it is proper to expoſe foremoſt, when the weather-glafs is fallen to much rain. When he had ſeen this treatiſe, and conſulted his alma- nack upon it, he gave me to underſtand, that he had inanifeftly confidered the two principal things, which were the bulk and the ſubject; and found, it would ne- ver take, but after a long vacation; and then only, in cafe it fhould happen to be a hard year for turnips. Upon which I defired to know, confidering my urgent neceffities, what he thought might be acceptable this month. He looked westward, and faid, I doubt we shall have a fit of bad weather; however, if you could prepare Some pretty little banter, (but not in verfe,) or a ſmall treatiſe upon the it would run like wild-fire. But if it hold up, I have already hired an author to write Something against Dr. Bentley, which, I am fure, will turn to account. I > At length we agreed upon the expedient, That when. a cuſtoraer comes for one of theſe, and deſires in confi- dence to know the author; he will tell him very pri- vately, as a friend, naming which ever of the wits fhall happen to be that week in vogue; and if Durfey's laſt play ſhould be in courſe, I had as lieve he may be the perfon as Congreve. This I mention, becauſe I am wonderfully well acquainted with the prefent reliſh of courteous readers; and have often obferved with fin- gular pleaſure, that a fly driven from a honey-pot, will im- mediately with very good appetite alight, and finish his meal on an excrement. I have one word to fay upon the fubject of profound writers, who are grown very numerous of late; and, I know very well, the judicious world is refolved to liſt me in that number. I conceive therefore, as to the buſineſs of being profound, that it is with writers, as with When Dr. Prideaux brought the copy of his connection of the Old and New Teſtament to the bookfeller, he told him, it was a dry Jubject, and the printing could not fafely be ventured, unless be could enliven it with a little bumour. Hawkef. 138 A TALE OF A TUB. with wells; a perfon with good eyes may fee to the bot- tom of the deepeft, provided any water be there; and often, when there is nothing in the world at the bottom, befides driness and dirt, though it be but a yard and half under ground, it fhall pass however for wondrous deep, upon no wifer a reafon, than becauſe it is wondrous dark. I am now trying an experiment very frequent among modern authors; which is, to write upon nothing: when the fubject is utterly exhaufted, to let the pen ftill move on; by fome called, the ghoft of wit, delighting to walk after the death of its body. And to ſay the truth, there ſeems to be no part of knowledge in fewer hands, than that of difcerning when to have done. By the time that an author hath written out a book, he and his readers are become old acquaintance, and grow very loth to part; fo that I have fometimes known it to be in writing, as in vifiting, where the ceremony of taking leave has em- ployed more time than the whole converfation before. The conclufion of a treatife refembles the conclufion of human life, which hath fometimes been compared to the end of a feaft; where few are fatisfied to depart, at plenus vite conviva: for men will fit down after the fulleft meal, though it be only to doze, or to fleep out the reft of the day. But, in this latter, I differ extremely from other writers; and fhall be too proud, if, by all my labours, I can have any ways contributed to the repose of mankind in times fo turbulent and unquiet as theſe. * Neither do I think fuch an employment fo very alien from the office of a wit, as fome would fup- pole. For among a very polite nation in Greece, there were the ſame temples built and confecrated to Sleep and the Mules, between which two deities they believed the strictest friendſhip was eſtabliſhed || I have one concluding favour to request of my reader, That he will not expect to be equally diverted and in- formed by every line, or every page of this difcourfe; but give fome allowance to the author's fpleen, and fhort *This was written before the peace of Ryfwick, which was fign- ed in September 1697. Trezenii, Paufan. 1. 2. 1 The Conclufion. 139 short fits or intervals of dulnefs, as well as his own; and lay it feriously to his confcience, whether, if he were walking the streets in dirty weather, or a rainy day, he would allow it fair dealing in folks at their eafe from a window to criticife his gait, and ridicule his dreſs at ſuch a juncture. In my difpofure of employments of the brain, I have thought fit to make invention the mafter, and to give method and reaſon the office of his lacqueys. The cauſe of this diſtribution was, from obferving it my peculiar cafe to be often under a temptation of being witty upon oc- caſions, where I could be neither wife nor found, nor any thing to the matter in hand. And I am too much a fer- vant of the modern way, to neglect any fuch opportuni- ties, whatever pains or improprieties I may be at to in- troduce them. For I have obſerved, that from a labo- rious collection of feven hundred thirty-eight flowers, and fining hints of the best modern authors, digefted with great reading into my book of common places; I have not been able, after five years, to draw, hook, or force into common converfation, any more than a dozen. ΟΙ which dozen, the one moiety failed of fuccefs, by being dropped among unfuitable company; and the other coft me fo many ftrains, and traps, and ambages to introduce, that I at length refolved to give it over. Now, this diſappointment, (to difcover a fecret,) I must own, gave me the first hint of fetting up for an author; and I have fince found among fome particular friends, that it is be- come a very general complaint, and has produced the fame effects upon many others. For I have reniarked many a towardly word to be wholly neglected or deſpif- ed in difcourfe, which hath paffed very fmoothly, with fome confideration and efteem, after its preferment and fanction in print. But now, fince, by the liberty and encouragement of the prefs, I am grown abfolute mafter of the occafions and opportunities to expofe the talents I have acquired; I already difcover, that the ifues of my obfervanda begin to grow too large for the receipts: Therefore I ſhall here pauſe a while, till I find, by feel- ing the world's pulfe, and my own, that it will be of abfolute neceflity for us both to refume my pen. A full [ 140 ] A full and true Account of the BATTLE fought laſt Friday, between the ANCIENT and the MODERN Books in St. James's Library. T The BOOKSELLER to the READER. HE following difcourfe, as it is unquestionably of the fame Author, fo it feems to have been writ- ten about the fame time with the former; I mean, the year 1697, when the famous difpute was on foot, about ancient and modern learning. The controverfy took its rife from an effay of Sir William Temple's upon that fub. ject; which was anfwered by W. Wotton, B. D. with an appendix by Dr. Bently, endeavouring to deftroy the credit of Afop and Phalaris for authors, whom Sir William Temple had, in the effay before mentioned, highly commended. In that appendix, the Doctor falls hard upon a new edition of Phalaris, put out by the Honourable Charles Boyle (now Earl of Orrery ;) to which Mr. Boyle replied at large with great learning and wit; and the Doctor voluminously rejoined. In this difpute, the town highly refented to fee a perfon of Sir William Temple's character and merits roughly uſed by the two Reverend gentlemen aforefaid, and without any manner of provocation. At length, there appearing no end of the quarrel, our author tells us, that the BOOKS in St. James's library, looking upon themfelves as parties principally concerned, took up the controverfy, and came to a decifive battle; but the manufcript, by the injury of fortune or weather, being in feveral places im- perfect, we cannot learn to which fide the victory fell. I must warn the reader, to beware of applying to per- fons, what is here meant only of books in the moft literal fenfe. So, when Virgil is mentioned, we are not to un- derſtand the perfon of a famous poet called by that name; but only certain fheets of paper, bound up in leather, containing in print the works of the faid poet; and fo of the reſt. The [ 141 ] The PREFACE of the AUTHOR. Atire is a fort of glass, wherein beholders do gene- SA rally diſcover every body's face but their own; which is the chief reafon for that kind reception it meets with in the world, and that fo very few are offended with it. But if But if it fhould happen otherwife, the danger is not great; and I have learned from long experience, never to apprehend mischief from thoſe underſtandings I have been able to provoke. For anger and fury, though they add ftrength to the finews of the body, yet are found to relax thofe of the mind, and to render all its efforts feeble and impotent. There is a brain that will endure but one fcumming : let the owner gather it with diſcretion, and manage his little ſtock with huſbandry. But of all things, let him beware of bringing it under the lab of his betters; be- caufe that will make it all bubble up into impertinence, and he will find no new ſupply: Wit without know- ledge being a fort of cream, which gathers in a night to the top, and by a ſkilful hand may be foon whipped into froth; but once fcummed away, what appears un- derneath, will be fit for nothing, but to be thrown to the hogs. A full [ 142 ] A full and true Account of the BATTLE fought laft Friday, &c. * WHOEVER examines with due circumfpection W into the annual records of time, will find it re- marked, that war is the child of Pride, and pride the daughter of Riches. The former of which affertions may be foon granted; but one cannot ſo eaſily fubfcribe to the latter. For Pride is nearly related to Beggary The Battle of the Books took its rife from a controverſy between Sir William Temple and Mr. Wotton; a controverfy which made much noiſe, and employed many pens towards the latter end of the laft century. This humorous treatife is drawn up in an heroic comic ftyle, in which Swift, with great wit and ſpirit, gives the victory to the former. The general plan is excellent, but particular parts are defective. The frequent chafms puzzle and interrupt the narra- tive: they neither convey any latent ideas; nor point out any diftin& or occult farcafms. Some characters are barely touched upon, which might have been extended; others are enlarged, which might have been contracted. The name of Horace is inferted; and Virgil is introduced only for an opportunity of comparing his tranflator Dry- den, to the lady in a lobſter; to a mouse under a canopy of ſtate; and to a fhrivelled beau within the pent-boufe of a full-bottomed periwig. Thefe fimiles carry the true ftamp of ridicule. But rancour muſt be very prevalent in the heart of an author, who could overlook the merits of Dryden; many of whofe dedications and prefaces are as fine compofitions, and as juft pieces of criticiſm, as any in our lan- guage. The tranflation of Virgil was a work of hafte and indi- gence. Dryden was equal to the undertaking, but unfortunate du- ring the conduct of it. The two chief heroes among the modern generals, are Wotton and Bentley. Their figures are diſplayed in the moſt diſadvantageous attitudes. The former is defcribed, "full The latter is reprefented, "of fpleen, dulnels, and ill manners." tall, without fhape or comelinefs; large, without ftrength or pro- "portion."-- -The battle, which is maintained by the ancients with great fuperiority of ftrength, though not of numbers, ends with the demolition of Bentley, and his friend Wotton, by the lance of the Honourable Charles Boyle, youngeſt fon of Roger the fecond Earl of Orrery, and father of the prefent Earl, He was a fellow of the royal focicty, and invented the aſtronomical machine called the Orrery. Orrery. +Riches produceth pride; pride is war's ground, &c. Vid. Ephem. de Mary Clarke; opt. edit. —now called Wing's fheet alma- nack, and printed by J. Roberts for the company of Stationers. THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS, 143 Beggary and Want, either by father or mother, and fometimes by both: and, to fpeak naturally, it very fel- dom happens among men to fall out, when all´have enough; invafions ufually travelling from worth to fouth, that is to ſay, from Poverty to Plenty. The inoft an- cient and natural grounds of quarrels are Luft and Avarice; which, though we may allow to be brethren or collate- ral branches of Pride, are certainly the iflues of Want. For, to speak in the phrafe of writers upon politics, we may obferve in the republic of Dogs, which in its origi- nal feems to be an inftitution of the many, that the whole ftate is ever in the profoundest peace, after a full meal; and that civil broils arife among them, when it hap- pens for one great bone to be feized on by fome leading dog; who either divides it among the few, and then it falls to an oligarchy; or keeps it to himself, and then it runs up to a tyranny. The fame reaſoning alfo holds place among them, in thofe diffenfions we behold upon a turgefcency in any of the females. For, the right of poffeffion lying in common, (it being impoffible to eſta- bliſh a property in fo delicate a cafe,) jealoufies and fuf- picions do fo abound, that the whole commonwealth of that ſtreet is reduced to a manifeſt ſtate of war, of every citizen against every citizen; till fome one of more cou- rage, conduct, or fortune than the reft, feizes and en- joys the prize: upon which naturally arifes plenty of heart-burning, and envy and fnarling againſt the happy dog. Again, if we look upon any of theie republics en- gaged in a foreign war, either of invafion or defence, we fhall find, the faine reafoning will ferve as to the grounds and occafions of each; and that Poverty or Want, in fome degree or other, (whether real, or in opinion, which makes no alteration in the cafe) has a great ſhare, as well as Pride, on the part of the aggreffor. Now, whoever will pleafe to take this fcheme, and either reduce or adapt it to an intellectual ftate, or com- monwealth of learning, will foon difcover the firft ground of dilagreement between the two great parties. at this time in arms; and may form juft conclufions. upon the merits of either caufe. But the iffue or events of this war are not fo eafy to conjecture at: for the prefent quarrel is fo inflamed by the warm heads of ei- ther 144 THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS. : ther faction, and the pretenfions fomewhere or other fo exorbitant, as not to admit the leaft overtures of ac- commodation. This quarrel firſt began, as I have heard it affirmed by an old dweller in the neighbourhood, a- bout a fmall pot of ground, lying and being upon one of the two tops of the hill Parnaflus; the higheft and largeſt of which had, it ſeems, been, time out of mind, in quiet poffeffion of certain tenants called the Ancients; and the other was held by the Moderns. But theſe diſliking their prefent ftation, fent certain ambaffadors to the Ancients, complaining of a great nuifance; how the height of that part of Parnaflus quite fpoiled the pro- fpect of theirs, eſpecially towards the east and there- fore, to avoid a war, offered them the choice of this al- ternative, Either that the Ancients would pleaſe to remove themſelves and their effects down to the lower fummity, which the Moderns would graciouſly furrender to them, and advance in their place; or elfe that the faid An- cients will give leave to the Moderns to come with fhovels and mattocks, and level the faid hill as low as they fhall think it convenient. To which the Ancients made anfwer, How little they expected fuch a meſſage as this, from a colony whom they had admitted, out of their own free grace, to fo near a neighbourhood: That as to their own feat, they were Aborigines of it; and there- fore to talk with them of a removal or furrender, was a language they did not underſtand: That if the height of the hill on their fide ſhortened the proſpect of the Mo- derns, it was a difadvantage they could not help; but defired them to confider, whether that injury (if it be any) were not largely recompenfed by the fade and fhelter it afforded them: That as to the levelling or dig- ging down, it was either folly or ignorance to propoſe it, if they did not know, how that fide of the hill was an entire rock, which would break their tools and hearts without any damage to itfelf: That they would therefore advife the Moderns, rather to raiſe their own fide of the hill, than dream of pulling down that of the Ancients; to the former of which they would not only give licence, but alfo largely contribute. All this was rejected by the Moderns, with much indig- nation: who ſtill infifted upon one of the two expe- dients. THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS. 145 dients. And fo this difference broke out into a long and obftinate war; maintained on the one part by refolution, and by the courage of certain leaders and allies; but on the other, by the greatnefs of their number, upon all defeats affording continual recruits. In this quarrel, whole rivulets of ink have been exhauſted, and the viru- lence of both parties enormously augmented. Now, it muſt here be underſtood, that ink is the great miffive weapon in all battles of the learned, which conveyed through a fort of engine called a quill, infinite numbers of theſe are darted at the enemy, by the valiant on each fide, with equal ſkill and violence, as if it were an en- gagement of porcupines. This malignant liquor was compounded by the engineer who invented it, of two ingredients, which are gall and copperas; by its bitterness and venom to fuit in fome degree, as well as to foment, the genius of the combatants. And as the Grecians, af- ter an engagement, when they could not agree about the victory, were wont to fet up trophies on both ſides ; the beaten party being content to be at the fame expence to keep itſelf in countenance, (a laudable and ancient custom happily revived of late in the art of war;) fo the learned, after a fharp and bloody difpute, do on both fides hang out their trophies too, whichever comes by the worst. Theſe trophies have largely infcribed on them the merits of the caufe; a full impartial account of fuch a battle, and how the victory fell clearly to the party that fet them up. They are known to the world under feveral names; as, Disputes, Arguments, Rejoin- ders, Brief Conſiderations, Anſwers, Replies, Remarks, Reflections, Objections, Confutations. For a very few days they are fixed up in all public places, either by them- felves or their reprefentatives, for paffengers to gaze at from whence the chiefeft and largeft are removed to certain magazines, they call libraries, there to remain in a quarter purposely affigned them, and from thence- forth begin to be called looks of controversy. In thefe books is wonderfully inftilled and preferved. the fpirit of each warrior, while he is alive; and after VOL. I. H his Their title-pages. 146 THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS. his death, his foul tranfmigrates there, to inform them. This, at leaſt, is the more common opinion. But I be- lieve, it is with libraries as with other cemeteries, where fome philofophers affirm, that a certain ſpirit, which they call brutum hominis, hovers over the monu- ment, till the body is corrupted, and turns to duft or to worms, but then vanishes or diffolves: fo, we may fay, a reſtleſs ſpirit haunts over every book, till duft or worms have ſeized upon it; which to fome may happen in a few days, but to others later And therefore books of controversy, being of all others haunted by the moſt diforderly ipirits, have always been confined in a feparate lodge from the reft; and for fear of mutual violence against each other, it was thought prudent by our an- ceſtors, to bind them to the peace with frong iron chains. Of which invention the original occafion was this. When the works of Scotus first came out, they were carried to a certain great library, and had lodgings appointed them: but this author was no fooner fettled, than he went to vifit his maſter Ariftotle; and there both concerted together to feize Plato by main force, and turn him out from his ancient ftation among the divines, where he had peaceably dwelt near eight hun- dred years. The attempt fucceeded, and the two ufur- pers have reigned ever fince in his ſtead. But to main- tain quiet for the future, it was decreed, that all polemics of the larger fize fhould be held faft with a chain. By this expedient, the public peace of libraries might certainly have been preferved, if a new fpecies of con- troverfial books had not arofe of late years, inftinct with a moſt malignant fpirit, from the war above mentioned, between the learned, about the higher fummity of Parnaffus. ! When these books were firft admitted into the public libraries, I remember to have faid upon occafion, to feveral perfons concerned, how I was fure they would create broils where-ever they came, unless a world of care were taken; and therefore I advised, that the champions of each fide fhould be coupled together, or otherwife mixed; that, like the blending of contrary poifons, their malignity might be employed among them felves. THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS. 147 : themſelves. And it ſeems I was neither an ill prophet, nor an ill counſellor for it was nothing else but the neg- lect of this caution which gave occafion to the terrible fight that happened on Friday laſt between the Ancient and Modern books in the King's library. Now, becaufe the talk of this battle is fo freſh in every body's mouth, and the expectation of the town fo great, to be informed in the particulars; I being poffeffed of all qualifications requifite in an hiftorian, and retained by neither party, have refolved to comply with the urgent importunity of my friends, by writing down a full impartial account thereof. The guardian of the regal library, a perfon of great valour, but chiefly renowned for his humanity, had been a fierce champion for the Moderns; and, in an en- gagement upon Parnaffus, had vowed, with his own hands to knock down two of the Ancient chiefs, who guarded a ſmall pafs on the fuperior rock: but endea- vouring to climb up, was cruelly obftructed by his own unhappy weight, and tendency towards his centre: A quality to which thofe of the Modern party are extreme fubject; for, being light-headed, they have in fpeculati- on a wonderful agility, and conceive nothing too high for them to mount; but in reducing to practice, difco- ver a mighty preffure about their pofteriors and their heels. Having thus failed in his defign, the difappoint- ed champion bore a cruel rancour to the Antients ; which he refolved to gratify, by fhewing all marks of his fa- vour to the books of their adverfaries, and lodging them in the fairest apartments; when at the fame time, what- ever book had the boldnefs to own itfelf for an advo- cate of the Ancients, was buried alive in fome obfcure corner, and threatened upon the leaft difpleaſure, to be turned out of doors. Befides it fo happened, that about this time there was a ſtrange confuſion of place among all the books in the library; for which feve- ral reaſons were affigned. Some imputed it to a great heap H 2 The Honourable Mr. Boyle, in the preface to his edition of Phalaris, fays, he was refufed a manufcript by the library keeper, pro folita humanitate fua. Ibid. Dr. Bentley was then library-keeper. The two ancients were Phalaris and fop. Harvkes. 143 THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS. heap of learned duft, which a perverfe wind blew off from a fhelf of Moderns into the keeper's eyes. Others af- firmed, he had a humour to pick the worms out of the Jchoolmen, and fwallow them freſh and fatting; whereof fome fell upon his fpleen, and fome climbed up into his head, to the great perturbation of both. And lastly, others maintained, that, by walking much in the dark about the library, he had quite loft the fituation of it out of his head; and therefore, in replacing his books, he was apt to miſtake, and clap Des Cartes next to Aristotle; poor Plato had got between Hobbes and the Seven wife maſters; and Virgil was hemmed in with Dryden on one fide, and Withers on the other. Mean while, thoſe books that were advocates for the Moderns, chofe out one from among them, to make a progress through the whole library. examine the number and strength of their party, and concert their affairs. This mefienger performed all things very induftrioufly, and brought back with him a lift of their forces, in all fifty thouſand, confifting chiefly of light horje, heavy- armed foot, and mercenaries: whereof the foot were, in general, but forrily armed, and worfe clad: their korjes large, but extremely out of cafe and heart. However, fome few, by trading among the Ancients, had furnifned themſelves tolerably enough. While things were in this ferment, Diſcord grew ex- tremely high, hot words paffed on both fides, and ill blood was plentifully bred. Here a folitary Ancient, fqueezed up among a whole fhelf of Moderns, offered fairly to dispute the cafe, and to prove, by manifeſt rea- fon, that the priority was due to them, from long pof- feffion, and in regard to their prudence, antiquity, and above all, their great merits towards the Moderns. But thefe denied the premifes; and feemed very much to wonder, how the Ancients could pretend to infift upon their antiquity, when it was fo plain, (if they went to that,) that the Moderns were much the more ancient I of As for any obligations they owed to the An- cients, they renounced them all. "It is true," faid they, we are informed fome few of our party have " been the two. CC According to the modern paradox, THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS. 149 "been fo mean to borrow their fubfiftence from you. "But the reft, infinitely the greater number, (and efpe. cially we French and Engliſh,) were fo far from tooping to fo baſe an example, that there never paí- "fed, till this very hour, fix words between us. " << For our borfes were of our own breeding, our arms of our own forging, and our cloaths of our own cutting out " and ſewing. Plato was by chance upon the next fhelf, and obferving thoſe that ſpoke to be in the rag- ged plight mentioned a while ago; their jades lean and foundered, their weapons of rotten wood, their armour. rufty, and nothing but rags underneath; he laughed loud, and, in his pleafant way, fwore, By lieved them. be be- Now, the Moderns had not proceeded in their late negotiation, with fecrecy enough to efcape the notice. of the enemy. For thofe advocates who had begun the quarrel, by fetting firft on foot the difpute of preceden- cy, talked fo loud of coming to a battle, that Temple- happened to overhear them, and gave immediate intel-- ligence to the Ancients; who thereupon drew up their fcattered troops together, refolving to act upon the de- fenfive. Upon which feveral of the Moderns fled over to their party, and among the rest Temple himſelf. This Temple having been educated and long converfed among the Ancients, was of all the Moderns their greateſt favou-- rite, and became their greateſt champion. Things were at this crifis, when a material accident fell out. For, upon the higheſt corner of a large win-- dow, there dwelt a certain spider, fwollen up to the first magnitude by the deſtruction of infinite numbers of flies, whofe fpoils lay fcattered before the gates of his palace, like human bones before the cave of fome giant. The avenues to his caftle were guarded with turnpikes and palitadoes, al after the modern way of fortification. Af ter you had paſſed ſeveral courts, you came to the cen- tre, wherein you might behold the conftable himſelf in his own lodgings, which had windows fronting to each avenue, and ports to fally out upon all occafions of prey or defence. In this maniion he had for fome time dwelt in peace and plenty, without danger to his perfon by Swallows from above, or to his palace by brooms from below: 150 THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS. J below; when it was the pleaſure of Fortune to conduct thither a wandering bee, to whofe curiofity a broken pane in the glafs had diſcovered itſelf and in he went; where expatiating a while, he at laft happened to a- light upon one of the outward walls of the Spider's ci- tadel; which yielding to the unequal weight, funk down to the very foundation. Thrice he endeavoured to force his paffage, and thrice the centre fhook. The Spider within feeling the terrible convulfion, fuppofed at firſt, that Nature was approaching to her final diffolution; or elſe, that Beelzebub, with all his legions, was coine to revenge the death of many thouſands of his fubjects, whom his enemy had flain and devoured. However, he at length valiantly refolved to iffue forth and meet his fate. Mean while the bee had acquitted himſelf of his toils, and poſted ſecurely at ſome diſtance, was em- ployed in cleanfing his wings, and difengaging them from the ragged remnants of the cobweb. By this time the spider was adventured out; when, beholding the chaims, the ruins, and dilapidations of his fortreſs, he was very near at his wit's end. He ftormed and fwore like a madman, and fwelled till he was ready to burſt. At length, cafting his eye upon the bee, and wifely ga- thering caufes from events, (for they knew each other by fight;)" A plague fplit you, faid he, " for a giddy fon of a whore. Is it you, with a vengeance, that "have made this litter here? Could not you look "before you, and be d-n'd? Do you think I have no- thing else to do, (in the devil's name,) but to mend "and repair after your arte ?" "Good words, friend," (faid the bee, having now pruned himſelf, and being difpofed to droll;) "I'll give you my hand and word to "come near your kennel no more: I was never in fuch CC >> I (C << a confounded pickle fince I was born." Sirrah," replied the fpider, "if it were not for breaking an old "cuſtom in our family, never to flir abroad againſt an enemy, I ſhould come and teach you better man- pray have patience," faid the bee, Or "you will spend your fubitance; and, for aught I fee, you may ftand in need of it all towards the repair of "your houſe.' Rogue, rogue," replied the fpider ; yet methinks you fhould have more refpect to a per- ... 64 ners. "} (C "fon, THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS. 151 "fon, whom all the world allows to be fo much your "betters." "By my troth," ſaid the bee, "the com- pariſon will amount to a very good jeft; and you will "do me a favour, to let me know the reafons that all "the world is pleafed to ufe in fo hopeful a difpute." At this, the Spider, having fwelled himſelf into the fize and poſture of a difputant, began his argument in the true fpirit of controverfy, with refolution to be heartily fcurrilous and angry; to urge on his own reaſons, with- out the leaſt regard to the anſwers or objections of his op- pofite; and fully predetermined in his mind againſt all conviction. "Not to diſparage myſelf," ſaid he, " by the com- "pariſon with ſuch a raſcal, what art thou but a vaga- "bond, without houfe or home, without ſtock or inhe- "ritance; born to no poffeffion of your own, but a "pair of wings and a drone-pipe? Your livelihood is "an univerfal plunder upon nature; a freebooter over "fields and gardens; and, for the fake of ſtealing, will "rob a nettle as readily as a violet. Whereas I am a "domeftic animal, furnifhed with a native ſtock within "myſelf. This large caftle (to fhew my improvements. "in the mathematics) is all built with my own hands, “and the materials extracted altogether out of my own. "perfon." "I am glad," anſwered the bee, " to hear you grant at least, that I am come honeftly by my wings and my voice for then, it ſeems, I am obliged to Hea- ven alone for my flights and my mufic; and Provi- "dence would never have beftowed on me two fuch CC ** gifts, without defigning them for the nobleft ends. I "vifit indeed all the flowers and bloffoms of the field " and garden: but whatever I collect from thence, en- "riches myſelf, without the leaſt injury to their beauty, "their fiell, or their tafte. Now, for you, and your ſkill in architecture and other mathematics, I "have little to fay. In that building of yours, there r might, for aught I know, have been labour and me- "thod enough; but, by woful experience for us both, "it is plain, the materials are naught; and I hope you "will henceforth take warning, and confider duration and matter, as well as method and art. You boaft "indeed 152 THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS. 41 AC "indeed of being obliged to no other creature, but of drawing and ſpinning out all from yourſelf; that is to fay, if we may judge of the liquor in the veffel by "what illues out, you poffefs a good plentiful ftore of dirt and poifon in your breaſt. And though I would by no means leffen or difparage your genuine ſtock of either, yet, I doubt, you are fomewhat obliged for an "increaſe of both to a little foreign affiftance. Your "inherent portion of dirt does not fail of acquifitions, by fweepings exhaled from below; and one infect "furniſhes you with a fhare of poifon to deſtroy another. So that, in fhort, the question comes all to this, "Whether is the nobler being of the two, that which, by a lazy contemplation of four inches round, by an "overweening pride, feeding and ingendering on itſelf, turns all into excrement and venom, producing no- thing at all, but fly-bane and a cobweb; or that, which, by an univerfal range, with long fearch, much fudy, true judgment, and diſtinction of things, brings home honey and wax ?" "6 45 44 This difpute was managed with fuch eagerneſs, cla- mour, and warmth, that the two parties of books in arms below flood filent a while, waiting in fufpence what would be the iffue. Which was not long undetermin- ed: for the bee, grown impatient at ſo much loſs of time, fled ftraight away to a bed of rofes, without looking for a reply; and left the ſpider, like an orator collected in himſelf, and juft prepared to burſt out. It happened upon this emergency, that Efop broke filence firft. He had been of late moft barbarouſly treated by a ſtrange effect of the regcnt's humanity, who had torn off his title-page, forely defaced one half of his leaves, and chained him faſt among a fhelf of Moderns ;† where foon difcovering how high the quarrel was like to proceed, he tried all his arts, and turned himſelf to a thousand forms. At length, in the borrowed ſhape of an afs, the regent miftook him for a Modern; by which means, he had time and opportunity to escape to the Ancients, just when the Spider and the bee were entering into their conteft; to which he gave his attention with a world + Bentley, who denied the antiquity of Æfop. See note, p. 147. THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS. 153 world of pleasure; and when it was ended, fwore in the loudest key, that, in all his life, he had never known two cafes fo parallel and adapt to each other, as that in the window, and this upon the fhelves. "The difpu- 66 tants, faid he, "have admirably managed the dif- pute between them, have taken in the full ftrength "of all that is to be faid on both fides, and exhaufted "the fubftance of every argument pro and con. It is but to adjuſt the reaſonings of both to the prefent quarrel, "then to compare and apply the labours and fruits of each, as the bee has learnedly deduced them; and we "fhall find the conclufion fall plain and cloſe upon the "Moderns and us. For pray, Gentlemen, was ever any << << thing fo modern as the spider, in his air, his turns, "and his paradoxes? He argues in the behalf of yout his brethren, and himself, with many boatings of "his native flock, and great genius; that he fpins and fpits wholly from himſelf, and fcorns to own any ob- ligation or affiance from without. Then he dif plays to you his great ſkill in architecture, and im- provement in the mathematics. To all this, the bee as an advocate retained by us the Ancients, thinks fit to answer, That if one may judge of the great genius or inventions of the Moderns, by what they "have produced, you will hardly have countenance to "bear you out in boating of either. Erect your "fchemes with as much method and ſkill as you pleaſe; ' << дам yet if the materials be nothing but dirt, fpun out of your own entrails, (the guts of modern brains,) the "edifice will conclude at laſt in a cobweb; the dura- "tion of which, like that of other ſpiders webs, may "be imputed to their being forgotten, or neglected, or hid in a corner. For any thing elſe of genuine "that the Moderns may pretend to, I cannot recol- "let; unless it be a large vein of wrangling and “ ટી fatire, much of a nature and ſubſtance with the fpi- "der's poifon; which, however they pretend to pit "wholly out of theinfelves, is improved by the fame "arts, by feeding upon the infects and vermin of the age. As for the Ancients, we are content, with the bee, "to pretend to nothing of our own, beyond our wings ** and our voice; tha is to fay, our flights and our "language. H 5 1 ་ 154 THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS. " 66 language. For the reft, whatever we have got, has "been by infinite labour and fearch, and ranging through every corner of Nature. The difference is, that in- "ſtead of dirt and poiſon, we have rather chofen to fill our hives with honey and wax; thus furnishing man- "kind with the two nobleft of things, which are, ſweet- "ness and light." cr st * It is wonderful to conceive the tumult arifen among the books, upon the clofe of this long defcant of Æſop. Both parties took the hint, and heightened their ani- mofities fo on a fudden, that they refolved it ſhould come to a battle. Immediately the two main bodies withdrew under their feveral enfigns, to the farther parts of the library, and there entered into cabals and con- fults upon the prefent emergency. The Moderns were in very warm debates upon the choice of their leaders; and nothing less than the fear impending from the ene- mies, could have kept them from matinies upon this oc- cafion. The difference was greatest among the horſe, where every private trooper pretended to the chief com- mand, from Taffo and Milton, to Dryden and Withers. The light-horſe were commanded by Cowley and De- fpreaux. There came the bowmen under their valiant leaders, Des Cartes, Gaffendi, and Hobbes; whoſe ftrength was ſuch, that they could fhoot their arrows beyond the atmosphere, never to fall down again, but turn, like that of Evander, into meteors, or, like the can- non-ball, into stars. Paracelfus brought a quadron of fink-pot-fingers from the fnowy mountains of Rhætia. There came a vast body of dragoons of different nations, under the leading of Harvey, their great Aga, ‡ part armed with Scythes, the weapons of death; part with lances and long knives, all ſteeped in poison; part ſhot bullets of a moft malignant nature, and ufed white pow- der, which infallibly killed without report. There came feveral bodies of heavy-armed foot, all mercenaries, under the enfigns of Guicciardine, Davila, Polydore. Virgil, * More commonly known by the name of Boileau. Hawkef. Dr. Harvey, who difcovered the circulation of the blood; a dif covery much infifted on by the advocates for the Moderns, and ex- cepted againſt as falfe by Sir William Temple, in his effay, p. 44 · 45. Hurukes. 1 THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS, 155 Virgil, Buchanan, Mariana, Camden, and others. The engineers were commanded by Regiomontanus and Wil- kins. The reſt were a confuſed multitude, led by Sco- tus, Aquinas, and Bellarmine; of mighty bulk and ſta- ture, but without either arms, courage, or difcipline. In the last place, came infinite fwarms of calanes, a difor- derly rout led by L'Eſtrange; rogues and ragga-muffi- ans, that follow the camp for nothing but the plunder; all without coats to cover them. ‡ * The army of the Ancients was much fewer in number Homer led the horſe, and Pindar the light-horſe; Euclid was chief engineer; Plato and Ariſtotle commanded the bowmen; Herodotus and Livy the foot; Hippocrates the dragoons; the allies led by Voffius, and Temple brought up the rear. • All things violently tending to a decifive battle, Fame, who much frequented, and had a large apartment for- merly affigned her in the regal library, fled up ftrait to Jupiter, to whom fhe delivered a faithful account of all that paffed between the two parties below; for among the gods fhe always tells truth. Jove, in great concern, convokes a council in the Milky Way. The fenate af- fembled: he declares the occafion of convening them; a bloody battle juft impendent between two mighty armies of Ancient and Modern creatures, called books, wherein the celeftial intereft was but too deeply concerned, Momus, the patron of the Moderns, inade an excellent ſpeech in their favour; which was anſwer- ed by Pallas, the protectreſs of the Ancients. The af- fembly was divided in their affections; when Jupiter coinmanded the book of Fate to be laid before him. Im- mediately were brought by Mercury three large volumes in folio, containing memoirs of all things paſt, preſent, and to come. The claſps were of filver, double gilt; the covers of celestial turkey-leather, and the paper fuch as *Calones. By calling this diſorderly rout calones, the author points both his fatire and contempt againſt all forts of mercenary foriblers who write as they are commanded by the leaders and patrons of fe- dition, faction, corruption, and every evil work. They are styled calones, becauſe they are the meanest and muſt deſpicable of all wri- ters; as the calones, whether belonging to the army or private families, were the meaneft of all flaves or fervants whatſoever. Hawkef. I Thele ore pamphlets, which are not bound or covered. 156 THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS. as here on earth might almoft pafs for vellum. Jupiter having filently read the decree, would communicate the import to none, but prefently fhut up the book. Without the doors. of this affembly, there attended a vaft number of light, nimble gods, menial fervants to Jupiter. Thele are his miniftering inftruments in all af- fairs below. They travel in a caravan, more or lefs to- gether, and are faſtened to each other, like a link of gal- ley flaves, by a light chain, which paffes from them to Jupiter's great toe. And yet, in receiving cr delivering a nellage, they may never approach above the lowest itep of his throne, where he and they whifper to each other through a long hollow trunk. Thefe deities are called by mortal men, Accidents or Events; but the gods call them Second Caufes. Jupiter having delivered his meffage to a certain number of thefe divinities, they flew immediately down to the pinnacle of the regal library, and, confulting a few minutes, entered unfeen, and difpofed the parties according to their orders She Mean while, Momus, fearing the worst, and calling to mind an ancient prophecy, which bore no very good face to his children the Moderns, bent his flight to the region of a ma ignant deity, called Criticism. dwelt on the top of a fnowy mountain in Nova Zembla. There Momus found her extended in her den, upon the fpoils of numberlets volumes half devoured. At her right hand fat Ignorance, her father and hufband, blind with age; at her left, Pride, her mother, drelling her up in the feraps of paper herself had torn. There was Opinion, her fifter, light of foot, hood-winked, and head-strong; yet giddy, and perpetually turning. A- bout her played her children, Noiſe and Impudence, Dul- nefs and Vanity, Pofitiveness, Pedantry, and Ill-Manners. The goddeſs herself had claws like a cat; her head, and cars, and voice, refembled thofe of an aſs; her teeth fallen out before; her eyes turned inward, as if ſhe looked only upon herſelf; her diet was the over- flowing of her own gall; her spleen was fo large, as to ftand prominent like a dug of the first rate; nor want- ed excrefcences in form of teats, at which a crew of ug- ly monsters were greedily fucking; and, what is won- cerful to conceive, the bulk of iplcen increafed falter than THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS. 157 CC cr than the fucking could diminiſh it. Goddeſs," faid Momus, can you fit idle here, while our devout wor- fhippers, the Moderns, are this minute entering into a cruel battle, and perhaps now lying under the ſwords "of their enemies? Who then hereafter will ever fa- "crifice, or build altars to our divinities? Hafte there- "fore to the British ifle, and, if poflible, prevent their “ deſtruction; while I make factions among the gods, "and gain them over to our party.” W cr Momus having thus delivered himſelf, ftaïd not for an anfwer, but left the goddeſs to her own refentiment. Up fhe roſe in a rage; and, as it is the form upon fuch oc- cafions, began a foliloquy. "It is I" (faid fhe) "who give wisdom to infants and idiots; by me children grow wiſer than their parents; by me beaux become politicians, and ſchoolboys judges of philofophy; by "me fophifters debate, and conclude upon the depths "of knowledge; and coffechoufe-wits, instinct by me, can correct an author's ſtyle, and diſplay his minuteſt errors, without underſtanding a fyllable of his matter or his language; by me ftriplings fpend their judg- ment, as they do their eftate, before it comes into their hands. It is I who have depofed Wit and Know- ledge from their empire over Poetry, and advanced mylelf in their ſtead. And ſhall a tew upstart Anci- ents dare oppofe me ?But coms, my aged parents, and you my children dear, and thou my beauteous "fifter; let us afcend my chariot, and hafte to affift our "devout Moderns, who are now facrificing to us a "becatomb, as I perceive by that grateful fmell, which from thence reaches my noftrils." เ 6.5 The goddeſs and her train, having mounted the cha- riot, which was drawn by tams geeft, flew over infinite regions, fhedding her influence in due places, till at length he arrived at her beloved iſland of Britain. But, in hovering over its metropolis, what bleſſings did ſhe not let fall upon her feminaries of Gresham and Covent-gar- den? And now ſhe reached the fatal plain of St. James's library, at what time the two armies were upon the point to engage; where entering with all her caravan unfeen, See the notes, p. 43.- and, 158 THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS. and landing upon a cafe of fhelves, now defert, but once inhabited by a colony of virtuofo's, fhe ftaid a while to obferve the poſture of both armies. But here the tender cares of a mother began to fill her thoughts, and move in her breast. For, at the head of a troop of Modern bowmen, the cat her eyes upon her fon Wotton; to whom the Fates had affigned a very fhort thread; Wotton, a young hero, whom an unknown father of mortal race begot by ftolen embraces with this goddess. He was the darling of his mother, above all her children; and the refolved to go and comfort him. But first, according to the good old cuftom of deities, ſhe caſt about to change her fhape; for fear the divinity of her countenance might dazzle his mortal fight, and overcharge the rest of his fenfes. She therefore gather- ed up her perfon into an Octavo compafs. Her body grew white and arid, and ſplit in pieces with drinefs the thick turned into palteboard, and the thin into paper; upon which her parents and children artfully ftrewed a black juice or decoction of gall and foot in form of let- ters; her head, and voice, and ſpleen, kept their pri mitive form; and that which before was a cover of fkin, did ftill continue fo. In this guile fhe marched on towards the Moderns, undiftinguishable in fhape and drefs from the divine Bentley, Wotton's dearest friend. "Brave Wotton," faid the goddefs, why do our ; troops ftand idle here, to ſpend their prefent vigour, "and opportunity of the day? Away, let us hafte to "the generals, and adviſe to give the onfet immediate- "ly." Having spoke thus, fhe took the ugliest of her monſters, full glutted from her fpleen, and flung it in- vifibly into his mouth; which flying ftraight up into his head, fqueezed out his eye-balls, gave him a diftort- ed look, and half overturned his brain. Then the pri- vately ordered two of her beloved children, Dulneſs and Ill-manners, clofely to attend his perfon in all encoun- ters. Having thus accoutred him, the vanished in a mift; and the hero perceived it was the goddeſs his mo- ther. The deſtined hour of fate being now arrived, the fight began; whereof before I dare adventure to make a particular defcription, I mult, after the example of other THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS. 159 other authors, petition for a hundred tongues, and mouths, and hands, and pens; which would all be too little to perforin fo immenſe a work. Say, goddeſs, that prefided over hiftory, who it was that first advanced in the field of battle. Paracelfus, at the head of his dragoons, obferving Galen in the adverfe wing, darted his javelin with a mighty force; which the brave Ancient received upon his fhield, the point breaking in the fecond fold. * Hic pauca defunt. They bore the wounded Aga † on their fhields to his chariot. * Defunt nonnulla. let fly his ar- and went hiz- Then Ariſtotle obferving Bacon advance with a furi- ous mein, drew his bow to the head, and row; which miffed the valiant Modern, zing over his head. But Des Cartes it hit: the ſteel point quickly found a defect in his head piece; it pierced the leather and the paſteboard, and went in at his right eye. The torture of the pain whirled the valiant bow- man round, till death, like a ftar of fuperior influence, drew him into his own vortex. * Ingens biatus. bic in MS. when Homer appeared at the head of the cavalry, mounted on a furious horfe, with difficulty managed by the rider himself, but which no other mortal durft ap- proach. He rode among the enemy's ranks, and bore down all before him. Say, goddefs, whom he flew firſt, and whom he flew laft. Firſt, Gondibert | advanced againſt + Dr. Harvey, See the note p. 154. It was not thought pro- per to name his antagonist, but only to intimate that he was wound- ed. Other Moderns are fpared by the hiatus that follows, probably for fimilar reafons. Hawkef, || An heroic poem by Sir William Davenant, in ftanzas of four lines. Haukef 160 THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS. er, + againſt him, clad in heavy armour, and mounted on a ftaid fober gelding, not fo famed for his fpced, as his do- cility in kneeling, whenever his rider would mount or alight. He had inade a vow to Pallas, that he would never leave the field, till he had ſpoiled Hom r of his armour, madınan, who had never once feen the wear - nor understood his ftrength! Him Homer over- threw, horfe and man, to the ground; there to be train- pled and choked in the dirt Then with a long ſpear he flew Denhamn, a ftout Modern; who from his father's fide derived his lineage from Apollo, but his mother was of mortal race. † He fell, and bit the earth The celeftial part Apollo took, and made it a ftar; but the terreſtrial lay wallowing upon the ground. Then Ho- mer flew Wefley, || with a kick of his horfe's heel. He took Perault by mighty force, out of his faddle; then hurled him at Fontenelle; with the fame blow dashing out both their brains. On the left wing of the horfe, Virgil appeared, in fining armour, completely fitted to his body. He was mounted on a dapp'e-grey feed, the flowness of whole pace was an effect of the higheſt mettle and vigour. He caft his eye on the advcife wing, with a defire to find an object worthy of his valour; when, behold, upon a forrel gelding of a monflrous fize, appeared a foe, iffuing from among the thickeft of the enemy's fquadrons: but his ſpeed was less than his noife; for his horfe, old and lean, fpent the dregs of his strength in a high trot; which, though it made flow advances, yet caufed a loud claſhing of his armour, terrible to hear. The two ca- valiers had now approached within the threw of a lance, when the ftranger defired a parley, and lifting up the vizor of his helmet, a face hardly appeared from with- in; which, after a paufe, was known for that of the re- nowned D yden. The brave Ancient fuddenly ſtarted, as one pofleffed with furprife and difappointment to- gether for the helmet was nine times too large for the head.; Vid: Homer. + Sir John Denham's poems are very unequal, extremely good, and very indifferent; fo that his detractors faid, he was not the real author of Cooper s Hill. Mr. Welley, who wrote the Life of Chrift in verſe, &c. Huzukef, THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS, 161 head; which appeared fituate far in the hinder part, even like the lady in a lobſter, or like a mouſe under a canopy of ſtate, or like a fhrivelled beau from within the pent houſe of a modern periwig: and the voice was fuited to the viſage, founding weak and remote. Dry- den, in a long harangue, foothed up the good Ancient, called him Father; and, by a large deduction of genea- logies, made it plainly appear that they were nearly re- lated. Then he humbly propofed an exchange of ar- mour, as a lafting mark of hofpitality between them. Virgil confented, (for the goddess Diffidence came unfeen, and caft a miſt before his eyes,) though his was of gold, and coft a hundred beeves, † the other's but of rufty iron. However, this glittering armour became the Mo- dern yet worſe than his own. Then they agreed to ex- change horſes; but when it came to the trial, Dryden was afraid, and utterly unable to mount. * * Alter -bia- tus in MS. Lucan appeared upon a fiery horfe, of admirable fhape, but headstrong, bear- ing the rider where he lifted, over the field He made a mighty flaughter among the enemy's horfe; which de- ftruction to top, Blackmore, a famous Modern, (but one of the mercenaries,) ftrenuously oppofed himſelf, and dart- ed his javelin with a ftrong hand, which falling fhort of its mark, ftruck deep in the earth. Then Lucan threw a lance; but Æfculapius came unfeen, and turned off the point. || "Brave Modern," faid Lucan, I per- "ceive fome god protects you; for never did my arm "fo deceive me before. But what mortal can contend "with a g d? Therefore let us fight no longer, but CC preſent gifts to each other." Lucan then bestowed the Modern a pair of Spurs, and Blackmore gave Lucan a bridle. Pauca defunt. Creech: † Vid. Homer. His fkill as a phyfician atoned for his dulnefs as a poet. Hawkef. 162 THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS. : Creech but the goddeſs Dulnefs took a cloud, formed into the fhape of Horace, armed and mounted, and plac- it in a flying pofture before him. Glad was the cava- lier to begin a combat with a flying foe, and purfued the image, threatening loud; till at laft it led him to the peaceful bower of his father Ogleby; by whom he was difarmed, and affigned to his repofe. and Then Pindar flew and Oldham, and ——, and Afra the Amazon, I light of foot; never advancing in a direct line, but wheeling with incredible agility and force, he made a terrible flaughter among the enemy's light-horse. Him when Cowley obferved, his generous heart burnt within him, and he advanced a- gainst the fierce Ancient, imitating his addrefs, his pace. and career, as well as the vigour of his horfe, and his own ſkill, would allow. When the two cavaliers had approached within the length of three javelins; first Cowley threw a lance, which miffed Pindar, and paffing into the enemy's ranks, fell ineffectual to the ground. Then Pindar darted a javelin, fo large and weighty, that fcarce a dozen cavaliers, as cavaliers are in our degene- rate days, could raife it from the ground; yet he threw it with eafe, and it went, by an unerring hand, fing- ing through the air; nor could the Modern have avoid- ed prefent death, if he had not luckily oppofed the fhield that had been given him by Venus. And now both Heroes drew their fwords. But the Modern was fo aghait and difordered, that he knew not where he was; his fhield dropped from his hands; thrice he filed, and thrice he could not efcape. At last he turned, and, lifting up his hands in the pofture of a fuppliant, "Godlike Pindar," faid he, Spare my life, and arms, befides the ranſom when they hear I am Dog," faid Pindar, (( CC poffefs my horfe, with thefe "which my friends will give, "alive, and your prifoner.' "let your ranſom ftay with your friends: but your "carcafe fhall be left for the fowls of the air, and the beafts of the field." With that, he raifed his fword, 66 and, 1 Mrs. Afra Behn, author of many plays, novels, and poems, Hawkef. § His poem called the Miftrefs, Hawkef. THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS. 163 and, with a mighty ftroke, cleft the wretched Modern in twain, the fword purſuing the blow; and one half lay panting on the ground, to be trod in pieces by the horſes feet, the other half was borne by the frighted ſteed through the field. This Venus took, I washed it feven times in ambrofia; then ftruck it thrice with a fprig of amaranth; upon which the leather grew round and ſoft, and the leaves turned into feathers; and being gilded before, continued gilded ftill; fo it became a dove, and fhe harneffed it to her chariot, * * * Hiatus valde deflendus in MS. Day being far ſpent, and the numerous forces of the Moderns half inclining to a retreat, there iffued forth from a fquadron of their heavy-armed foot, a captain, whoſe name was Bentley; the most deformed of all the Moderns; tall, but without fhape or comeliness; large, but without ſtrength or proportion. His armour was patched up of a thouſand incoherent pieces; and the found of it, as he marched, was loud and dry, like that made by the fall of a fheet of lead, which an Etefian wind blows fuddenly down from the roof of fome ſteeple. His helmet was of old rufty iron; but the vizor was braſs, which, tainted by his breath, corrupted into copperas, nor wanted gall from the fame fountain; fo that, whenever provoked by anger or labour, an atra- mentous quality of moft malignant nature was ſeen to diftil from his lips. In his right hand he graſped a flail, || and I do not approve the author's judgment in this; for I think Cowley's Pindarics are much preferable to his Miſtreſs. It may however be confidered that Cowley's Pindarics were but copies of which Pindar was the original. Before Pindar therefore his Pindarics might fall; and his M.ftrefs be preferved, as properly his own. Hawkef. § The epifode of Bentley and Wotton. As the account of the battle of the books is an allegorical repre- ſentation of Sir William Temple's effay, in which the Ancients are oppofed to the Moderns, the account of Bentley and Wotton is cal- led an epiſode, and their intrufion reprefented as an under action. Hawkef. The perfon here fpoken of, is famous for letting fly at every body without diftinction, and ufing mean and foul fcurrilities. 164 THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS. and (that he might never be unprovided of an offenfice weapon) a veffel full of ordure in his left. Thus com- pletely armed, he advanced with a flow and heavy pace, where the Modern chiefs were holding a confult upon the fum of things; who, as he came onwards, laughed to behold his crooked leg, and hump fhoulder, which his boot and armour vainly endeavouring to hide, were for- ced to comply with, and expofe. The generals made ufe of him for his talent of railing; which, kept within government, proved frequently of great fervice to their caufe; but at other times did more mischief than good; for at the leaft touch of offence, and often without any at all, he would, like a wounded elephant, convert it against his leaders. Such, at this juncture, was the dif pofition of Bentley, grieved to fee the enemy prevail, and diffatisfied with every body's conduct but his own. He humbly gave the Modern generals to underſtand, that he conceived, with great fubmiflion, they were all a pack of rogues, and fools, and fons of whores, and d―n'd cowards, and confounded loggerheads, and illiterate whelps, and non- Jenfical Scoundrels; that if himself had been conftituted general, thofe prefumptuous degs the Ancients would long before this have been beaten out of the field. You," faid he, "fit here idle; but when I, or any "other valiant Modern, kill an enemy, you are fure to ८ feize the fpoil. But I will not march one foot again ft "the foe, till you all fwear to me, that whomever I "take or kill, his arms I fhall quietly poflefs" Bent- ley having fpoken thus, Scaliger bettowing him a four look. "Mifcreant prater," faid he, " eloquent only "in thine own eyes, thou raileft without wit, or truth, .. :: : or difcretion. The malignity of thy temper per- "verteth nature, thy learning makes thee more barba- rous; thy ftudy of humanity, more inhuman thy con- "verſe among poets, more groveling, miry, and dull. "All arts of civilizing others render thee rude and un- "tractable; courts have taught thee ill manners, and polite converfation has finifhed thee a pedant. Befides, a greater coward burdeneth not the army. But ne- "ver defpond; I país my word, whatever fpoil, thou "takel, Vid. Homer de Therfite. THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS. 155 *< takeſt, ſhall certainly be thy own; though, I hope, "that vile carcate will firft become a prey to kites and << worms." Bentley durft not reply; but half choaked with fpleen and rage, withdrew in full refolution of perform- ing ſome great atchievement. With him, for his aid and companion, he took his beloved Wot on; refolving, by policy or furpriſe, to attempt fome neglected quarter of the Ancients army. They began their march over car- cafes of their flaughtered friends; then to the right of their own forces; then wheeled northward, till they came to Aldrovandus's tomb; which they paffed on the fide of the declining fun. And now they arrived with fear towards the enemy's out-guards; looking about, if haply they might fpy the quarters of the wounded, or fome fraggling fleepers, unarmed, and remote from the reft. As when two mungrel curs, whom native greedi- nels and domestic want provoke and join in partnerſhip, though fearful, nightly to invade the folds of fome rich grazier; they, with tails depreffed and lolling tongues, creep foft and flow: mean while, the conſcious moon, now in her zenith, on their guilty heads darts perpen- dicular rays; nor dare they bark, though much pro- voked at her refulgent vifage, whether feen in puddle by reflection, or in Iphere direct; but one furveys the region round, while t'other fcouts the plain, if hap- ly to discover, at difance from the flock, fome car- cafe half devoured, the refufe of gorged wolves, or ominous ravens: fo marched this lovely, loving pair of friends, nor with lefs fear and circumfpection; when, at diftance, they might perceive two fhining fuits of armour, hanging upon an oak, and the owners not far off in a profound fleep. The two friends drew lots, and the purſuing of this adventure fell to Bentley. On he went, and in his van Confufion and Amaze, while Horror and Affright brought up the rear. As he came near, behold two heroes of the Ancients army, Phalaris and Elop, lay faſt aſleep. Bentley would fain have dif- patched them both; and, ftealing clofe, aimed his flail at Phalaris's breaft. But then the goddess Affright in- terpofing, caught the Modern in her icy arms, and dragged him from the danger fhe forefaw; for both the dormant 166 THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS. dormant heroes happen to turn at the fame inſtant, though foundly fleeping, and bufy in a dream. For Phalaris was just that minute dreaming, how a most vile poetafter had lampooned him, and how he had got him roaring in his bull. And Alop dreamed, that as he and the Ancient chiefs were lying on the ground, a zvild aſs broke loofe, ran about trampling and kicking, and dung- ing in their faces. Bentley, leaving the two heroes afleep, feized on both their armours, and withdrew in queft of his darling Wotton. He in the mean time had wandered long in fearch of fome enterprife, till at length he arrived at a ſmall rivu- let, that iffued from a fountain hard by, called, in the language of mortal men, Helicon. Here he stopped, and, parched with thirſt, refolved to allay it in this lim- pid ftream. Thrice with profane hands he effayed to raiſe the water to his lips, and thrice it flipped all through his fingers. Then he ftooped prone on his breaft; but ere his mouth had kifled the liquid crystal, Apollo came, and in the channel held his field betwixt the Modern and the fountain, ſo that he drew up nothing but mud. For although no fountain on earth can com- pare with the clearness of Helicon, yet there lies at bot- tom a thick ſediment of flime and mud; for fo Apollo begged of Jupiter, as a punishment to thofe who durft at- tempt to taste it with unhallowed lips, and for a leffon to all, not to draw too deep, or far from the jpring. At the fountain-head, Wotton difcerned two heroes. The one he could not diſtinguiſh; but the other was foon known for Temple, general of the allies to the Ancients. His back was turned, and he was employed in drinking large draughts in his helmet, from the fountain, where he had withdrawn himſelf to reft from the toils of the war. Wotton, obferving him, with quaking knees and trembling hands fpoke thus to himself. "Oh, that I "could kill this deftroyer of our army! What renown "ſhould I purchaſe among the chiefs? But to iffue out againſt him, man against man, ſhield againſt ſhield, "and lance againſt lance, ‡ what Modern of us dare? "For This is according to Homer, who tells the dreams of those who were killed in their fleep. Vid. Homer. THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS. 167 66 ** And For he fights like a god, and Pallas or Apollo are ever at his elbow. But, Oh, mother! if what Fame reports be true, that I am the ſon of fo great a god- "defs, grant me to hit Temple with this lance, that the "ftroke may fend him to hell, and that I may return in fafety and triumph, laden with his fpoils." The firſt part of this prayer the gods granted, at the interceffion of his mother, and of Momus; but the reft, by a per- verfe wind, fent from Fate, was fcattered in the air. Then Wotton grafped his lance, and brandishing it thrice over his head, darted it with all his might; the goddeſs his mother, at the fame time, adding ftrength to his arm. Away the lance went hizzing, and reached even to the belt of the averted Ancient; upon which lightly grafing, it fell to the ground. Temple neither felt the weapon touch him, nor heard it fall. Wotton might have eſcaped to his army, with the honour of having emitted his lance againſt fo great a leader, unrevenged; but Apollo, enraged, that a javelin Alung by the alliſtance of ſo foul a goddeſs ſhould pollute his fountain, put on the ſhape of and foftly came to young Boyle, who then accompanied Temple: he point- ed first to the lance, then to the diftant Modern that flung it, and commanded the young hero to take immediate revenge. Boyle, clad in a fuit of armour which had been given him by all the gods, immediately advan- ced against the trembling foe, who now fled before him. As a young lion in the Libyan plains, or Arabian Defart, fent by his aged fire to hunt for prey, or health, or exercife; he fcours along, wishing to meet fome tyger from the mountains, or a furious boar; if chance a wild afs, with brayings importune, affronts his ear; the generous beaft, though loathing to diftain his claws with blood fo vile, yet much provoked at the offenſive noife; which Echo, foolish nymph, like her ill-judg- ing Jex, repeats much louder, and with more delight than Philomela's fong; he vindicates the honour of the forest, Boyle was affifted in this difpute by Dean Aldrich, Dr. Atter- bury, afterwards Biſhop of Rocheſter and other perfons at Oxford, celebrated for their genius and their learning, then called the Cbriß- Church wits. Hawkef. 168 THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS. foreſt, and hunts the noify long-ear'd animal: fo Wot- ton fled, fo Boyle purfued. But Wotton, heavy-arm- ed, and flow of foot, began to flack his course; when his lover Bentley appeared, returning laden with the fpoils of the two fleeping Ancients. Boyle obferved him well; and foon difcovering the helmet and ſhield of Pha- laris, his friend, both which he had lately, with his own hands, new poliſhed and gilt; rage fparkled in hi eyes; and leaving his purfuit after Wotton, he furi- oufly ruthed on against this new approacher. Fain would he be revenged on both; but both now fled dif- ferent ways. And as a woman in a little houſe, that gets a painful livelihood by ipinning; if chance her geefe be ſcattered o'er the common, fhe courfes round the plain from fide to fide, compelling here and there the itragglers to the flock; they cackle loud, and flutter o'er the champain to Boyle purfued, fo fled this pair of friends. Finding at length th ir flight was vain, they bravely joined, and drew themfelves in phalanx. First, Bentley threw a fpear with all his force, hoping to pierce the enemy's breast. But Pallas came unleen, and in the air took off the point, and clapped on one of lead; which, after a dead bang against the enemy's fhield, fell blunted to the ground. Then Boyle, ob- ferving well his time, took up a lance of wondrous length and fharpness; and as this pair of friends compacted ſtood cloſe fide to fide, he wheeled him to the right, and, with unuſual force, darted the weapon. ley faw his fate approach; and flaning down his arins clofe to his ribs, hoping to fave his body; in went the point, pailing through arm and fide: nor topt, or ſpent its force, ull it had alio pierced the valiant Wotion; who going to fuftain his dying friend, flared his fate. As when a fkilful cook has truffed a bracc of woodcocks, he, with iron fkewer pierces the ten- der fides of both, their legs and wings clote pinioned to their ribs fo was this pair of friends transfixed, till down they fell, joined in their lives, joined in their Bent- deaths; This is alfo after the manner of Homer; the woman's getting a painful livelihood by fpinning, has nothing to do with the fimili- tude, nor would be excufable without fuch an authority. Vid. Homer. THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS. 169 deaths; fo cloſely joined, that Charon would miſtake them both for one, and waft them over Styx for half his fare. Farewel, beloved, loving pair; few equals have you left behind: and happy and immortal ſhall you be, if all my wit and eloquence can make you, And, now * * 1 * 7 Defunt cætera. VOL. I. I A Dis. [ 170 ] A DISCOURSE concerning the MECHANICAL OPERATION of the SPIRIT. In a LETTER to a FRIEND. A FRAGMENT. TH The BOOKSELLER'S ADVERTISEMENT. HE following difcourfe came into my hands per- fect and entire. But there being feveral things in it which the prefent age would not very well bear, I kept it by me fome years, refolving it fhould never fee the light. At length, by the advice and affiſtance of a judicious friend, I retrenched thoſe parts that might give moſt offence, and have now ventured to publiſh the re- mainder. Concerning the author, I am wholly igno- rant neither can I conjecture, whether it be the fame with that of the two foregoing pieces; the original hav- ing been fent me at a different time, and in a different hand. The learned reader will better determine; to whoſe judgment I entirely ſubmit it. A DIS- [ 17 ] A DISCOURSE concerning the MECHANICAL OPERA- TION of the SPIRIT. t For T. H. Efq; || at his chambers in the academy of the Beaux-Efprits in New England. SIR, IT T is now a good while fince I have had in my head fomething, not only very material, but abfolutely neceffary to my health, that the world ſhould be in- formed in. For, to tell you a fecret, I am able to con- tain it no longer. However, I have been perplexed for fome time, to refolve what would be the moſt proper form to fend it abroad in, To which end, I have been three days courfing through Westminster-hall, and St. Paul's church-yard, and Fleet-ſtreet, to perufe titles; and I do not find any which holds fo general a vogue, as that of A letter to a friend. Nothing is more common than to meet with long epiftles addreffed to perfcus and places, where, at firſt thinking, one would be apt to i- magine it not altogether fo neceffary or convenient; fuch as, a neighbour at next door, a mortal enemy, a per- I 2 fect + This difcourfe is not altogether equal to the former, the beſt parts of it being omitted. Whether the bookfeller's account be true, that he durft not print the reft, I know not: nor indeed is it eafy to determine, whether he may be relied on in any thing he faye of this, or the former treatifes,only as to the time they were writ in: which, however, appears more from the difcourfes themfelves, then his relation. This difcourfe is a fatire againſt enthufiafm, and thofe affected in- fpirations, which conftantly begin in folly, and very often end 11 vice. In this treatife, the author has revelled in too licentious a vin of farcafm: many of his ideas are nauteous, fome are indecent, and others have an irreligious tendency. Nor is the picce itfelf equal in wit and humour, either to The Tale of a Tub, or The Battle of the Books. I fhould conftantly chufe rather to praife, than to arraign - ny part of Swift's writings: but in thoſe tracts where he tries to make us unealy with ourſelves, and unhappy in our prefent exift- ence, there I muſt yield him up entirely to confure. Otrary. || Suppoſed to be Col. Hunter. 172 ON THE MECHANICAL fect firanger, or a perfon of quality in the clouds; and thefa upon fubjects, in appearance, the leaſt proper for con- veyance by the poft; as, long Schemes in philofophy, dark and wonderful myfteries of ftate, laborious differtations in cri- ticifm aud philofophy, advice to parliaments, and the like. Now, Sir, to proceed after the method in prefent wear (for, let me fay what I will to the contrary, I am afraid you will publiſh this letter, as foon as ever it comes to your hand :) I defire you will be my witnefs to the world, how careleſs and fudden a fcribble it has been; that it was but yesterday, when you and I began acciden- tally to fall into difcourfe on this matter; that I was not very well when we parted; that the poft is in ſuch haſte, I have had no manner of time to digeft it into order, or correct the ftyle; and if any other modern excuſes, for hafte and negligence, fhall occur to you in reading, I beg you to infert them, faithfully promifing they fhall be thankfully acknowledged. Pray, Sir, in your next letter to the Iroquois virtuofi, do me the favour to prefent my humble fervice to that illuftrious body; and affure them, I fhall fend an ac- count of thofe phænomena, as ſoon as we can determine them at Greſham. I have not had a line from the literati of Tobinambou theſe three laft ordinaries. And now, Sir, having diſpatched what I had to fay of forms, or of buſineſs, let me intreat, you will fuffer me to proceed upon my fubject; and to pardon me, if I make no further ufe of the epiftolary ftyle, till I come to conclude. SECT. I. T is recorded of Mahomet, that, upon a vifit he was ITS going to pay in Paradife, he had an offer of feveral vehicles to conduct him upwards; as ficry chariots, winged horfes, and celeftial fedans: but he refufed them all, and would be borne to heaven upon nothing but his afs. Now, this inclination of Mahomet, as fingu- lar as it fccms, hath been fince taken up by a great number of devout Chriftians; and doubtlefs with very good OPERATION OF THE SPIRIT. 173 good reaſon. For fince that Arabian is known to have borrowed a moiety of his religious fyftem. from the Chri- ftian faith, it is but juſt he ſhould pay repriſals to ſuch as would challenge them; wherein the good people of England, to do them all right, have not been backward. For though there is not any other nation in the world fo plentifully provided with carriages for that journey, either as to fafety or eafe; yet there are abundance of us, who will not be fatisfied with any other machine, befides this of Mahomet, For my own part, I must confefs to bear a very fingu - lar reſpect to this animal, by whom I take human na- ture to be most admirably held forth in all its qualities as well as operations: and therefore, whatever in my ſmall reading occurs concerning this our fellow-creature, I do never fail to fet it down by way of common-place; and when I have occafion to write upon human reaſon, politics, eloquence, or knowledge, I lay my memoran- dums before me, and infert them with a wonderful faci- lity of application. However, among all the qualificati- ons afcribed to this diſtinguiſhed brute, by ancient or modern authors, I cannot remember this talent, of bear- ing his rider to heaven, has been recorded for a part of his character, except in the two examples mentioned al- ready; therefore I conceive the methods of this art to be a point of useful knowledge in very few hands, and which the learned world would gladly be better informed in this is what I have undertaken to perform in the following difcourfe. For towards the operation already mentioned, many peculiar properties are required, both in the rider and the afs; which I ſhall endeavour to ſet in as clear a light as I can. : But, becauſe I am refolved, by all means, to avoid giving offence to any party whatever, I will leave off difcourfing fo clofely to the letter as I have hitherto done, and go on for the future by way of allegory, though in fuch a manner, that the judicious reader may, without much training, make his applications, as often as he fhall think fit. Therefore, if you pleaſe, from hence forward instead of the term afs, we fhall make ufe of gifted, or enlightened teacher; and the word rider, we will exchange for that of fanatic auditory, or any other 174 ON THE MECHANICAL ther denomination of the like import. Having fettled this weighty point, the great fubject of inquiry before. us is, to examine, by what methods this teacher arrives at his gifts, or fpirit, or light; and by what intercourfe between him and his affembly it is cultivated and ſup- ported. In all my writings I have had conftant regard to this great end, not to fuit and apply thein to particular oc- cafions and circumſtances of time, of place, or of per- fon; but to calculate them for univerfal nature, and man- kind in general. And of fuch catholic uſe I eſteem this prefent difquifition: for I do not remember any other temper of body, or quality of mind, wherein all nations and ages of the world have fo unanimously agreed, as that of a fanatic ftrain, or tincture of enthuſiaſm; which, improved by certain perfons or focieties of men, and by them practiſed upon the reft, has been able to pro- duce revolutions of the greateſt figure in hiſtory; as will foon appear to thofe who know any thing of Ara- bia, Perfia, India, or China, of Morocco and Peru. Farther, it has poffeffed as great a power in the kingdom of knowledge, where it is hard to affign one art or ſcience, which has not annexed to it fome fanatic branch: ſuch are the philofopher's ftone, the grand elixir, † the planetary worlds, the fquaring of the circle, the fummum bonum, Utopian commonwealths, with fome others of lefs or fub- ordinate note; which all ferve for nothing elſe, but to employ or amufe this grain of enthuſiaſm, dealt into every compofition. But if this plant has found a root in the fields of Em- pire and of Knowledge, it has fixed deeper, and ſpread yet farther upon holy ground: wherein, though it hath paffed under the general name of enthufiafm, and perhaps arifen from the fame original; yet ha h it produced cer- tain branches of a very different nature, however often miſtaken for each other. The word, in in its univerfal acceptation, may be defined, A lifting up of the foul, or its faculties, above matter. This defcription will hold good in general: but I am only to underſtand it as ap- plied to religion; wherein there are three general ways Some writers hold them for the fame, others not. of OPERATION OF THE SPIRIT. 175 of ejaculating the foul, or tranfporting it beyond the ſphere of matter. The first is, the immediate act of God, and is called prophecy or infpiration. The fecond is, the immediate act of the devil, and is termed poſſeſ fon. The third is, the product of natural caufes, the ef- fect of ftrong imagination, fpleen, violent anger, fear, grief, pain, and the like. Theſe three have been abun- dantly treated on by authors, and therefore ſhall not employ my inquiry. But the fourth method of religious enthufiajm, or launching out of the foul, as it is purely an effect of artifice and mechanic operation, has been fparingly handled, or not at all, by any writer; becauſe, though it is an art of great antiquity, yet, having been confined to few perfons, it long wanted thofe advance- ments and refinements which it afterwards met with, fince it has grown fo epidemic, and fallen into fo many cultivating hands. It is therefore upon this mechanical operation of the Spirit that I mean to treat, as it is at preient performed by our British workmen. I ſhall deliver to the reader the refult of many judicious obſervations upon the mat- ter; tracing, as near as I can, the whole courſe and method of this trade; producing parallel inftances, and relating certain difcoveries that have luckily fallen in my way. I have faid, that there is one branch of religious enthu- fiafm, which is purely an effect of nature; whereas the part I mean to handle, is wholly an affect of art, which, however, is inclined to work upon certain natures and conftitutions, more than others. Befides, there is many an operation, which, in its original, was purely an artifice; but, through a long fucceffion of ages, hath grown to be natural. Hippocrates tells us, that a- mong our anceſtors the Scythians, there was a nation called Longheads, § which at firſt began by a cuſtom a- mong midwives and nurfes, of moulding, and fqueezing, and bracing up the heads of infants; by which means, nature, fhut out at one paffage, was forced to ſeek a- nother, and, finding room above, fhot upwards in the form of a fugar-loaf; and being diverted that way, for § Macrocephali. fome 196 ON THE MECHANICAL || fome generations, at laſt found it out of herſelf, need- ing no affiſtance from the nurfe's hand. This was the original of the Scythian Longheads; and thus did cuſtom, from being a fecond nature, proceed to be a firft. To all which there is fomething very analogous among us of this nation, who are the undoubted pofterity of that re- fined people. For, in the age of our fathers, there aroſe a generation of men in this iſland, called Round- beads, whofe race is now ſpread over three kingdoms; yet, in its beginning, was merely an operation of art, produced by a pair of fciffars, a fqueeze of the face, and à black cap. Theſe heads, thus formed into a perfect ſphere in all aſſemblies, were moft expoſed to the view of the female fort; which did influence their concepti- ons fo effectually, that nature at laſt took the hint, and did it of herfelf; fo that a Round-head has been ever fince as familiar a fight among us, as a Long-head among the Scythians. Upon thefe examples, and others eaſy to produce, I defire the curious reader to diſtinguiſh, firſt, between an effect grown from art into nature, and one that is natural from its beginning; fecondly, between an effect whol- ly natural, and one which has only a natural foundation, but where the fuperftructure is entirely artificial. For the firſt and the laſt of theſe, I underſtand to come with- in the districts of my ſubject. And having obtained thefe allowances, they will ferve to remove any objection be raiſed hereafter againſt what I fhall advance. The practitioners of this famous art proceed in genc- ral upon the following fundamental, That the corrup- tion of the fenfes is the generation of the fpirit; becauſe the fenfes in men are fo many avenues to the fort of reaſon, which in this operation is wholly blocked up. All endeavours must be therefore ufed, either to divert, bind up, ftupify, flufter, and amuſe the fenfes, or elſe that may το The Fanatics, in the time of Charles I. ignorantly applying the text, Ye knew that it is a fhame for men to bave long hair, cut theirs very fhort. It is faid, that the Queen, once feeing Pym, a celebrat- ed patriot, thus cropped, inquired who that round headed man was j and that from this incident the distinction became general, and the party were called Round-beads. Hawkef. OPERATION OF THE SPIRIT. 177 to juſtle them out of their ſtations; and while they are either abfent, or otherwiſe employed, or engaged in a civil war againſt each other, the ſpirit enters, and per- forms its part. Now, the ufual methods of managing the fenfes up- on fuch conjunctures, are what I fhall be very particu- lar in delivering, as far as it is lawful for me to do; but having had the honour to be initiated into the myſteries of every fociety, I defire to be excufed from divulging any rites, wherein the profane muſt have no part. But here, before I can proceed farther, a very dan- gerous objection muft, if poffible, be removed. For t is pofitively denied by certain critics, that the Spirit can by any means be introduced into an affembly of modern faints; the difparity being fo great, in many material circumstances, between the primitive way of infpiration, and that which is practifed in the prefent age. This they pretend to prove from the 2d chapter of the Acts, where, comparing both, it appears, first, that the apoftles were gathered together with one accord in one place; by which is meant an univerfal agreement in opinion and form of worſhip; a harmony, fay they, fo far from being found between any two conventicles among us, that it is in vain to expect it between any two heads in the fame. Secondly, The Spirit inftructed the apoſtles in the gift of ſpeaking feveral languages; a knowledge fo remote from our dealers in this art, that they neither underſtand propriety of words, or phrafes, in their own. Laſtly, ſay theſe objectors, The modern artiſts do utterly exclude all approaches of the Spirit, and bar up its ancient way of entering, by covering themſelves io clofe, and fo induftrioufly a-top. For they will needs. have it as a point clearly gained, that the cleven tongues never fat upon the apoftles heads, while their hats were. on. Now, the force of thefe objections feems to conſiſt in the different acceptation of the word fpirit; which if it be understood for a fupernatural affillance, ap- proaching from without, the objectors have reafon, and their affertions may be allowed: but the pirit we treat of here, proceeding entirely from within, the argu- 1.5 ment. 178 ON THE MECHANICAL. And, upon ment of theſe adverfaries wholly is eluded. the fame account, our modern artificers find it an expe- dient of abfolute neceffity to cover their heads as clofe as they can, in order to prevent perſpiration; than which nothing is obferved to be a greater fpender of mechanic light, as we may perhaps farther fhew in con- venient place. To proceed therefore upon the phænomenon of spiritual mechaniſm, it is here to be noted, that in forming and working up the Spirit, the affembly has a confiderable fhare, as well as the preacher. The method of this ar- canum is as follows. They violently ftrain their eye-balls inward, half clofing the lids; then, as they fit, they are in a perpetual motion of fee-faw, making long hums at proper periods, and continuing the found at equal height; chufing their time in thofe intermiffions, while the preacher is at ebb. Neither is this practice in any part of it fo fingular and improbable, as not to be traced, in diftant regions, from reading and obfervation. For, firft, the Jauguis, || or enlightened faints of India, fee all their vifions by help of an acquired ftraining and pref- fure of the eyes. Secondly, the art of fee-faw on a beam, and fwinging by feffion upon a cord, in order to raiſe artificial ecftafies, hath been derived to us from our Scythian anceſtors, where it is practifed at this day among the women. Laftly, the whole proceed- ing, as I have here related it, is performed by the na- tives of Ireland, with a confiderable improvement; and it is granted, that this noble nation hath of all others admitted fewer corruptions, and degenerated leaft from the purity of the old Tartars. Now, it is uſual for a knot of Iriſh, men and women, to abſtract them- felves from matter, bind up all their fenfes, grow viſio- nary and ſpiritual, by influence of a fhort pipe of to- bacco handed round the company; each preferving the fmoke in his mouth, till it comes again to his turn to take in freſh. At the fame time there is a concert of a con- tinued gentle hum, repeated and renewed by inſtinct, as occafion requires; and they move their bodies Bernier, mem. de Mogol, Į Guagnini hift. Sarmat, up OPERATION OF THE SPIRIT. 179 up and down to a degree, that ſometimes their heads and points lie parallel to the horizon. Mean while, you may obferve their eyes turned up in the pofture of one who endeavours to keep himſelf awake; by which, and many other ſymptoms among them, it manifeftly ap- pears, that the reaſoning facultics are all fufpended and fuperfeded; that imagination hath ufurped the feat, ſcat- tering a thouſand deliriums over the brain. Returning from this digreffion, I fhall defcribe the methods by which the Spirit approaches. The eyes being difpofed according to art, at firt you can fee nothing; but, after a fhort paule, a imall glimmering light begins to appear, and dance before you. Then, by frequently moving your body up and down, you perceive the vapours to afcend very faft, till you are perfectly dofed, and flufter - ed like one who drinks too much in a morning. Mean while, the preacher is alio at work; he begins a loud hum, which pierces you quite through: this is imme- diately returned by the audience; and you find your- felf prompted to imitate them, by a mere fpontaneous impulfe, without knowing what you do. The interftitia are duly filled up by the preacher, to prevent too long a paufe, under which the spirit would foon faint and grow languid. 'This is all I am allowed to diſcover about the pro- grels of the pirit, with relation to that part which is borne by the affembly; but in the methods of the preach- er, to which I now proceed, I fhall be more large and particular. Yo SECT II. OU will read it very gravely remarked in the books of thoſe illuftrious and right eloquent penmen, the modern travellers, that the fundamental difference in point of religion between the wild Indians and us, lies in this; that we worship God, and they worthip the de- vil. But there are certain critics, who will by no means admit of this diftinction; rather believing, that all nations whatſoever adore the true God, becauſe they fe:m to intend their devotions to fome inviſible power, 180 ON THE MECHANICAL of greatest goodness, and ability to help them; which perhaps will take in the brighteſt attributes aſcribed to the Divinity. Others again inform us, that thoſe ido- laters adore two principles; the principle of good, and that of evil: which indeed I am apt to look upon as the moſt univerfal notion that mankind, by the mere light of nature, ever entertained of things invifible. How this idea hath been managed by the Indians and us, and with what advantage to the underſtandings of either, may well deſerve to be examined. To me the difference ap- pears little more than this, that they are put oftener up- on their knees by their fears, and we by our defires ; that the former fet them a praying, and us a curfing. What I applaud them for, is their difcretion in limiting their devotions and their deities to their feveral diftricts; nor ever fuffering the liturgy of the white god, to croſs or to interfere with that of the black. Not fo with us; who, pretending, by the lines and meafures of our rea- fon, to extend the dominion of one invifible power, and contract that of the other, have difcovered a grofs igno- rance in the natures of good and evil, and moft horribly confounded the frontiers of both. After men have lifted up the throne of their Divinity to the cælum empyræum, adorned with all fuch qualities and accomplishments as themſelves feem moft to value and poffefs; after they have funk their principle of evil to the lowest centre, bound him with chains, loaded him with curfes, furniſh- ed him with viler difpofitions than any rake-bell of the town, accoutred him with tail, and horns, and huge claws, and faucer eyes; I laugh aloud to ſee theſe rea- foners at the fame time engaged in wife difpute about certain walks and purlieus, whether they are in the verge of God or the devil; feriously debating, whether fuch and ſuch influences come into men's minds from above or below, whether certain paffions and affections are guided. by the evil spirit or the good: Dum fas atque nefas exiguo fine libidinum Difcernunt avidi- Thus do men eſtabliſh a fellowſhip of Christ with Belial, and fuch is the analogy they make between cloven tongues and cloven feet. Of the like nature is the difqui- fition OPERATION OF THE SPIRIT. 181 fition before us. It hath continued theſe hundred years an even debate, whether the deportment and the cant of our English enthuaftic preachers were poffeffion or in- Spiration; and a world of argument has been drained on either fide, perhaps to little purpoſe. For I think it is in life as in tragedy, where it is held a conviction of great defect, both in order and invention, to interpofe the affiftance of preternatural power, without an abfolute and laft neceffity. However, it is a fketch of human vanity, for every individual to imagine the whole uni- verfe is intereſted in his meanest concern. If he hath got cleanly over a kennel, fome angel unfeen defcended on purpoſe to help him by the hand; if he hath knock- ed his head against a poft, it was the devil, for his fins, let loose from hell on purpoſe to buffet him. Who, that fees a little paultry mortal droning, and dreaming, and drivelling to a multitude, can think it agreeable to common good fenfe, that either heaven or hell ſhould be put to the trouble of influence or infpection upon what he is about? Therefore I am refolved immediately to weed this error out of mankind, by making it clear, that this mystery of vending ſpiritual gifts is nothing but a trade, acquired by as much inftruction, and maſtered by equal practice and application, as others are. This will beft appear by defcribing and deducing the whole pro- cefs of the operation, as variouſly as it hath fallen under my knowledge or experience. * Here the whole fcheme of Spiritual mechanifm was de- duced and explained, with an appearance of great read- ing and obfervation; but it was thought neither fafe nor convenient to print it. Here it may not be amifs to add a few words upon the laudable practice of wearing quilted caps; which is not a matter of mere cuftom, humour, or faſhion, as fome would pretend, but an inftitution of great fagaci- ty 182 ON THE MECHANICAL ty and uſe. Thefe, when moistened with fweat, ftop all perfpiration; and, by reverberating the heat, prevent the ſpirit from evaporating any way but at the mouth; even as a ſkilful houſewife, that covers her ſtill with a wet clout for the fame reaſon, and finds the fame effect. For it is the opinion of choice virtuofi, that the brain is only a croud of little animals, but with teeth and claws extremely ſharp, and therefore cling together in the con- texture we behold, like the picture of Hobbes's Leviathan, or like bees in perpendicular fwarm upon a tree, or like a carrion corrupted into vermin, ftill preferving the fhape and figure of the mother animal: That all in- vention is formed by the morfure of two or more of theſe animals, upon certain capillary nerves, which proceed from thence; whereof three branches fpread into the tongue, and two into the right hand. They hold alſo, that theſe animals are of a conftitution extremely cold; that their food is the air we attract, their excrement phlegm; and that what we vulgarly call rheums, and colds, and diftillations, is nothing else but an epidemical loofenefs, to which that little commonwealth is very. ſubject, from the climate it lies under: Farther, that no- thing less than a violent heat can difintangle theſe crea- tures from their hamated ftation of life, or give them. vigour and humour to imprint the marks of their little teeth That if the morfure be hexagonal, it produces poetry; the circular gives eloquence; if the bite hath been conical, the perfon, whofe nerve is ſo affected, ſhall be difpoſed to write upon politics; and fo of the reft. I fhall now difcourfe briefly, by what kind of practices the voice is beſt governed, towards the compofition and improvement of the jpirit; for without a competent fkill in tuning and toning each word, and fyllable, and letter, to their due cadence, the whole operation is in- complete, miffes entirely of its effect on the hearers, and puts the workman himself to continual pains for new fupplies without fuccefs. For it is to be underſtood, that, in the language of the fpirit, cant and droning fup- ply the place of ſenſe and reaſon, in the language of men ; becauſe, in fpiritual harangues, the difpofition of the words according to the art of grammar, hath not the leaf OPERATION OF THE SPIRIT. 183 1 leaſt uſe, but the fkill and influence wholly lie in the choice and cadence of the fyllables; even as a diſcreet compoſer, who, in fetting a fong, changes the words and order fo often, that he is forced to make it nonſenſe, be- fore he can make it mufic. For this reafon it hath been held by fome, that the art of canting is ever in greateſt perfection, when managed by ignorance; which is thought to be enigmatically meant by Plutarch, when he tell us, that the beft mufical inftruments were made from the bones of an ass. And the profounder critics upon that paffage are of opinion, the word, in its genuine fignification, means no other than a jaw-bone; though fome rather think to have been the os facrum. But in fo nice a cafe I fhall not take upon me to decide; the curious are at liberty to pick from it whatever they pleafe. The first ingredient towards the art of canting, is a competent ſhare of inward light; that is to fay, a large memory, plentifully fraught with theological polyfyl- lables, and myfterious texts from holy writ, applied and digeſted by thofe methods and mechanical operations al- ready related; the bearers of this light refembling lan- terns, compact of leaves from old Geneva Bibles: which invention, Sir Humphrey Edwin, during his mayoralty, of happy memory, highly approved and advanced; affirming the fcripture to be now fulfilled, where it fays, Thy word is a lantern to my feet, and a light to my paths. Now, the art of canting confists in fkilfully adapting the voice to whatever words the ſpirit delivers, that each may ſtike the ears of the audience with its moft fignifi- cant cadence. The force or energy of this eloquence is not to be found, as among ancient orators, in the dif pofition of words to a fentence, or the turning of long periods; but, agreeable to the modern refinements in mufic, is taken up wholly in dwelling and dilating upon · fyllables and letters. Thus, it is frequent for a ſingle vowel to draw fighs from a multitude; and for a whole affembly of faints, to fob to the mufic of one folitary li- quid. But thefe are trifles, when even founds inarticu- late are obſerved to produce as forcible effects. A ma- ſter-workman ſhall blow bis pofe so powerfully, as to pierce 184 ON THE MECHANICAL pierce the hearts of his people, who are difpofed to re- ceive the excrements of his brain, with the fame reverence as the iſſue of it. Hawking, ſpitting, and belching, the defects of other inen's rhetoric, are the flowers, and fi- gures, and ornaments of his. For, the Spirit being the fame in all, it is of no import through what vehicle it is conveyed. It is a point of too much difficulty, to draw the prin- ciples of this famous art within the compafs of certain adequate rules. However, perhaps I may one day oblige the world with my critical effay upon the art of canting, philofophically, phyfically, and mufically confidered. But, among all improvements of the spirit wherein the voice hath borne a part, there is none to be compa- red with that of conveying the found through the nose, which, under the denomination of fnuffling,* hath paffed with fo great applaufe in the world. The originals of this inftitution are very dark; but having been initiated into the mystery of it, and leave being given me to pub- lifh it to the world, I fhall deliver as direct a relation as I can. This art, like many other famous inventions, owed its birth, or at leaſt improvement and perfection, to an effect of chance; but was eſtabliſhed upon folid reafons, and hath flouriſhed in this ifland ever fince, with great luftre. All agree, that it first appeared upon the decay and diſcouragement of bagpipes; which, having long fuf- fered under the mortal hatred of the brethren, tottered for a time, and at laſt fell with monarchy. The story is thus related. As yet fnufling was not; when the following adven- ture happened to a Banbury faint. Upon a certain day, while he was far engaged among the tabernacles of the wicked, he felt the outward man put into odd commo- tions, and ſtrangely pricked forward by the inward: An effect very ufual among the modern infpired. For ſome think, that the spirit is apt to feed on the flesh, like hungry wines upon raw beef. Others rather believe, there is a perpetual game at leap-frog between both ; and * The Snuffling of men, who have loft their nofes by lewd courſes, is faid to have given rife to that tone, which our Diffenters did two much affect. W. Wotton OPERATION OF THE SPIRIT. 185 : In and fometimes the flesh is uppermoft, and fometimes the Spirit: adding, that the former, while it is in the ſtate of a rider, wears huge Rippon fpurs, and, when it comes to the turn of being bearer, is wonderfully headstrong and hard-mouthed. However it came about, the faint felt his veſſel full extended in every part, (a very natu- ral effect of ſtrong infpiration ;) and the place and time falling out fo unluckily, that he could not have the con- venience of evacuating upwards, by repetition, prayer, or lecture, he was forced to open an inferior vent. ſhort, he wreſtled with the flesh fo long, that he at length fubdued it, coming off with honourable wounds all be-' fore. The furgeon had now cured the parts primarily affected; but the difeafe, driven from its poft, flew up into his head and as a ſkilful general, valiantly attack- ed in his trenches, and beaten from the field, by flying marches withdraws to the capital city, breaking down the bridges to prevent purfuit; fo the diſeaſe, repelled from its firft ftation, fled before the rod of Hermes, to the upper region, there fortifying itself; but, finding the foe making attacks at the nose, broke down the bridge, and retired to the head-quarters. Now, the na- turalifls obferve, that there is in human nofes an idiofyn- cracy, by virtue of which, the more the paffage is ob- ſtructed, the more our ſpeech delights to go through, as the muſic of a flagellet is made by the flops. By this method, the twang of the nofe becomes perfectly to re- femble the Jnuffle of a bagpipe, and is found to be qually attractive of British ears; whereof the faint had fudden experience, by practifing his new faculty with wonderful fuccefs in the operation of the Spirit: for, in a fhort time, no doctrine paffed for found and or- thodox, unleſs it were delivered through the nofe. Straight, every paftor copied after this original; and thoſe who could not otherwife arrive to a perfection, fpirited by a noble zeal, made ufe of the fame experi- ment to acquire it. So that, I think, it may be truly af- firmed, the jaints owe their empire to the fnuffling of one animal, as Darius did his to the neighing of another; and both ſtratagems were performed by the fame art; for Herodot. 186 ON THE MECHANICAL for we read, how the Perfian beaft acquired his faculty by covering a mare the day before. I ſhould now have done, if I were not convinced, that whatever I have yet advanced upon this fubject, is liable to great exception. For, allowing all I have faid to be true, it may ſtill be justly objected, That there is, in the commonwealth of artificial enthuſiaſm, ſome real founda- tion for art to work upon in the temper and complexion of individuals, which other mortals feem to want. Ob- ferve but the gefture, the motion, and the countenance of fome choice profeffors, though in their moſt familiar *actions, you will find them of a different race from the reft of human creatures. Remark your commoneft pre- tender to a light within, how dark, and dirty, and gloomy he is without: as lanterns, which the more light they bear in their bodies, caft out fo much the more foot, and finoke, and fuliginous matter to adhere to the fides. Liften but to their ordinary talk, and look on the mouth that delivers it: you will imagine you are hearing ſome ancient oracle, and your underſtanding will be equally informed. Upon thefe, and the like reafons, certain ob- jectors pretend to put it beyond all doubt, that there must be a fort of preternatural Spirit poffeffing the heads. of the modern faints; and fome will have it to be the beat of zeal, working upon the dregs of ignorance, as other Spirits are produced from lees by the force of fire. Some again think, that when our earthly tabernacles are diſordered and defolate, fhaken and out of repair, the fpirit delights to dwell within them; as houfes are faid to be haunted, when they are forfaken and gone to de- cay. To fet this matter in as fair a light as poffible, I fhall here very briefly deduce the hiftory of Fanaticifm from the moft early ages to the prefent. And if we are able to fix upon any one material or fundamental point, wherein the chief profeffors have univerfally agreed, I think we may reaſonably lay hold on that, and affign it for the great feed or principle of the Spirit. The most early traces we meet with of Fanatics in ancient ftory, are among the Ægyptians, who inftituted thoſe rites known in Greece by the names of Orgia, Panegyres, and Dionyfia; whether introduced there by Orpheus OPERATION OF THE SPIRIT. 187 Orpheus or Melampus, we fhall not diſpute at prefent, nor, in all likelihood, at any time for the future. The feaſts were celebrated to the honour of Ofiris, whom the Grecians called Dionyfius, and is the fame with Bac- chus. Which has betrayed fome fuperficial readers to imagine, that the whole bufinefs was nothing more than a fet of roaring, fcouring companions, over-charged. with wine. But this is a fcandalous mistake, foifted on the world by a fort of modern authors, who have too literal an underſtanding; and, becauſe antiquity is to be traced backwards, do therefore, like Jews, begin their books at the wrong end, as if learning were a fort of conjuring. Theſe are the men who pretend to under- ſtand a book by fcouting through the index; as if a tra- veller fhould go about to defcribe a palace, when he had feen nothing but the privy; or like certain fortune-tel- lers in Northern America, who have a way of reading a man's deftiny by peeping into his breech. For, at the time of inftituting thefe myfteries, there was not one vine in all Ægypt, the natives drinking nothing but ale; which liquor feems to have been far more ancient than wine, and has the honour of owing its invention and progrefs not only to the Egyptian Ofiris § but to the Grecian Bacchus; who, in their famous expedition, carried the receipt of it along with them, and gave it to the nations they vifited or fubdued. Befides, Bacchus himſelf was very feldom or never drunk for it is re- corded of him, that he was the firft inventor of the mi- tre; which he wore continually on his head, (as the whole company of Bacchanals did,) to prevent vapours and the beadach after hard drinking. And for this rea- fon, fay fome, the fcarlet whore, when fhe makes the kings of the earth drunk with her cup of abomination, is al- ways fober herfelf, though the never balks the glass in her turn, being, it feems, kept upon her legs by the virtue of her triple mitre. Now, theſe feafts were infti- tuted in imitation of the famous expedition Ofiris made through the world, and of the company that attended him, whereof the Bacchanalian ceremonies † were fo many Diod. Sic. 1. 1. Plut. de Ifide et Ofiride. ↑ Herod. 1. 2. § Diod. Sic. 1. 1. &. 3. See the particulars in Diod. Sic. 1. 1. & 3. 》 Id. 1.4 188 ON THE MECHANICAL many types and fymbols. From which account it is manifeft, that the Fanatic rites of thefe Bacchanals can- not be imputed to intoxications by wine, but muſt needs have had a deeper foundation. What this was, we may gather large hints from certain circumstances in the courfe of their myfteries. For, in the first place, there was in their proceffions, an entire mixture and confufion of fexes; they affected to ramble about hills and deferts: their garlands were of ivy and vine, emblems of cleav- ing and clinging; or of fir, the parent of turpentine. It is added, that they imitated fatyrs, were attended by goats, and rode upon affes, all companions of great ſkill and practice in affairs of gallantry. They bore, for their enfigns, certain curious figures, perched upon long poles, made into the fhape and fize of the virga genita- lis, with its appurtenances; which were fo many fhadow's and emblems of the whole myſtery, as well as trophies fet up by the female conquerors. Laftly, in a certain town of Attica, the whole folemnity, tripped of all its types, was performed in puris naturalibus; the votaries. not flying in covies, but forted into couples. The fame may be farther conjectured from the death of Orpheus, one of the inftitutors of thefe myfteries; who was torn in pieces by women, becauſe he refuſed to com- municate his orgies to them; which others explained, by telling us, he had caftrated himſelf upon grief, for the lofs of his wife. Omitting many others of lefs note, the next Fanatics we meet with of any eminence, were the numerous fects of heretics, appearing in the five firft centuries of the Chri- ftian era, from Simon Magus and his followers, to thofe of Eutyches. I have collected their ſyſtems from infinite reading; and comparing them with thoſe of their fucceffors in the feveral ages fince, I find there are certain bounds fet even to the irregularity of human thought, and thoſe a great deal narrower than is com- monly apprehended. For as they all frequently inter- fere, even in their wildest ravings; fo there is one fun- damental point, wherein they are fure to meet, as lines in Dionyfia Brauronia. Vid. Photium in excerptis è Conone. OPERATION OF THE SPIRIT. 189 in a centre, and that is, the community of women. Great were their folici.uies in this matter; and they never failed of certain articles in their schemes of worſhip on purpoſe to eft bliſh it. ; The laſt Fanatics of note, were thofe which ſtarted up in Germany, a little after the reformation of Luther fpringing, as mushrooms do at the end of a harvest. Such were John of Leyden, David George, Adam Neufter, and many others; whofe vifions and revelations always terminated in leading about half a dozen fifters apiece, and inaking that practice a fundamental part of their fyſtem. For human life is a continual navigation; and if we expect our veſſels to paſs with ſafety, through the waves and tempeits of this fluctuating world; it is neceffary to make a good provifion of the flesh, as feamen lay in ſtore of beef for a long voyage. Now, from this brief furvey of fome principle fects among the Fanatics in all ages, (having omitted the Ma- bometans and others, who might alſo help to confirm the argument I am about ;) to which I might add feveral among ourſelves, íuch as the family of love, fweet fingers of Ifrael, and the like; and from reflecting upon that fundamental point in their doctrines, about women, where- in they have fo unanimoufly agreed; I am apt to imagine, that the feed or principle, which has ever put men upon vifions in things invifible, is of a corporeal nature. For the profounder chymifts inform us, that the ſtrongeſt Spirits may be extracted from human flefb. Be- fides, the ſpinal narrow, being nothing elſe but a con- tinuation of the brain, muſt needs create a very free communication between the fuperior faculties and thoſe below and thus the thorn in the flesh, ferves for a ſpur to the Spirit. I think it is agreed among phyſicians, that nothing affects the head fo much, as a tentiginous humour, repelled and elated to the upper region, found by daily practice to run frequently up into madneſs. A very eminent member of the faculty affured me, that when the Quakers firſt appeared, he feldom was without fome female patients among them, for the furor- Perſons of a vifionary devotion, either men or women, are, in their complexion, of all others, the moſt amo- rous. For zeal is frequently kindled from the fame ſpark with 190 ON THE MECHANICAL with other fires, and from inflaming brotherly love, will proceed to raife that of a gallant. If we infpect in- to the ufual procefs of modern courtship, we fhall find it to confift in a devout turn of the eyes, called ogling; an artificial form of canting and whining, by rote, every interval, for want of other matter, made up with a fhrug, or a hum; a figh or a groan; the ſtyle compact of in- fignificant words, incoherences, and repetition. Thefe I take to be the moft accompliſhed rules of addreſs to a miſtreſs; and where are thefe performed with more dex- terity, than by the faints? Nay, to bring his argument yet cloſer, I have been informed by certain fanguine brethren of the firſt claſs, that in the height and orgaſ- mus of their ſpiritual exerciſe, it has been frequent with them * *; immediately after which, they found the Spirit to relax and flag of a fudden with the nerves, and they were forced to haften to a conclu- fion. This may be farther ftrengthened, by obferving with wonder, how unaccountably all females are attract- ed by vifionary or enthuſiaſtic preachers, though never fo contemptible in their outward mien; which is uſually ſuppoſed to be done upon confiderations purely fpiritual, without any carnal regards at all. But I have reafon to think, the ſex hath certain characteriſtics, by which they form a truer judgment of human abilities and perform- ings, than we ourſelves can poffibly do of each other. Let that be as it will, thus much is certain, that however fpiritual intrigues begin, they generally conclude like all others; they may branch upwards towards heaven, but the root is in the earth. Too intenſe a contemplation is not the buſineſs of flesh and blood; it muft, by the ne- ceffary courſe of things, in a little time, let go its hold, and fall into matter. Lovers for the fake of celestial converſe, are but another fort of Platonics, who pretend to fee ftars and heaven in ladies eyes, and to look or think no lower; but the fame pit is provided for both. And they ſeem a perfect moral to the ſtory of that phi- lofopher, who, while his thoughts and eyes were fixed upon the constellations, found himſelf feduced by his lower parts into a ditch. I had OPERATION OF THE SPIRIT. 191 I had fomewhat more to ſay upon this part of the fubject; but the poft is just going, which forces me in great hafte to conclude, Pray burn this letter as foon as it comes to your hands. SIR, Yours, & An [192] An ARGUMENT to prove that the ABOLISH- ING OF CHRISTIANITY in ENGLAND, may, as things now ftand, be attended with fome inconveniences, and perhaps not produce thoſe many good effects propoſed thereby. * I Written in the year 1708. Am very fenfible, what a weakneſs and prefump- tion it is, to reafon againſt the general humour and difpofition of the world. I remember it was with great juſtice, and a due regard to the freedom, both of the public and the prefs, forbidden, upon fevere penalties, to write, or difcourfe, or lay wagers againſt the union, even before it was confirmed by parliament; becauſe that was looked upon as a defign to oppoſe the current of the people; which, befides the folly of it, is a manifeft breach of the fundamental law, that makes this majority of opinion the voice of God. In like manner, and for the very fame reaſons, it may perhaps be neither fafe nor prudent to argue againſt the abolish- ing *The argument against abolishing Chriftianity, is carried on with the higheſt wit and humour. Graver divines threaten their readers with future puniſhments: Swift artfully exhibits a picture of pre- fent fhame. He judged rightly in imagining, that a ſmall treatiſe, written with a ſpirit of mirth and freedom, muſt be more efficacious, than long fermons, or laborious leffons of morality. He endeavours to laugh us into religion; well knowing, that we are often laughed out of it. Orrery. The argument, &c. is the most delicate, refined, complete, unva- ried piece of irony, from the beginning to the end, that ever was written fince the creation of the world. And without difpute, if in the works of man there can be fuppofed any fuch thing as real per. fection, we muſt allow it to confift in thoſe amazing productions of wit and humour, which in all probability can never be excelled by any effort of genius, and beyond which it is impoffible to frame any critical or diftinct idea of the human faculties.. With what egre- gious contempt and ridicule doth he, in this piece, expofe the abfurdi- ty of thoſe wretches, who are the patrons and abettors of vice and irreligion? Swift. AN ARGUMENT AGAINST, &c. 193 ing of Chriftianity, at a juncture when all parties appear fo unanimouſly determined upon the point; as we can- not but allow from their actions, their difcourfes, and their writings. However, I know not how, whether from the affectation of fingularity, or the perverſeneſs of human nature; but fo it unhappily falls out, that I can- not be entirely of this opinion. Nay, though I were fure an order were iffued for my immediate profecution by the Attorney-General, I ſhould ſtill confefs, that, in the prefent polture of our affairs at home or abroad, I do not yet fee the abfolute neceffity of extirpating the Chritian religion from among us. : This perhaps may appear too great a paradox, even for our wife and paradoxical age to endure therefore I fhall handle it with all tenderneſs, and with the utmoſt deference to the great and profound majority, which is of another fentiment. And yet the curious inay pleaſe to obferve, how much the genius of a nation is liable to alter in half an age. I have heard it affirmed for certain, by fome very old people, that the contrary opinion was, even in their me- mories, as much in vogue as the other is now; and that a project for the aboliſhing of Chriſtianity would then have appeared as fingular, and been thought as abfurd, as it would be at this time to write or difcourfe in its defence. Therefore I freely own, that all appearances are a- gainst me. The fyftem of the gospel, after the fate of other fyftems, is generally antiquated and exploded; and the mafs or body of the common people, among whom it ſeems to have had its lateft credit, are now grown as much aſhamed of it as their betters; opinions, like faſhions, always defcending from thofe of quality to the middle fort, and thence to the vulgar, where at length they are dropped, and vaniſh. But here I would not be miſtaken; and must there- fore be fo bold as to borrow a diftinction from the wri- ters on the other fide, when they make a difference be- tween nominal and real Trinitarians. I hope no reader imagines me fo weak to ftand up in the defence of real Christianity, fuch as ufed in primitive times (if we may believe the authors of thofe ages) to have an in- VOL. I. K Aluence t ! 194 AN ARGUMENT AGAINST fluence upon men's belief and actions. To offer at the reftoring of that, would indeed be a wild project: it would be to dig up foundations; to deſtroy at one blow all the wit, and half the learning of the kingdom; to break the entire frame and conftitution of things; to ruin trade, extinguiſh arts and ſciences, with the profeffors of them; in fhort, to turn our courts, exchanges, and ſhops into deferts and would be full as abfurd as the propof- al of Horace, where he advifes the Romans, all in a bo- dy, to leave their city, and to feck a new feat in ſome re- mote part of the would, by way of cure for the corrup- tion of their manners. : Therefore I think this caution was in itſelf altogether unneceflary, (which I have inferted only to prevent all poffibility of cavilling ;) fince every candid reader will eafily understand my difcourfe to be intended only in defence of nominal Chriftianity; the other having been for fome time wholly laid afide by general confent as ut- terly inconfiftent with our prefent fchemes of wealth and power. But why we ſhould therefore caft off the name and title of Chriftians, although the general opinion and re- folution he fo violent for it, I confeſs I cannot (with fubmiffion) apprehend, nor is the confequence neceffary. However, fince the undertakers propofe fuch wonderful advantages to the nation by this project, and advance. many plaufible objections against the fyftem of Chrifti- anity; I fhall briefly confider the ftrength of both, fair- ly allow them their greateſt weight, and offer fuch an- fwers as I think moſt reaſonable. After which I will beg leave to fhew, what inconveniencies may poffibly hap- pen by fuch an innovation, in the prefent pofture of our affairs. Firſt, One great advantage propofed by the abolishing` of Chriftianity is, That it would very much enlarge and eftabliſh liberty of confcience, that great bulwark of our nation, and of the Proteftant religion; which is ftill too much limited by prieftcraft, notwithstanding all the good intentions of the legislature; as we have lately found by a fevere inftance. For it is confidently reported, that two young gentlemen, of real hopes, bright wit, and profound judgment, who, upon a tho- rough ABOLISHING CHRISTIANITY. 195 rough examination of caufes and effects, and by the mere force of natural abilities, without the leaft tincture of learning, having inade a difcovery, that there was no God, and generously communicating their thoughts for the good of the public, were fome time ago, by an un- parallelled feverity, and upon I know not what obfolete law, broke only for blafphemy. And, as it hath been wifely obſerved, if perfecution once begins, no man alive knows how far it may reach, or where it will end. In anſwer to all which, with deference to wifer judg- ments, I think this rather fhews the neceffity of a no- minal religion among us. Great wits love to be free with the higheſt objects; and, if they cannot be allowed a God to revile or renounce, they will speak evil of dignities, abufe the government and reflect upon the miniftry; which, I am fure, few will deny to be of much more pernicious confequence; according to the faying of Tiberius, Deorum offenfa diis cura. As to the parti- cular fact related, I think it is not fair to argue from one inftance; perhaps another cannot be produced: yet (to the comfort of all thoſe who may be apprehenfive of profecution) blafphemy, we know, is freely ſpoken a million of times in every coffeehouſe and tavern, or wherever elfe good company meet. It must be allowed in- deed, that to break an Engliſh free-born officer only for blafphemy, was, to fpeak the gentleft of fuch an action, a very high ftrain of abfolute power. Little can be faid in excufe for the General. Perhaps he was afraid it might give offence to the allies, among whom, for aught we knew, it may be the cuftom of the coun- try to believe a God. But if he argued, as fome have done, upon a miſtaken principle, that an officer who is guilty of ſpeaking blafphemy, may, fome time or other, proceed fo far as to raiſe a mutiny; the confequence is by no means to be admitted for furely the commander of an English army is like to be but ill obeyed, whoſe foldiers fear and reverence him as little as they do a Deity. : It is further objected against the gospel-fyftem, That it obliges men to the belief of things too difficult for freethinkers, and fuch as have fhaken off the preju- K 2 dices 196 AN ARGUMENT AGAINST dices that ufually cling to a confined education. To which I anſwer, That men fhould be cautious how they raiſe objections, which reflect upon the wisdom of the nation. Is not every body freely allowed to believe whatever he pleaſeth, and to publiſh his belief to the world whenever he thinks fit, eſpecially if it ſerves to strengthen the party which is in the right? Would any indifferent foreigner, who fhould read the trumpery late- ly written by Afgil, Tindal, Toland, Coward, and forty more, imagine the goſpel to be our rule of faith, and confirmed by parliaments? Does any man cither be- lieve, or fay he believes, or defire to have it thought that he fays he believes one fyllable of the matter? And is any man worſe received upon that fcore; or does he find his want of nominal faith a diſadvantage to him, in the purfuit of any civil or military employment? What if there be an old dormant ftatute or two against him? Are they not now obſolete, to a degree, that Empion and Dudley themfelves, if they were now alive, would find it impoffible to put them in execution ? It is likewife urged, That there are, by computation, in this kingdom, above ten thousand parfors; whofe re- venues added to thofe of my Lords the Bishops, would fuffice to maintain, at leaſt, two hundred young gentle- men of wit and pleafure, and free-thinking; enemies to prieftcraft, narrow principles, pedantry, and prejudi- ces; who might be an ornament to the court and town: and then again, fo great a number of able [bodied] di. vines might be a recruit to our fleet and armies. This indeed appears to be a confideration of fome weight. But then, on the other fide, feveral things deferve to be confidered likewife: As, firit, whether it may not be thought neceffary, that in certain tracts of country, like what we call parishes, there fhould be one man, at leaſt, of abilities to read and write. Then it feems a wrong computation, that the revenues of the church throughout Afgil wrote an argument to prove, that man may be tranẞated from hence into eternal life, without paffing through death, Toland published fome deiftical books. Tindal's writings were blafphemous and atheiſtical. Coward afferted the mortality of the foul, and alledged the feat of it to be in the blood. Hawkef. ABOLISHING CHRISTIANITY. 197 throughout this ifland, would be large enough to main- tain two hundred young gentlemen, or even half that number after the prefent refined way of living; that is, to allow each of them fuch a rent, as, in the modern form of fpeech, would make them eaſy. But ftill there is in this project a greater mifchief behind; and we ought to beware of the woman's folly, who killed the hen that every morning laid her a golden egg. For, pray, what will become of the race of men in the next age, if we had nothing to trust to, befide the fcrophulous, confumptive productions furnifhed by our men of with and pleaſure; when, having fquandered away their vigour, health, and eftates, they are forced, by fome dif agreeable marriage, to piece up their broken fortunes, and entail rottennefs and politenefs on their pofterity? Now, here are ten thousand perfons reduced, by the wife regulations of Henry VIII. to the neceflity of a low diet, and moderate exercife, who are the only great re- florers of our breed; without which the nation would, in an age or two, become one great hoſpital. Another advantage propofed by the abo'ifhing of Christianity is, the clear gain of one day in feven, which is now entirely loft, and confequently the kingdom one feventh lefs confiderable in trade, bufinefs, and pleaſure; beſides the loſs to the public of fo many ftately ftructures now in the hands of the clergy; which might be con- verted into play-houfes, market-houfes, exchanges, com- mon dormitories, and other public edifices. I hope I fhall be forgiven a hard word, if I call this a perfect cavil. I readily own there hath been an old cuſtom, time out of mind, for people to affemble in the churches every Sunday; and that fhops are ftill frequent- ly fhut, in order, as it is conceived, to preferve the memory of that ancient practice. But how this can prove a hindrance to bufinefs or pleaſure, is hard to imagine. What if the men of pleaſure are forced, one day in the week, to game at home, inftead of the choco- Latehouse? Are not the taverns and coffeehouses open? Can there be a more convenient feafon for taking a doſe of phyfic? Are fewer claps got upon Sundays than o- ther days? Is not that the chief day for traders to fum up the accounts of the week; and for lawyers to prepare 198 AN ARGUMENT AGAINST prepare their briefs? But I would fain know, how it can be pretended, that the churches are miſapplied? Where are more appointments and rendezvoufes of gal- lantry? where moie care to appear in the foremost box, with greater advantage of drefs? where more meetings for bufinefs? where more bargains driven of all forts? and where fo many conveniencies or incitements to fleep? There is one advantage, greater than any of the fore- going, propofed by the abolishing of Chriftianity; That it will utterly extinguifh parties among us, by removing thoſe factious diftinctions of High and Low Church, of Whig and Tory, Prefbyterian and Church of England; which are now fo many grievous clogs upon public pro- ceedings, and are apt to difpofe men to prefer the grati- fying themſelves, or depreffing their adverſaries, before the most important intereſt of the ſtate. I confefs, if it were certain, that fo great an advan- tage would redound to the nation by this expedient, I would ſubmit, and be filent. But will any man fay, that if the words whoring, drinking, cheating, lying, ftealing, were, by act of parliament, ejected out of the English tongue and dictionaries, we fhould all awake next morn- ing chafte and temperate, honeft and juft, and lovers of truth? Is this a fair confequence? Or, if the phyficians would forbid us to pronounce the words, pox, gout, rheu- matifm, and ftone, would that expedient ferve, like fo ma- ny talifmans, to destroy the difeafes themfelves? Are par- ty and faction rooted in men's hearts no deeper than phraſes borrowed from religion, or founded upon no firmer prin- ciples? And is our language fo poor, that we cannot find other terms to exprefs them? Are, envy, pride, avarice, and ambition, fuch il nomenclators, that they cannot furnish appellations for their owners? Will not Heydukes and Mamalukes, Mandarines and Patfhaws, or any o- ther words formed at pleaſure, ferve to diſtinguiſh thoſe who are in the miniftry, from others who would be in it if they could? What, for instance, is eaſier than to vary the form of speech? and, instead of the word church, make it a queftion in politics, whether the monument be in danger? Becauſe rcligion was neareſt at hand to furniſh a few convenient phrafes, is our invention fo barren, ABOLISHING CHRISTIANITY. 199 : barren, we can find no other? Suppofe, for argument's fake, that the Tories favoured Margarita, the Whigs Mrs. Tofts, and the Trimmers Valentini; † would not Mar- garitians, Toftians, and Valentinians, be very tolerable. marks of diftinction? The Prafini and Veniti, two moſt virulent factions in Italy, began (if I remember right) by a diftinétion of colours in ribbands and we might contend, with as good a grace, about the dignity of the blue and the green; which would ferve as properly to divide the court, the parliament, and the kingdom be- tween them, as any terms of art whatfoever borrowed from religion. And therefore I think there is little force in this objection againſt Chriſtianity, or profpect of fo great an advantage as is propofed in the abolining of it. It is again objected, as a very abfurd ridiculous cuſtom, That a ſet of men fhould be fuffered, much leſs employ- ed, and hired, to bawl one day in feven, against the law- fulneſs of thoſe methods moft in afe towards the purſuit of greatness, riches, and pleaſure, which are the conftant practice of all men alive on the other fix. But this ob- jection is, I think, a little unworthy fo refined an age as ours. Let us argue this matter calmly. I appeal to the breaft of any polite freethinker, whether, in the purſuit of gratifying a predominant paffion, he hath not always felt a wonderful incitement, by reflecting it was a thing forbidden and therefore we fee, in order to cultivate this tafte, the wisdom of the nation hath taken ſpecial care, that the ladies fhould be furnished with prohibited filks, and the men with prohibited wine. And indeed it were to be wished, that fome other prohi- bitions were promoted, in order to improve the plea- fures of the town, which, for want of fuch expedients, begin already, as I am told, to flag and grow languid, giving way daily to cruel inroads from the spleen. : It is likewife propofed, as a great advantage to the public, That if we once difcard the fyftem of the gof pel, all religion will of courfe be banished for ever; and confequently, along with it, thofe grievous prejudices of education; Italian fingers then in vogue. Margarita was afterwards mar ried to Dr. Pepufche. 200 AN ARGUMENT AGAINST education; which, under the names of virtue, conscience, honour, justice, and the like, are fo apt to difturb the peace of human minds; and the notions whereof are ſo hard to be eradicated by right reafon or freethinking, fometimes during the whole courſe of our lives. Here, firſt, I obferve how difficult it is to get rid of a phrafe, which the world is once grown fond of, though the occafion that first produced it be entirely taken away. For feveral years paft, if a man had but an ill-favoured nofe, the deep-thinkers of the age would, fome way or o- ther, contrive to impute the caufe to the prejudice of his education. From this fountain are faid to be derived all our foolish notions of juftice, piety, love of our coun- try; all our opinions of God, or a future ftate, heaven, hell, and the like: and there might formerly, perhaps, have been fome pretence for this charge. But fo effec- tual care hath been fince taken to remove thofe prejudi- ces, by an entire change in the methods of education, that (with honour I mention it to our polite innovators) the young gentlemen who are now on the fcene, feem to have not the leaft tincture left of thofe infufions, or ftring of thofe weeds: and, by confequence, the reafon for abolishing nominal Chriftianity upon that pretext, is wholly ceaſed. For the reft, it may perhaps admit a controverfy, whe- ther the baniſhing all notions of religion whatfoever would be convenient for the vulgar. Not that I am, in the leaſt, of opinion with thoſe who hold religion to have been the invention of politicians, to keep the lower part of the world in awe, by the fear of invifible powers; unleſs mankind were then very different from what it is now: for I look upon the maſs or body of our people here in England to be as free-thinkers, that is to fay, as ftanch unbelievers, as any of the highest rank. But I conceive ſome ſcattered notions about a fuperior power to be of fingular ufe for the common people, as furniſh- ing excellent materials to keep children quiet when they grow peevish, and providing topics of amufement in a tedious winter night. Laftly, It is propofed, as a fingular advantage, That the aboliſhing of Chriftianity will very much contribute to the uniting of Proteftants, by enlarging the terms of communion, ABOLISHING CHRISTIANITY. ΤΟΥ communion, fo as to take in all forts of diffenters; who are now ſhut out of the pale upon account of a few ce- remonies, which all fides confefs to be things indifferent: That this alone will effectually anſwer the great ends of a scheme for comprehenfion, by opening a large noble gate, at which all bodies may enter; whereas the chaf fering with diffenters, and dodging about this or the o- ther ceremony, is but like opening a few wickets, and leaving them at jar, by which no more than one can get in at a time, and that not without ftooping, and fideling, and ſqueezing his body. To all this I anfwer, That there is one darling incli- nation of mankind, which ufually affects to be a retainer to religion, though fhe be neither its parent, its godmo- ther, or its friend; I mean the fpirit of oppofition, that lived long before Chriſtianity, and can eaſily fubfift without it. Let us, for instance, examine wherein the oppofition of fectaries among us confifts. We fhall find Chriſtianity to have no ſhare in it at all. Does the gof- pel any where preferibe a ftarched, fqueezed, counte- nance, a fiff formal gait, a fingularity of manners and habit, or any affected modes of fpeech, different from the reaſonable part of mankind? Yet, if Chriſtianity did not lend its name to ftand in the gap, and to employ or divert theſe humours, they muft of neceflity be ſpent in contraventions to the laws of the land, and diſturb- ance of the public peace. There is a portion of en- thufiafm affigned to every nation, which, if it hath not proper objects to work on, will burit out, and fet all in a flame. If the quiet of a ftate can be bought by only flinging men a few ceremonies to devour, it is a purchaſe no wife man would refufe. Let the maſtiffs a- mufe themſelves about a fheep's fkin ftuffed with hay, provided it will keep them from worrying the flock. The inftitution of convents abroad feems in one point a ftrain of great wiſdom; there being few irregularities in human paffions, that may not have recourie to vent themſelves in fome of thofe orders; which are fo many retreats for the fpeculative, the melancholy, the proud, the filent, the politic, and the morofe, to ſpend them- felves, and evaporate the noxious particles: for each of whom we in this ifland are forced to provide feve- K 5 ral 202 AN ARGUMENT AGAINST ral fects of religion, to keep them quiet. And whenever Chriſtianity fhall be abolished, the legislature muft find fome other expedient to employ and entertain them. For what imports it how large a gate you open, if there will be always left a number, who place a pride and a merit in refufing to enter? Having thus confidered the moſt important objections against Christianity, and the chief advantages propofed by the abolishing thereof; I fhall now, with equal defe- rence and fubmiffion to wifer judgments as before, pro- ceed to mention a few inconveniencies that may happen, if the gospel fhould be repealed; which perhaps the pro- jectors may not have fufficiently confidered. And, firft, I am very fenfible how much the gentlemen of wit and pleaſure are apt to murmur, and be choked at the fight of fo many daggled-tail parfons, who hap- pen to fall in their way, and offend their eyes. But at the fame time thefe wife reformers do not confider, what an advantage and felicity it is, for great wits to be always provided with objects of fcorn and contempt, in order to exercife and improve their talents, and divert their ſpleen from falling on each other, or on themſelves; efpecially when all this may be done without the leaft imaginable danger to their perfons. And to urge another argument of a parallel nature: If Chriftianity were once ablifhed, how could the free- thinkers, the ſtrong reafoners, and the men of profound learning, be able to find another fubject fo calculated in all points whereon to diſplay their abilities? What won- derful productions of wit fhould we be deprived of, from thole whofe genius, by continual practice, hath been wholly turned upon raillery and invectives againſt religion, and would therefore never be able to fhine or diftinguish themſelves upon any other fubject? We are daily complaining of the great decline of wit among us; and would we take away the greateft, perhaps the only topic we have left? Who would ever have fuf- pected Afgil for a wit, or Toland for a philofopher, if the inexhauftible ftock of Chriftianity had not been at hand to provide them with materials? What other fubject through all art or nature could have pro- duced Tindal for a profound author, or furnifhed him with ABOLISHING CHRISTIANITY. 203 with readers? It is the wife choice of the fubject that alone adorns and diſtinguiſhes the writer. For had an hundred fuch pens as theſe been employed on the fide of religion, they would have immediately funk into filence and oblivion. ! Nor do I think it wholly ground lefs, or my fears al- together imaginary, that the abolishing of Chriftianity may perhaps bring the church in danger, or at leaft put the fenate to the trouble of another fecuring vote. I defire I may not be miſtaken; I am far from prefuming to affirm, or think, that the church is in danger at pre- fent, or as things now ftand; but we know not how foon it may be fo, when the Chriftian religion is repealed. As plaufible as this project ſeems, there may be a dan- gerous defign lurking under it. Nothing can be more no- torious, than that the Atheists, Deifts, Socinians, Anti- trinitarians, and other fubdivifions of free-thinkers, are perfons of little zeal for the prefent ecclefiaftical efta- blishment. Their declared opinion is for repealing the facramental teft; they are very indifferent with regard: to ceremonies ; nor do they hold the jus divinum of Epif- copacy. Therefore this may be intended as one politic ſtep towards altering the conftitution of the church eſta- bliſhed, and fetting up Prefbytery in the ftead; which I leave to be further confidered by thoſe at the helm. 1 In the last place,. I think nothing can be more plain; than that, by this expedient, we fhall run into the evil we chiefly pretend to avoid; and that the aboliſhment: of the Chriſtian religion, will be the readieſt.courſe we can take to introduce Popery. And.I am the more in- clined to this opinion, becauſe we know it hath been the conftant practice of the Jefuits, to fend over emiſſa- ries, with inftructions to perſonate themſelves members of the feveral prevailing fects among us. So it is record- ed that they have at fundry times appeared in the guife of Prefbyterians, Anabaptifts, Independents, and Quakers, according as any of theſe were moft in credit: fo, fince. the fashion hath been taken up of exploding religion, the Popish miffionaries have not been wanting to mix. with the free-thinkers; among whom Toland, the great oracle of the Anti-chriftians, is an Iriſh prieſt, the: fon of an Irish prieſt; and the moſt learned and inge-. *་ niouss 204 AN ARGUMENT AGAINST : nious author of a book called the rights of the Chriftian church, was, in a proper juncture, reconciled to the Ro- mifh faith; whofe true fon, as appears by a hundred paf- fages in this treatife, he ftill continues. Perhaps I could add fome others to the number but the fact is beyond difpute. And the reafoning they proceed by is right: for fuppofing Chriftianity to be extinguifhed, the people will never be at eafe till they find out fome other method of worship; which will as infallibly produce fuperftiti- on, as fuperftition will end in Popery. · And therefore, if, notwithstanding all I have ſaid, it ftill be thought neceffary to have a bill brought in tor repealing Chriftianity, I would humbly offer an amend ment, that inftead of the word Chriftianity, may be put religion in general; which, I conceive, will much bet- ter answer all the good ends propofed by the projectors of it. For as long as we leave in being a God and his pro- vidence, with all the neceflary confequences which curi- ous and inquifitive men will be apt to draw from fuch premiffes; we do not ſtrike at the root of the evil, though we fhould ever fo effectually annihilate the prefent fcheme of the gofpel. For of what ufc is freedom of thought, if it will not produce freedom of action; which is the fole end, how remote foever in appearance, of all objec- tions againft Chriftianity? and therefore the free-think- ers confider it as a fort of edifice, wherein all the parts have fuch a mutual dependance on each other, that, if you happen to pull out one fingle nail, the whole fabric inuit fall to the ground. This was happily expreí fed by him, who had heard of a text brought for proof of the Trinity, which in an ancient manufcript was dif- ferently read; he thereupon immediately took the hint, and, by a fudden deduction of a long ferites, moft lo- gically concluded, Why, if it be as you fay, I may fafely whore and drink on, and defy the parfon. From which, and many the like inftances, eaſy to be produced, I think nothing can be more manifeft, than that the quarrel is not against any particular points of hard digeftion in the † A forites differs from a fyllogifm, in that it takes only the minor propofition. An example of this figure may be feen, vol. 5. in John Bull, part 2. chap. 17. near the end, p. 268, Hawkef. ABOLISHING CHRISTIANITY. 205 the Chriſtian fyftem; but againſt religion in general; which, by laying reftraints on human nature, is fuppofed the great enemy to the freedom of thought and action. Upon the whole, if it.fhall be thought for the benefit of church and ſtate, that Chriſtianity be abolished; I conceive, however, it may be more convenient to defer the execution to a time of peace; and not venture in this conjuncture to difoblige our allies; who, as it falle out, are all Chriftians; and many of them, by the pre- judices of their education, fo bigotted, as to place a fort of pride in the appellation. If, upon being rejected by them, we are to trufl to an alliance with the Turk, we fhall find ourſelves much deceived: for as he is too re- mote, and generally engaged in war with the Perfian Emperor, fo his people would be more fcandalized at our infidelity, than our Chriftian neighbours. For the Turks are not only ftrict obfervers of religious worſhip; but, what is worfe, believe a God; which is more than is required of us, even while we preferve the name of Chriftians. To conclude: Whatever fome may think of the great advantages to trade by this favourite fheme, I do very much apprehend, that in fix months time after the act is paffed for the extirpation of the gospel, the Bank and Eaft-India flock may fall, at least, one per cent. And fince that is fifty times more than ever the wildom of our age thought fit to venture for the preſervation of Chrifti- anity, there is no reaſon we fhould be at fo great a lofs merely for the fake of destroying it. A Pro- [ 206 ] A Project for the ADVANCEMENT of RE- LIGION and the REFORMATION of MAN- NERS. * By a PERSON of QUALITY. Written in the year 1709 To the Countess of BERKELEY. + MADAM, M Y intention in prefixing your Ladyfhip's name, is not, after the common form, to defire your prot.ċti n of the following papers; which I take to be a very unreasonable requeit; fince, by being in- fcribed to your Ladyfhip, though without your know- ledge, and from a concealed hand, you cannot recom- mend *The author appears in earneft throughout this whole treatiſe ; and the dedication, or introduction, is in a ftrain of ferious pane y- ric, which the Lady, to whom it is addretfed, undoubtedly deſerved. But as the pamphlet is of the fatirical kind, I am apt to imagine, that the Dean put a violence upon himſelf, in chufing to appear candidly ferious, rather than to fimile under his ufual maſk of gravity. thinks, upon thefe occalions, 1 perceive him writing in fhackles. Orrery. Mc- In the Project, &c. Dr. Swift appears in the character of a gre it infpired prophet. He crieth aloud, he fpareth not, he lifteth up bis voice like a trumpet, If. lviii. 1. He rebuketh all ranks of men for their depravities and corruptions, their profaneneis, their blafphemy and irreligion. His difcourfe he addrefeth unto his fovereign, and, beyond all contradiction, proveth it to be an important duty incum- bent on all princes, to encourage and to enforce morals and religion, by exerting their utmoſt authority. He then applieth himſelf to the legiflature, conjuring them to forward fo noble a defign, and to pro- vide remedies againſt that torrent of iniquity, which, if not vigorouf- ly oppoſed, would certainly increaſe, and never ftop in its career, un- til it fubverted the conftitution. And, finally, he declares, in the prophetic ftyle and fpirit, that a reformation of manners, and turn- ing unto God, are the beſt natural as well as religious means, to bring the war to an happy conclufion. Swift. This excellent Lady, was Elifabeth, the daughter of Baptift Noel, Viſcount Campden, and fifter to Edward Earl of Gainsborough, Hawkef. A PROJECT, &c. 207 mend them without fome fufpicion of partiality. My real defign is, I confefs, the very fame I have often de- teſted in moſt dedications; that of publiſhing your praiſes to the world; not upon the fubject of your noble birth, for I know others as noble; or of the greatnefs of your fortune, for I know others far greater; or of that beau- tiful race, (the images of their parents,) which calls you mother; for even this may perhaps have been equalled in fome other age or country. Befides, none of theſe advantages do derive any accomplishments to the owners, but ferve, at beft, only to adorn what they really poffefs. What I intend, is your piety, truth, good ſenſe, and good nature, affability, and charity; wherein I wish your Ladyship had many equals, or any fuperiors; and I wish I could fay, I knew them too, for then your Ladyfhip might have had a chance to efcape this addrefs. In the mean time, I think it highly neceffary, for the intereſt of virtue and religion, that the whole kingdom fhould be informed in fome parts of your character: for in- ſtance, That the easiest and politeft converſation, joined with the trueft piety, may be obſerved in your Lady- fhip, in as great perfection as they were ever feen apart in any other perfon: That, by your prudence and management under feveral difadvantages, you have pre- ferved the luftre of that moſt noble family into which you are graffed, and which the unmeafurable profufion of ancestors, for many generations, had too much eclipfed: Then how happily you perform every office of life, to which Providence hath called you; in the edu- cation of thofe two incomparable daughters, whoſe con- duct is ſo univerfally admired; in every duty of a pru- dent, complying, affectionate wife; in that care which defcends to the meancit of your domeſtics; and, laſtly, in that endleſs bounty to the poor, and difcretion where to diſtribute it. I infift on my opinion, that it is of im- portance for the public, to know this, and a great deal more of your Ladyfhip; yet whoever goes about to in- form them, fhall, inftead of finding credit perhaps be cenfured for a flatterer. To avoid fo ufual a reproach, I declare this to be no dedication, but merely an introduc- tion to a propofal for the advancement of religion and morals, by tracing, however imperfectly, fome few linea- ments 208 A PROJECT FOR THE ments in the character of a Lady, who hath ſpent all her life in the practice and promotion of both. A Mong all the ſchemes offered to the public in this projecting age, I have obferved, with fome dif- pleature, that there have never been any for the improve- ment of religion and morals: which, beſides the piety of the deſign from the confequence of fuch a reformation in a future life, would be the beft natural means for ad- vancing the public felicity of the ſtate, as well as the prefent happinefs of every individual. For as much as faith and morality are declined among us, I am altoge- ther confident, they might, in a ſhort time, and with no very great trouble, be railed to as high a perfection as numbers are capable of receiving. Indeed the method is fo eafy and obvious, and fome prefent opportunities fo good, that, in order to have this project reduced to prac- tice, there ſeems to want nothing more than to put thoſe in mind, who, by their honour, duty, and intereft, are chiefly concerned. But becauſe it is idle to propofe remedies before we are affured of the diſeaſe, or to be in fear till we are convinced of the danger; Ifhall first fhew in general, that the nation is extremely corrupted in religion and morals; and then I will offer a fhort ſcheme for the reformation of both. As to the first, I know it is reckoned but a form of fpeech,when divines complain of the wickednels of the age. However I believe, upon a fair compariſon with other times. and countries, it would be found an undoubted truth. For, first, to deliver nothing but plain matter of fact, without exaggeration or fatire, I fuppofe it will be granted, that hardly one in an hundred among our peo- ple of quality or gentry appears to act by any principle of religion; that great numbers of them do entirely dif card it, and are ready to own their difbelief of all revela- tion in ordinary difcourfe. Nor is the cafe much better among the vulgar, eſpecially in great towns, where the profanenefs and ignorance of handicraftfmen, fmall tra- ders, fervants, and the like, are to a degree very hard to be imagined greater. Then it is obferved abroad, that no race of mortals hath fo little fenfe of religion, as the Eng- lifh ADVANCEMENT OF RELIGION. 209 lifh foldiers. To confirm which, I have been often told by great officers of the army, that, in the whole compaſs of their acquaintance, they could not recollect three of their profeffion, who ſeemed to regard or believe one fyllable of the gospel. And the fame at leaft may be affirmed of the fleet. The confequences of all which upon the actions of men, are equally manifeft. They never go about, as in former times, to hide or palliate their vices, but expofe them freely to view, like any o- ther common occurrences of life, without the leaft re- proach from the world or themſelves. For inftance, any man will tell you, he intends to be drunk this evening, or was fo laſt night, with as little ceremony or fcruple, as he would tell you the time of the day. He will let you know he is going to a wench, or that he has got a clap, with as much indifferency, as he would a piece of public news. He will fwear, curfe, or blafpheme, without the leaft paffion or provocation. And though all regard for reputation is not quite laid afide in the other fex, it is however at fo low an ebb, that very few among them feem to think virtue and conduct of any necelfity for preferving it. If this be not fo, how comes it to paſs, that women of tainted reputations find the fame counte- nance and reception in all public places, with thoſe of the niceft virtue, who pay and receive vifits from them without any manner of fcruple? Which proceeding, as it is not very old among us, fo I take it to be of moſt pernicious confequence. It looks like a fort of com- pounding between virtue and vice; as if a woman were allowed to be vitious, provided the be not a profligate ; as if there were a certain point where gallantry ends, and infamy begins: or that an hundred criminal amours were notas pardonable as half a ſcore. Befides thofe corruptions already mentioned, it would be endleſs to enumerate fuch as arife from the excels of play or gaming; the cheats, the quarrels, the oaths, and blafphemies among the men; among the women, the neglect of houſehold-affairs, the unlimited freedoms, the indecent paflion; and, laftly, the known inlet to all lewdnefs, when after an ill run the person must answer the defects of the pure: the rule on fuch occafions hold- ing A 210 A PROJECT FOR THE ing true in play, as it does in law, Quod not habet in cru- mena, luat in corpore. But all theſe are trifles in compariſon, if we ſtep into other ſcenes, and confider the fraud and cozenage of trading men and fhopkeepers; that infatiable gulf of in- juftice and opprellion, the law; the open traffic of all civil and military employments, (I wish it refted there,) without the leaft regard to merit or qualifications; the corrupt management of men in office; the many de- teſtable abuſes in chufing thoſe who reprefent the peo- ple; with the management of interefts and factions a- mong the reprefentatives: to which I muſt be bold to add, the ignorance of fome of the lower clergy; the mean fervi e temper of others; the pert pragmatical demean- our of feveral young flagers in divinity, upon their first producing themſelves into the world; with many other circumstances needlefs, or rather invidious to mention which, falling in with the corruptions already related, have, however unjustly, almoft rendered the whole order contemptible. This is a fhort view of the general depravities among us, without entering into particulars, which would be an endless labour. Now, as univerfal and deep-rooted as thefe appear to be, I am utterly deceived, if an ef- fectual remedy might not be applied to most of them; neither am I at prefent upon a wild fpeculative project, but fuch a one as may be eaſily put in execution. For, while the prerogative of giving all employments continues in the crown, either immediately, or by ſub- ordination, it is in the power of the prince to make piety and virtue become the faſhion of the age, if at the fame time he would make them neceffary qualifications for fa- vour and preferment. It is clear from prefent experience, that the bare ex- ample of the beſt prince will not have any mighty influ- ence, where the age is very corrupt. For when was there ever a better prince on the throne than the prefent Queen? I do not talk of her talent for governinent, her love of the people, or any other qualities that are pure- ly Perhaps the author intended to intimate that it extended to ecclefiaftical. Hawkef. ADVANCEMENT OF RELIGION. 211 ly regal; but her piety, charity, temperance, conjugal love, and whatever other virtues do beft adorn a private life; wherein, without queſtion or flattery, the hath no fuperior: yet neither will it be fatire, or peevifh invective, to affirm, that infidelity and vice are not much diminiſh- ed fince her coming to the crown; nor will, in proba- bility, till more effectual remedies be provided. Thus human nature feems to lie under the diſadvan- tage, that the example alone of a vitious prince will in time corrupt an age, but the example of a good one will not be fufficient to reform it without further endea- vours. Princes must therefore fupply this defect by a vigorous exercife of that authority which the law has left them, by making it every man's intereft and honour to cultivate religion and virtue, by rendering vice a dif- grace, and the certain ruin to preferment or pretenfions: all which they ſhould firſt attempt in their own courts and families. For instance, might not the Queen's do- meſtics of the middle and lower fort be obliged, upon penalty of fufpenfion or lofs of their employments, to a conftant weekly attendance on the fervice of the church to a decent behaviour in it; to receive the facrament four times a-year; to avoid fwearing, and irreligious profane difcourfes, and to the appearance at leaft of temperance and chastity? Might not the care of all this be committed to the ftrict inspection of proper officers? Might not thoſe of higher rank, and nearer ac- cefs to her Majefty, receive her own commands to the fame purpoſe, and be countenanced or disfavoured ac- cording as they obey? Might not the Queen lay her in- junctions on the bishops, and other great men of un- doubted piety, to make diligent inquiry, and give her notice, if any perfon about her fhould happen to be of libertine principles or morals? Might not all thoſe who enter upon any office in her Majefty's family, be obliged to take an oath parallel with that againft fimony, which is adminiftered to the clergy? It is not to be doubted, but that if thefe or the like proceedings were duly obferved, morality and religion would foon be- come faſhionable court-virtues, and be taken up as the only methods to get or keep employments there; which 212 A PROJECT FOR THE which alone would have mighty influence upon many of the nobility and principal gentry. But if the like methods were purfued as far as poffible, with regard to thoſe who are in the great employments of ſtate, it is hard to conceive how general a reformation they might in time produce among us. For if piety and virtue were once reckoned qualifications neceffary to preferment, every man thus endowed, when put into great ftations, would readily imitate the Queen's exam- ple in the diſtribution of all offices in his difpofal; efpe- cially if any apparent tranfgreffion, through favour or partiality, would be imputed to him for a misdemeanor, by which he muft certainly forfeit his favour and ſtari- on. And there being fuch great numbers in employ- ment, ſcattered through every town and county in this kingdom, if all thefe were exemplary in the conduct of their lives, things would foon take a new face, and reli- gion receive a mighty encouragement. Nor would the public weal be leſs advanced; fince of nine offices in ten that are ill executed, the defect is not in capacity or un- derſtanding, but in common honefty. I know no em- ployment, for which piety difqualifies any man: and if it did, I doubt the objection would not be very ſeaſon- ably offered at prefent; becauſe it is perhaps too juft a re- flection, that, in the difpofal of places, the queftion, whe- ther a perfon be fit for what he is recommended to? is generally the laft that is thought on or regarded. I have often imagined, that fomething parallel to the office of cenfors anciently in Rome, would be of mighty ufe among us, and could be easily limited from running into any exorbitances. The Romans under- ftood liberty at least as well as we, were as jealous of it, and upon every occafion as bold afferters: yet I do not remember to have read any great complaints of the abuſes in that office among them; but many admirable effects of it are left upon record. There are feveral per- nicious vices frequent and notorious among us, that eſcape or elude the punishment of any law we have yet invented, or have had no law at all againſt them; ſuch as atheiſm, drunkennefs, fraud, avarice, and fe- veral others; which, by this inftitution, wildly regu- lated, ADVANCEMENT OF RELIGION. 213 lated, might be much reformed. Suppofe, for inftance, that itinerary commiffioners were appointed to infpect, every where throughout the kingdom, into the conduct (at least) of men in office, with refpect to their morals and religion, as well as their abilities; to receive the com- plaints and informations that ſhould be offered againſt them, and make their report here upon oath to the court or the miniftry, who fhould reward or punish according- ly. I avoid entering into the particulars of this or any other fcheme: which coming from a private hand, might be liable to many defects, but would foon be digefted by the wiſdom of the nation. And, furely, fix thouſand pounds a-year would not be ill laid out among as many commillioners duly qualified, who in three divifions fhould be perfonally obliged to take their yearly circuits for that purpofc. But this is befide my prefent defign; which was only to fhew what degree of reformation is in the power of the Queen, without the interpofition of the legislature; and which her Majesty is, without question, obliged in confcience to endeavour by her authority, as much as ſhe doth by her practice. 1 It will be cafily granted, that the example of this great town hath a mighty influence over the whole king- dom; and it is as manifeft, that the town is equally in- fluenced by the court, and the miniftry, and thoſe who, by their employments or their hopes, depend upon them. Now, if under fo excellent a princefs as the prefent Queen, we would fuppofe a family triatly regulated, as I have above propofed; a miniltry where every fingle perfon was of diftinguished piety; if we fhould fuppofe all great offices of ftate and law filled after the fame manner, and with fuch as were equally diligent in chufing perions, who, in their feveral fubordinations, would be obliged to follow the examples of their fuperiors, under the penalty of lofs of favour and place; will not every body grant, that the empire of vice and irreligion would be foon deftroyed in this great metropolis, and receive a terrible blow through the whole iſland, which hath ſo great an intercourſe with it, and ſo much affects to follow its fafhions? For, if religion were once underſtood to be the necef- fary 214 A PROJECT FOR THE fary step to favour and preferment, can it be imagined that any man would openly offend againſt it, who had the leaſt regard for his reputation or his fortune? There is no quality fo contrary to any nature, which men can- not affect, and put on upon occafion, in order to ferve an intereft, or gratify a prevailing paffion. The proud- eft man will perfonate humility, the morofeft learn to flatter, the lazieſt will be fedulous and active, where he is in purſuit of what he hath much at heart: how rea- dy therefore would most men be to ftep into the paths of virtue and piety, if they infallibly led to favour and fortune! If fwearing and profaneness, fcandalous and avowed lewdness, exceffive gaming and intemperance, were a lit- tle diſcountenanced in the army, I cannot readily fee what ill confequences could be apprehended. If gentle- men of that profeffion were at leall obliged to fome ex- ternal decorum in their conduct; or even if a profligate life and character were not a ineans of advancement, and the appearance of piety a moft infallible hindrance, it is impoffible the corruptions there ſhould be ſo univer- fal and exorbitant. I have been aflured by ſeveral great officers, that no troops abroad are fo ill difciplined as the English; which cannot well be otherwife, while the common ſoldiers have perpetually before their eyes, the vitious example of their leaders; and it is hardly poffible for thofe to commit any crime, whereof theſe are not in- finitely more guilty, and with lefs temptation. It is commonly charged upon the gentlemen of the army, that the beaftly vice of drinking to excefs hath been lately, from their example, reftored among us; which for fome years before was almoft dropt in Eng- land. But, whoever the introducers were, they have fucceeded to a miracle; many of the young nobility and gentry are already become great proficients, and are under no manner of concern to hide their talent, but are got beyond all fenfe of fhame, or fear of reproach. This might foon be remedied, if the Queen would think fit to declare, that no young perfon of quality whatſoever, who was notorioufly addicted to that or any other vice, fhould be capable of her favour, or e- ven ADVANCEMENT OF RELIGION, 215 ven admitted into her prefence; with pofitive command to her miniſters, and others in great office, to treat them in the fame manner: after which, all men who had any regard for their reputation, or any profpect of prefer- ment, would avoid their commerce. This would quick- ly make that vice fe fcandalous, that thofe who could not ſubdue, would at leaſt endeavour to diſguiſe it. By the like methods a ftop might be put to that ruin- ous practice of deep gaming: and the reaſon why it pre- vails fo much, is, becauſe a treatment directly oppofite in every point is made ufe of to promote it; by which means the laws enacted againft this abufe are wholly eluded, For if It cannot be denied, that the want of ſtrict difcipline in the univerſities hath been of pernicious confequence to the youth of this nation, who are there almost left en- tirely to their own management, eſpecially thofe among them of better quality and fortune; who, becauſe they are not under a neceffity of making learning their main- tenance, are cafily allowed to pafs their time, and take their degrees with little or no improvement. Than which there cannot well be a greater abfurdity. no advancement of knowledge can be had from thoſe places, the time there fpent is at beft utterly loft, becauſe every ornamental part of education is better taught elfe- where. And as for keeping youths out of harm's way, I doubt, where fo many of them are got together, at full liberty of doing what they pleafe, it will not anſwer the end. But whatever abute, corruptions, or devia- tions from ftatutes have crept into the univerfities through neglect, or length of time, they might in a great degree. be reformed, by flrict injunctions from court (upon each particular) to the visitors and heads of houſes; befides the peculiar authority the Queen may have in feveral colleges, whereof her predeceffors were the founders, And among other regulations, it would be very conve- nient to prevent the excess of drinking, with that fcurvy cultom among the lads, and parent of the former vice, the taking of tobacco, where it is not abfolutely neceffary in point of health. From the Univerſities the young nobility, and others of 216 A PROJECT FOR THE of great fortunes, are fent for early up to town, for fear of contracting any airs of pedantry by a college-educa- tion. Many of the younger gentry retire to the inns of court, where they are wholly left to their own difcre- tion. And the confequence of their remiflnefs in educa- tion appears by obferving, that nine in ten of thoſe who rife in the church or the court, the law or the ar- my, are younger brothers, or new men, whoſe narrow fortunes have forced them upon induftry and applica- tion. As for the inns of court, unless we fuppofe them to be much degenerated, they must needs be the worst infti- tuted feminaries in any Chriſtian country; but whether they may be corrected without interpofition of the le- giflature, I have not ſkill enough to determine. However, it is certain, that all wife nations have agreed in the ne- ceffity of a ſtrict education; which confifted, among other things, in the obfervance of moral duties, eſpeci- ally juftice, temperance, and chastity, as well as the knowledge of arts, and bodily exercifes. But all theſe among us are laughed out of doors. Without the leaft intention to offend the clergy, I cannot but think, that, through a miſtaken notion and practice, they prevent themfelves from doing much fer- vice, which otherwife might lic in their power, to re- ligion and virtue: I mean, by affecting fo much to con- verfe with each other, and caring fo little to mingle with the laity. They have their particular clubs, and par- ticular coffeeboufes, where they generally appear in cluf- ters. A ſingle divine dares hardly fhew his perfon a- mong numbers of fine gentlemen; or if he happens to fall into fuch company, he is filent and fufpicious, in continual apprehenfion that fome pert man of pleaſure ſhould break an unmannerly jeft, and render him ridi- culous. Now, I take this behaviour of the clergy to be juſt as reaſonable, as if the phyficians fhould agree to Ipend their time in vifiting one another, or their feveral apothecaries, and leave their patients to fhift for them- felves. In my humble opinion, the clergy's buſineſs lies entirely among the laity neither is there perhaps a more effectual way to forward the falvation of men's fouls, than for fpiritual perfons to make themfelves as agreeable ADVANCEMENT OF RELIGION. 217 agreeble as they can in the converfations of the world; for which a learned education gives them great advan tage, if they would pleaſe to improve and apply it. It ſo happens, that the men of pleaſure, who never go to church, nor ufe themfelves to read books of devotion, form their ideas of the clergy, from a few poor ftrollers they often obferve in the ſtreets, or ſneaking out of fome perſon of quality's houfe, where they are hired by the lady at ten fhillings a-month: while thofe of better fi- gure and parts do feldom appear to correct theſe no- tions. And let fome reafoners think what they pleafe, it is certain, that men must be brought to esteem and love the clergy, before they can be perfuaded to be in love with religion. No man values the beſt medicine, if adminiſtered by a phyſician, whoſe perſon he hates or defpifes. If the clergy were as forward to appear in all companies, as other gentlemen, and would a little study the arts of converfation, to make themſelves agreeable, they might be welcome to every party, where there was the leaft regard for politeness or good fenfe; and confequently prevent a thouſand vitious or profane dif- courſes, as well as actions: neither would men of under- ftanding complain, that a clergyman was a conſtraint up- on the company, because they could not ſpeak blafphc- my or obscene jelts before him. While the people are fo jealous of the clergy's ambition, as to abhor all thoughts of the return of ecclefiaftic difcipline among them, I do not fee any other method left for men of that function to take, in order to reform the world, than by uſing ali honeſt arts to make themſelves acceptable to the laity. 'This, no doubt, is part of that wifdom of the ferpent, which the author of Chriftianity directs; and is the very method used by St. Paul, who became all th`ngs to all men, to the Jews a Jew,and a Greek to the Greeks. How to remedy thefe inconveniences, may be a mat- ter of fome difficulty; fince the clergy feem to be of an opinion, that this humour of fequettering themselves is a part of their duty; nay, as I remember, they have been told fo by fome of their bifhops in their pastoral letters, particularly by one || among them of great merit VOL. I. L Suppofed to be Dr. Burnet, Biſhop of Saliſbury, and 218 A PROJECT FOR THE and diſtinction; who yet, in his own practice, hath all his life-time taken a courſe directly contrary. But I am deceived, if an awkward fhame, and fear of ill ufage from the laity, have not a greater fhare in this miſtaken conduct, than their own inclinations. However, if the outward profeffion of religion and virtue were once in practice and countenance at court, as well as among all men in office, or who have any hopes or dependence for preferment, a good treatment of the clergy would be the neceffary confequence of fuch a reformation; and they would foon be wife enough to fee their own duty and in- tereft, in qualifying themselves for lay converſation, when once they were out of fear of being choked by ribaldry or profaneness. 4 There is one further circumftance upon this occafion, which I know not whether it will be very orthodox to mention. The clergy are the only fet of men among us, who conſtantly wear a diſtinct habit from others: the confequeuce of which (not in reafon, but in fact) is this, that as long as any fcandalous perfons appear in that drefs, it will continue, in fome degree, a general mark of contempt. Whoever happens to fee a coundrel ir a gown, recling home at midnight, (a fight neither frequent or miraculous,) is apt to entertain an ill idea of the whole order, and at the fame time to be extremely comforted in his own vices. Some remedy might be put to this, if thoſe fraggling gentlemen, who come up to town to frek their fortunes, were fairly difmiffed to the West-In- dies; where there is work enough, and where fome better provifion fhould be made for them, than I doubt there is at prefent. Or, what if no perfon were al- lowed to wear the habit, who had not fome preferment in the church, or at leaſt ſome temporal fortune fuffici- ent to keep him out of contempt ? though, in my opi- nion, it were infinitely better, if all the clergy (except the bishops) were permitted to appear like other men of the graver fort, unless at thofe feafons when they are doing the bufinefs of their function: There is one abufe in this town, which wonderfully contributes to the promotion of vice; that fuch men are often put into the commiffion of the peace, whoſe intereft ADVANCEMENT OF RELIGION. 219 intereft it is, that virtue ſhould be utterly baniſhed from among us; who maintain, or at leaſt enrich themſelves by encouraging the groffeft immoralities; to whom all the bawds of the ward pay contribution for fhelter and protection from the laws. Thus thefe worthy magi- ftrates, inſtead of leffening enormities, are the occafion of juſt twice as much debauchery as there would be without them. For thofe infamous women are forced upon doubling their work and induftry, to anſwer dou- ble charges, of paying the juſtice, and fupporting them- felves; like thieves who eſcape the gallows, and are let out to fteal, in order to diſcharge the gaoler's fees. It is not to be queftioned, but the Queen and mini- fry might easily redrefs this abominable grievance, by enlarging the number of justices of the peace, by endea vouring to chufe men of virtuous principles, by admit- ting none who have not confiderable fortunes; perhaps, by receiving into the number fome of the most eminent clergy: then, by forcing all of them, upon ſevere pe- nalties, to act when there is occafion, and not permit- ting any who are offered to refuſe the commiffion. But in theſe two laſt cafes, which are very material, I doubt there will be need of the legislature. The reformation of the ftage is entirely in the power of the Queen; and in the confequences it hath upon the minds of young people, doth very well deferve the ftrictest care. Befides the indecent and profane paf- fages; beſides the perpetual turning into ridicule the very function of the priesthood, with other irregulari- ties, in most modern comedies, which have been often objected to them; it is worth obferving the distributive juſtice of the authors, which is conftantly applied to the punishment of virtue, and the reward of vice; directly oppofite to the rules of their beſt critics, as well as to the practice of dramatic poets in all other ages and countries. For example, a country-'fquire, who is re- preſented with no other vice but that of being a clown, and having the provincial accent upon his tongue, which is neither a fault, nor in his power to remedy, muſt be condemned to marry a caft wench, or a crack- ed chambermaid. On the other fide, a rake-hell of the L 2 town, 220 A PROJECT FOR THE town, whofe character is fet off with no other accom- pliſhment but exceffive prodigality, profaneneſs, intem- perance, and luft, is rewarded with a lady of great for- tune to repair his own, which his vices had almoſt ruin- ed. And as, in a tragedy, the hero is reprefented to have obtained many victories, in order to raiſe his cha- racter in the minds of the fpectators; fo the hero of a comedy is reprefented to have been victorious in all his intrigues, for the fame reafon. I do not remember, that our English poets ever fuffered a criminal amour to fucceed upon the ſtage, till the reign of King Charles II. Ever fince that time, the alderman is made a cuckold, the deluded virgin is debauched, and adultery and for- nication are fuppofed to be committed behind the ſcenes, as part of the action. Thefe, and many more corrup- tions of the theatre, peculiar to our age and nation, need continue no longer, than while the court is content to connive at or neglect them. Surely a penfion would not be ill employed on fome men of wit, learning, and virtue, who might have power to ftrike out every offen- five or unbecoming paffage from plays already written, as well as thofe that may be offered to the ftage for the future. By which, and other wife regulations, the theatre night become a very innocent and uſeful diver- fion, inſtead of being.a fcandal and reproach to our re- ligion and country. The propofals I have hitherto made for the advance- ment of religion and morality, are fuch as come with- in the reach of the adminiſtration; fuch as a pious active prince, with a fteddy refolution, might foon bring to effect. Neither am I aware of any objections to be raiſed againſt what I have advanced; unless it fhould be thought, that the making religion a neceffary step to intereſt and favour, might increaſe hypocrify among us: and I readily believe it would. But if one in twenty fhould be brought over to true piety, by this or the like methods, and the other nineteen be only hypocrites, the advantage would ſtill be great Befides, hypocri- fy is much more eligible, than open infidelity and vice: it wears the livery of religion; it acknowleges her authority, and is cautious of giving ſcandal. Nay, a long continued difguife is too great a constraint upon human ADVANCEMENT OF RELIGION. 227 human nature, eſpecially an Engliſh difpofition. Men would leave off their vices out of mere wearineſs, rather than undergo the toil and hazard, and perhaps the ex- pence, of practising them perpetually in private. And I believe it is often with religion as it is with love; which, by much diffembling, at laft grows real. All other projects to this great end have proved hither- to ineffectual. Laws againſt immorality have not been executed; and proclamations occafionally iffued out to inforce them, are wholly unregarded, as things of form. Religious focieties, though begun with excellent inten- tion, and by perfons of true piety, are faid, I know not whether truly or no, to have dwindled into factious clubs, and grown a trade to enrich little knaviflì informers of the meanest rank, fuch as common conftables, and broken fhopkeepers. And that ſome effectual attempt fhould be made to- ward fuch a reformation, is perhaps more neceffary than people commonly apprehend; becauſe the ruin of a ſtate is generally preceded by an univerfal degeneracy of man- ners, and contempt of religion; which is entirely our cafe at preſent. Diis te minorem quod geris, imperas. Hor. Neither is this a matter to be deferred, till a more con- venient time of peace and leifure. A reformation in men's faith and morals, is the beft natural, as well as re- ligious means, to bring the war to a good concluſion : becauſe, if men in truft performed their duty for con- fcience fake, affairs would not fuffer through fraud, falfe- hood, and neglect, as they now perpetually do. And if they believed a God, and his providence, and acted accordingly, they might reaſonably hope for his divine afliſtance in ſo juſt a cauſe as ours. Nor could the majefty of the English.crown appear, upon any occafion, in greater luftre, either to foreign- ers or fubjects, than by an adminiftration, which, produc- ing fuch great effects, would difcover fo much power. And power being the natural appetite of princes, a li- mited monarch cannot fo well gratify it in any thing, as a ftrict execution of the laws. Befides, all parties would be obliged to cloſe with fo good 222 A PROJECT FOR THE good a work as this, for their own reputation. Neither is any expedient more likely to unite them. For the moft violent partymen I have ever obferved, are fuch as, in the conduct of their lives, have difcovered leaft fenfe of religion and morality; and when all fuch are laid aſide, at leaſt thofe among them who fhall be found incorrigi- ble, it will be a matter perhaps of no great difficulty to reconcile the reſt. The many corruptions at prefent in every branch of bufinefs, are almoft inconceivable. I have heard it com- puted by ſkilful perfons, that of fix millions raiſed every year for the fervice of the public, one third, at leaſt, is funk and intercepted through the feveral claffes and fubordinations of artful men in office, before the re- mainder is applied to the proper ufe. This is an acci- dental ill effect of our freedom. And while fuch men are in truſt, who have no check from within, nor any views but towards their intereft, there is no other fence against them, but the certainty of being hanged upon the firſt diſcovery, by the arbitrary will of an unlimited monarch, or his vizier Among us the only danger to be apprehended, is the lofs of an employment; and that danger is to be eluded a thoufand ways. Befides, when fraud is great, it furnishes weapons to defend it- felf: and, at worft, if the crimes be fo flagrant, that a man is laid afide out of perfect ſhame, (which rarely happens,) he retires loaded with the ſpoils of the nation et fruitur diis iratis. I could name a commiffion, where feveral perfons, out of a falary of five hundred pounds, without other vifible revenues, have always lived at the rate of two thouſand, and laid out forty or fifty thouſand upon purchaſes of land or annuitics. An hun- dred other inftances of the fame kind might eaſily be produced. What remedy therefore can be found against Tuch grievances in a conftitution like ours, but to bring religion into countenance, and encourage thofe, who, from the hope of future reward, and dread of future punishment, will be moved to act with juſtice and inte- grity? This is not to be accomplished any other way, than by introducing religion as much as poffible to be the turn and fashion of the age; which only lies in the power of ADVANCEMENT OF RELIGION. 223 of the adminiſtration; the prince with utmoſt ſtrictneſs regulating the court, the miniftry, and other perfons in great employment; and thefe, by their example and au- thority, reforming all who have dependence on them. It is certain, that a reformation fuccefsfully carried on in this great town, would, in time, ſpread itſelf over the whole kingdom; fince most of the confiderable youth paſs here that feafon of their lives, wherein the ſtrongeſt impreffions are made, in order to improve their educa- tion, or advance their fortune; and thofe among them who return into their feveral countries, are fure to be fol- lowed and imitated, as the greateſt patterns of wit and good-breeding. And if things were once in this train; that is, if vir- tue and religion were established as the neceffary titles to reputation and preferment, and if vice and infidelity were not only loaden with infamy, but made the infalli ble ruin of all men's pretenfions ;. out duty, by becoming our intereft, would take root in our natures, and mix with the very genius of our people; fo that it would not be eafy for the example of one wicked prince to bring us back to our former corruptions. I have confined myſelf (as it is before obferved) to thofe methods for the advancement of piety, which are. in the power of a prince limited like ours, by a strict exc- cution of the laws already in force. And this is enough for a project that comes without any naine or recommen- dation; I doubt a great deal more, than will be fud- denly reduced into practice. Though, if any difpofi- tion fhould appear towards fo good a work, it is certain, that the affiſtance of the legiſlative power would be ne- ceffary to make it more complete. I will inftance only a few particulars. In order to reform the vices of this town, which, as we have faid, hath fo mighty an influence on the whole kingdoin, it would be very inftrumental to have a law made, that all taverns and alehouſes ſhould be obliged to difmifs their company by twelve at night, and ſhut up their doors; and that no woman ſhould be fuffered- to enter any tavern or alehoufe upon any pretence what- foever. It is eafy to conceive, what a number of ill confequences fuch a law would prevent.; the mif- chicfa 224 A PROJECT FOR THE chiefs of quarrels, and lewdness, and thefts, and mid- night-brawls, the difeafes of intemperance and venery and a thouſand other evils needlefs to mention. Nor would it be amifs, if the mafters of thoſe public houſes were obliged, upon the fevereft penalties, to give only a proportioned quanity of drink to every company; and when he found his guests difordered with excels, to re- fuſe them any more. I believe there is hardly a nation in Chriftendom, where all kind of fraud is practifed in fo unmeaſurable a degree as with us. The lawyer, the tradefman, the mechanic, have found fo many arts to deceive in their feveral callings, that they far outgrow the common pru- dence of mankind, which is in no fort able to fence againſt them. Neither could the legislature in any thing more confult the public good, than by providing fome effec- tual remedy againſt this evil; which in feveral cafes de- ferves greater punishment, than many crimes that are capital among us. The vintner, who, by mixing poi- fon with his wine, deftroys more lives than any malig- nant difeafe; the lawyer, who perfuades you to a pur- chafe, which he knows is mortgaged for more than the worth, to the ruin of you and your family; the banker or fcrivener, who takes all your fortune, to diſpoſe of, when he has beforehand refolved to break the following day, do furely deferve the gallows much better than the wretch who is carried there for ſtealing a horfe. It cannot easily be answered to God or man, why a law is not made for limiting the prefs; at leaſt ſo far as to prevent the publishing of fuch pernicious books, as, under pretence of free-thinking, endeavour to over- throw thoſe tenets in religion, which have been held in- violable almoſt in all ages, by every fect that pretends to be Chriſtian; and cannot therefore, with any colour of reafon, be called points in controverfy, or matters of Speculation, as fome would pretend. The doctrine of the Trintty, the divinity of Chrift, the immortality of the foul, and even the truth of all revelation, are daily ex- ploded and denied in books openly printed; though it is to be fuppofed, neither party avow fuch principles, ** * Neither Whig nor Tory. Harvkes. ΟΙ ADVANCEMENT OF RELIGION. 225 + or own the fupporting of them to be any way neceffary to their fervice. It would be endleſs to fet down every corruption or defect which requires a remedy from the legislative power. Senates are like to have little regard for any propofals that come from without doors; though, under a due fenfe of my own inabilities, I am fully convinced, that the unbiaffed thoughts of an honeſt and wife man, employed on the good of his country, may be better di- gefted, than the refults of a multitude, where faction and interest too often prevail; as a fingle guide may direct the way, better than five hundred who have contrary views, or look afquint, or fout their eyes. I fhall thereforetore mention but one more particular, which I think the parliament ought to take under con- fideration; whether it be not a fhame to our country, and a ſcandal to Chriftianity, that in many towns, where there is a prodigious increaſe in the number of houſes and inhabitants, fo little care fhall be taken for the building of churches, that five parts in fix of the people are abfolutely hindered from hearing divine fervice? particularly here in London, ‡ where a fingle minifter, with one or two forry curates, hath the care fometimes of above twenty thousand fouls incumbent on him. A neglect of religion fo ignominious, in my opinion, that it can hardly be equalled in any civilized age or country. But, to leave theſe airy imaginations of introducing new laws for the amendment of mankind; what I prin- cipally infilt on, is a due execution of the old, which lies wholly in the crown, and in the authority derived from thence. I return therefore to my former affertion, That if ſtations of power, truft, profit, and honour, were conftantly made the rewards of virtue and piety, ſuch an adminiftration must needs have a mighty influence on the faith and mortals of the whole kingdom and men of great abilities would then endeavour to excel in the duties of a religious life, in order to qualify them- felves L 5 This paragraph is known te have given the firſt hint to certain Bishops, particularly to Bishop Atterbury, in the Earl of Oxford's ministry, to procure a fund for building fifty new churches in Lon- don. 226 A PROJECT FOR THE felves for public fervice. I may poffibly be wrong in fome of the means I prefcribe towards this end; but that is nó material objection against the defign itſelf. Let those who are at the helm contrive it better, which perhaps they may eaſily do. Every body will agree, that the diſeaſe is manifeft, as well as dangerous; that fome remedy is neceffary, and that none yet applied hath been. effectual; which is a fufficient excufe for any man who wiſhes well to his country, to offer his thoughts, when he can have no other end in view but the public good, The prefent Queen is a princefs of as many and great virtues as ever filled a throne: how would it brighten her character to the preſent and after ages, if fhe would exert her utmoſt authority to inftil fome ſhare of thoſe virtues into her people, which they are too degenerate to learn only from her example? and, be it ſpoke with all the veneration poffible for fo excellent a fovereign, her beſt endeavours in this weighty affair are a moſt im- portant part of her duty, as well as of her intereſt, and her honour. But it muſt be confeffed, that, as things are now, every man thinks he has laid in a fufficient ſtock of merit, and may pretend to any employment, provided he hath been loud and frequent in declaring himſelf hearty for the go- vernment, It is true, he is a man of pleasure, a free- thinker; that is, in other words, he is profligate in his morals, and a defpifer of religion; but in point of party, he is one to be confided in; he is an afferter of liberty and property; he rattles it out against Popery and arbi- trary power, and prieftcraft and high-church. It is e- nough he is a perfon fully qualified for any employ- inent in the court or the navy, the law or the revenue ; where he will be fure to leave no arts untried of bribery, fraud, injuftice, or oppreflion, that he can practiſe with any hope of impunity. No wonder fuch men are trua to a government, where liberty runs high, where pro- perty, however attained, is fo well fecured, and where the adminiftration is at leaft fo gentle it is impoffible they could chuſe any other conftitution, whichout changing to their lofs. Fidelity to a prefent eſtabliſhment is indeed the prin- cipal means to defend it from a foreign enemy; but without ADVANCEMENT OF RELIGION. 227 without other qualifications, will not prevent corruptions. from within; and ſtates are more often ruined by theſe than the other. To conclude: Whether the propoſals I have offered towards a reformation, be ſuch as are moſt prudent and convenient, may probably be a queftion: but it is none at all, whether fome reformation be abſolutely neceflary: becauſe the nature of things is fuch, that if abuſes be not remedied, they will certainly increaſe, nor ever ſtop As till they end in a fubverfion of a commonwealth. there must always of neceffity be fome corruptions, fo, in a well-inftituted ftate, the executive power will be always contending againſt them, by reducing things (as Machia- vel fpeaks) to their first principles, never letting abufes grow inveterate, or multiply fo far that it will be hard to find remedies, and perhaps impoffible to apply them. As he that would keep his houſe in repair, muſt attend every little breach or flaw, and fupply it immediately, elfe time alone will bring all to ruin; how much more the common accidents of ftorms and rain? He must live in perpetual danger of his houfe falling about his ears; and will find it cheaper to throw it quite down, and build it again from the ground, perhaps upon a new foundation, or at leaſt in a new form, which may neis ther be fo fafe, nor fo convenient as the old. The [228] The SENTIMENTS of a CHURCH-OF-ENG- LAND MAN with refpect to RELIGION and GOVERNMENT. † WE Written in the year 1708. HOEVER hath examined the conduct and proceedings of both parties for fome years paft, whether in or out of power, cannot well conceive it poffible to go far towards the extremes of either, with- out offering fome violence to his integrity or under- flanding. A wife and a good man may indeed be fome- times induced to comply with a number, whofe opinion he generally approves, though it be perhaps againſt his own. But this liberty fhould be made uſe of upon very few occafions, and thofe of fmall import- ance, This piece is adapted to that particular period in which it was written. The style of the whole pamphlet is nervous, and, except in fome few places, impartial. The fate of Holland is juſtly, and, at the fame time, concifely delineated. This tract is very well worth one's reading and attention: and it confirms an obfervation which will perpetually occur, that Swift cxcels in whatever ftyle or manner he affumes. When he is in earnest, his ftrength of reafon carries with it conviction; when in jeft, every competitor in the race of wit is left behind him. Orrery. This picce feemeth to have been one of Swift's projects for unit- ing of parties, and written with a defign to check that rage and vio- lence, which fubfifted in thoſe times between the contending facti- ons of Whig and Tory; and perhaps to recommend, in the place of that abominable rancour and malice, which had broken all the laws of charity and hoſpitality among human kind, thofe candid falutary principles, with reſpect to religion and government, which, if right- ly comprehended and vigorously purfued, might certainly preferve the whole conftitution, both of church and fate, for ten thouſand generations. Swift. This appears to be an apology for the Tories, and a juftification of them against the mifreprefentations of the Whigs, who were then in the ministry, and ufed every artifice to perpetuate their power. Mr. Harley, afterwards Lord Oxford, had, by the influence of the Duke of Marlborough and Lord Treaſurer Godolphin, been lately removed from his poft of Principal Secretary of State; and Mr. St. John, afterwards Lord Bolingbroke, refigned his place of Secretary at ar, and Sir Simon Harcourt that of Attorney General. Hazuk‹f.. THE SENTIMENTS, &.. 229 ance, and then only with a view of bringing over his own fide another time to fomething of great and more public moment. But to facrifice the innocency of a friend, the good of our country, or our own confcience, to the humour or paffion, or intereſt of a party, plainly fhews, that either our heads or our hearts are not as they should be.. Yet this very practice is the very funda- mental law of each faction among us; as may be obvi- ous to any, who will impartially, and without engage- ment, be at the pains to examine their actions: which however is not ſo eaſy a taſk; for it feems a principle in human nature, to incline one way more than another, even in matters where we are wholly unconcerned. And it is a common obfervation, that in reading a hif of facts done a thousand years ago, or ftanding by at play among thoſe who are perfect ftrangers to us, we are apt to find our hopes and wifhes engaged on a fudden in favour of one fide more than another. No wonder then that we are all fo ready to intereft ourſelves in the courfe of public affairs, where the moft inconfiderable have fome real fhare, and, by the wonderful importance which every man is of to himſelf, a very great imaginary tory one. And indeed, when the two parties that divide the whole commonwealth, come once to a rupture, with- out any hopes left of forming a third with better prin- ciples, to balance the others, it feems every man's duty to chufe one of the two fides, though he cannot entirely approve of either; and all pretences to neutrality are justly exploded by both, being too ftale and obvious; only intending the fafety and eaſe of a few individuals, while the public is embroiled. This was the opinion and practice of the latter Cato, whom I efteem to have been the wifeſt and beſt of all the Romans. * But before things proceed to open violence, the trueft fer- vice a private man may hope to do his country, is by unbiafling his mind as much as poffible, and then endea- vouring to moderate moderate between the rival powers; which muſt needs be owned a fair proceeding with the world; becauſe it is of all others the leaſt confiſtent with the * One of the fextumvirate in Gulliver, part 3. chap. 7. vol. 4. P. 187. 230 THE SENTIMENTS OF A } the common deſign of making a fortune by the merit of an opinion. I have gone as far as I am able in qualifying myſelf: to be fuch a moderator. I believe I am no bigot in re- ligion, and I am fure I am none in government. I'con- verfe in full freedom with many confiderable men of both parties; and if not in equal number, it is purely accidental and perfonal, as happening to be near the court, and to have made acquaintance there, more under one miniftry than another. Then I am not under the neceffity of declaring myfelf by the proſpect of an em- ployment.. And, laftly, if all this be not fufficient I in- duftriouſly conceal my name, which wholly exempts me from any hopes and fears in delivering my opinion. In confequence of this free uſe of my reaſon, I can- not poffibly think. fo well or fo ill of either party, as they would endeavour to perſuade the world of each o- ther, and of themſelves.. For inſtance, I do not charge it upon, the body of the Whigs or the Tories, that their feveral principles lead them to introduce Prefbytery, and the religion of the church of Rome, or a common- wealth, and arbitrary power. For why fhould any par- ty be accuſed of a principle, which they folemnly dif own and proteſt againſt ? But to this they have a mu- tual anſwer ready: they both affure us, that their ad- verfaries are not to be believed; that they diſown their principles out of fear, which are manifelt enough, when we examine their practices. To prove this, they will produce inftances, on one fide, either of avowed Pref- byterians, or perfons of libertine and atheistical tenets and on the other, of profeffed Papifts, or fuch as are openly in the intereft of the abdicated family. Now, it: is very natural for all fubordinate fects and denominati- ons in a ſtate, to fide with fome general party, and to chufe that which they find to agree with themſelves in. fome general principle. Thus, at the restoration, the Pref byterians, Anabaptifts, Independents, and other fects, did all, with very good reafon, unite and folder up their. ſeveral ſchemes to join against the church; who, without. regard to their diftinctions, treated them all as equal ad-. verfaries. Thus our prefent diffenters do very naturally cloſe in with the Whigs, who profefs moderation, declare they 1 CHURCH-OF-ENGLAND MAN. 231 they abhor all thoughts of perfecution, and think it hard, that thoſe who differ only in a few ceremonies and ſpecu- lations, fhould be denied the privilege and profit of ferv- ing their country in the higheft employments of ſtate. Thus, the Atheiſts, libertines, defpifers of religion and revelation in general; that is to fay, all thofe who ufual- ly pass under the name of Freethinkers, do properly join with the fame body; becauſe they likewife preach up moderation, and are not fo over-nice to diftinguiſh be- tween an unlimited liberty of confcience, and an unli- mited freedom of opinion. Then, on the other fide, the profeffed firmness of the Tories for Epiſcopacy, as an apoftolical inftitution; their averfion to thofe fects who lie under the reproach of having once deftroyed their conſtitution, and who, they imagine, by too indifcreet a zeal for reformation, have defaced the primitive mo- del of the church; next, their moderation for monar- chical government in the common courfe of fucceffion, and their hatred to republican ſchemes: theſe, I ſay, are principles which not only the nonjuring zealots pro- fefs, but even papifts themfelves fall readily in with. And every extreme here mentioned, flings a general ſcandal upon the whole body it pretends to adhere to. But furely no man whatſoever ought, in juſtice or good manners, to be charged with principles he actually dif- owns, unleſs his practices do openly, and without the leaſt room for doubt, contradict his profeffion; not upon fmall furmifes, or becauſe he has the misfortune to have ill men fometimes agree with him in a few general ſen- timents. However, though the extremes of W’big and Tory feem, with little juſtice, to have drawn religion in- to their controverfies, wherein they have fmall concern; yet they both have borrowed one leading principle from the abuſe of it; which is, to have built their feveral fyf- tems of political faith, not upon inquiries after truth, but upon oppofition to each other; upon injurious ap- pellations, charging their adverſaries with horrid opini- ons, and then reproaching them for the want of charity; et neuter faljo. In order to remove theſe prejudices, I have thought nothing could be more effectual, than to defcribe the fentinents of a church-of-England man with refpect to religion 232 THE SENTIMENTS OF A religion and government. This I fhall endeavour to do in fuch a manner, as may not be liable to the leaft objection from either party, and which I am confident would be affented to by great numbers in both, if they were not miflead to thofe mutual misreprefentations, by fuch mo- tives as they would be ashamed to own. I fhall begin with religion. And here, though it makes an odd found, yet it is ne- ceffary to fay, that whoever profeffeth himfelf a member of the church of England, ought to believe a God, and his providence, together with revealed religion, and the divinity of Chrift. For befides thofe many thouſands, who (to ſpeak in the phraſe of divines) do practically deny all this by the immorality of their lives, there is no ſmall number, who, in their converfation and writings, directly, or by confequence, endeavour to overthrow it: yet all theſe place themſelves in the liſt of the national church, though at the fame time (as it is highly reafon- able) they are great sticklers for liberty of confcience. To enter upon particulars: A church-of England man has a true veneration for the fcheme eltabliſhed among us of ecclefiaftic government; and though he will not determine whether Epifcopacy be of divine right, he is fure it is moft agreeable to primitive inftitution; fitteft of all others for preferving order and purity, and, under its prefent regulations, belt calculated for our civil ſtate : he fhould therefore think the abolishment of that order among us, would prove a mighty ſcandal and corruption to our faith, and manifeftly dangerous to our monar- chy; nay, he would defend it by arms against all the powers on earth, except our own legiflature; in which cafe he would fubmit as to a general calamity, a dearth or a pestilence. As to rites and ceremonies, and forms of prayer, he allows there might be fome ufeful alterations; and more, which in the profpect of uniting Chriftians might be ve- ry fupportable, as things declared in their own nature indifferent; to which he would therefore readily com- ply, if the clergy, or (though this be not fo fair a me- thod) if the legislature fhould direct: yet at the fame time CHURCH-OF-ENGLAND MAN. 233 time he cannot altogether blame the former for their unwillingness to confent to any alteration; which, be- ide the trouble, and perhaps difgrace, would certainly never produce the good effects intended by it. The only condition that could make it prudent and juft for the clergy to comply in altering the ceremonial, or any other indifferent part, would be a firm refolution in the legiſlature to interpofe, by fome ftrict and effectual laws, to prevent the rifing and ſpreading of new fects, how plaufible foever, for the future; elfe there muſt never be an end: and it would be to act like a man, who ſhould pull down and change the ornaments of his houfe, in compliance with every one who was difpofed find fault as he paffed by; which, befides the perpetual trouble and expence, would very much damage, and perhaps in time deftroy the building. Sects in a ſtate feem only tolerated with any reafon, becauſe they are already ſpread; and becauſe it would not be agreeable with fo mild a government, or fo pure a religion as ours, to uſe violent methods againſt great numbers of miflaken people, while they do not manifeftly endanger the conftitution of either. But the greatest advocates for general liberty of confcience will allow, that they ought to be checked in their beginnings, if they will allow them to be an evil at all, or, which is the fame thing, if they will only grant it were better for the peace of the ftate, that there should be none. But while the clergy confider the natural temper of man- kind in general, or of our own country in particular, what affurances can they have, that any compliances they fhall make, will remove the evil of diffention, while the liberty ftill continues of profeffing whatever new opi- nions we pleaſe? Or how can it be imagined, that the body of diffenting teachers, who must be all undone by fuch a revolution, will not caft about for fome new ob- jections to with-hold their flocks, and draw in freſh pro- felytes by fome further innovations or refinements? Upon theſe reaſons he is for tolerating fuch different forms in religious worship as are already admitted; but by no means for leaving it in the power of those who are tolerated, to advance their own models upon the ruin of what is already cftablished; which it is natural for ર THE SENTIMENTS OF A 234 for all fects to defire, and which they cannot be juſtified by any confiftent principles, if they do not endeavour and yet which they cannot fucceed in, without the ut- moſt danger to the public peace. To prevent theſe inconveniencies, he thinks it highly juft, that all rewards of truft, profit, or dignity, which the ftate leaves in the difpofal of the adminiſtration, fhould be given only to thofe whofe principles direct them to preſerve the conſtitution in all its parts. In the late affair of occafional conformity, the general argument of thoſe who were againſt it, was not, to deny it an evil in itſelf, but that the remedy propofed was violent, un- timely, and improper; which is the Biſhop of Saliſbury's* opinion, in the fpeech he made and publiſhed againſt the bill. But however juft their fears or complaints might have been upon that ſcore, he thinks it a little too grofs and precipitate, to employ their writers already in arguments for repealing the facramental. teft, upon no wifer a maxim, than that no man fhould, on the acs count of confcience, be deprived the liberty of ferving his country; a topic which may be equally applied to admit Papifts, Atheiſts, Mabometans, Heathens, and Jews. If the church wants members of its own to employ in the fervice of the public, or be fo unhappily contrived, as to exclude from its communion fuch perfons who are likelieft to have great abilities, it is time it ſhould be al- tered, and reduced into fome more perfect, or at leaſt more popular form: but in the mean while it is not al- together improbable, that when thoſe who diflike the conftitution, are fo very zealous in their offers for the ſervice of their country, they are not wholly unmindful of their party, or of themſelves. The Dutch, whofe practice is fo often quoted to prove and celebrate the great advantages of a general liberty of confcience, have yet a national religion pro- feffed by all who bear office among them. But why ſhould they be a precedent for us, either in religion or government? Our country differs from theirs, as well in fituation, foil, and productions of nature, as in the ge- nius and complexion of inhabitants. They are a com- monwealth founded on a fudden, by a defperate at- tempt, * Dr. Burnet, CHURCH-OF-ENGLAND MAN. 235 tempt, in a defperate condition; not formed or digefted into a regular fyftem by mature thought and reaſon, but huddled up under the preffure of fudden exigencies; calculated for no long duration, and hitherto fubfifting by accident in the midſt of contending powers, who cannot yet agree about ſharing it amongst them. Theſe difficulties do indeed preſerve them from any great cor- ruptions, which their crazy conftitution would extreme- ly fubject them to in a long peace. That confluence of people in a perfecuting age to a place of refuge neareſt at hand, put them upon the neceffity of trade, to which they wifely gave all cafe and encouragement. And if we could think fit to imitate them in this laft particular, there would need no more to invite foreigners among us; who feem to think no farther than how to fecure their property and confcience, without projecting any ſhare in that government which gives them protection, or call- ing it perfecution, if it be denied them. But I fpeak it for the honour of our adminiſtration, that although our fects are not ſo numerous as thofe in Holland, which I preſume is not our fault, and I hope is not our misfor- tune, we much excel them, and all Christendom befides, in our indulgence to tender conſciences. * One fingle compliance with the national form of receiving the fa- crament, is all we require to qualify any fectary among us for the greatest employments in the ftate; after which he is at liberty to rejoin his own affemblies for the rest of his life. Befides, I will fuppofe any of the numerous fects in Holland to have fo far prevailed, as to have raif- ed a civil war, deftroyed their government and religion, and put their adminiftrators to death; after which I will fuppofe the people to have recovered all again, and to have fettled on their old foundation. Then I would put a query, whether that feet which was the unhappy inftrument of all this confufion, could reaſonably expect to be intrufted for the future with the greateſt employ- ments, or indeed to be hardly tolerated among them? To go on with the fentiments of a church-of-England man : * When this was written, there was no law against occafional conformity. 236 THE SENTIMENTS OF A man: He does not fee how that mighty paffion for the church, which fome men pretend, can well confiſt with thoſe indignities and that contempt they beftow on the perfons of the clergy. It is a ftrange mark whereby to diftinguiſh high-churchmen, that they are fuch who ina- gine the clergy can never be too low. He thinks the maxim theſe gentlemen are fo fond of, that they are for an humble clergy, is a very good one: and fo is he, and for an humble laity too; fince humility is a virtue that perhaps equally befits and adorns every ſtation of life. But then, if the fcribblers on the other fide freely fpeak the fentiments of their party, a divine of the church of England cannot look for much better quarter from thence. You fhall obſerve nothing more frequent in their weekly papers, than a way of affecting to con- found the terms of clergy and high-church, of applying both indifferently, and then loading the latter with all the calumny they can invent. They will tell you, they honour a clergyman; but talk at the fame time, as if there were not three in the kingdom who could fall in with their definition. After the like manner they infult the univerſities, as poiſoned fountains, and corrupters of youth. : Now, it ſeems clear to me, that the Wigs might eaſily have procured and maintained a majority among the clergy, and perhaps in the univerfities, if they had not too much encouraged or connived at this intemperance of ſpeech and virulence of pen, in the worſt and moſt proſtitute of their party among whom there hath been, for fome years paft, fuch a perpetual clamour against the ambition, the implacable temper, and the cove- toufneſs of the priesthood; fuch a cant of high-church, and perfecution, and being priest-ridden; ſo many reproaches about narrow principles, or terms of communion; then fuch fcandalous reflections on the univerfities, for infect- ing the youth of the nation with arbitrary and Jacobite principles, that it was natural for thoſe who had the care of religion and education, to apprehend ſome ge- neral defign of altering the conftitution of both. And all this was the more extraordinary, becauſe it could not cafily be forgot, that whatever oppofition was made CHURCH-OF-ENGLAND MAN. 237 made to the ufurpations of King James, proceeded alto- gether from the church of England, and chiefly from the clergy, and one of the univerfities. For if it were of any uſe to recal matters of fact, what is more notorious than that prince's applying himſelf first to the church of England; and, upon their refufal to fall in with his mea- fures, making the like advances to the diffenters of all kinds who readily, and almoft univerfally complied with him, affecting, in their numerous addreffes and pamphlets, the ſtyle of our brethren the Roman Catholics; whofe interests they put on the fame foot with their own and fome of Cromwell's officers took pofts in the army raiſed againſt the Prince of Orange. Theſe pro- ceedings of theirs they can only extenuate by urging the provocations they had met from the church in King Charles's reign; which, though perhaps excufable upon the fcore of human infirinity, are not by any means a plea of merit equal to the conftancy and fufferings of the bishops and clergy, or of the head and fellows of Mag- dalen college, that furniſhed the Prince of Orange's de- claration with fuch powerful arguments to justify and promote the revolution. Therefore a church-uf-England man abhors the humour of the age, in delighting to fling fcandals upon the cler- gy in general; which, befides the difgrace to the refor- mation, and to religion itſelf, caſt an ignominy upon the kingdom, that it doth not deferve. We have no better inaterials to compound the priesthood of, than the mafs of mankind, which, corrupted as it is, thofe who receive orders must have fome vices to leave behind them when they enter into the church; and if a few do ſtill adhere, it is no wonder, but rather a great one, that they are no worfe. Therefore he cannot think ambition, or love of power, more juftly laid to their charge, than to other men; becaufe that would be to make religion itſelf, or at leaſt the beſt conftitution of church-government, an- fwerable for the errors and depravity of human nature. Within theſe laſt two hundred years, all forts of tem- poral power have been wrefted form the clergy, and much of their ecclefiaftic: the reaſon or juſtice of which proceeding I fhall not examine; but that the remedies were 238 THE SENTIMENTS OF A were a little too violent, with respect to their pollesions, the legislature hath lately confeffed by the remiffion of their firſt-fruits. Neither do the common libellers deny this; who, in their invectives, only tax the church with an inſatiable defire of power and wealth, (equally com- mon to all bodies of men, as well as individuals,) but thank God, that the laws have deprived them of both. However, it is worth obferving the juftice of parties. The fects among us are apt to complain, and think it hard ufage, to be reproached now, after fifty years, for over- turning the ſtate, for the murder of a King, and the in- dignity of an ufurpation; yet theſe very men, and their partifans, are continually reproaching the clergy, and lay- in to their charge, the pride, the avarice, the luxury, the ignorance, and fuperftition of Popish times, for a thousand years paſt. He thinks it a fcandal to government, that fuch an unlimited liberty ſhould be allowed of publiſhing books againſt thoſe doctrines in religion, wherein all Chriſtians have agreed; much more to connive at fuch tracts as re- ject all revelation, and by their confequences often deny the very being of a God. Surely it is not a fufficient atonement for the writers, that they profefs much loyal- ty to the preſent government, and fprinkle up and down fome arguments in favour of the diffenters; that they dif pute as ftrenuously as they can, for liberty of confcience, and inveigh largely against all ecclefiaftics under the name of high-church; and, in ſhort, under the ſhelter of fome popular principles in politics and religion, under- mine the foundations of all piety and virtue. As he doth not reckon every fchifm of that damnable nature which fome would reprefent, fo he is very far from clofing with the new opinion of thoſe who would make it no crime at ali; and argue at a wild rate, that God almighty is delighted with the variety of faith and worſhip, as he is with the varieties of nature. To fuch abfurdities are men carried by the affectation of free- thinking, and removing the prejudices of education; under which head they have for ſome time begun to lift morali- ty and religion. It is certain, that before the rebellion in 1642, though the number of Puritans (as they were then called) CHURCH-OF-ENGLAND MAN. 239 called) was as great as it is with us, and though they af- fected to follow pafters of that denomination; yet thoſe paftors had epifcopal ordination, poffeffed preferments. in the church, and were fometimes promoted to biſhop- ics themſelves. But a breach in the general form of worship was, in thoſe days, reckoned fo dangerous and finful in itſelf, and fo offenfive to Roman Catholics at home and abroad, that it was too unpopular to be at- tempted neither, I believe, was the expedient then found out, of maintaining feparate paftors out of private puries. When a fchifm is once ſpread in a nation, there grows at length a diſpute, which are the fchifmatics. With- out entering on the arguments ufed by both fides a- mong us to fix the guilt on each other, it is certain, that, in the fenfe of the law, the fchifm lies on that fide which oppofeth itſelf to the religion of the ſtate. I leave it among the divines to dilate upon the danger of fchifm as a fpiritual evil; but I would confider it only as a tem- poral one. And I think it clear, that any great feparati- on from the eſtabliſhed worſhip, though to a new one that is more pure and perfect, may be an occafion of en- dangering the public peace; becauſe it will compoſe a body always in referve, prepared to follow any difcon- tented heads, upon the plaufible pretexts of advancing true religion, and oppofing error, fuperftition, or idola- try. For this reafon Plato lays it down as a maxim, That men ought to worship the gods according to the laws of the country; and he introduces Socrates, in his laft difcourfe, utterly difowning the crime laid to his charge, of teaching new divinities, or methods of worſhip.- Thus the poor Hugonots of France were engaged in a civil war by the fpecious pretences of fome, who, un- der the guife of religion, facrificed fo many thouſand lives to their own ambition and revenge. Thus was the whole body of Puritans in England drawn to be in- ftruments or abettors of all manner of villany, by the artifices of a few men, whoſe deſigns from the firſt were levelled to deſtroy the conftitution both of religion and government. And thus, even in Holland itſelf, where * Lord Clarendon's hiſtory. 240 THE SENTIMENTS OF A where it is pretended that the variety of fects live fo amicably together, and in fuch perfect obedience to the magiftrate, it is notorious, how a turbulent party joining with the Arminians, did, in the memory of our fathers, attempt to deſtroy th. liberty of that republic. So that, upon the whole, where fects are tolerated in a ſtate, it fit they fhould enjoy a full liberty of confcience, and every other privilege of free-born fubjects, to which no power is annexed. And to preferve their obedience up- on all emergencies, a government cannot give them too much eaſe, nor trust them with too little power. The clergy are ufually charged with a perfecuting Spirit, which they are faid to diſcover by an implacable hatred to all diffenters: and this appears to be inore unreaſon- able, becauſe they fuffer lefs in their interefts by a tole- ration, than any of the conforming laity; for while the church remains in its prefent form, no diffenter can poſ- fibly have any ſhare in its dignities, revenues, or power; whereas, by once receiving the facrament, he is render- ed capable of the higheft employments in the ſtate. And it is very poffible, that a narrow education, together with a mixture of human infirmity, may help to beget among fome of the clergy in poffeffion, fuch an averfion and con- tempt for all innovators, as phyficians are apt to have for empirics; or lawyers for pettifoggers, or merchants for ped- lars: but fince the number of fectaries doth not concern the clergy, either in point of intereft or confcience, (it being an evil not in their power to remedy,) it is more fair and reaſonable to fuppofe their diſlike proceeds from the dangers they apprehend to the peace of the common- wealth, in the ruin whereof they must expect to be the firft and greateſt fufferers. To conclude this fection, it must be obferved, that there is a very good word, which hath of late fuffered much by both parties; I mean moderation; which the one fide very jully difowns, and the other as unjustly pretends to Befide what paffes every day in converfation, any man who reads the papers publiſhed by Mr. Lefley, and others of his ftamp, muft needs conclude, that if this author could make the nation fee his adverfaries un- der the colours he paints them in, we have nothing elfe to CHURCH-OF-ENGLAND MAN. 241 to do, but riſe as one man, and deſtroy fuch wretches from the face of the earth. On the other fide, how fhall we excufe the advocates for moderation? among whom I could appeal to a hundred papers of univerfal approbation, by the cauſe they were writ for, which lay fuch principles to the whole body of the Tories, as, if they were true, and believed, our next bufinefs fhould, in prudence, be, to erect gibbets in every parifh, and hang them out of the way. But I fuppofe it is prefumed, the common people understand raillery, or at leaft rhetoric; and will not take hyperboles in too literal a ſenſe; which however in fome junctures might prove a deſperate expe- riment. And this is moderation, in the modern fenfe of the word; to which, fpeaking impartially, the bigots of both parties are equally intitled. SECT. II. The fentiments of a church of England man, with re- Spect to government. WE E look upon it as a very juft reproach, though we cannot agree where to fix it, that there fhould be fo much violence and hatred in religious matters a- mong men who agree in all fundamentals, and only dif- fer in fome ceremonies, or, at moft, mere fpeculative points. Yet is not this frequently the cafe between contending parties in a ftate? For inftance, do not the generality of Whigs and Tories among us profefs to agree in the fame fundamentals, their loyalty to the Queen, their abjuration of the pretender, the fettlement of the crown in the Proteftant line, and a revolution-prin ciple their affection to the church eſtabliſhed, with toleration of diffenters ? Nay, fometimes they go far- ther, and paſs over into each other's principles; the Whigs become great afferters of the prerogative, and the Tories, of the people's liberty; thefe crying down almoft the whole fet of bifhops, and thofe defending them: fo that the differences fairly ftated, would be much of a fort with thofe in religion among us, and a- mount to little more than, who should take place, or go VOL. I. M ix 242 THE SENTIMENTS OF A in and out first, or kifs the Queen's band, and what are thele but a few court-ceremonies? or, who should be in the miniſtry? and what is that to the body of the nation, but a mere fpeculative point? Yet I think it muſt be al- lowed, that no religious fects ever carried their mutual averſions to greater heights than our ftate-parties have done, who, the more to inflame their paffions, have mix- ed religious and civil animofities together; borrowing one of their appellations from the church,with the addi- tion of high and low, how little foever their difputes re- late to the term, as it is generally understood. I now proceed to deliver the fentiments of a church-of- England man, with respect to government. He doth not think the church of England fo narrow- ly calculated, that it cannot fall in with any regular fpecics of government; not doth he think any one re- gular fpccies of government more acceptable to God than another. The three generally received in the fchools have, all of them, their feveral perfections, and are ſub- ject to their feveral depravations. However, few ſtates are ruined by any defect in their inftitution, but gene- rally by the corruption of manners, againſt which the beſt inftitution is no longer a fecurity, and without which a very ill one may fubfift and flourish; whereof there are two pregnant inftances now in Europe. The firit is, the aristocracy of Venice; which, founded upon the wifeft maxims, and digefted by a gicat length of time, hath in our age admitted fo many abufes, through the degeneracy of the nobles, that the period of its duration feems to approach. The other is the united republics of the States-General, where a vein of temperance, in- duftry, parfimony, and a public fpirit, running through the whole body of the people, hath preferved an infant commonwealth, of an untimely birth and fickly confti- tution, for above an hundred years, through fo many dangers and difficulties, as a much more healthy one could never have ftruggled againfl without thofe advan- tages. Where fecurity of perfon and property are preſerved by laws, which none but the tobule can repeal, there the great ends of government are provided for, whether the adminiſtration be in the hands of one or of many. Whe any CHURCH.OF-ENGLAND MAN. 243 any one person or body of men, who do not reprefent the whole, ferze into their hands the power in the laſt reſort, there is properly no longer a government, but what Ariftotle and his followers call the abuse and corruption of one. This diſtinction excludes arbitrary power, in whatever numbers; which, notwithſtanding all that Hobbes, Filmer, and others, have faid to its advantage, I look upon as a greater evil than anarchy itſelf; as much as a favage is in a happier ſtate of life, than a fave at the oar. man can It is reckoned ill manners, as well as unreafonable, for men to quarrel upon difference in opinion; becauſe that is ufually fuppofed to be a thing which no help in himself. But this I do not conceive to be an univerfal infallible maxim, except in thofe cafes where the question is pretty equally difputed among the learned. and the wife. Where it is otherwife, a man of tolerable reafon, fome experience, and willing to be inftructed, may apprehend he has got into a wrong opinion, though the whole courfe of his mind and inclination would per- fuade him to believe it true: he may be convinced that he is in an error, though he does not fee where it lies, by the bad effects of it in the common conduct of his life, and by obferving thofe perlons, for whofe wifdom and goodness he hath the greatest deference, to be of a con- trary fentiment. According to Hobbes's comparifon of reaſoning with cafting up accounts, whoever finds a mif- take in the fum total, muſt allow himſelf out, though, after repeated trials, he may not fee in which article he has inifreckoned. I will inftance in one opinion, which I look upon every man obliged in confcience to quit, or in prudence to conceal; I mean, that whoever argues in defence of abfolute power in a fingle perlon, though he offers the old plaufible plea, that it is his opinion, which he cannot help, unless he be convinc- ed, ought in all free ftates to be treated as the com- mon enemy of mankind. Yet this is laid as heavy charge upon the clergy of the two reigns before the revolution, who, under the terms of paffive obedience and non-refistance, are faid to have preached up the un- limited power of the prince, becauſe they found it a doc- trine that pleafed the court, and made way for their preferment. M 2 a 244 THE SENTIMENTS OF A preferment. And I believe, there may be truth enough in this accufation to convince us, that human frailty will too often interpofe itſelf among perfons of the holiest function. However, it may be offered in excuſe for the clergy, that in the best focieties there are fome ill members, which a corrupted court and miniftry will in- duftriouſly find out and introduce. Befides, it is mani- feft, that the greater number of thofe who held and preached this doctrine, were mifguided by equivocal terms, and by perfect ignorance in the principles of go- vernment, which they had not made any part of their ftudy. The question originally put, and as I remem- ber to have heard it difputed in public fchools, was this, Whether, under any pretence whatsoever, it may be lawful to resist the fupreme magiftrate? which was held in the negative; and this is certainly the right opinion. But many of the clergy and other learned men, deceived by a dubious expreffion, miftook the object to which paffive obedience was due. By the Supreme magiftrate is proper- ly underſtood the legislative power, which in all govern- ments must be abfolute and unlimited. But the word magiftrate fecming to denote a ſingle perſon, and to expreſs the executive power, it came to pass, that the obedience due to the legislature was, for want of knowing or con- fidering this eafy diftinction, mifapplied to the adminiſtra- tion. Neither Neither is it any wonder, that the clergy, or other well-meaning people, fhould fall into this error, which deceived Hobbes himſelf ſo far, as to be the foundation of all the political miſtakes in his books; where he per- petually confounds the executive with the legislative power; though all well-inftituted ftates have ever plac- ed them in different hands; as may be obvious to thoſe who know any thing of Athens, Sparta, Thebes, and other republics of Greece, as well as the greater ones of Carthage and Rome. Befides, it is to be confidered, that when thefe doc- trines began to be preached among us, the kingdom had not quite worn out the memory of that horrid re- bellion, under the confequences of which it had groaned almost twenty years. And a weak prince, in conjunc- tion with a fucceflion of moft proftitute minifters, be- gan again to difpofe the people to new attempts, which 1 ic CHURCH-OF-ENGLAND MAN. 245 it was, no doubt the clergy's duty to endeavour to pre- vent; though fome of them, for want of knowledge in temporal affairs, and others, perhaps, from a worfe prin- ciple, proceeded upon a topic, that, ftrictly followed, would inflave all mankind. Among other theological arguments made ufe of in thofe times in praife of monarchy, and juftification of abfolute obedience to a prince, there feemned to be one of a fingular nature. It was urged, That heaven was go- verned by a monarch, who had none to controul his power, but was abfolutely obeyed: then it followed, that earthly governments were the more perfect, the nearer they imitated the government in heaven. which I look upon as the frongelt argument againſt de- potic power that ever was offered; fince no reaſon can poffibly be affigned, why it is beft for the world, that God almighty hath fuch a power, which doth not direct- ly prove that no mortal man ſhould ever have the like. All But though a church-of England man thinks every fpe- cies of government equally lawful, he does not think them equally expedient; or for every country indifferent- ly. There may be fomething in the climate naturally diſpoſing men towards one fort of obedience; as it is manifest all over Afia, where we never read of any com- monwealth, except fome fmall ones on the weſtern coaſts eftablished by the Greeks. There may be a great deal in the fituation of a country, and in the prefent genius of the people It hath been obferved, that the temperate climates ufually run into moderate governments, and the extremes into defpotic power. It is a remark of Hobbes, that the youth of England are corrupted in their principles of government, by reading the authors. of Greece and Rome, who writ under commonwealths. But it might have been more fairly offered for the honour of liberty, that while the reft of the known world was over-run with the arbitrary government of fingle perfons, arts and feiences took their rife, and flourished, only in thofe few ſmall territories where the people were free. And though learning may con- tinue after liberty is lot, as it did in Rome, for a while, upon the foundations laid under the common- wealth, 246 THE SENTIMENTS OF A wealth, and the particular patronage of fome emperors, yet it hardly ever began under a tyranny in any nation : becauſe flavery is, of all things, the greateſt clog and ob- Itacle to Speculation And, indeed, arbitrary power is but the fift natural ſtep from anarchy, or the favage life; the adjuſting power and freedom being an effect and con- fequence of maturer thinking: and this is no where ſo duly regulated as in a limited monarchy; becauſe I be- lieve it may pass for a maxim in flate, That the admini- ftration cannot be placed in too few hands, nor the legiſla- ture in too many. Now, in this material point the con- ftitution of the English government far exceeds all others at this time on the earth; to which the prefent eſtab- liſhment of the church doth fo happily agree, that, I think, whoever is an enemy to either, muft of neceflity be fo to both. He thinks, as our monarchy is constituted, an heredi- fary right is much to be preferred before election, becauſe the government here, especially by fome late amend- ments, is fo regularly difpofed in all its parts, that it al- moft executes itself: and therefore, upon the death of a prince among us, the adminiftration goes on without any rub or interruption. For the fame reaſons, we have leſs to apprehend from the weakness or fury of our monarchs who have fuch wife councils to guide the firft, and laws to restrain the other. And therefore this hereditary right ſhould be kept ſo facred, as never to break the fuc- ceffion, unlefs where the preferving it may endanger the conftitution; which is not from any intrinfic merit or unalienable right in a particular family, but to avoid the confequences that ufually attend the ainbition of com- petitors, to which elective kingdoms are expofed; and which is the only obftacie to hinder them from arriving at the greatest perfection that government can poffibly reach. Hence appears the abfurdity of that diftinction between a king de facto and one de jure, with refpect to us. For every limited monarch is a king de jure; be- cauſe he governs by the confent of the whole, which is authority fufficient to abolish all precedent right. If a king come in by conquest, he is no longer a limited monarch; if he afterwards content to limitations, he becomes im- mediately king de jure, for the fame reafon. The CHURCH-OF-ENGLAND MAN. 247 The great advocates for fucceffion, who affirm it ought not to be violated upon any regard or conſideration whatfoever, do infilt much upon one argument, that feems to carry little weight. They would have it, that a crown is a prince's birthright, and ought at least to be as well fecured to him and his pofterity, as the inheri- tance of any private man; in fhort, that he has the fame title to his kingdom, which every individual has to h's property. Now, the confequence of this doctrine muſt be, that as a man may find feveral ways to wafte, mi- fpend, or abuse his patrimony, without being anſwerable to the laws; fo a king may in like manner do what he will with his own; that is, he may fquander and mifap- ply his revenues, and even alienate the crown, without being called to an account by his fubjects. They allow fuch a prince to be guilty indeed of much folly and wickedness; but for thefe he is answerable to God, as every private man must be that is guilty of mifmanage- ment in his own concerns. Now, the folly of this rea- foning will best appear, by applying it in a parallel caſe. Should any man argue, that a phyfician is fuppofed to underſtand his own art beft; that the law protects and encourages his profeffion; and therefore, although he fhould manifeftly prefcribe poison to all his patients, whereof they fhould immediately die, he cannot be juttly punished, but is anfwerable only to God: or fhould the fame be offered in behalf of a divine, who would preach againſt religion and moral duties: in either of theſe two cafes, every body would find out the fophiftry, and prefently anfwer, That although common men are not exactly ſkilled in the compofition or appli- cation of medicines, or in preferibing the limits of du- ty; yet the difference between poiſons and remedies is eafily known by their cffects; and common reafon foon diftinguishes between virtue and vice: and it must be neceflary to forbid both theſe the further practice of their profeffions, becaufe their crimes are not purely perfonal to the phyfician or the divine, but deftruc- tive to the public. All which is infinitely ftronger in reſpect to a prince, in whofe good or ill conduct the happineſs or mifery of a whole nation is included; whereas 248 THE SENTIMENTS OF A whereas it is of fmall confequence to the public, farther than example, how any private perfon manageth his pro- perty. But granting that the right of a lineal fucceffor to a crown were upon the fame foot with the property of a fubject; ftill it may at any time be transferred by the legiſlative power, as other properties frequently are. The fupreme power in a ſtate can do no wrong; becauſe whatever that doth, is the action of all: and when the lawyers apply this maxim to the king, they must under- stand it only in that fenfe, as he is adminiftrator of the fupreme power; otherwife it is not univerfally true, but may be controuled in feveral inftances, eafy to produce. And theſe are the topics we must proceed upon to ju- ftify our exclufion of the young pretender in France; that of his fufpected birth being merely popular, and there- fore not made ufe cf, as I remember, fince the revolution, in any ſpeech, vote, or proclamation, where there was occafion to mention him As to the abdication of King James, which the advo- cates on that fide look upon to have been forcible and unjuft, and confequently void in itſelf, I think a man may obſerve every article of the English church, without being in much pain about it. It is not unlikely, that all doors were laid open for his departure, and perhaps not without the privity of the Prince of Orange; as reafona- bly concluding, that the kingdom might better be fettled. in his abfence. But to affirm he had any cauſe to ap- prehend the fame treatment with his father, is an impro- bable fcandal flung upon the nation by a few bigotted French fcribblers, or the invidious affertion of a ruined party at home in the bitterness of their fouls; not one material circumftance agreeing with thoſe in 1648; and the greatest part of the nation having preferved the utmoit horror for that ignominious murder. But whether his removal were caufed by his own fears, or other men's artifices, it is manifeſt to me, that, fuppofing the throne to be vacant, which was the foot the nation went upon, the body of the people was thereupon left at liberty to chufe what form of government they pleaſed, by them- felves, or their reprefentatives. The CHURCH-OF-ENGLAND MAN. -249 The only difficulty of any weight against the proceed- ings at the revolution, is an obvious objection to which the writers upon that fubject have not yet given a direct or fufficient anfwer; as if they were in pain at fome confequences, which they apprehend thofe of the con- trary opinion might draw from it. I will repeat this ob- jection, as it was offered me fome time ago, with all its advantages, by a very pious, learned, and worthy gen- tleman of the nonjuring party. † The force of his argument turned upon this, That the laws made by the fupreme power cannot otherwiſe than by the fupreme power be annulled: That this con- fifted in England of a King, Lords, and Commons, whereof each have a negative voice, no two of them can repeal or enact a law without confent of the third; much lefs may any one of them be entirely excluded from its part of the legislature by a vote of the other two: That all theſe maxims were openly violated at the revolution; where an affembly of the nobles and people, not fummon- ed by the King's writ, (which was an effential part of the conftitution,) and confequently no lawful meeting, did, merely upon their own authority, declare the King to have abdicated, the throne vacant; and gave the crown by a vote to a nephew, when there were three children to inherit; though, by the fundamental laws of the realm, the next heir is immediately to fucceed. Neither doth it appear, how a prince's abdication can make any other fort of vacancy in the throne, than would be caufed by his death; fince he cannot abdicate for his children, who claim their right of fucceffion by act of parliament,) otherwife than by his own confènt, in form, to a bill from the two houſes. And this is the difficulty that feems chiefly to flick with the moſt reaſonable of thoſe who, from a mere fcruple of confcience, refufe to join with us upon the revolution-principle; but for the reft are, I believe, as far from loving arbitrary government as any others can M 5 be, + Mr. Nelfon, author of the feats and fafts of the church of.. England, 250 THE SENTIMENTS OF A be, who are born under a free conftitution, and are al- lowed to have the leaſt ſhare of common good fenfe. In this objection there are two questions included. First, Whether, upon the foot of our conftitution, as it ſtood in the reign of the late King James, a king of Eng- land may be depofed? The fecond is, Whether the peo- ple of England, convened by their own authority, after the king had withdrawn himſelf in the manner he did, had power to alter the ſucceſſion ? I As for the first, it is a point I fhall not prefume to de- termine; and fhall therefore only fay, that, to any man who holds the negative, I would demand the liberty of putting the cafe as ftrongly as I pleafe. I will fuppofe a prince limited by laws like ours, yet running into a thouſand caprices of cruelty, like Nero or Caligula ; will ſuppoſe him to murder his mother and his wife; to commit inceft, to ravifh matrons, to blow up the fenate, and burn his metropolis; openly to renounce God and Chrift, and worship the devil: thefe, and the like exor- bitancics, are in the power of a fingle perfon to commit, without the advice of a miniflry, or affillance of an army. And if ſuch a king as I have defcribed, cannot be de- pofed but by his own confent in parliament, I do not well fee how he can be refifted; or what can be meant by a limited monarchy: or what fignifies the people's confent in making and repealing laws, if the perfon, who admi- nifters, hath no tie but confcience, and is anſwerable to none but God. I defire no ftronger proof that an opi- nion must be falfe, than to find very great abſurdities annexed to it; and there cannot be greater than in the prefent cafe for it is not a bare fpeculation, that kings may run into fuch enormities as are above mentioned; the practice may be proved by examples, not only drawn from the firit Cæfars, or later Emperors, but many modern princes of Europe; fuch as, Peter the Cruel, Philip II. of Spain, John Bafilovits of Mufcovy ; and, in our own nation, King John, Richard III. and Henry VIII. But there cannot be cqual abfurdi- ties fuppofed in maintaining the contrary opinion; becauſe it is certain, that princes have it in their power to keep a majority on their fide by any to- lerable adminiftration, till provoked by continual` op- preflions; CHURCH.OF.ENGLAND MAN. 251 preffions; no man indeed can then anfwer where the madnefs of the people will ftop. As to the fecond part of the objection, Whether the pcople of England, convened by their own authority, upon King James's precipitate departure, had power to alter the fucceffion? In anfwer to this, I think it is manifeft from the prac- tice of the wifeft nations, and who feem to have had the trueft notions of freedom, that when a prince was laid afide for male adminiftration, the nobles and people, if they thought it neceſſary for the public weal, did reſume the administration of the fupreme power, (the power it- felf having been always in them,) and did not only al- ter the fucceffion, but often the very form of govern- ment too; becauſe they believed there was no natural right in one man to govern another, but that all was by inftitution, force, or confent. Thus, the cities of Greece, when they drove out their tyrannical kings, either chofe others from a new family, or abo.ifhed the kingly go- vernment, and became free ftatcs. Thus the Romans, upon the expulfion of Tarquin, found it inconvenient - for them to be fubject any longer to the pride, the luft, the cruelty and arbitrary will of fingle perfons; and therefore, by general confent, entirely altered the whole frame of their government. Nor do I find the pro- ceedings of either, in this point, to have been condenm- ed by any hiftorian of the fucceeding ages. But a great deal hath been already faid by other wri- ters upon this invidious and beaten fubject; therefore I fhall let it fall; though the point is commonly miſtaken, efpecially by the lawyers; who, of all others, feem leaft to underſtand the nature of government in general; like under-workmen, who are expert enough at making a fingle wheel in a clock, but are utterly ignorant how to adjuſt the ſeveral parts, or regulate the movements. To return, therefore, from this digreflion: It is a church-of-England man's opinion, that the freedom of a nation confifls in an abfolute unlimited legislative power, wherein the whole body of the people are fairly repre- fented and in an executive duly limited; becauſe on this fide likewife there may be dangerous degrees, and a very ill extreme. For when two parties in a ſtate are, pretty 252 THE SENTIMENTS OF A pretty equal in power, pretenfions, merit, and virtue, (for thefe two laft are, with relation to parties and a court, quite different things,) it hath been the opinion of the best writers upon government, that a prince ought not in any fort to be under the guidance or influence of either; becauſe he declines, by this means, from his of- fice of prefiding over the whole, to be the head of a par- ty: which, befides the indignity, renders him anfwer- able for all public mifmanagements, and the confequen- ces of them and in whatever ftate this happens, there muft either be a weakneſs in the prince or miniftry, or elfe the former is too much reſtrained by the nobles, or thoſe who repreſent the people, : To conclude: A church-of-England man may, with prudence and a good confcience, approve the profeſſed principles of one party more than the other, according as he thinks they beft promote the good of church and ftate; but he will never be fwayed by paflion or intereſt to advance an opinion, merely because it is that of the party he moſt approves; which one fingle principle he looks upon as the root of all our civil animofities. To enter into a party, as into an order of friars, with fo re- figned an obedience to fuperiors, is very unfuitable both. with the civil and religious liberties we fo zealouſly af- fert. Thus the understandings of a whole fenate are often inflaved by three or four leaders on each fide; who, inftead of intending the public weal, have their hearts wholly fet upon ways and means how to get or to keep employments. But to speak more at large, how has this fpirit of faction mingled itfelf with the mafs of the people, changed their nature and manners, and the very genius of the nation? broke all the laws of chari.. ty, neighbourhood, alliance, and hofpitality, deftroyed all ties of friendship, and divided families againſt them- felves? And no wonder it ſhould be ſo, when, in order to find out the character of a perfon, inftead of inquiring whether he be a man of virtue, honour, picty, wit, good fenfe, or learning; the modern queftion is only, Whe- ther he be a Whig or a Tory? under which terms all good and ill qualities are included. Now, becauſe it is a point of difficulty to chufe an exact middle between two ill extremes, it may be worth inquiring, CHURCH-OF-ENGLAND MAN. 253 inquiring, in the prefent cafe, which of thefe a wife and good man would rather feem to avoid. Taking there- fore their own good and ill characters, with due abate- ments and allowances for partiality and paffion, I fhould think, that, in order to preferve the conftitution entire in church and ſtate, whoever hath a true value for both, would be fure to avoid the extremes of W'big for the fake of the former, and the extremes of Tory on account of the latter. I have now faid all that I could think convenient up- on fo nice a fubject, and find I have the ambition com- mon with other reafoners, to wiſh at leaſt that both par- ties may think me in the right; which would be of fome ufe to thoſe who have any virtue left, but are blindly drawn into the extravagancies of either, upon falfe repre- fentations, to ferve the ambition or malice of defigning men, without any profpect of their own. But if that is not to be hoped for, my next wiſh ſhould be, that both might think me in the wrong; which I would under- ftand as an ample juftification of myfelf, and a fure ground to believe, that I have proceeded at leaſt with im- partiality, and perhaps with truth. POST- [ 254 ] POSTHUMOUS SERMON S.* SERMON I. On the TRINITY. 1 Epiftle general of ST. JOHN V. 7. For there are three that bear record in heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Holy Ghost; and theje three are one. T HIS day being fet apart to acknowledge our belief in the eternal Trinity, I thought it might be proper to employ my prefent difcourfe entirely upon that fubject and I hope to handle it in fuch a manner, that the moſt ignorant among you may return home bet- ter informed of your duty in this great point, than pro- bably you are at prefent. : It must be confeffed, that by the weakneſs and indif- cretion of bufy (or, at beft, of well-meaning, people, as well as by the malice of thoſe who are enemies to all revealed religion, and are not content to poffefs their own infidelity in filence, without communicating it to the disturbance of mankind; I fay, by theſe means, it muft * Thefe fermons are curious, and curious for fuch reafons as would make other works defpicable. They were written in a care- lefs hurrying manner; and were the offspring of neceffity, not of choice: fo that one will fee the original force of the Dean's genius more in theſe compofitions, that were the legitimate fons of duty, than in other pieces that were the natural fons of love. They were held in fuch low efteem in his own thoughts, that, fome years be- fore he died, he gave away the whole collection to Dr. Sheridan, with the utmoſt indifference: "Here," fays he, are a bundle of "my old fermons. You may have them if you pleafe. They may "be of use to you, they have never been of any to me. The parcel given to Dr. Sheridan confifted, as I have heard, of about thirty-five fermons. Three or four only are publifhed; and thoſe I have read. over with attention, Orrery. >> Ser. I. ON THE TRINITY. 255 must be confeffed, that the doctrine of the Trinity hath fuffered very much, and made Chriftianity fuffer along with it. For thefe two things must be granted: Firſt, That men of wicked lives would be very glad there were no truth in Chriftianity at all; and, fecondly, If they can pick out any one fingie article in the Chriftian religion which appears not agreeable to their own corrupted rea- fon, or to the arguments of thoſe bad people who follow the trade of feducing others, they prefently conclude, that the truth of the whole gospel muft fink along with that one article. Which is just as wife, as if a man fhould fay, becauſe he diflikes one law of his country, he will therefore obferve no law at all; and yet that one law may be very reaſonable in itſelf, although he does not allow it, or does not know the reafon of the lawgivers. Thus it hath happened with the great doctrine of the Trinity; which word is indeed not in fcripture, but was a term of art invented in the earlier times, to express the doctrine by a fingle word, for the fake of brevity and convenience. The doctrine then as delivered in holy fcripture, though not exactly in the fame words, is very fhort, and amounts only to this; That the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghoft, are each of them God, and yet there is but one God. For as to the word perſon, when we fay there are three perfons; and as to thofe other explanations in the Athanafian creed, this day read to you, (whether compiled by Athanafius or no,) they were taken up three hundred years after Chrift, to expound this doctrine; and I will tell you upon what occafion. About that time there fprang up a herefy of people called Arians, from one Arius the leader of them. Thele denied our Saviour to be God, although they al- lowed all the rest of the gospel, (wherein they were more fincere than their followers among us.) Thus the Chriſtian world was divided into two parts, till at length, by the zeal and courage of St. Athanafius, the Arians were condemned in a general council, and a creed formed upon the true faith, as St. Athanafius hath fet- tled it. This creed is now read at certain times in our churches; which although it is uſeful for edification to thoſe who underſtand it, yet fince it contains fome nice and 256 Ser. I. ON THE TRINITY. and philofophical points, which few people can com- prehend, the bulk of mankind is obliged to believe no more than the fcripture-doctrine, as I have delivered it ; becauſe that creed was intended only as an anſwer to the Arians in their own way, who were very ſubtle dif puters. But this hereſy having revived in the world about an hundred years ago, and continued ever fince; not out of a zeal to truth, but to give a looſe to wickedness, by throwing off all religion; feveral divines, in order to anſwer the cavils of thofe adverfaries to truth and mo- rality, began to find out farther explanations of this doc- trine of the Trinity by rules of philofophy; which have multiplied controverfies to fuch a degree, as to beget fcruples that have perplexed the minds of many fober Chriftians, who otherwife could never have entertained them. I must therefore be ſo bold to affirm, that the method taken by many of thofe learned men to defend the doc- trine of the Trinity, hath been founded upon a miſtake. For It must be allowed, that every man is bound to fol- low the rules and directions of that meaſure of reafon which God hath given him. And indeed he cannot do otherwife, if he will be fincere, or act like a man. inſtance, if I ſhould be commanded by an angel from. heaven to believe it is midnight at noon-day; yet I could not believe him. So if I were directly told in fcripture, that three are one, and one is three, I could not conceive or believe it, in the natural common fenfe of that expreffion; but muft fuppofe, that fomething. dark or myftical was meant, which it pleafed God to con- ceal from me, and from all the world. Thus, in the text, There are three that bear record, &c. Am I capable of knowing and defining, what union and what diftinc- tion there may be in the divine nature, which poffibly may be hid from the angels themfelves? Again, I fee it plainly declared in fcripture, that there is but one God; and yet I find our Saviour claiming the prerogative of God, in knowing men's thoughts; in faying, He and his Father are one; and, Before Abraham was, I am. I read, that the difciples worshipped him; that Thomas faid to him, My. Ser. I. 257 ON THE TRINITY. My Lord and my God; and St. John, chap. i. In the begin- ning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. I read likewife, that the Holy Ghoft beſtowed the gift of tongues, and the power of working miracles; which, if rightly confidered, is as great a mi- racle as any, that a number of illiterate men ſhould of a fudden be qualified to fpeak all the languages then known in the world; fuch as could be done by the in- ſpiration of God alone. From thefe feveral texts it is plain, that God commands us to believe there is an union, and there is a diftinction; but what that union, or what that diſtinction is, all mankind are equally ignorant, and muſt continue fo, at leaft till the day of judgment, with- out fome new revelation. But becauſe I cannot conceive the nature of this union and diftinction in the divine nature, am I therefore to reject them as abfurd and impoffible, as I would if any one told me, that three men are one, and one man is three? We are told, that a man and his wife are one fleſh this I can comprehend the meaning of; yet, lite- rally taken, it is a thing impoffible. But the apoftle tells us, We ſee but in part, and we know but in part; and yet we would comprehend all the fecret ways and work- ings of Gods. Therefore I fhall again repeat the doctrine of the Trinity, as it is pofitively affirmed in fcripture: That God is there expreffed in three different names, as Fa- ther, In defending the peculiar doctrines of Chriftianity, perhaps it is always best to infift upon the pofitive evidence, as the Dean has done in this fermon: for in every queftion, he who undertakes to ob- viate objections, muſt neceffarily be foiled by him who puts them. By the human intellect, little more than the furface of things can be known; and therefore fpeculative objections, which would puzzle an able philofopher, may be easily raiſed even against thoſe truths which admit of practical demonftration. It was once objected to a philofopher, who was explaining the laws of motion, That there could be no fuch thing; for that a body must move either in the place in which it is, or in the place in which it is not ; but both being impof- . fible, there could be no motion. The objection the philofopher im- mediately removed, by walking cross the room. And if none were to triumph in the ftrength of popular objections against Chriftianity but thoſe who could otherwife fhew the fallacy of this againſt moti- on, the number of moral phil fophers among us would probably be very few. Hawkes, 258 Ser. I. ON THE TRINITY. ther, as Son, and as Holy Ghoft; that each of thefe is God, and that there is but one God But this union and diſtinction are a myſtery utterly unknown to man- kind. This is enough for any good Chriftian to believe on this great article, without ever inquiring any farther. And this can be contrary to no man's reafon, although the knowledge of it is hid from him. But there is another difficulty, of great importance a- inong thofe who quarrel with the doctrine of the Trini- ty, as well as with ſeveral other articles of Christianity; which is, That our religion abounds in myfterics; and theſe they are ſo bold to revile as cant, impofture, and prieftcraft. It is impoffible for us to determine, for what reaſons God thought fit to communicate fome things to us in part, and leave fome part a mystery: but fo it is in fact, and fo the holy fcriptures tell us in feveral places. For inftance, the refurrection and change of our bodies are called myfteries by St. Paul; our Saviour's inca nation is another: the kingdom of God is called a myfter by our Saviour, to be only known to his difci- ples; fo is faith and the word of God, by St. Paul. I omit many others. So that to declare against all myf teries without distinction or exception, is to declare against the whole tenor of the New Teftament. There are two conditions that may bring a myſtery under fufpicion. First, when it is not taught and com- manded in holy writ; or, fecondly, When the myſtery turns to the advantage of thoſe who preach it to others. Now, as to the first, it can never be faid, that we preach myfteries without warrant from holy fcripture; al- though I confess this of the Trinity may have fometimes been explained by human invention, which might perhaps better have been spared. As to the fecond, it will not be poffible to charge the Proteftant priesthood with propofing any temporal advantage to themſelves by broaching, or multiplying, or preaching of myf teries. Does this mystery of the Trinity, for instance, and the deſcent of the Holy Ghoft, bring the leaſt profit or power to the preachers? No; it is as great a mystery to themfelves, as it is to the meanelt of their Ser. I. 259 ON THE TRINITY. their hearers; and may be rather a caufe of humiliation, by putting their understanding in that point upon a level with the moft ignorant of their flock. It is true indeed the Roman church hath very much enriched herself by trading in myfteries, for which they have not the leaft authority from fcripture, and which were fitted only to advance their own temporal wealth and grandeur; fuch as tranfubftantiation, worshipping of images, indulgences for fins, purgatory, and mafjes for the dead; with many more. But it is the perpetual talent of thoſe who have ill-will to our church, or a contempt for all religion, taken up by the wickedness of their lives, to charge us with the errors and corruptions of Popery, which ali Proteftants have thrown off near two hundred years: whereas thoſe myftcries held by us have no prospect of power, pomp, or wealth; but have been ever maintained by the uni- verfal body of true believers irm the days of the apof- tles, and will be fo to the refurrection; neither will the gates of hell prevail againſt them. It may be thought perhaps a ftrange thing, that God fhould require us to believe mytteries, while the reaſon or manner of what we are to believe is above our com- prehension, and wholly concealed from us Neither doth it appear at firſt ſight, that the believing or not believing them doth concern either the glory of God, or contri- bute to the goodneſs or wickedness of our lives. But this is a great and dangerous mistake. We fee what a mighty weight is laid upon faith both in the Old and New Teftament. In the former we read, how the faith of Abraham is praiſed, who could believe that God would raife from him a great nation, at the very fame time that he was commanded to facrifice his only fon, and deſpaired of any other iffue: and this was to him a great mystery. Our Saviour is perpetually preaching faith to his difciples, or reproaching them with the want of it; and St. Paul produceth numerous examples of the wonders done by faith, And all this is highly rea- fonable for faith is an entire dependence upon the truth, the power, the juftice, and the mercy of God; which dependence will certainly incline us to obey him in all things. So that the great excellency of faith con- fifts in the confequence it hath upon our actions: as, if 260 Ser. I. ON THE TRINITY. if we depend upon the truth and wisdom of a man, we fhall certainly be more difpofed to follow his advice. Therefore let no man think, that he can lead as good a moral life without faith, as with it; for this reaſon, be- cauſe he who has no faith cannot, by the ftrength of his own reafon or endeavours, fo eafily refift temptations, as the other, who depends upon God's affiftance in the over- coming his frailties, and is fure to be rewarded for ever in heaven, for his victory over them Faith, fays the apofle, is the evidence of things not feen. H means, that faith is a virtue, by which any thing commanded us by God to believe, appears evident and certain to us, al- though we do not fee, nor can conceive it; becaufe by faith we entirely depend upon the truth and power of God. It is an old and true diftinction, that things may be above our reaſon, without being contrary to it. Of this kind are the power, the nature, and the univerfal pre- fence of God, with innumerable other points. How little do thoſe who quarrel with myfteries, know of the commonest actions of nature? The growth of an animal, of a plant, or of the finalleft feed, is a myflery to the wifeft among men. If an ignorant perfon were told, that a loadſtone would draw iron at a diftance, he might fay, it was a thing contrary to his reaſon, and could not believe before he faw it with his eyes. The manner whereby the foul and body are united, and how they are diftinguiſhed, is wholly unaccountable to us. We fee but one part, and yet we know we con- fift of two and this is a mystery we cannot comprehend, any more than that of the Trinity. From what hath been faid, it is manifeft, that God did never command us to believe, nor his miniſters to preach, any docrine which is contrary to the reaſon he hath pleaſed to endue us with; but, for his own wife ends, has thought fit to conceal from us the nature of the thing he commands; thereby to try our faith and obc- dience, and increaſe our dependence upon him. It is highly probable, that if God thould pleafe to reveal unto us this great mystery of the Trinity, or fome other myſteries in our holy religion, we ſhould not be able to understand them, unless he would at the fame time Ser. I. 261 ON THE TRINITY. time think fit to beftow on us fome new powers or facul- ties of the mind, which we want at prefent, and are re- ferved till the day of refurrection to life cternal For now, as the apoſtle fays, we ſce through a glajs darkly, but then face to face. Thus, we fee, the matter is brought to this iffue; we muft either believe what God directly commands us in holy fcripture, or we muſt wholly reject the fcripture, and the Chriſtian religion, which we pretend to profeſs. But this, I hope, is too deſperate a ſtep for any of us to make. I have already obferved, that thofe who preach up the belief of the Trinity, or of any other mystery, cannot pro- pofe any temporal advantage to themfelves by fo doing. But this is not the cafe of thoſe who oppoſe theſe doc- trines Do they lead better moral lives than a good Chriftian? Are they more juft in their dealings? more chafte, or temperate, or charitable? Nothing at all of this; but, on the contrary, their intent is to overthrow all religion, that they may gratify their vices, without any reproach from the world, or their own conscience; and are zealous to bring over as many others as they can to their own opinions; becauſe it is fome kind of ima- ginary comfort, to have a multitude on their fide. There is no miracle mentioned in holy writ, which, if it were strictly examined, is not as much contrary to common reaſon, and as much a myſtery, as this doctrine of the Trinity; and therefore we may with equal justice deny the truth of them all. For inftance, it is againſt the laws of nature, that a human body fhould be able to walk upon the water, as St. Peter is recorded to have done; or that a dead carcafe fhould be railed from the grave after three days, when it began to corrupt; which thofe who underland anatony, will pronounce to be impoffible by the common rules of nature and reafon. Yet thefe miracles, and many others, are pofi- tively affirmed in the goipel; and thefe we muft be- lieve, or give up our holy religion to Atheiſts and In- fidels. I fhall now make a few inferences and obfervations upon what hath been faid. First, 262 Ser. I. ON THE TRINITY. 签 ​First, It would be well, if people would not lay fo much weight on their own realon in matters of religion, as to think every thing impoffible and abfurd which they cannot conceive. How often do we contradict the right rules of reaſon in the whole courſe of our lives? Reaſon itſelf is true and juft; but the reafon of every par- ticular man is weak and wavering, perpetually fwayed and turned by his interefts, his paffions, and his vices. Let any man but confider, when he hath a controverſy with another, though his cauſe be ever ſo unjuſt, though the whole world be against him, how blinded he is, by the love of himſelf, to believe that right is wrong, and wrong is right, when it makes for his own advantage. Where is then the right ufe of his reafon, which he fo much boaſts of, and which he would blafphemously fet up to control the commands of the Almighty? Secondly, When men are tempted to deny the myfte- ries of religion, let them examine and fearch into their own hearts, whether they have not fome favourite fin, which is of their party in this difpute, and which is equally contrary to other commands of God in the gof- pel. For why do men love darkneſ, rather than light? The fcripture tells us, Because their deeds are evil; and there can be no other reafon afligned. Therefore when men are curious and inquifitive to difcover fome weak fides in Chriſtianity, and inclined to favour every thing that is offered to its difadvantage, it is plain they wish it were not true and thofe wishes can proceed from nothing but an evil confcience; becaufe, if there be truth in our religion, their condition must be miferable. * And, therefore, thirdly, men fhould confider, that raifing difficulties concerning the mysteries in religion, cannot make them more wife, learned, or virtuous; better neighbours, or friends, or more ferviceable to their *It is an high encomium on reformed Christianity, and a ſtrong argument of its fuperior excellence, that a corrupt life always inclines men to wish it were not true. It does not appear, that Mahome- tans and Papists with their religion to be falfe in proportion as their lives are immoral; and it is faid of Dryden, that not being able to fortify himſelf in infidelity, he died a Papiſt. Harukef. Ser. I. 263 ON THE TRINITY. their country; but, whatever they pretend, will deſtroy their inward peace of mind, by perpetual doubts and fears arifing in their breafts. And God forbid we fhould ever fee the times fo bad, when dangerous opini- ons in religion will be a means to get favour and prefer- ment; although, even in fuch a cafe, it would be an ill traffic, to gain the world, and loſe our own fouls. So that, upon the whole, it will be impoffible to find any real ufe towards a virtuous or happy life, by denying the myfteries of the gospel. Fourthly, Thofe ftrong unbelievers who expect that all myfteries fhould be ſquared and fitted to their own reaſon, might have fomewhat to lay for themſelves, if they could fatisfy the general reafon of mankind in their opinions. But herein they are miſerably detective, ab- furd, and ridiculous. They ftrain at a gnat, and ſwallow a camel they can believe, that the world was made by chance; that God doth not concern himself with things below, will neither punifh vice nor reward virtue; that religion was invented by cunning men to keep the world in awe; with many other opinions equally falfe and deteſtable, againſt the common light of nature as well as reafon; againſt the univerfal fentiments of all civilized nations, and offenfive to the ears even of a fober Hea- then. Laftly, Since the world abounds with peftilent books, particularly written againſt this doctrine of the Trinity, it is fit to inform you, that the authors of them pro- ceed wholly upon a mistake. They would fhew how impoffible it is, that three can be one, and one can be three: whereas the fcripture faith no fuch thing, at leaſt in that manner they would make it; but only that there is fome kind of unity and diftinction in the divine nature, which markind cannot poffibly compre- hend. Thus the whole doctrine is ſhort and plain, and in itſelf incapable of any controverty; fince God him- felf hath pronounced the fact, but wholly concealed the manner. And therefore, many divines, who thought fit to anſwer thofe wicked books, have been mistaken too, by answering fools in their folly, and endeavour- ing to explain a mystery which God intended to keep fecret from us. And as I would exhort all men to a- void 264 Ser. I. ON THE TRINITY. void reading thofe wicked books written against this doctrine, as dangerous and pernicious; fo I think they may omit the anſwers, as unneceffary. This, I confefs, will probably affect but few or none among the genera- lity of our congregations, who do not much trouble themſelves with books, at leaſt of this kind. However, many who do not read themſelves, are feduced by o- thers that do; and thus become unbelievers upon truft, and at fecond hand; and this is too frequent a cafe: for which reaſon I have endeavoured to put this doctrine up- on a fhort and fure foot, levelled to the mncaneft under- ftanding; by which we may, as the apoftle directs, be ready always to give an anſwer to every man that aſketh us a reaſon of the hope that is in us, with meekneſs and fear. And thus I have done with my fubject; which pro- bably I ſhould not have chofen, if I had not been invited to it by the occafion of this feafon, appointed on pur- pofe to celebrate the mysteries of the Trinity, and the defcent of the Holy Ghoft, wherein we pray to be kept ftedfaſt in this faith; and what this faith is, I have fhewn you in the plainest manner I could. For, upon the whole, it is no more than this: God commands us, by our dependence upon his truth and his holy word, to believe a fact that we do not understand. And this is no more, than what we do every day in the works of nature, upon the credit of men of learning. Without faith we can do no works acceptable to God; for if they procced from any other principle, they will not advance our falvation, and this faith, as I have explained it, we may acquire, without giving up our fenfes, or contra- dicting our realon. May God, of his infinite inercy, in- fpire us with true faith in every article and myſtery of our holy religion, fo as to difpofe us to do what is plea- fing in his fight and this we pray through Jefus Chrift; to whom, with the Father and the Holy Ghoft, the myf- terious incomprehenfible ONE GOD, be all honour and glory, now and for ever more. Amen. **This is one of the beft fermons in its kind. Dr. Swift ſeems not to have made fur h a plan his voluntary choice, nor to have built, fuo ex motu, upon fuch a baſis; but he has completed the fuperitruc- ture in a moſt maſterly manner. The materials anfwer the dignity of Ser. II. ON MUTUAL SUBJECTION. 265 of the edifice; and the artificer may aſſume great honour, upon the completion of fo noble, fo fimple, and fo uſeful a pile. The myfte- rious parts of our religion are apt to have dreadful effects upon weak minds. The general comments upon the facred writings, and the ſeveral fermons upon the moſt abftrufe points of fcripture, are too of- ten compofed in the gloomy ftyle. Damnation, eternal damnation, is placed with all its horror before our eyes; and we are ſo terrified at the prospect, that fear makes us imagine we can comprehend my- fteries, which, on this fide of the grave, muft be for ever denied to our limited underſtandings. Swift has taken the ſafeſt, and the propereft method of expounding theſe arcana. He advances every pofition that can be eſtabliſhed upon fo incomprehenfible a fubject. He fuftains the belief, avows the doctrine, and adapts the matter of faith as well as poffible to the human capacity. His manner of rea- ſoning is maſterly, and his arguments are nervous, particularly, where he fays, "It is highly probably, that if God ſhould pleaſe to "reveal unto us this great mystery of the Trinity, or fome other "myſteries in our holy religion, we ſhould not be able to underſtand "them, unless he would at the fame time think fit to beſtow on us "fome new powers or faculties of the mind, which we want at pre- "fent, and are referved till the day of refurrection to life eternal." p. 260, 1. Orrery. SERMON II. ON MUTUAL SUBJECTION. Τ' I St. PETER V. 5. Yea, all of you be jubject one to another. HE apoſtle having, in many parts of this epiſtle, given directions to Chriftians concerning the duty of fubjection, or obedience to fuperiors; in the feveral inftances of the fubject to the prince, the child to his parent, the fervant to his mafter, the wife to her huf- band, and the younger to the elder; both here, in the words of my text, fum up the whole, by advancing a point of doctrine, which at firft may appear a little ex- traordinary Yea, all of you, faith he, be ſubject one to another. For it ſhould feem, that two perfons cannot properly be faid to be fubject to each other, and that fubjection is only due from inferiors to thoſe above them: VOL. I. N yet 266 Ser. II. ON MUTUAL SUBJECTION. + yet St. Paul hath feveral paffages to the fame purpoſe. For he exhorts the Romans, in honour to prefer one ano- ther; and the Philippians, that in lowliness of mind they should let each efteem other better than themselves;t and the Ephefians, that they ſhould ſubmit themſelves one to another in the fear of the Lord. Here we find theſe two great apoftles recommending to all Chriftians this duty. of mutual fubjection. For we may obferve by St. Peter, that having mentioned the feveral relations which men bear to each other, as governor and ſubject, maſter and fervant, and the reft which I have already repeated, he makes no exception; but fums up the whole with com- manding all to be fubject one to another. From whence we may conclude, that this fubjection due from all men to all men, is fomething more than the compliment of courfe, when our betters are pleafed to tell us they are our humble fervants, but underſtand us to be their flaves. I know very well, that fome of thofe who explain this text, apply it to humility, to the duties of charity, to private exhortations, and to bearing with each other's infirmities; and it is probable the apollle may have had a regard to all theſe. But however, many learned men agree, that there is fomething more underflood; and fo the words in their plain natural meaning muft import; as you will obſerve yourſelves, if you read them with the beginning of the verfe which is thus: Likewise ye younger, Submit yourselves unto the elder: yea, all of you be Jubječt one to another. So that, upon the whole, there mult be fome kind of fubjection due from every man to every man, which cannot be made void by any power, pre- eminence, or authority whatfoever. Now, what fort of fubjection this is, and how it ought to be paid, ſhall be the ſubject of my prefent difcourle. As God hath contrived all the works of nature to be uſeful, and in fome manner a fupport to each other, by which the whole frame of the world under his provi- dence is preferved and kept up; fo, among mankind our particular ftations are appointed to each of us by God al- mighty, wherein we are obliged to act, as far as our power reacheth, towards the good of the whole community. And Rom. xii. 10. + Phil. ii. 3. || Eph. v. 21. Ser. II. ON MUTUAL SUBJECTION. 267 And he who doth not perform that part affigned him, towards advancing the benefit of the whole, in propor- tion to his opportunities and abilities, is not only an ufe- leſs, but a very mischievous member of the public; be- cauſe he takes his fhare of the profit, and yet leaves his fhare of the burden to be borne by others, which is the true principal caufe of moft miferies and misfortunes in life. For a wife man who does does not affift with his counfels, a great man with his protection, a rich man with his bounty and charity, and a poor man with his labour, are perfect nuiſances in a commonwealth. Nei- ther is any condition of life more honourable in the fight of God than another; otherwife he would be a respecter of perſons, which he affures us he is not: for he hath propofed the fame falvation to all men, and hath only placed them in different ways or ſtations to work it out. Princes are born with no more advantages of ftrength or wisdom than other men; and, by an unhap- py education, are ufually more defective in both, than thouſands of their fubjects. They depend for every ne- ceffary of life upon the meaneft of their people: befides, obedience and fubjection were never enjoined by God to humour the paflions, lufts, and vanities of thoſe who demand them from us; but we are commanded to obey our governors, becauſe diſobedience would breed fediti- ons in the ſtate. Thus fervants are directed to obey their masters, children their parents, and wives their huſbands; not from any reſpect of perfons in God, but becauſe otherwife there would be nothing but confufion in private families. This matter will be clearly ex- plained, by confidering the compariſon which St. Paul makes between the church of Chrift and the body of man for the fame refemblance will hold, not only to families and kingdoms, but to the whole corporation of mankind. The eye, faith he, cannot fay unto the hand, I have. no need of thee: nor again the head to the feet, I have no need of you. Nay, much more, thofe members of the body which feem to be more feeble, are neceffary. And whether one member fuf- fer, all the members fuffer with it; or one member be honoured, all the members rejoice with it.The cafe is directly the fame N 2 among 1 Cor. xii. 21, 22, 26. 268 ON MUTUAL SUBJECTION. Ser. II, among mankind. The prince cannot fay to the mer- chant, I have no need of thee; nor the merchant to the labourer, I have no need of thee. Nay, much more thoſe members which feem to be more feeble, are necef- fary. For the poor are generally more neceffary mem- bers of the commonwealth than the rich: which clearly fhews, that God never intended fuch poffeffions for the fake and fervice of thofe to whom he lends them ; but becauſe he hath affigned every man his particular ftation to be uſeful in life, and this for the reafon given by the apoftle, that there may be no fchifm in the body. From hence may partly be gathered the nature of that fubjection which we all owe to one another. God al- mighty hath been pleafed to put us into an imperfect ſtate, where we have perpetual occafion of each other's affiftance. There is none fo low, as not to be in a capa- city of affifting the higheft; nor fo high, as not to want the affiftance of the loweſt. It plainly appears from what hath been ſaid, that no one human creature is more worthy than another in the fight of God, farther than according to the goodness or holiness of their lives; and that power, wealth, and the like outward advantages, are fo far from being the marks of God's approving or preferring thoſe on whom they are beſtowed, that, on the contrary, he is pleaſed to ſuffer them to be almoft ingroffed by thofe who have least title to his favour. Now, according to this equality wherein God hath placed all mankind with relation to himſelf, you will obferve, that in all the relations be- tween man and man, there is a mutual dependence, whereby the one cannot fubfift without the other Thus, no man can be a prince without fubjects, nor a maller, without fervants, nor a father without children. And this both explains and confirms the doctrine of the text: for where there is a mutual dependence, there muſt be a mutual duty, and confequently a mutual fubjection. For inftance, the fubject muft obey his prince, becauſe God commands it, human laws require it, and the fafe- ty of the public makes it neceflary. For the fame reaſons we muft obey all that are in authority, and fubmit ourselves not only to the good and gentle, but alfo Ser. II. ON MUTUAL SUBJECTION. 269 allo to the froward, whether they rule according to our liking or no. On the other fide, in thoſe countries that pretend to freedom, princes are fubject to thofe laws which their people have chofen; they are bound to pro- tect their ſubjects in liberty, property, and religion; to receive their petitions, and redreſs their grievances: fo that the beſt prince is, in the opinion of wife men, only the greatest fervant of the nation: not only a fervant to the public in general, but in fome fort to every man in it. In the like manner, a fervant owes obedience, and diligence, and faithfulneſs, to his maſter; from whom, at the fame time, he hath a juít demand for protection, and maintenance, and gentle treatment. Nay, even the poor beggar hath a just demand of an alms from the rich man; who is guilty of fraud, injuſtice, and oppreſ fion, if he does not afford relief according to his abili ties. But this fubjection we all owe one to another, is no where more neceffary, than in the common converfations of life; for without it there could be no fociety among men. If the learned would not fometimes fubinit to the ignorant, the wife to the fimple, the gentle to the fro- ward, the old to the weakneffes of the young, there would be nothing but everlaſting variance in the world. This our Saviour himself confirmed by his own example; for he appeared in the form of a fervant, and waſhed his difciples feet, adding thoſe memorable words, le call me Lord, and Mafter: and ye fay well; for fo I am. If I then your Lord and Mafter wash your feet, how much more ought ye to wash one anothers feet? Under which expref- fion of washing the feet, is included all that fubjection, affiftance, love, and duty, which every good Chriftian ought to pay his brother, in whatever itation God hath placed him. For the greatest prince and the meaneſt flave are not by infinite degrees fo diitant, as our Savi- our and thofe difciples whofe feet he vouchlafed to waſh. And although this doctrine of fubjecting ourſelves to one another, may feem to grate upon the pride and va- nity of mankind, and may therefore be hard to be digefted by thofe who value themfelves upon their greatnefs or their wealth; yet it is really no more than what 270 Ser. II. ON MUTUAL SUBJECTION. what moſt men practile upon other occafions. For if our neighbour, who is our inferior, comes to fee us, we rife to receive him, we place him above us, and refpect him as if he were better than ourfelves; and this is thought both decent and neceflary, and is ufually called. good manners. Now, the duty required by the apoſtle is only, that we should enlarge our minds, and that what we thus practiſe in the common courfe of life, we should imitate in all our actions and proceedings whatfoever; fince our Saviour tells us, that every man is our neigh- bour, and fince we are fo ready, in the point of civility, to yield to others in our own houfes, where only we have any title to govern. Having thus fhewn you, what fort of ſubjection it is which all men owe one to another, and in what manner it ought to be paid, I fhall now draw fome obſervations from what hath been ſaid. And, firf, A thorough practice of this duty of fub- jecting ourselves to the wants and infirmities of each other, would utterly extinguish in us the vice of pride. For if God has pleafed to intruft me with a talent not for my own fake, but for the fervice of others, and at the fame time hath left me full of wants and neceffities, which others muft fupply; I can then have no cauſe to fet any extraordinary value upon myſelf, or to defpife my brother, becauſe he hath not the fame talents which were lent to me. His being may probably be as uſeful to the public as mine; and therefore, by the rules of right reaſon, I am in no fort preferable to him. Secondly, It is very manifeft from what has been faid, that no man ought to look upon the advantages of life, fuch as riches, honour, power, and the like, as his pro- perty, but merely as a truft which God hath depoſited with him to be employed for the uſe of his brethren : and God will certainly punifh the breach of that truft, though the laws of man will not, or rather indeed can- not; becauſe the truft was conferred only by God, who has not left it to any power on earth to decide infalli- bly, whether a man makes a good ufe of his talents or no, or to puniſh him where he fails. And therefore God feems to have more particularly taken this matter into his own hands, and will most certainly reward or puniſh Ser. II. ON MUTUAL SUBJECTION. 271 punish us in proportion to our good or ill performance in it Now, although the advantages which one man pof- feffeth more than another, may in fome fenfe be called his property with respect to other men; yet, with re- ípect to God, they are, as I faid, only a truft: which will plainly appear from hence: If a man does not uſe thoſe advantages to the good of the public, or the bene- fit of his neighbour, it is certain, he doth not deferve them, and conſequently that God never intended them for a bleffing to him; and, on the other fid, whoever does employ his talents as he ought, will find by his own experience, that they were chiefly lent him for the fer- vice of others; for to the fervice of others he will cer- tainly employ them. Thirdly, If we could all be brought to practife this duty of fubjecting ourſelves to each other, it would very much contribute to the general happinels of mankind. For this would root out envy and malice from the heart of man; becauſe you cannot envy your neighbour's- ſtrength, if he make uſe of it to defend your life, or car- ry your burden; you cannot envy his wifdom, if he gives you good counfel; nor his riches, if he fupplies you in your wants; nor his greatnefs, if he employs it to your protection. The miferies of life are not properly owing to the unequal diftribution of things; but God almighty, the great King of heaven, is treated like the kings of the earth, who although perhaps intending well themſelves, have often moſt abominable miniſters and ſtewards; and thofe generally the vileft, to whom they intruft the mcft talents. But here is the differ- ence, that the priness of this world fee by other men's eyes, but God fees all things; and therefore when- ever he permits his blefings to be dealt among thofe who are unworthy, we may certainly conclude, that he intends them only as a punishment to an evil world, as well as to the owners. It were well, if thofe would confider this, whofe riches ferve them only as a fpur to avarice, or as an inftrument to their lufts; whoſe wiſdom is only of this world, to put falfe colours upon things, to call good evil, and evil good, against the conviction of their own conſciences; and, lally, who employ their power and favour in acts of oppreffion 272 Ser. II. ON MUTUAL SUBJECTION. oppreffion or injuftice, in mifreprefenting perfons and things, or in countenancing the wicked to the ruin of the innocent. Fourthly, The practice of this duty of being ſubject to one another, would make us reft contented in the ſeveral ſtations of life wherein God hath thought fit to place us; becauſe it would, in the beſt and eaſieſt man- ner, bring us back as it were to that early ſtate of the gofpel, when Chriſtians had all things in common. For if the poor found the rich diſpoſed to fupply their wants; if the ignorant found the wife ready to inftruct and di- rect them; or if the weak might always find protection. from the mighty; they could none of them, with the leaft pretence of juftice, lament their own condition. From all that hath been hitherto faid, it appears, that great abilities of any fort, when they are employed as God directs, do but make the owners of them greater and more painful fervants to their neighbour, and the public. However, we are by no means to conclude from hence, that they are not really bleffings, when they are in the hands of good men. For, firft, what can be a greater honour, than to be chofen one of the ſtewards and difpenfers of God's bounty to mankind? What is there that can give a generous fpirit more pleaſure and complacency of mind, than to confider, that he is an in- ftrument of doing much good? that great numbers owe to him, under God, their fubfiftence, their fafety, their health, and the good conduct of their lives? The wick- edeft man upon earth takes a pleaſure in doing good to thofe he loves; and therefore, furely, a good Chriftian, who obeys our Saviour's command of loving all men, cannot but take delight in doing good even to his ene- mies. God, who gives all things to all men, can receive nothing from any; and thofe among men who do the moſt good, and receive the fewest returns, do moſt reſemble their Creator: for which reafon St Paul delivers it as a faying of our Saviour, that it is more bleſſed to give than to receive. By this rule, what must become of thoſe things which the world values as the greatest bleffings, riches, power, and the like, when our Saviour plainly determines, that the best way to make them bleffings, is to part with them? Ser. II. ON MUTUAL SUBJECTION. 273 them? Therefore although the advantages which one man hath over another, may be called bleffings, yet they are by no means fo in the fenfe the world ufually un- derſtands. Thus, for example, great riches are no bleſ- fing in themſelves; becauſe the poor man, with the common neceffaries of life, enjoys more health, and has fewer cares, without them. How then do they become bleffings No other wife, than by being employed in feeding the hungry, clothing the naked, rewarding wor- thy men, and, in ſhort, doing acts of charity and gene- rofity. Thus likewife power is no bleffing in itſelf, be- caufe private men bear leſs envy, and trouble, and an. guiſh, without it. But when it is employed to prote&t the innocent, to relieve the oppreffed, and to puniſh the oppreffor, then it becomes a great bleffing. And fo, laitly, even great wifdom is, in the opinion of Solomon, not a bleſſing in itſelf: for in much wisdom is much for- row; and men of common underſtandings, if they ferve God, and mind their callings, make fewer miſtakes in the conduct of life, than thoſe who have better heads.. And yet wiſdom is a mighty bleffing, when it is applied to good purpoſes, to inftruct the ignorant, to be a faith- ful counsellor either in public or private, to be a director to youth, and to many other ends needlefs here to men- tion. To conclude: God fent us into the world to obey his commands, by doing as much good as our abilities will reach, and as little evil as our many infirmities will per- mit. Some he hath only trufted with one talent, fome with five, and fome with ten, No man is without his talent; and he that is faithful or negligent in a little, ſhall be rewarded or puniſhed, as well as he that hath. been fo in a great deal. Confider what hath been faid, &c. . *This fermon is upon mutual fubjection, and that duty which is owing from one man to another. A clearer ftyle, or a difcourfe more properly adapted to a public audience, can fcarce be framed. Every paragraph is fimple, nervous, and intelligible. The threads of each argument are clofely connected, and logically pursued. But in places where the Dean has the leaft opportunity to introduce po- litical maxims, or to dart an arrow at the conduct of princes, he ne- ver fails to indulge himſelf in his ufual manner of thinking; as will appear N 5 274 Ser. III. ON THE TESTIMONY appear from the following quotation. "A wife man," fays Dr. Swift, "who does not affift with his counfels, a great man with his "protection, a rich man with his bounty and charity, and a poor << man with his labour, are perfect nuiſances in a commonwealth. "Neither is any condition of life more honourable in the fight of "God than another; otherwife he would be a reſpecter of perſons, "which he aſſumes us he is not: for he hath propofed the fame "falvation to all men, and hath only placed them in different ways "or ftations to work it out. Princes are born with no more ad- "vantages of ftrength or wiſdom than other men; and, by an un- "happy education, are uſually more defective in both, than thou- "fands of their fubjects," p, 267. Again, in the fame ftrain, "The beſt prince is, in the opinion of wife men, only the greatest fer- vant of the nation; not only a fervant to the public in general, but " in ſome fort to every man in it," p. 269. But the moſt extraordi- nary paffage is a covert ftroke at the highest order of his brethren the clergy. It runs thus. "The miferics of life are not properly owing "to the unequal diftribution of things; but God almighty, the great "King of heaven, is treated like the kings of the earth; who al- "though perhaps intending well them elves, have often moft abo. minable minifters and ftewards, and thofe generally the vilett, to "whom they intruft the most talents," p. 271. Dark as it is, this paragraph requires no explanation. The author's natural tur of mind breaks forth upon all occafions, and the politician frequently outweighs the divine. If the dictates of fuch a ipirit were capable of forcing their way from the pulpit, what a glorious, what a confiſt- ent figure must Swift have made in the roftrum, at Rome, or in one of the portico's at Athens? Onay. SERMON III On the TESTIMONY of CONSCIENCE. 2 COR. i. 12 part of it. For our rejoicing is this, the testimony of our con- Jiience. Here is no word more frequently in the mouths of TH men, than that of confcience; and the meaning of it is in fome meafure generally underſtood. However, becauſe it is likewife a word extremely abufed by many people, who apply other meanings to it, which God al- mighty Ser. III. 275 OF CONSCIENCE. mighty never intended; I fhall explain it to you in the clearest manner I am able. The word confcience proper- ly fignifies that knowledge which a man hath within himſelf, of his own thoughts and actions. And be- cauſe, if a man judgeth fairly of his own actions, by comparing them with the law of God, his mind will either approve or condeinn him, according as he hath done good or evil; therefore this knowledge or con- fcience may properly be called both an accufer and a judge. So that whenever our confcience accufeth us, we are certainly guilty: but we are not always innocent, when it doth not accufe us; for very often through the hardness of our hearts, or the fondneis and favour we bear to ourselves, or through ignorance or neglect, we do not fuffer our confcience to take any cognisance of feveral fins we commit. There is another office like- wife belonging to confcience, which is that of being our director and guide; and the wrong uſe of this hath been the occafion of more evils under the fun, than almoſt all other caufes put together. For as confcience is no- thing else but the knowledge we have of what we are thinking and doing; fo it can guide us no farther than that knowledge reacheth; and therefore God hath placed conſcience in us to be our director only in thoſe actions which feripture and reaſon plainly tell us to be good or evil. But in cafes too difficult or doubtful for us to comprehend or determine, there confcience is not concerned; becauſe it cannot advife in what it doth not understand, not decide where it is itſelf in doubt: but, by God's great mercy, thofe difficult points are never of abfolute neceffity to our falvation. There is likewife another evil, that men often fay, a thing is againſt their confcience, when really it is not. For instance, afk any of those who differ from the worſhip eſtabliſh- ed, why they do not come to church? they will fay, they diflike the ceremonies, the prayers, the habits, and the like: and therefore it goes against their con- fcience. But they are mistaken; their teacher hath put thoſe words into their mouths; for a man's confcience can go no higher than his knowledge; and therefore till he has thoroughly examined, by feripture, and the practice of the ancient church, whether thofe points are blame- able. 276 Ser. III. ON THE TESTIMONY able or no, his confcience cannot poffibly direct him to condemn them. Hence have likewife arifen thofe mif- takes about what is ufually called liberty of confcience; which, properly ſpeaking, is no more than a liberty of knowing our own thoughts; which liberty no one can take from us, But thoſe words have obtained quite different meanings. Liberty of confcience is now-a-days not only underſtood to be the liberty of believing what men pleaſe, but alſo of endeavouring to propagate that belief as much as they can, and to overthrow the faith which the laws have already eſtabliſhed, and to be re- warded by the public for thofe wicked endeavours: and this is the liberty of confcience which the Fanatics are now, openly in the face of the world, endeavouring at with their utmoſt application. At the fame time it can- not but be obſerved, that thoſe very perfons who, un- der pretence of a public fpirit, and tenderness towards their Chriftian brethren, are fo zealous for fuch a liber. ty of confcience as this, are of all others the leaft tender to thoſe who differ from them in the fmalleft point re- lating to government; and I wish I could not fay, that the majesty of the living God may be offended with more fecurity than the memory of a dead prince. But the wiſdom of the world at prefent feems to agree with that of the Heathen emperor, who faid, If the gods were of- fended, it was their own concern, and they were able to vindicate themselves. But although confcience hath been abuſed to thofe wicked purpoſes which I have already related, yet a due regard to the directions it plainly gives us, as well as to its accufations, reproaches, and advices, would be of the greatest ufe to mankind, both for their prefent welfare and future happineſs Therefore my difcourfe at this time ſhall be directed to prove to you, that there is no folid, firm foundation for virtue, but on a confcience which is guided by religion, In order to this, I fhall first fhew you the weakneſs and uncertainty of two falfe principles, which many people fet up in the place of confcience for a guide to their actions. The first of thefe principles is what the world ufually calls moral honesty. There are fome people, who appear very indifferent Ser. III. 277 OF CONSCIENCE. indifferent as to religion, and yet have the repute of be- ing juſt and fair in their dealings; and thefe are gene- rally known by the character of good moral-men. But now, if you look into the grounds and the motives of ſuch a man's actions, you ſhall find them to be no other than his own caſe and intereft. For example, you truft a moral man with your money in the way of trade, you truſt another with the defence of your caufe at law; and perhaps they both deal juftly with you. Why? not from any regard they have for justice, but becauſe their fortune depends upon their credit, and a ftain of open public difhonefty must be to their difadvantage. But let it confit with fuch a man's intereſt and ſafety to wrong you, and then it will be impoffible you can have any hold upon him; becauſe there is nothing left to give him a check, or to put in the balance againſt his profit. For if he hath nothing to govern himſelf by but the opinion of the world, as long as he can conceal his injuftice from the world, he thinks he is fafe. Befides, it is found by experience, that thofe men who fet up for morality, without regard to religion, are ge- nerally virtuous but in part: they will be juft in their dealings between man and man; but if they find them- felves difpofed to pride, luft, intemperance, or avarice, they do not think their morality concerned to check them in any of thefe vices; becauſe it is the great rule of fuch men, that they may lawfully follow the dictates of na- ture, where-ever their fafety, health, and fortune are not injured. So that, upon the whole, there is hardly one vice which a mere moral man may not upon fome oc- cafions allow himſelf to practiſe. The other falſe principle which fome men fet up in the place of conſcience to be their director in life, is what thoſe who pretend to it call honour. This word is often made the fanction of an oath ; it is reckoned a great commendation to be a man of ſtrict honour; and it is commonly underſtood, that a man of honour can never be guilty of a baſe action. This is ufually the ftyle of military men, of per- fons with titles, and of others who pretend to birth and quality. It is true indeed, that in ancient times it was univerfally underſtood, that honour was the reward of virtue ; 278 Ser. III ON THE TESTIMONY virtue; but if fuch honour as is now-a-days going, will not permit a man to do a bafe action, it muſt be allowed, there are very few fuch things as baſe actions in nature. No man of honour, as that word is ufually underſtood, did ever pretend, that his honour obliged him to be chafte or temperate, to pay his creditors, to be uſeful to his country, to do good to mankind, to endeavour to be wife or learned, to regard his word, his promife, or his oath : or if he hath any of thefe virtues, they were never learn- ed in the catechifm of honour: which contains but two precepts; the punctual payment of debts contracted at play, and the right understanding the feveral degrees of an affront, in order to revenge it by the death of an ad- verſary. But fuppofe this principle of honour, which fome men ſo much boast of, did really produce more virtues than it ever pretended to; yet, fince the very being of that honour depended upon the breath, the opinion, or the fancy of the people, the virtues derived from it could be of no long or certain duration. For example, fuppoſe a man, from a principle of honour, fhould refolve to be juft, or chafte, or temperate, and yet the cenfuring world fhould take a humour of refufing him thofe characters, he would then think the obligation at an end. Or, on the other fide, if he thought he could gain honour by the falfeft and vileft action, (which is a cafe that very of- ten happens,) he would then make no fcruple to perform it. And God knows, it would be an unhappy itate, to have the religion, the liberty, or the property of a peo- ple lodged in fuch hands; which however hath been too often the cafe. What I have faid upon this principle of honour, may perhaps be thought of Imall concernment to moſt of you who are my hearers: however, a caution was not altoge- ther unneceffary; fince there is nothing by which not only the vulgar, but the honeft tradefman hath been fo inuch deceived, as this infamous pretence to honour in too many of their betters. Having thus fhewn you the weakneſs and uncertainty of thoſe principles which fome men fet up in the place of conſcience to direct them in their actions, I ſhall now endeavour to prove to you, that there is no folid, firm foundation Ser. III. 279 OF CONSCIENCE. foundation of virtue, but in a confcience directed by the principles of religion. There is no way of judging how far we may depend upon the actions of men, otherwife than by knowing the motives and grounds, and caufes of them; and if the motives of our actions be not refolved and determined into the law of God, they will be precarious and un- certain, and liable to perpetual changes. I will fhew you what I mean, by an example. Suppoſe a man thinks it his duty to obey his parents, becaufe reafon tells him ſo, becaufe he is obliged by gratitude, and becauſe the laws of his country command him to do fo: if he ſtops here, his parents can have no lafting ſecurity; for an occafion may happen, wherein it may be extremely his intereft to be diſobedient, and where the laws of the land can lay no hold upon him therefore, before fuch a man can fafely be trufted, he muft proceed farther, and confider that his reafon is the gift of God; that God commanded him to be obedient to the laws, and did moreover, in a particular manner, enjoin him to be dutiful to his pa- rents; after which, if he lays due weight upon thoſe con- fiderations, he will probably continue in his duty to the end of his life; becaufe no earthly intereft can ever come in competition to balance the danger of offending his Creator, or the happineſs of pleaſing him. And of all this his confcience will certainly inform him, if he hath any regard to religion. : Secondly, Fear and hope are the two greatest natural motives of all men's actions. But neither of thefe paf- fions will ever put us in the way of virtue, unless they be directed by confcience. For although virtuous men do fometimes accidentally make their way to prefer- ment, yet the world is to corrupted, that no man can reaſonably hope to be rewarded in it, merely upon ac- count of his virtue. And confequently the fear of nifhment of this life will preferve men from very few vices; fince fome of the blackeft and bafeft do often prove the fureft fleps to favour; fuch as ingratitude, hy- pocrify, treachery, malice, fubornation, atheifm, and many more, which human laws do little concern them- felves about. But when confcience placeth before us the hopes of everlafting happiness, and the fears of pu- everlaſting 280 Ser. III. ON THE 'TESTIMONY everlaſting miſery, as the reward and punishment of our good or evil actions, our reaſon can find no way to avoid the force of fuch an arguinent, otherwife than by run- ning into infidelity. Lastly, Confcience will direct us to love God, and to put our whole truft and confidence in him. Our love of God will infpire us with a deteftation for fin, as what is of all things moſt contrary to his divine nature; and if we have an entire confidence in him, that will enable us to fubdue and defpife all the allurements of the world. It may here be objected, If conſcience be fo fure a di- rector to us Chriftians in the conduct of our lives, how comes it to pass, that the ancient Heathens, who had no other lights but thofe of nature and reaſon, ſhould ſo far exceed us in all manner of virtue, as plainly appears by many examples they have left on record? : To which it may be anſwered: Firft, thofe Heathens were extremely ſtrict and exact in the education of their children whereas, among us, this care is fo much laid afide, that the more God has bleffed any man with e- ftate or quality, juft fo much the lefs in proportion is the care he takes in the education of his children, and particularly of that child which is to inherit his for- tune; of which the effects are viſible enough among the great ones of the world. Again, thofe Heathens did, in a particular manner, inftil the principle into their chil- dren, of loving their country; which is fo far otherwife now-a-days, that of the ſeveral parties among us, there is none of them that ſeem to have fo much as heard whe- ther there be fuch a virtue in the world; as plainly ap- pears by their practices, and eſpecially when they are placed in thoſe ſtations where they can only have oppor- tunity of fhewing it. Laftly, the most confiderable among the Heathens did generally believe rewards and puniſhments in a life to come; which is the great prin- ciple for confcience to work upon: whereas too many of those who would be thought the moft confiderable among us, do, both by their practices and their dif- courfes, plainly affirm, that they believe nothing at all of the matter. Wherefore, fince it hath manifeftly appeared, that a religious Ser. III. 281 OF CONSCIENCE religious confcience is the only true folid foundation upon which virtue can be built, give me leave, before I conclude, to let you fee how neceffary fuch a confci- ence is, to conduct us in every ftation and condition of our lives. in awe. That a religious confcience is neceffary in any ſtation, is confeffed even by thofe who tell us that all religion was invented by cunning men in order to keep the world For if religion, by the confeffion of its adver- faries, be neceffary toward the well-governing of man- kind; then every wife man in power will be fure, not only to chufe out, for every ftation under him, fuch fons as are moſt likely to be kept in awe by religion, but likewife to carry fome appearance of it himſelf, or elſe he is a very weak politician. And accordingly, in any country, where great perfons affect to be open defpifers of religion, their counſels will be found at laft to be fully as deftructive to the ftate as to the church. any per- It was the advice of Jethro to his fon-in-law Mofes, to provide able men, fuch as fear God, men of truth, hating covetousness, and to place fuch over the people; and Mofes, who was as wife a ftatefman at leaſt as any in this age, thought fit to follow that advice. Great abi- lities without the fear of God are most dangerous inftru- ments, when they are trufted with power. The laws of man have thought fit, that thofe who are called to office of truft, fhould be bound by an oath to the faith- ful difcharge of it: but an oath is an appeal to God, and therefore can have no influence except upon thoſe who believe that he is, and that he is a rewarder of thoſe that ſeek him, and a puniſher of thoſe who diſo- bey him and therefore we fee the laws themſelves are forced to have recourfe to confcience in thefe cafes; be- cauſe their pena'ties cannot reach the arts of cunning men, who can find ways to be guilty of a thouſand in- juſtices, without being difcovered, or at leaſt without being punished. And the reafon why we find fo many frauds, abuſes, and corruptions where any truft is con- ferred, can be no other, than that there is fo little con- fcience and religion left in the world; or at leaſt that men, in their choice of inftruments, have private ends in view, which are very different from the fervice of the public. 282 ON THE TESTIMONY, &'c. Ser. III. public. Befides, it is certain, that men who profeſs to have no religion, are full as zealous to bring over profe- lytes as any Papift or Fanatic can be. And therefore, if thoſe who are in ftation high enough to be of influence or example to others; if thofe (I fay) openly profefs a contempt or disbelief of religion, they will be fure to make all their dependents of their own principles; and what fecurity can the public expect from fuch perfons, whenever their interefts or their lufts come into compe- tition with their duty? It is very poffible for a man who hath the appearance of religion, and is a great pre- tender to conſcience, to be wicked and a hypocrite; but it is impoffible for a man who openly declares againſt religion, to give any reafonable fecurity that he will not be falfe, and cruel, and corrupt, whenever a temptation offers, which he values more than he does the power wherewith he was trufled. And if fuch a man doth not betray his caufe and his mafter, it is only becaufe the temptation was not properly offered, or the profit was too fmall, or the danger too great. And hence it is, that we find fo little truth or juſtice among us, becauſe there are ſo very few, who, either in the fervice of the public, or in common dealings with each other, do ever look farther than their own advantage, and how to guard themſelves against the laws of the country; which a man may do by favour, by fecrecy, or by canning, though. he breaks almost every law of God. Therefore to conclude: It plainly appears, that unless men are guided by the advice and judgment of confci- ence founded on religion, they can give no fecurity that they will be either good fubjects, faithful fervants of the public, or honeft in their mutual dealings; fince there is no other tie, through which the pride, or luft, or avarice, or ambition of mankind will not certainly break one time or other. Confider what has been faid, &c. *** In this moral effay, for I can fearce call it a fermon, the au- thor inferts fome very firiking obfervations upon fuch falfe notions of honour as are too prevalent in the world. [Here the particular paffage is quoted, beginning thus, "The other falfe principle which "Some men fet up in the place of confcience," &c. p. 277.4. 32. and c..ding L Ser. IV. ON BROTHERLY LOVE. 283 ending thus, in order to revenge it by the death of an adverſary," p. 278. l. 14. But you must be weary of quotations: and in ex- cufe of thofe already made, I can only offer, that in comments upon original authors, quotations are often the best, and perhaps the only explanations that can fully anfwer the end propofed. I mean, that the original fpirit is fo volatile, as not to admit of the leaft transfuf- on. In ordinary compofitions, the effence may be extracted, and the fubtileft parts diftilled: but Swift's fermons appeared a chymical preparation of fo extraordinary and pen-trating a nature, that I was refolved to fend you as much of the ethereal ipirit as might be fafe- ly conveyed by the polt. Orray. SERMON IV. IN On BROTHERLY LOVE.* HER. xiii. I. Let brotherly love continue. N the early times of the gofpel, the Chriftians were very much diſtinguiſhed from all other bodies of men, by the great and conftant love they bore to each other; which although it was done in obedience to the fre- quent injunctions of our Saviour and his apoftles, yet, I confefs, there feemeth to have been likewife a natural reaſon, that very much promoted it. For the Chriſti- ans then were few and ſcattered, living under perfecu- tion by the Heathens round about them, in whofe hands was all the civil and military power; and there is no- thing fo apt to unite the minds and hearts of men, or to beget love and tendernels, as a general diftrefs. The firſt diffentions between Chriftians took their begin- ning from the errors and herefies that arofe among them; many of thofe herefies, fometimes extinguifhed, and fometimes reviving, or fucceeded by others, remain to this day; and having been made inftruments to the pride, avarice, or ambition of ill-defigning men, by extinguishing This fermon is not in the first Dublia edition. 284 Ser. IV. ON BROTHERLY LOVE. extinguiſhing brotherly love, have been the cauſe of in- finite calamites, as well as corruptions of faith and man- ners, in the Chriftian world, The laſt legacy of Chriſt was peace and mutual love but then he foretold, that he came to fend a fword upon the earth. The primitive Chriftians accepted the lega- cy, and their fucceffors down to the prefent age have been largely fulfilling his prophecy. But whatever the practice of mankind hath been, or fill continues, there is no duty more incumbent upon thoſe who profefs the goſpel, than that of brotherly love; which whoever could reſtore in any degree among men, would be an inftrument of more good to human fociety, than ever was, or will be done by all the ſtateſmen and politicians in the world. It is upon this fubject of brotherly love that I intend to diſcourſe at prefent; and the method I obſerve ſhall be as follows. 1. I will inquire into the causes of this great want of brotherly love among us. 2. I will lay open the fad effects and confequences which our animofities and mutual hatred have produc- ed. 3. I will uſe fome motives and exhortations that may perfuade you to embrace brotherly love, and continue in it. I. I fhall inquire into the caufes of this great want of brotherly love among us. This nation of ours hath for an hundred years paft been infeſted by two enemies, the Papifts and Fanatics; who each in their turns filled it with blood and flaughter, and for a time deſtroyed both the church and govern- ment. The memory of thefe events hath put all true Proteftants equally upon their guard against both theſe adverfaries; who, by confequence, do equally hate us, The Fanatics revile us, as too nearly approaching to Popery; and the Papifts condemn us, as bordering too much on Fanaticiſm The Papifts, God be praifed, are, by the wisdom of our laws, put out of all viſible poffi. bility of hurting us; befides, their religion is fo general- ly Ser. IV. ON BROTHERLY LOVE. 285 ly abhorred, that they have no advocates or abettors a- mong proteſtants to allift them. But the Fanatics are to be confidered in another light: they have had, of late years, the power, the luck, or the cunning to divide us among ourſelves; they have endeavoured to reprefent all thoſe who have been ſo bold as to oppoſe their errors and defigns, under the character of perfons difaffected to the government; and they have ſo far fucceeded, that now- a-days, if a clergyman happens to preach with any zeal and vehemence against the fin or danger of fchifm, there will not want too many in his congregation ready enough to cenfure him, as hot and high-flying, an in- flamer of men's minds, an enemy to moderation, and dif. loyal to his prince. This hath produced a formed and ſettled divifion between thoſe who profefs the fame doc- trine and difcipline, while they, who call themſelves moderate, are forced to widen their bottom, by facrific- ing their principles and their brethren to the incroach- inents and infolence of diffenters; who are therefore anſwerable, as a principal caufe of all that hatred and animofity now reigning among us. Another caufe of the great want of brotherly love, is the weakneſs and folly of too many among you of the lower fort, who are made the tools and inftruments of your betters to work their defigns, wherein you have no concern. Your numbers make you of uſe, and cunning men take the advantage by putting words into your mouths which you do not understand; then they fix good or ill characters to thoſe words, as it beft ferves their purpoſes and thus you are taught to love or hate, you know not what or why; you often fufpect your best friends and nearest neighbours, even your teacher him- felf, without any reafon, if your leaders once taught you to call him by a name which they tell you fignifieth fome very bad thing. A third caufe of our great want of brotherly love feemeth to be, that this duty is not fo often infifted on from the pulpit, as it ought to be in fuch times as theſe : on the contrary, it is to be doubted, whether doctrines are not fometimes delivered by an ungoverned zeal, a defire to be diftinguiſhed, or a view of intereſt, which produce quite different effects; when, upon occafions fet apart 286 Ser. IV. ON BROTHERLY LOVE. apart to return thanks to God for fome public bleffing, the time is employed in ftirring up one part of the con- gregation against the other, by reprefentations of things. and perfons, which God in his mercy forgive thofe who are guilty of. The laft caufe I fhall mention of the want of brother- ly love, is that unhappy difpofition towards politics. among the trading people, which hath been induftriouf- ly inftilled into them. In former times, the middle and lower fort of mankind ſeldom gained or loft by the fac- tions of the kingdom; and therefore were little con- cerned in them, further than as matter of talk and amuſement but now the meaneft dealer will expect to turn the penny by the merits of his party. He can re- preſent his neighbour as a man of dangerous principle; can bring a railing accufation againſt him, perhaps a cri- minal one; and fo rob him of his livelihood, and find his own account by that much more than if he had dif- paraged his neighbour's goods, or defamed him as a cheat. For fo it happens, that inftead of inquiring into the ſkill or honefty of thoſe kinds of people, the manner is now to inquire into their party, and to reject or encourage them accordingly; which proceeding hath made our people in general fuch able politicians, that all the arti- fice, flattery, diffimulation, diligence, and dexterity in undermining each other, which the fatirical wit of men hath charged upon courts; together with all the rage and violence, cruelty and injuftice, which have been ever imputed to public affemblies; are with us (fo polite are we grown) to be feen among our meanest traders and artificers in the greateſt perfection. All which, as it may be matter of fome humiliation to the wife and mighty of this world, fo the effects thereof may perhaps in time prove very different from what, I hope in charity, were ever forefeen or intended. II. I will therefore now, in the fecond place, lay open ſome of the fad effects and confequences which our ani- mofities and mutual hatred have produced. And the first ill confcquence is, that our want of bro- therly love hath almoſt driven out all fenfe of religion from among us; which cannot well be otherwife: for fince Ser. IV. 287 ON BROTHERLY LOVE. fince our faviour laid fo much weight upon his difciples loving one another, that he gave it among his laſt in- ſtructions; and fince the primitive Chriftians are allowed to have chiefly propagated the faith, by the ſtrict obfer- vance of that inftruction; it must follow, that, in propor- tion, as brotherly love declineth, Chriftianity will do fo too. The little religion there is in the world, hath been obferved to refide chiefly among the middle and lower fort of people, who are neither tempted to pride and luxury by great riches, nor to defperate courfes by ex- treme poverty and truly I upon that account have thought it a happineſs, that thoſe who are under my im- mediate care are generally of that condition. But where party hath once made entrance, with all its confequences, of hatred, envy, partiality, and virulence, religion can- not long keep its hold in any ſtate or degree of life whatſoever. For if the great men of the world have been cenfured in all ages for mingling too little religion. with their politics, what a havock of principles muit they needs make in unlearned and irregular heads? of which indeed the effects are already too viſible and me- lancholy all over the kingdom. Another ill confequence from our want of brotherly love is, that it increaſeth the infolence of the Fanatics. And this partly arifeth from a miſtaken meaning of the word moderation; a word which hath been much abuf- ed, and handed about for feveral years paſt. There are too many people indifferent enough to all religion; there are many others who diflike the clergy, and would have them live in poverty and dependence. Both thefe forts are much commended by the Fanatics for moderate men, ready to put an end to our divifions, and to make a general union among Proteftants. Many ignorant well- meaning people are deceived by theie appearances, trengthened with great pretences to loyalty; and theſe occafions the Fanatics lay hold on to revile the doctrine and difcipline of the church, and even infult and op- prefs the clergy, where-ever their numbers or favourers will bear them out; infomuch that one wilful refrac- tory Fanatic hath been able to diſturb a whole parish for many years together. But the noft moderate and favoured divines dare not own, that the word moderation, 288 ON BROTHERLY LOVE. Ser. IV. moderation, with refpect to the diffenters, can be at all applied to their religion, but is purely perfonal or pru- dential. No good man repineth at the liberty of con- fcience they enjoy; and perhaps a very moderate divine may think better of their loyalty than others do; or, to ſpeak after the manner of men, may think it neceffary, that all Proteſtants ſhould be united againſt the common enemy; or out of difcretion, or other reafons beſt known to himſelf, be tender of mentioning them at all. But still the errors of the diffenters are all fixed and de- termined; and muft, upon demand, be acknowledged by all the divines of our church, whether they be called, in party-phrafe, high or low, moderate or violent. And further, I believe it would be hard to find many mode- rate divines, who, if their opinion were aſked, whether diffenters fhould be trufted with power, could according to their confciences anfwer in the affirmative: from whence it is plain, that all the ftir which the Fanatics have made with this word moderation, was only meant to increase our divifions, and widen them fo far as to make room for themſelves to get in between. And this is the only ſcheme they ever had (except that of destroying root and branch) for the uniting of Proteftants, they lo much talk of : I fhall mention but one ill confequence more, which attends our want of brotherly love; that it hath put an end to all hoſpitality and friendſhip, all good correſpond- ence and commerce between mankind. There are in- deed fuch things as leagues and confederacies among thoſe of the fame party; but furely God never intended, that men fhould be fo limited in the choice of their friends however, fo it is in town and country, in eve- ry pariſh and ſtreet; the paftor is divided from his flock, the father from his fon, and the houfe often divided again itself. Men's very natures are foured and their paflions inflamed, when they meet in party-clubs, and fpend their time in nothing elfe but railing at the oppo- fite fide thus every man alive among us is encompaffed with a million of enemies of his own country, among which his oldeſt acquaintance, and friends, and kindred themſelves are often of the number. Neither can people of different parties mix together without conſtraint, fufpicion, Ser. IV. 285 ON BROTHERLY LOVE. fufpicion, and jealoufy; watching every word they ſpeak, for fear of giving offence, or elfe falling into rudeness and reproaches: and fo leaving themſelves open to the malice and corruption of informers, who were never more numerous or expert in their trade. And, as a further ad- dition to this evil, thofe very few, who, by the goodneſs and generofity of their nature, do in their own hearts defpife this narrow principle, of confining their friend- fhip and efteem, their charity and good offices, to thoſe of their own party, yet dare not diſcover their good in- clinations, for fear of lofing their favour and intereſt. And others, again, whom God had formed with mild and gentle difpofitions, think it neceffary to put a force upon their own tempers, by acting a noify, violent, ma- licious part, as a means to be diftinguifhed. Thus hath party got the better of the very genius and conftitution of our people; fo that whoever reads the character of the Engliſh in former ages, will hardly believe their pre- fent pofterity to be of the fame nation or climate. III. I fhall now, in the laft place, make ufe of fome motives and exhortations, that may perfuade you to em- brace brotherly love, and to continue in it. Let me ap- ply myself to you of the lower fort, and defire you will confider, when any one of you make use of fair and en- ticing words to draw in caftomers, whether you do it for their fakes or your own. And then for whofe fakes do you think it is, that your leaders are fo induftrious to put into your heads all that party rage and virulence? Is it not to make you the tools and inftruments, by which they work out their own defigns? Has this fpirit of faction been uſeful to any of you in your worldly con- cerns, except to thoſe who have traded in whifpering, backbiting, or informing, and wanted fkill or honefty to thrive by fairer methods? It is no bufnefs of yours to inquire, who is at the head of armies, or of councils, unless you had power and kill to chufe, neither of which is ever like to be your cafe: and therefore to fill your heads with fears and hatred of perfons and things of which it is impoffible you can ever make a right judgment, or to let you at variance with your neighbour, becauſe his thoughts are not the VOL. I Q fame 290 Ser. IV, ON BROTHERLY LOVE. fame as yours, is not only in a very grofs manner to cheat you of your time and quiet, but likewife to endanger your fouls. your Secondly, In order to restore brotherly love, let me ear- neftly exhort you to ftand firm in your religion, I mean the true religion hitherto eſtabliſhed among us; without varying in the leaft, either to Popery on the one fide, or to Fanaticism on the other and in a particular manner beware of that word moderation; and believe it, that neighbour is not immediately a villain, a Papift, and a traitor, becauſe the Fanatics and their adherents will not allow him to be a moderate man. Nay, it is very pro- bable, that your teacher himſelf may be a loyal, pious, and able divine, without the leaft grain of moderation, as the word is too frequently understood. Therefore, to fet you right in this matter, I will lay before you the character of a truly moderate man; and then I will give you the deſcription of fuch an one who falfely pretend- eth to that title. A man truly moderate is ſteady in the doctrine and difcipline of the church, but with a due Chriftian chari- ty to all who diffent from it out of a principle of con- fcience; the freedom of which, he thinketh, ought to be fully allowed; as long as it is not abuſed; but never truſted with power. He is ready to defend with his life and fortune the Proteftant fucceffion, and the Proteftant eſtabliſhed faith, againft all invecers whatfoever. He is for giving the crown its juft pregative, and the people their juft liberties. He hateth no man for differing from him in political opinions; or doth he think it a maxim infallible, That virtue fhould always attend up- on favour, and vice upon difgrace. Theſe are fome few lineaments in the character of a truly moderate man. Let us now compare it with the deicription of one who ufually palleth under that title. A moderate man, in the new meaning of the word, is one to whom all religion is indifferent; who, al- though he denominates himself of the church, regard- eth it no more than a conventicle. He perpetually rail- eth at the body of the clergy, with exceptions only to a very few, who, he hopeth, and probably upon falſe grounds, are as ready to betray their rights and pro- perties Ser. IV. ON BROTHERLY LOVE. 291 perties as himſelf. He thinks the power of the people can never be too great, nor that of the prince too little; and yet this very notion he publiſheth, as his beſt argu- ment to prove him a moft loyal ſubject. Every opinion in government that differeth in the leaft from his, tends directly to Popery, flavery, and rebellion. Whoever lieth under the frown of power, can in his judgment neither have common fenfe, common honefty, nor reli- gion. Lastly, his devotion confifteth in drinking gib- bets, confufion, and damnation: in profanely idolizing the memory of one dead prince, and ungratefully tramp- ling upon the ashes of another. By theſe marks you will eafily diftinguiſh a truly mo- derate man from thoſe who are commonly, but very falfely, fo called: and while perfons thus qualified are fo numerous and fo noify, fo full of zeal and induftry to gain profelytes, and ſpread their opinions among the peo- ple, it cannot be wondered that there fhould be fo little brotherly love left among us. Lajily, It would probably contribute to reftore fome degree of brotherly love, if we would but confider, that the matter of thole difputes which infl me us to this degree, doth not in its own nature at all concern the generality of mankind. Indeed, as to thoſe who have been great gainers or lofers by the changes of the world, the cafe is different; and to preach moderation to the firit, and patience to the laft, would perhaps be to lit- tle purpoſe. But what is that to the bulk of the peo- ple, who are not properly concerned in the quarrel, al- though evil inftruments have drawn them into it? For if the reaſonable men on both fides were to confer opini- ons, they would find neither religion, loyalty, nor in- tereſt, are at all affected in this difpute. Not religion, becauſe the members of the church on both fides pro- fels to agree in every article: not loyalty to our prince; which is pretended to by one party as much as the other, and therefore can be no ſubject for debate: not interest, for trade and induftry lie open to all; and, what is further, concerneth thofe only who have ex- pectations from the public. So that the body of the people, if they knew their own good, might yet live a- micably together, and to leave their betters quarrel a- 02 mong 292 Ser. V. THE DIFFICUTY OF among themſelves, who might alfo probably foon come to a better temper, if they were lefs feconded and ſup- ported by the poor deluded multitude. I have now done with my text; which I confess to have treated in a manner more fuited to the preſent times, than to the nature of the fubject in general. That I have not been more particular in explaining the ſeve- ral parts and properties of this great duty of brotherly love, the apoftle to the Theffalonians will plead my ex- cufe. Touching brotherly love, (iaith he,) ye need not that I write unto you; for ye yourselves are taught of God to love •ne another. So that nothing remains to add, but our prayers to God, that he would pleafe to restore and continue this great duty of brotherly love or charity among us, the very bond of peace and of all virtues. Nov. 29. 1717. SERMON V. The difficulty of knowing one's felf. * 2 KINGS viii. 13. part of it. And Hazael ſaid, But what, is thy jervant a dug, that he fhould do this great thing? WE E have a very fignal inſtance of the deceitfulness of the heart reprefented to us in the perſon of Hazael; who was fent to the prophet Elifha, to inquire of * The manufcript title-page of the following fermon being loft, and no memorandums writ upon it, as there were upon the others; when and where it was preached, made the editor doubtful whether he fhould print it as the Dean's or not. But its being found amongst the fame papers; and the hand, although writ fomewhat better, having a great fimilitude to the Dean's, made him willing to lay it before the public, that they might judge whether the ftyle and man- mer alfo do not render it ſtill more probable to be his. Dublin editie "I fhall take no notice of this fermon, as it is evidently not compoſed by the Dean. Orrery, Ser. V. KNOWING ONE'S SELF. 293 of the Lord, concerning his mafter the King of Syria's recovery For the man of God having told him that the King might recover from the diforder he was then labouring under, began to fet and faſten his countenance upon him of a fudden, and to break out into the moit violent expreffions of forrow, and a deep concern for it: whereupon, when Hazael, full of thame and confufion, afked, I by veepeth my lord? he anfwered, Because I know the ecil that thou wilt do unto the children of Ijracl: their ftrong holds wilt thou jet on fire, and their young men wilt that fly with the word, and wilt dafh their children, and rip up their women with child. Thus much did the man of God fay and know of him, by a light darted into his mind from heaven. But Hazael, not knowing himſelf fo well as the other did, was ſtartled and amazed at the relation, and would not believe it poffible, that a man of his temper could ever run over into fuch enormous in- ſtances of cruelty and inhumanity: What, fays he, is thy fervant a dog that he should do this great thing? And yet, for all this, it is highly probable, that he was then that very man he could not imagine himſelf to be: for we find him, on the very next day after his return, in a very treacherous and difloyal manner, murdering his own maiter, and ufurping his kingdom; which was but a prologue to the fad tragedy which he afterwards acted upon the people of Ifrael. And now the cafe is but very little better with moſt men, than it was with Hazael. However it cometh to paſs, they are wonderfully unacquainted with their own temper and difpofition, and know very little of what paffeth within them for of fo many proud, ambitious, revengeful, envying, and ill-natured perfons that are in the world, where is there one of them, who, al- though he hath all the fymptoms of the vice appearing upon every occafion, can look with fuch an impartial eye upon himſelf, as to believe that the imputation thrown upon him is not altogether groundleſs and un- fair? who, if he were told, by men of a difcerning fpi- rit and a strong conjecture, of all the evil and abfurd things which that falfe heart of his would at one time or other betray him into, would not believe as little, and 294 Ser. V. THE DIFFICULTY OF and wonder as much, as Hazael did before him? Thus, for inftance, tell an angry perfon, that he is weak and impotent, and of no confiftency of mind; tell him, that fuch or fuch a little accident, which he may then defpife, and think much below a paffion, fhall hereafter make him ſay and do ſeveral abfurd, indifcreet, and miſbecom- ing things he may perhaps own, that he hath a fpirit of refentment within him, that will not let him be im- pofed on; but he fondly imagines, that he can lay a be- coming reſtraint upon it when he pleaſes, although it is ever running away with him into fome indecency or other. Therefore, to bring down the words of my text to our preſent occafion, I ſhall endeavour, in a further pro- fecution of them, to evince the great neceflity of a nice and curious inſpection into the feveral receffes of the heart; that being the fureft and the ſhorteſt method that a wicked man can take to reform himſelf. For let us but ftop the fountain, and the ftreams will ſpend and waſte themſelves away in a very little time: but if we go about, like children, to raiſe a bank, and to ftop the cur- rent, not taking notice all the while of the fpring which continually feedeth it; when the next flood of a temp- tation rifeth, and breaketh in upon it, then we ſhall find, that we have begun at the wrong end of our duty, and that we are very little more the better for it, than if we had fat flill, and made no advances at all. But, in order to a clearer explanation of the point, I fhall ſpeak to thefe following particulars. 1. By endeavouring to prove, from particular inftances, that man is generally the moſt ignorant creature in the world of himſelf. 2. By inquiring into the grounds and reaſons of this ignorance. 3. And lastly, By propofing feveral advantages that do molt affuredly attend a due improvement in the know- ledge of ourselves. I. First then, To prove that man is generally the moit ignorant creature in the world of himfelf: To purlue the heart of man through all the inftances of Ser. V. 295 KNOWING ONE'S SELF. : of life, in all its feveral windings and turnings, and un- der that infinite variety of fhapes and appearances which it putteth on, would be a difficult and almoft impoffible undertaking ſo that I fhall confine myfelf to fuch as have a nearer reference to the prefent occafion, and do, upon a clofer view, fhew themfelves through the whole buſineſs of repentance. For we all know what it is to repent; but whether he repenteth him truly of his fins or not, who can know it? Now, the great duty of repentance is chiefly made up of theſe two parts; a hearty forrow for the follies and miscarriages of the time paft, and a full purpoſe and re- folution of amendment for the time to come. And now, to fhew the falſeneſs of the heart in both theſe parts of. repentance. And, Firſt, As to a hearty forrow for the fins and mifcarri- ages of the time paft: Is there a more ufual thing than for a man to impofe upon himfelf by putting on a grave and demure countenance, by cafting a fevere look into his paft conduct, and making fome few pious and devout reflections upon it, and then to believe that he hath re- pented to an excellent purpofe, without ever letting it ſtep forth into practice, and fhew itfelf in a holy con- verfation? Nay, fome perfons do carry the deceit a lit- tle higher; who, if they can but bring themfelves to weep for their 'fins, are then full of an ill-grounded confidence and fecurity; never confidering, that all this may prove to be no more than the very garb and outward drefs of a contrite heart, which another heart, as hard as the nether millstone, may as well put on. For tears and fighs, however in fome perfons they may be decent and commendable expreflions of a godly for- row, are neither neceffary, nor infallible figns of a true and unfeigned repentance: not neceffary, becauſe fome- times, and in fome perfons, the inward grief and an- guifh of the mind may be too big to be expreffed by fo little a thing as a tear; and then it turneth its edge in- wards upon the mind; and, like thofe wounds of the bo- dy which bleed inwardly, it generally proves the moſt fatal and dangerous to the whole body of fin: not in- fallible, becauſe a very finall portion of forrow may make fome tender difpofitions melt, and break out into tears; 1 296 THE DIFFICULTY OF Ser. V. tears; or a man may perhaps weep at parting with his fins, as he would to bid the laft farewel to an old friend' that he was fure never to fee again. But there is Rill a more pleafant cheat in this affair, that when we find a deadnefs, and a ſtrange kind of un- aptnefs and indifpofition to all impreffions of religion, and that we cannot be as truly forry for our fins as we ſhould be, we then pretend to be forry that we are not more forry for them; which is not lefs abfurd and irra- tional, than that a man fhould pretend to be very angry at a thing, becauſe he did not know how to be angry at all. But after all, what is wanting in this part of repent- ance, we expect to make it up in the next; and to that purpoſe we put on a refolution of amendment, which we take to be as firm as a houfe built upon a rock; ſo that let the floods arife, and the winds blow, and the ftreams beat vehemently upon it, nothing fhall ſhake it into ruin and diforder. We doubt not, upon the ftrength of this refolve, to ftand faft and unmoved amidst the ftorm of a temptation; and do firmly believe, at the time we make it, that nothing in the world will ever be able to make us commit thofe fins over again, which we have fo firmly refolved against. 'T'hus many a time have we come to the facrament of the Lord's fupper, with a full purpofe of amendment, and with as full a perfuafion of putting that fame purpoſe in- to practice; and yet have we not all as often broke that good purpoſe, and falfified that fame perfuafion, by ſtart- ing afide, like a broken bow, into thofe very fins which we then fo folemnly and fo confidently declared again ft? Whereas, had but any other perfon entered with us into a vow fo folemn, that he had taken the holy facra- ment upon it, I believe had he but once deceived us by breaking in upon the vow, we ſhould hardly ever after be prevailed upon to trust that man again, although we till continue to trust our own hearts, againſt reafon and against experience. This indeed is a dangerous deceit enough; and will of courſe betray all thoſe well- meaning perſons into fin and folly, who are apt to take religion for a much eaſier thing Ser. V. 297 KNOWING ONE'S SELF. thing than it is. But this is not the only mistake we are apt to run into: we do not only think fometimes that we can do more than we can do, but fometimes that we are incapable of doing leſs: An error of another kind indeed, but not lefs dangerous, arifing from a diffi- dence and falſe humility; for how much a wicked man can do in the bufinefs of religion, if he would but do his beft, is very often more than he can tell. Thus nothing is more common, than to ſee a wicked man running headlong into fin and folly, againſt his rea- fon, against his religion, and against his God. Tell him, that what he is going to do, will be an infinite difparage- ment to his understanding, which at another time he fetteth no fmall value upon; tell him, that it will black- en his reputation, which he had rather die for than lofe; tell him, that the pleaſure of the fin is fhort and tran- fient, and leaveth a vexatious kind of a fting behind it, which will very hardly be drawn forth; tell him, that this is one of thoſe things for which God will moſt fure- ly bring him to judgment, which he pretendeth to be- lieve with a full affurance and perfuafion: and yet, for all this, he fhutteth his eyes against all conviction, and rutheth into the fin, like a horfe into the battle; as if he had nothing left to do, but, like a fily child, to wink hard, and to think to eſcape a certain and an infinite mil- chief, only by endeavouring not to fee it. And now to fhew that the heart hath given in a falſe report of the temptation, we may learn from this, that the fame weak man would refilt and mafter the fame powerful temptation, upon confiderations of infinitely lefs value than thofe which religion offereth, nay, ſuch vile confiderations that the grace of God cannot, with- out blafphemy, be fuppofed to add any manner of force and efficacy to them. Thus, for instance, it would be an hard matter to drefs up a fin in ſuch ſoft and tempt- ing circumſtances, that a truly covetous man would not refift for a confiderable fum of money; when neither the hopes of heaven nor the fears of hell could make an impreflion upon him before. But can any thing be a furer indication of the deceitfulness of the heart, than thus to fhew more courage, refolution, and activity, in 0 5 an 298 Ser. V THE DIFFICULTY OF an ill cauſe, than it doth in a good one? and to exert it felf to better purpoſe, when it is to ferve its own pride, or luft, or revenge, or any other paffion, than when it is to ſerve God upon the motives of the gofpel, and upon all the arguments that have ever been made ufe of to bring men over to religion and a good life? And thus having fhewn that a man is wonderfully apt to deceive and impoſe upon himſelf, in paffing through the feveral ftages of that great duty, repentance, I proceed now, in the II. Second place, To inquire into the grounds and reafons of this ignorance, and to fhew whence it cometh to paſs, that a man, the only creature in the world that can reflect and look into himſelf, fhould know fo little of what paffeth within him, and be fo very much unac- quainted even with the ftanding difpofitions and com- plexions of his own heart. The prime rcafon of it is, becauſe we ſo very feldom converſe with ourſelves, and take fo little notice of what paffeth within us. For a man can no more know his own heart than he can know his own face, any other way than by reflection: he may as well tell over every feature of the fmaller portions of his face without the help of a looking-glafs, as he can tell all the inward bents and tendencies of the foul, thoſe ftanding features and lineaments of the inward man, and know all the various changes that this is liable to, from cuftom, from paffion, and from opinion, without a very frequent ufe of looking within himſelf. For our paffions and inclinations are not always upon the wing, and always moving towards their refpective objects; but retire now and then into the more dark and hidden recefles of the heart, where they lie concealed for a while, until a freſh occafion calls them forth again : fo that not every tranfient, oblique glance upon the mind, can bring a man into a thorough knowledge of all its ftrengths and weakneffes; for a man may fometimes turn the eye of the mind inward upon itſelf, as he may behold his natural face in a glafs, and go away, and Atraight forget what manner of man he was. man muſt rather fit down, and unravel every action of the past day into all its circumftances and particularities, But a and Ser. V. 299 KNOWING ONE'S SELF and obferve how every little thing moved and affected. him, and what manner of impreffion it made upon his heart: this done, with that frequency and carefulneſs which the importance of the duty doth require, would: in a fhort time bring him into a near and intimate ac- quaintance with himſelf. But when men, inftead of this, do país away months. and years in a perfect lumber of the mind, without once awaking it, it is no wonder they ſhould be fo very igno- rant of themſelves, and know very little more of what paffeth within them, than the very beafts which perish. But here it may not be amifs to inquire into the reaſons why most men have fo little converfation with them- felves. And, if, Becauſe this reflection is a work and labour · of the mind, and cannot be performed without fome pain and difficulty. For before a man can reflect upon. himfelf, and look into his heart with a ſteady eye, he muft contract his fight, and collect all his fcattered and. roving thoughts into fome order and compafs, that he may be able to take a clear and diftinct view of them ;. he muft retire from the world for a while, and be unat- tentive to all impreffions of fenfe and how hard and. painful a thing inuft it needs be to a man of paffion and infirmity, amidſt ſuch a croud of objects that are conti- nually striking upon the fenfe, and foliciting the affecti- ons, not to be moved and interrupted by one or other of them! But, zdly, Another reafon why we fo feldom converfe with: ourfelves, is becauſe the bufinefs of the world taketh. up all our time, and leaveth us no portion of it to ſpend upon this great work and labour of the mind. Thus twelve or fourteen years pafs away before we can well. difcern good from evil; and of the reft. fo much goeth. away in fleep, fo much in the ordinary bufinefs of life,. and fo much in the proper bufinefs of our callings, that. we have none to lay out upon the more ferious and re- ligious employments. Every man's life is an imperfect fort of a circle, which he repeateth and runneth over every day; he hath a fet of thoughts, defires, and incli- nations, which return upon him in their proper time and order, and will very hardly be laid aſide to make room : for: 300 Ser. V. THE DIFFICULTY OF : for any thing new and uncommon fo that call upon him when you pleaſe, to fet about the ſtudy of his own heart, and you are fure to find him pre-engaged; either he hath fome bufinefs to do, or iome diverfion to take, fome acquaintance that he muft vifit, or fome company that he muſt entertain, or fome croſs accident hath put him out of humour, and unfitted him for ſuch a grave employment. And thus it comes to pafs, that a man can never find leiſure to look into himſelf, becauſe he doth not fet apart fome portion of the day for that very pur- pofe, but foolishly deferreth it from one day to another, until his glafs is almoft run out, and he is called upon to give a miferable account of himself in the other world. But, 3dly, Another reafon why a man doth not more fie- quently converfe with himſelf, is, becauſe fuch a con- verfation with his own heart may difcover fome vice or fome infirmity lurking within him, which he is very un- willing to believe himself guilty of. For can there be a more ungrateful thing to a man, than to find, that up- on a nearer view, he is not that perfon he took himſelf to be? that he hath neither the courage, nor the honef- ty, nor the piety, nor the humility, that he dreamed he had that a very little pain, for instance, putteth him out of patience, and as little pleaſure fofteneth and dif- armeth him into eafe and wantonnefs? that he hath been at more pains, and labour, and coft, to be reveng- ed of an enemy, than to oblige the best friend he hath in the world? that he cannot bring himfelf to fay his prayers without a great deal of reluctancy; and when he doth fay them, the ſpirit and fervour of devotion eva- porate in a very fhort time, and he can fcarcely hold out a prayer of ten lines, without a number of idle and impertinent, if not vain and wicked thoughts coming into his head? Thefe are very unwelcome difcoveries that a man may make of himfelf; fo that it is no won- der that every one, who is already fluſhed with a good opinion of himself, fhould rather ftudy how to run away from it, than how to converfe with his own heart. But further, If a man were both able and willing to retire into his own heart, and to fet apart fome portion of Ser. V. 301 KNOWING ONE'S SELF. of the day for that very purpofe; yet he is still difabled from paiſing a fair and impartial judgment upon himſelf, by feveral difficulties, arifing paitly from prejudice and prepoffeffion, partly from the lower appetites and inclina- tions. And, 1st, That the bufinefs of prepoffeffion may lead and betray a man into a falfe judgment of his own heart. For we may obferve, that the firft opinion we take up of any thing, or of any perfon, doth generally ſtick cloſe to us; the nature of the mind being fuch, that it cannot but defire, and confequently endeavour, to have fome certain principles to go upon, fomething fixed and im- moveable, whereon it may reft and fupport itſelf. And hence it cometh to pass, that fome perfons are with fo much difficulty brought to think well of a man they have once entertained an ill opinion of; and, perhaps, that too for a very abfurd and unwarrantable reafon. But how much more difficult then muft it be, for a man who taketh up a fond opinion of his own heart, long be- fore he hath either years or fenfe enough to underſtand it, either to be perfuaded out of it by himſelf, whom he loveth fo well, or by another, whofe intereft or diverfion it may be to make him ashamed of himſelf? Then, zdly, As to the difficulties arifing from the inferior appetites and inclinations, let any man look into his own heart, and obferve, in how different a light, and under- what different complexions, any two fins, of equal turpitude and malignity, do appear to him, if he hath but a ftrong inclination to the one, and none at all to the other. That which he hath an inclination to, is al- ways dreffed up in all the falfe beauty that a fond and bufy imagination can give it; the other appeareth naked. and deformed, and in all the true circumftances of folly and difhonour. Thus, ftealing is a vice that few gentle- men are inclined to; and they juftly think it below the dignity of a man, to ftoop to fo bafe and low a fin: but no principle of honour, no workings of the mind and. confcience, not the ftill voice of mercy, not the dread- ful call of judgment, nor any confiderations what- ever, can put a stop to that violence and oppreffion, that pride and ambition, that revelling and wantonneſs, which 302 THE DIFFICULTY OF Ser. V, which we every day meet with in the world. Nay, it is eafy to obſerve very different thoughts in a man, of the fin that he is moft fond of, according to the different ebbs and flows of his inclination to it. For as foon as the appetite is alarmed, and ſeizeth upon the heart, a lit- tle cloud gathereth about the head, and ſpreadeth a kind of darkneſs over the face of the foul, whereby it is hin- dered from taking a clear and diftinct view of things: but no fooner is the appetite tired and fatiated, but the fame cloud paffeth away like a fhadow, and a new light Ipringing up in the mind of a fudden, the man feeth much more, both of the folly and of the danger of the fin, than he did before. And thus having done with the feveral reafons, why man, the only creature in the world that can reflect and look into himself, is fo very ignorant of what paffeth within him, and fo much unacquainted with the ſtanding difpofitions and complexions of his own heart; I proceed now, in the III. Third and laft place, to lay down feveral advan- tages, that do most affuredly attend a due improvement in the knowledge of ourfelves. And, 1. One great advantage is, that it tendeth very much to mortify and humble a man into a modest and low opinion of himself. For let a man take a nice and curious infpection into all the feveral regions of the heart, and obferve every thing irregular and amifs within him; for inftance, how narrow and short-fighted a thing is the underſtanding! upon how little reafon do we take up an opinion, and upon how much lefs fometimes do we lay it down again! how weak and falfe ground do we often. walk upon, with the biggest confidence and affurance; and how tremulous and doubtful we are very often, where no doubt is to be made! again, how wild and impertinent, how bufy and incoherent a thing is the imagination, even in the best and wifeft men; infomuch that every man may be faid to be mad, but every man doth not fhew it. Then, as to the paffions, how noisy, how turbulent, and how tumultuous are they! how ea- fily are they ftirred and fet a-going; how eager and hot in the purfuit, and what itrange diforder and confuſion dọ Ser. V. 303 KNOWING ONE'S SELF. do they throw a man into, fo that he can neither think, nor speak, nor act, as he ſhould do, while he is under the dominion of any one of them. Thus, let every man look with a fevere and impartial eye into all the diftinct regions of the heart; and, no doubt, ſeveral deformities and irregularities that he never thought of, will open and difclofe themfelves upon fo near a view; and rather make the man afhamed of him- felf, than proud. 2. A due improvement in the knowledge of ourfelves, doth certainly fecure us from the fly and infinuating af faults of flattery. There is not in the world a bafer, and more hateful thing, than flattery. It proceedeth from ſo much falſeneſs and infincerity in the man that giveth it, and often difcovereth fo much weaknels and folly in the man that taketh it, that it is hard to tell which of the two is moft to be blamed. Every man of common fenfe can demonftrate in fpeculation, and may be fully convinced, that all the praifes and commendations of the whole world can add no more to the real and in- trinfic value of a man, than they can add to his ftature. And yet, for all this, men of the beft fenfe and piety, when they come down to the practice, cannot forbear thinking much better of themſelves, when they have the good fortune to be fpoken well of by other perfons. But the meaning of this abfurd proceeding feemeth to be no other than thi:: There are few men that have fo intimate an acquaintance with their own hea ts, as to know their own real worth, and how to fet a juſt rate upon themſelves; and therefore they do not know, but that he, who praifes them molt, may be molt in the right of it. For, no doubt, if a man were ignorant of the true value of a thing he loved as well as himfelf, he would meaſure the worth of it according to the efteem of him who biddeth moft for it, rather than of him that biddeth lefs. Therefore the most infallible way to difentangle a man from the fnares of flattery, is to confult and study his own heart; for whoever does that well, will hardly be fo abfurd, as to take another man's word, before his own. fenfe and experience, 3. Another 304 THE DIFFICULTY OF Ser. T. 3. Another advantage from this kind of ftudy, is this, that it teacheth a man how to behave himſelf patiently, when he has the ill fortune to be cenfured and abuſed by other people. For a man who is thoroughly acquaint- ed with his own heart, doth already know much more evil of himſelf than any body elfe can tell him; and when any one fpeaketh ill of him, he rather thanketh God, that he can fay no worſe. For could his enemy but look into the dark and hidden recefles of the heart, he confidereth what a number of impure thoughts he might there fee brooding and hovering like a dark cloud upon the face of the foul; that there he might take a profpect of the fancy, and view it acting over the ſeveral fcenes of pride, of ambition, of envy, of luft, and re- venge; that there he might tell how often a vitious in- clination hath been refrained, for no other reaſon, but just to fave the man's credit or intereft in the world; and how many unbecoming ingredients have entered into the compofition of his bett actions. And now, what man in the whole world would be able to bear fo fevere a telt, to have every thought and inward motion of the heart laid open and expoted to the view of his enemies? But, 4. And laftiv, another advantage of this kind is that it maketh men lefs fevere upon other people's faults, and lefs bufy and induftrious in fpreading them. For a man employed at home, infpecting into his own failings, hath not leifure enough to take notice of every little ſpot and blemiſh that lieth fcattered upon others: or, if he can- not eſcape the fight of them, he always paffes the moft eaſy and favourable conftruction upon them. Thus, for inftance, does the ill he knoweth of a man proceed from an unhappy temper and conftitution of body? he then confidereth with himſelf, how hard a thing it is, not to be borne down with the current of the blood and ſpirits; and accordingly layeth fome part of the blame upon the weakness of human nature, for he hath felt the force and rapidity of it within his own breaſt; though perhaps, in another instance, he remembereth how it rageth and fwel- leth by oppofition; and though it may be reftrained, or diverted for a while, yet it can hardly ever be totally fubdued. Ora Ser. V. 305 KNOWING ONE'S Self. Or, hath the man finned out of cuftom; he then, from his own experience, traceth a habit into the very first rife and imperfect beginnings of it; and can tell, by how flow and infenfible advances it creepeth upon the heart; how it worketh itſelf by degrees into the very frame and texture of it, and fo paffeth into a fecond nature; and confequently he hath a juft fenfe of the great difficulty for him to learn to do good, who hath been long accuf- tomed to do evil. Or, laftly, hath a falfe opinion betrayed him into a fin? he then calleth to mind what wrong apprehenfions he hath had of fome things himfelf; how many opinions. that he once made no doubt of, he hath, upon a ſtricter examination, found to be doubtful and uncertain; how many more to be unreasonable and abfurd. He know- eth further, that there are a great many more opinions that he hath never yet examined into at all, and which, however, he ſtill believeth, for no other reaſon, but be- cauſe he hath believed them fo long already without a reafon. Thus, upon every occafion, a man intimately acquainted with himlelf, confulteth his own heart, and maketh every man's cafe to be his own, (and fo puts the moſt favourable interpretation upon it.) Let every man therefore look into his own heart, before he beginneth to abuſe the reputation of another, and then he will hardly be fo abfurd, as to throw a dart that will ſo certainly rebound, and wound himſelf. And thus, through the whole courſe of his converfation, let him keep an eye upon that one great and comprehenfive rule of Chriftian duty, on which hangeth not only the law and the pro- phets, but the very life and fpirit of the goſpel too; Whatſoever ye would that men ſhould de unto you, do ye even So unto them. Which rule that we may all duly obferve, by throwing afide all fcandal and detraction, all ſpite and rancour, all rudeness and contempt, all rage and violence, and whatever tendeth to make converfation and commerce either uneafy or troubleſome, may the God of peace grant, for Jefus Chrift's fake, &c. Confider what hath been faid, and the Lord give you a right underſtanding in all things. To whom, with the Son, and the Holy Ghoſt, be all honour and glory, now and for ever. A PRO- [ 306 ] A PROPOSAL humbly offered to the PARLIA- MENT, for the more effectual preventing the further growth of POPERY. With the defcription and ufe of the ECCLESIASTICAL THERMOMETER, Very proper for all families: Infani fanus nomen ferat, æquus iniqui, Ultra quam fatis eft, virtutem fi petat ipfum. H HOR. Aving, with great forrow of heart, obferved the in- creaſe of Popery among us of late years, and how ineffectual the penal laws and ftatutes of this realm have been, for near forty years laſt paſt, towards reclaiming tha blind and deluded people from their errors, not- withstanding the good intentions of the legiflators, and the pious and unwearied labours of the many learned di- vincs of the eltabliſhed church, who have preached to them without ceafing, although hitherto without fucceſs: Having alfo remarked, in his Grace's fpeech to both houfes of parliament, moft kind offers of his Grace's good offices, towards obtaining fuch further laws as hall be thought neceffary towards bringing home the faid wandering fheep into the fold of the church; as al- fo a good difpofition in the parliament to join in the laudable work, towards which every good Proteſtant ought to contribute at least his advice: I think it a pro- per time to lay before the public a fcheme which was writ fome years fince, and laid by to be ready on a fit oc- cafion. That whereas the feveral penal laws and ftatutes now in being againſt Papifts, have been found ineffectual, and rather tend to confirm than reclaim men from their er- rors, as, calling a man coward, is a ready way to make him fight; it is humbly propofed, I. That A PROPOSAL, &c. 307 I. That the faid penal laws and ftatutes against Pa- pifts, except the law of Gavelkind, and that which dif qualifies them for places, be repealed, abrogated, annul- led, deſtroyed, and obliterated, to all intents and pur- pofes. II. That, in the room of the faid penal laws and fta- tutes, all ecclefiaftical jurifdiction be taken from out of the hands of the clergy of the eſtabliſhed church, and the fame be vefted in the feveral Popifh archbishops, bifhops, deans, and archdeacons ; nevertheleſs fo as fuch jurif- diction be exerciſed over perfons of the Popish religion only. III. That a Popish priest fhall be fettled by law in each and every pariſh in Ireland. IV. That the faid Popish prieſt fhall, on taking the oath of allegiance to his Majefty, be intitled to a tenth part or tithe of all things tithable in Ireland, belonging to the Papifts within their refpective parifhes; yet fo as fuch grant of tithes to fuch Popish priests fhall not be conſtrued, in law or equity, to hinder the Proteftant cler- gyman of fuch parifh from receiving and collecting his tithes, in like manner as he does at prefent. V. That, in cafe of detention or fubtraction of tithes by any Papift, the parish-pricft do have his remedy at law, in any of his Majelly's courts, in the fame manner as now practiſed by the clergy of the cftabliſhed church; to- gether with all other ecclefiaftical dues. And, for their further difcovery, to vex their people at law, it might not be amifs to oblige the Solicitor-General, or fome other able King's counfel, to give his advice or affiftance to fuch priests gratis, for which he might receive a falary out of the barrack fund, military contingencies, or concor- datum; having obferved the exceedings there better paid than of the army, or any other branch of the cftabliſh- ment; and I would have no delay in payment in a mat- ter of this importance. VI. That the archbishops and bifh ps have power to vifit the inferior clergy, and to extort proxies, exhibits, and all other perquilites ufual in Pepijh and Proteftant countries. VII. That the convocation having been found by long 308 A PROPOSAL FOR long experience, to be hurtful to true religion, be for ever hereafter abolished among Proteſtants. VIII That, in the room thereof, the Popish archbi- fhops, bishops, priests, deans, archdeacons, and proctors, have liberty to affemble themſelves in convocation, and be impowered to make fuch canons as they fhall think proper for the government of the Papifts in Ireland. IX. And, that the fecular arm being neceffary to in- force obedience to ecclefiaftical cenfure, the fheriffs, con- ftables, and other officers, be commanded to execute the decrees and fentences of the faid Popish convocation, with fecrecy and difpatch; or, in lieu thereof, they may be at liberty to erect an inquifition, with proper officers of their own. X. That, as Papifts declare themiclves converts to the eſtabliſhed church, all ſpiritual power over them fhall ceafe. XI. That as foon as any whole pariſh ſhall renounce the Popish religion, the prieſt of ſuch pariſh, ſhall for his good fervices, have a penfion of zool. per annum ſet- tled on him for life, and that he be, from fuch time, exempt from preaching and praying, and other duties of his function, in like manner as Proteftant divines, with equal incomes, are at preſent. XII. That each biſhop, fo foon as his dioceſe ſhall be- come Proteſtants, be called My Lord, and have a penfion of two thousand pounds per annum during life. XIII. That when a whole province fhall be reclaimed, the archbiſhop ſhall be called His Grace, and have a pen- fion of three thouſand pounds per annum, during life, and be admitted a member of his Majeſty's moſt honouralle privy council. The good confequences of this fcheme (which will execute itſelf without murmurings against the govern- ment) are very vifible. I fhall mention a few of the most obvious. I The giving the priest a right to the tithe would produce law-fuits and wrangles; his Reverence, being intitled to a certain income at all events, would confider himfelf as a legal incumbent, and behave accordingly, and apply himſelf more to fleecing than feeding his flock. His neceffary attendance on the courts of justice would leave PREVENTING POPERY. 309 leave his people without a fpiritual guide; by which means Proteftant curates, who have no fuits about tithes, would be furniſhed with proper opportunities for making converts, which is very much wanted. II. The erecting a ſpiritual juriſdiction amongst them, would, in all probability, drive as many out of that com- munion, as a due execution of fuch jurifdiction hath hi- therto drove from amongst ourſelves. III. An inquifition would ſtill be a further improve- ment, and most certainly would expedite the converfion of Papiſts. I know it may be objected to this fcheme, and with fome fhew of reaſon, That, ſhould the Popiſh princes abroad purſue the fame methods, with regard to their Proteftant fubjects, the Proteftant intereft in Europe would thereby be confiderably weakened. But, as we have no reaſon to fufpect Popish counfels will ever pro- duce fo much moderation, I think the objection ought to have but little weight. A due execution of this fcheme will foon produce many converts from Popery nevertheleſs to the end it may be known when they fhall be of the true church, I have ordered a large parcel of ecclefiaftical or church thermo- meters to be made, one of which is to be hung up in each pariſh-church; the defcription and uſe of which take as follows, in the words of the ingenious Ifaac Bicker- ſtaff, Eſq; T HE church-thermometer, which I am now to treat of, is ſuppoſed to have been invented in the reign of Henry VIII. about the time when that religious prince put fome to death for owning the Pope's fupre- macy, and others for denying tranfubftantiation. I do not find, however, any great ufe made of this inftru- ment, till it fell into the hand of a learned and vigilant prieft or minifter, (for he frequently wrote himſelf both the one and the other,) who was fome time vicar of Bray. This gentleman lived in his vicarage to a good old age; and, after having feen feveral fucceffions of his neighbouring clery, either burnt or banished, departed this life with the fatisfaction of having never deferted his flock, and died vicar of Bray. As this glafs was firſt defigned 310 A PROPOSAL FOR defigned to calculate the different degrees of heat in re- ligion, as it raged in Popery, or as it cooled and grew temperate in the reformation, it was marked at feveral diſtances, after the manner our ordinary thermometer is to this day, viz. Extreme het, Sultry hot, Very hot, Hot, Warm, Temperate, Cold, Juß freezing, Froft, Hard frost, Great froft, Extreme cold. It is well known,1 hat Torricellius, the inventor of the common weather-glafs, made the experiment of a long tube which held thirty two foot of water; and that a more modern virtuofo finding fuch a machine altogether unwieldly and uſeleſs, and confidering that thirty-two inches of quickfilver weighed as much as fo many foot of water in a tube of the fame circumference, invented that fizeable inftrument which is now in ufe. After this manner, that I might adapt the thermometer I am now ſpeaking of to the prefent conftitution of our church, as divided into High and Low, I have made ſome necef- fary variations, both in the tube, and the fluid it con- tains. In the first place, I ordered a tube to be caſt in a planetary hour, and took care to feal it hermetically, when the fun was in conjunction with Saturn. I then took the proper precautions about the fluid, which is a compound of two different liquors; one of them a fpirit drawn out of a ſtrong heady wine, the other a particu- lar fort of rock-water, colder than ice, and clearer than cryftal. The ſpirit is of a red, fiery colour; and iù ve- ry apt to ferment, that, unless it be mingled with a pro- portion of the water, or pent up very clofe, it will burſt the veſſel that holds it, and fly up in fume and fmoke. The water, on the contrary, is of fuch a fubtile, pierc- ing cold, that unless it be mingled with a proportion of the fpirits, it will fink almoft through every thing it is put into; and feems to be of the fame nature as the water mentioned by Quintus Curtius, which, fays the historian, could be contained in nothing but in the hoof, or (as the Oxford manufcript has it) the fcull of an aſs. The thermometer is marked according to the following figure, which I fet down at length, not only to give my reader a clear idea of it, but alſo to fill up my paper. Ignorance. PREVENTING POPERY. 311 Ignorance Perfecution. Wrath. Zeal. CHURCH. Moderation. Lukewarmneſs. Infidelity. Ignorance. The reader will obferve, that the church is placed in the middle point of the glafs, between Zealand Modera- tion, the fituation in which fhe always flouriſhes, and in which every good Engliſhman wifhes her, who is a friend to the conftitution of his country. However, when it mounts to Zeal, it is not amifs; and when it finks to Moderation, it is ftill in admirable temper. The worst of it is, that when once it begins to rife, it has ftill an inclination to aſcend, infomuch that it is apt to climb from Zeal to Wrath, and from Wrath to Perfecution, which often ends in Ignorance, and very often proceeds from it. In the fame manner, it frequently takes its pro- grefs through the lower half of the glaſs; and, when it has a tendency to fall, will gradually defcend from Mo- deration to Lukecvarmneſs, and from Lukewarmnejs to In- fidelity, which very often terminates in Ignorance, and al- ways proceeds from it. It is a common obfervation, that the ordinary ther- mometer will be affected by the breathing of people who are in the room where it ftands; and indeed it is almoft incredible to conceive, how the glass I am now defcrib. ing, will fall by the breath of the multitude crying Pope- ry; or, on the contrary, how it will rife when the fame multitude (as it fometimes happens) cry out in the fame breath, The church is in danger. As foon as I had finished this my glass, and adjuſted it to the above-mentioned fcale of religion, that I might make proper experiments with it, I carried it under iny cloak to feveral coffeehouſes, and other places of refort, about this great city. At St James's coffeehouſe the li- quor ſtood at Moderation; but at Will's, to my extreme furpriſe, it fubfided to the very loweſt mark of the glaſs. At A PROPOSAL FOR At the Grecian it mounted but juſt one point higher; at the Rainbow it ftill afcended two degrees: Child's fetched it up to Zeal, and other adjacent coffeehouſes to Wrath. It fell in the lower half of the glaſs, as I went further into the city, till at length it ſettled at Moderation, where it continued all the time I ftaid about the Change, as al- fo whilft I paffed by the Bank. And here I cannot but take notice, that, through the whole courfe of my re- marks, I never obferved iny glaís to rife at the fame time that the ftocks did. To complete the experiment, I prevailed upon a friend of mine, who works under me in the occult fciences, to make a progrefs with my glafs through the whole iſland of Great Britain; and, after his return, to prefent me with a regiſter of his obfervations. I gueſſed before-hand at the temper of feveral places he pafled through, by the characters they have had, time out of mind. Thus, that facetious divine, Dr. Fuller, (peaking of the town of Banbury, near a hundred years ago, tells us, it was a place famous for cakes and geal; which I find by my glaſs is true to this day, as to the latter part of his defcription; though I must confefs, it is not in the fame reputation for cakes that it was in the time of that learned author; and thus of other places. In fhort, I have now by me, digefted in an alphabetical order, all the counties, corporations, and boroughs in Great-Eri- tain, with their reſpective tempers, as they ftand related in my thermometer. But this i fhall keep to myfelf, be- caufe I would by no means do any thing that may ſeem to influence any enfuing election. The point of doctrine which I would propagate by this my invention, is the fame which was long ago ad- vanced by that able teacher Horace, out of whom I have taken my text for this difcourfe. We fould be careful not to overshoot ourſelves, in the purſuits even of virtue Whether Zcal or Moderation be the point we aim at, let us keep fire out of the one, and froſt out of the other. But alas! the world is too wile to want fuch a precaution. The terms High-church and Low- church, as commonly uſed, do not fo much denote a principle, as they diftinguifh a party. They are like words PREVENTING POPERY. 313 words of battle, that have nothing to do with their ori- ginal fignification, but are only given out to keep a body of men together, and to let them know friends from enemies. I must confefs, I have confidered, with fome atten- tion, the influence which the opinions of theſe great national fects have upon their practice; and do look upon it as one of the unaccountable things of our times, that multitudes of honeft gentlemen, who entirely agree in their lives, fhould take it in their heads to differ in their religion. I ſhall conclude this paper with an account of a con- ference which happened between a very excellent divine (whofe doctrine was cafy, and formerly much refpect- ed) and a lawyer. A ND behold, a certain lawyer ftood up, and tempted him, faying, Maſter, what fhall I do to inherit eternal life? He ſaid unto him, What is written in the law? how readeft thou? And he anſwering, faid, Thou fhalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy foul, and with all thy ftrength, and with all thy mind; and thy neighbour as thyſelf. And he faid unto him, Thou haft anſwered right : this do, and thou shalt live. But he, willing to juftify himself, faid unto Jefus, And who is my neighbour ? And Jefus anfwering, faid, A certain man went down from Jerufalem to Jericho, and fell among thieves, which ſtripped him of his raiment, and wounded him, and departed, leaving him half dead. And by chance there came down a certain prieſt that way; and when he faw him, he paffed by on the other fide. And likewife a Levite, when he was at the place, came and looked on him, and paffed by on the other fide. But a certain Samaritan, as he journeyed, came where he was and when he faw him, he had compaffion on him, VOL. I. P And 314 PROPOSAL, &c. A And went to him, and bound up his wounds, pour- ing in oil and wine; and fet him on his own beaft, and brought him to an inn, and took care of him. And on the morrow, when he departed, he took out two pence, and gave them to the hoft, and faid unto him, Take care of him; and whatſoever thou ſpendeſt more, when I come again, I will repay thee. Which now of these three, thinkeft thou, was neigh- bour unto him that fell among the thieves? And he faid, He that fhewed mercy on him. Then faid Jefus unto him, Go, and do thou likewiſe. Luke x. 25 to 38. T ADVERTISEMENT. HERE is now in the prefs a propofal for railing a fund towards paying the national debt by the following means. The author would have commiffioners appointed to fearch all the public and private libraries, bookſellers ſhops and warehouſes, in this kingdom, for fuch books as are of no uſe to the owner, or to the public, viz. all comments on the holy fcrip- tures, whether called fermons, creeds, bodies of divinity, tomes of cafuiftry, vindications, confutations, ellays, anfwers, replies, rejoinders, or fur-rejoinders; together with all other learned treatiſes and books of divinity of what denomination or claſs foever as alfo, all comments on the laws of the land; fuch as, reports, law-cafes, decrees, guides for attorneys and young clerks; and, in fine, all the books now in being in this king- dom, (whether of divinity, law, phyfic, metaphyficks, logics, or politics), except the pure text of the holy fcriptures, the naked text of the laws, a few books of morality, poetry, mufic, architecture, agriculture, mathematics, merchandiſe, and hif- tory: the author would have the aforesaid uſeleſs books carried to the feveral paper-mills, there to be wrought into white pa- per; which, to prevent damage or complaints, he would have performed by the commentators, critics, popular preachers, apothecaries, learned lawyers, attorneys, folicitors, logicians, phyficians, almanack-makers, and others of the like wrong turn of mind; the faid paper to be fold, and the produce appli- ed to diſcharge the national debt. What ſhould remain of the faid debt unfatisfied, might be paid by a tax on the falaries or eſtates of bankers, common cheats, uſurers, treaſurers, imbez- zlers of public money, general officers, Jharpers, penfioners, pick-pockets, &c. THE END OF THE FIRST VOLUME. ARTES 1837 SCIENTIA LIBRARY VERITAS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN TUEBOR QUÆRIS PENINSULAM IMINAM CONSPICE GISD OF RECENT 12 HUBBARD