rward
made to do duty in the "Instalment," a poem addressed to Walpole:
"Be this thy partial smile, from censure free,
'Twas meant for merit, though it fell on me."
It was probably "The Revenge" that Young was writing when, as we learn
from Spence's anecdotes, the Duke of Wharton gave him a skull with a
candle fixed in it, as the most appropriate lamp by which to write
tragedy. According to Young's dedication, the Duke was "accessory" to
the scenes of this tragedy in a more important way, "not only by
suggesting the most beautiful incident in them, but by making all
possible provision for the success of the whole." A statement which is
credible, not indeed on the ground of Young's dedicatory assertion, but
from the known ability of the Duke, who, as Pope tells us, possessed
"each gift of Nature and of Art,
And wanted nothing but an honest heart."
The year 1722 seems to have been the period of a visit to Mr. Dodington,
of Eastbury, in Dorsetshire--the "pure Dorsetian downs" celebrated by
Thomson--in which Young made the acquaintance of Voltaire; for in the
subsequent dedication of his "Sea Piece" to "Mr. Voltaire," he recalls
their meeting on "Dorset Downs;" and it was in this year that Christopher
Pitt, a gentleman-poet of those days, addressed an "Epistle to Dr. Edward
Young, at Eastbury, in Dorsetshire," which has at least the merit of this
biographical couplet:
"While with your Dodington retired you sit,
Charm'd with his flowing Burgundy and wit."
Dodington, apparently, was charmed in his turn, for he told Dr. Wharton
that Young was "far superior to the French poet in the variety and
novelty of his _bon-mots_ and repartees." Unfortunately, the only
specimen of Young's wit on this occasion that has been preserved to us is
the epigram represented as an extempore retort (spoken aside, surely) to
Voltaire's criticism of Milton's episode of sin and death:
"Thou art so witty, profligate, and thin,
At once, we think thee Milton, Death, and Sin;"--
an epigram which, in the absence of "flowing Burgundy," does not strike
us as remarkably brilliant. Let us give Young the benefit of the doubt
thrown on the genuineness of this epigram by his own poetical dedication,
in which he represents himself as having "soothed" Voltaire's "rage"
against Milton "with gentle rhymes;" though in other respects that
dedication is anything but favorable to a high estimate of Young's wit.
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