[Alexander Pope by Leslie Stephen]@TWC D-Link book
Alexander Pope

CHAPTER III
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But he cannot quite stand Homer's downright comparison of Ajax to an ass, and speaks of him in gingerly fashion as-- The slow beast with heavy strength endued.
Pope himself thinks the passage "inimitably just and beautiful;" but on the whole, he says, "a translator owes so much to the taste of the age in which he lives as not to make too great a compliment to the former [age]; and this induced me to omit the mention of the word _ass_ in the translation." Boileau and Longinus, he tells us, would approve the omission of mean and vulgar words.

"Ass" is the vilest word imaginable in English or Latin, but of dignity enough in Greek and Hebrew to be employed "on the most magnificent occasions." The Homeric phrase is thus often muffled and deadened by Pope's verbiage.

Dignity of a kind is gained at the cost of energy.

If such changes admit of some apology as an attempt to preserve what is undoubtedly a Homeric characteristic, we must admit that the "dignity" is often false; it rests upon mere mouthing instead of simplicity and directness, and suggests that Pope might have approved the famous emendation "he died in indigent circumstances," for "he died poor." The same weakness is perhaps more annoying when it leads to sins of commission.

Pope never scruples to amend Homer by little epigrammatic amplifications, which are characteristic of the contemporary rhetoric.


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