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

CHAPTER VIII
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This microscopic attention to fragments sometimes injures the connexion, and often involves a mutilation of construction.

He corrects and prunes too closely.

He could, he says, in reference to the Essay on Man, put things more briefly in verse than in prose; one reason being that he could take liberties of this kind not permitted in prose writing.

But the injury is compensated by the singular terseness and vivacity of his best style.

Scarcely any one, as is often remarked, has left so large a proportion of quotable phrases,[25] and, indeed, to the present he survives chiefly by the current coinage of that kind which bears his image and superscription.
This familiar remark may help us to solve the old problem whether Pope was, or rather in what sense he was, a poet.


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