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

CHAPTER VIII
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They preferred the philosophy of the Essay on Man, which might be appropriated by a common-sense preacher, or the rhetoric of _Eloisa and Abelard_, bits of which might be used to excellent effect (as indeed Pope himself used the peroration) by a fine gentleman addressing his gallantry to a contemporary Sappho.

It is only too easy to expose their shallowness, and therefore to overlook what was genuine in their feelings.

After all, Pope's eminent friends were no mere tailor's blocks for the display of laced coats.

Swift and Bolingbroke were not enthusiasts nor philosophers, but certainly they were no fools.
They liked in the first place thorough polish.

They could appreciate a perfectly turned phrase, an epigram which concentrated into a couplet a volume of quick observations, a smart saying from Rochefoucauld or La Bruyere, which gave an edge to worldly wisdom; a really brilliant utterance of one of those maxims, half true and not over profound, but still presenting one aspect of life as they saw it, which have since grown rather threadbare.


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