ler, Spenser, an

Moad Boulton lesbi****@uniso*****
2010年 3月 27日 (土) 02:42:40 JST


D boasted of his friendship, shortly after
the satire, in the Epilogue to the Satires. A more disagreeable affair
at the moment was the description, in the Epistle on Taste, of Canons,
the splendid seat of the Duke of Chandos. Chandos, being still alive,
resented the attack, and Pope had not the courage to avow

his meaning, which might in that case have been justifiable. He
declared to Burlington (to whom the epistle
was addressed), and to Chandos, that he had not intended Canons, and
tried to make peace by saying in another epistle

that "gracious Chandos is beloved at sight." This exculpation, says
Johnson, was
received by the duke "with great magnanimity, as by a man who accepted
his excuse, without believing his professions." Nobody, in fact,
believed, and even Warburton let out the secret by a comic oversight.
Pope had prophesied in his poem that another age would see the
destruction of "Timon's Villa," when

laughing Ceres would reassume the land. Had he lived three years
longer, said
Warburton in
a note, Pope would have

seen his prophecy fulfilled, namely, by the destruction of Canons. The
note was corrected, but the
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