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

CHAPTER II
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Dennis, like Philips, was inscribed on the long list of his hatreds; and was pursued almost to the end of his unfortunate life.
Pope, it is true, took great credit to himself for helping his miserable enemy when dying in distress, and wrote a prologue to a play acted for his benefit.

Yet even this prologue is a sneer, and one is glad to think that Dennis was past understanding it.

We hardly know whether to pity or to condemn the unfortunate poet, whose unworthy hatreds made him suffer far worse torments than those which he could inflict upon their objects.
By this time we may suppose that Pope must have been regarded with anything but favour in the Addison circle; and, in fact, he was passing into the opposite camp, and forming a friendship with Swift and Swift's patrons.

No open rupture followed with Addison for the present; but a quarrel was approaching which is, perhaps, the most celebrated in our literary history.

Unfortunately, the more closely we look, the more difficult it becomes to give any definite account of it.


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