[] THE NORTHERN-STAR. A POEM.
Written by Mr. HILL.
LONDON: Printed for E. Berington at the Croſs-Keys near Eſſex-ſtreet End in the Strand, and J. Morphew near Stationers-Hall MDCCXVIII. Price One Shilling.
THE PREFACE To Mr. POPE.
[]I Am ſo little inclin'd to trouble even Men of Merit, with the Addreſs of ſuch Trifles as Theſe, that it was impoſſible I ſhou'd ſo much as have thought of Yourſelf with that View, if Honeſt Bernard, your Bookſeller, had not inform'd me, That You (I ſuppoſe it was out of the Fulneſs of your known Zeal for our Church and Conſtitution) had taken upon you to aſſert, that Printing any thing in Praiſe of the Czar of Ruſſia wou'd be receiv'd as a Satyr on the Government.
'Tis poſſible, that under this Diſguiſe of Opinion, Your Exceſs of Good-breeding may have conceal'd your Diſlike of the Performance; for I find it a Difficulty to conceive, how ſo whimſical an Objection cou'd come into a Head, ſo well ſtor'd with Judgment, as we are to conclude Yours to be, from Your Eſſay on Criticiſm.
Let either of theſe ſage Caſes be the Right, I conſider their Importance as Equal; and take this Occaſion, with a Frankneſs, like Your own, to aſſure You, that my Eſteem for Your Genius as a Poet, is ſo very conſiderable, that it is hardly exceeded by my Con⯑tempt of Your Vanity.
What led me to embrace an Opportunity of knowing Your Opinion, was a Diſpoſition which two Lines in Your Eſſay above-mention'd ſhall explain for me;
I cou'd not, I confeſs, conſider you as a Friend, having that very great Misfortune to languiſh under, of not being reckon'd in the Number of Your Acquaintance: But in the Laſt of the two Lights, I preſum'd, I might regard You, ſince Mr. Dennis, for whoſe Skill in Judging I profeſs an Eſteem, has aſſured us, that You are a Kind of Foe to e⯑very Body but Your-ſelf, and on that Foundation, ſupports his rough Attempt to pull the Lyon's Skin from a certain little Aſs he there mentions, and I fear he means You, Sir.
When I conſider'd You in this Character, I made no doubt but any Poem wou'd have had the Good Fortune to come out of Your Hands well examined, that I ſhou'd have heard of Rough Verſe, improper Sentiments, and a World of Poetical Errors: But I profeſs Your Penetration over-ſhot all my Fears, and I cannot find Words to expreſs my Aſtoniſh⯑ment at Your Capacity, when Mr. Lintott liſp'd out, That Mr. Pope ſaid, there were ſeveral good Things in the Northern-Star, BUT, it would be taken for an Inſult on the Government: FOR, tho' the Czar is King George 's Ally; yet we are like⯑ly to quarrel with Sweden; and Muſcovy, whiſper'd Bernard, lies, he ſays, in the North!
If this pleaſant Diſcovery was Your Real Opinion, we muſt, I'm aſraid, learn to pity the Weakneſs of a Judgment, which, I know, is Heroic enough to wiſh rather for Envy, tho' a ſturdier Paſſion, and agree with You heartily, that,
But if you diſlik'd the Poem, as a Poem, why did you not fairly avow the Diſreliſh? I could have own'd a Conviction of Error, with the ſame Satisfaction, I feel, when I repay a Civility. Shall I put you in Mind, that Diſlike not own'd openly, ſtands condemn'd by a Judge, whoſe Sentence Mr. Pope, of all Mankind, will be the laſt to appeal from,
Pope 's Eſſay on Criticiſm.
I muſt, by no Means, imagine, that a ſupercilious Reſult, from Neglect of examining into the Merits of a Cauſe, he pretends to decide, can he charg'd with any Juſtice on the Au⯑thor of the following Lines, unleſs he was religious enough to write them, with Deſign to laſh himſelf by Way of Penance.
In ſhort, if I writ Verſe often enough to make my Vanity Rampant; I ſhould ſhrewdly ſuſpect, that you were mightily taken with this Poem, ſince you thought it worth your while [] to give it an ill Charàcter; for You▪ who rever iie, have told the World, and I ſuppoſe you aſſert Nothing but from Your own Knowledge,
But. if I was not afraid, that You wou'd think me Ill-natur'd, I wou'd obſerve in your Favour, on this Occaſion, that tho' all theſe foregoing Verſes are Your own Words, they way poſibly be very different from Your Sentiments; for I remember, that, among the reſt, You, tell us, by Way of Warning.
That Men of Wit may their own Rules invade,
As Kings diſpenſe with Laws, themſelves have made.
I will therefore take Advantage, from my having been pretty converſant with your Writings, to ſeek a better Reaſon yet, for the Oddneſs of your Notion, that this North⯑ern-Star is a Satyr on the Government. Your abovemention'd Cabinet of Sentences is ſo well furniſhed, that, like a Maſquerade-ſhop at Venice. it will give a Man what Face he pleaſes in a Twinkling; but I preſume, I have hit the Right Nail, when I ſtop at the fol⯑lowing Simile.
But however, tho▪ as Teague in the Comedy, finds his Mouth run from one Side to the other, and cannot for his Life ſay Ladyſhip to Mrs. Day, without laughing in her Face, I cannot without much Difficulty grow Grave, when I compare the Judge with the Sen⯑tence; yet to allow all poſſible fair Quarter, let us ſuppoſe, that the Czar, as He is not; were now actually our Enemy—Are his Merits leſs ſhining? Does His Glory depend on His Friendſhip for Britain? Contemptible Meanneſs of Thought! Is it neceſſary to⯑wards becoming a Patriot, among the Engliſh, that every Thing muſt be hated, that is▪ Foreign? At that Rate the toto diviſos orbe Britannos wou'd be more applicable to our Humour than it is to our Sitvation.
Next to deſerving well ourſelves, it is the nobleſt Perfection of Nature, to admire and applaud thoſe, who do ſo; But to have no Ear open to Renown at a Diſtance, were baſe, vain and brutal, equally diſtaſteful to Humanity and Wiſdom. We may talk what we pleaſe of our Natural Advantages. There is one Natural Defect, which will ſha⯑dow them All; and which makes it impoſſible to widen our Power, till we enlarge our Conceptions.
I am apt to believe that Nothing has contributed more to this Narrowneſs of Mind, than the Flatteries of our Poets: who generally writing for a precarious Subſiſtance, can no Way ſo eaſily ſucceed, as by falling in with the Weakneſs and Byaſs of Mens Natures; and hence all our Women are Nymphs, Angels, or Goddeſſes; our Men, Demi-Hero's; all our Soldiers are invincible; all our Generals beyond Caeſar; all our Kings like Auguſ⯑tus; and every Lord who has a Penny in his Pocket, and a Crotchet in His Imagination, a very Mecaenas.
A Poet ſhou'd ſometimes ſtand high, and look wide for a Subject; If He is always Do⯑meſtic, He will be often unnatural. Virgil's celebrated Praiſe of his Italy, had been Falſhood and F [...]attery, apply'd to Great Britain. He knew and admired the Delights of His Country, and acted as became Him, when he juſtly commended them. But our High⯑way-Poets, whoſe utmoſt Reach of Skill is a Poor Imitation, forget that they make Them⯑ſelves contemptible▪ inſtead of ornamenting their Subject, when Peace in our Climate is dreſs'd in her Olives; when Pan fills our Woods, and Tritons our Seas; and our Shep⯑herds ſit Piping, like the Swains of Arcadia.
A meer Poet, that is to ſay, a Wretch, who has nothing but the Jingle in his Brain to ring Chimes to his Vanity, and whoſe whole Trade is Rhyme-jobbirg; ſuch a Creature is certainly the moſt worthleſs Incumbrance of his Country. His Arrogance is the only Thing more Remarkable than his Ignorance. The fantaſtical Merit that ſwells him, is, like o⯑ther Ill-Humors▪ the more noxious for its Thinneſs. Uſeful Science is an Air much too Groſs for His Intellects: Biting Scorn, and Univerſal Neglect turn their Points on His Conceitedneſs, and while the whole World ſtrives in vain to correct him by Diſgrace and Reproaches, All that Tempeſt to Him is no more, than Blowing Wind in a Bladder, the ſtronger the Puff, the more boiſterous the Swelling.
All this, Mr. Pope muſt reeds know, between his double Capacity, of Poet and Critic; and, if ſo, He has given a Judgment, as well corrupt, as ridiculous, in attributing to Party the Endeavours of Juſtice. But if after all, it was not the Subject, but the Poem, that found no Favour in His Eyes, I will take upon me to aſſure Him, it ſues not for the Bleſſing: Let him like it as ill as He pleaſes, I dare at leaſt, undertake, it ſhall eaſily defend it ſelf againſt any Attack, of His making; which, pray Sir, inform Him, ſince you are His greateſt Admirer, and oblige
THE Northern Star. A POEM.
[1]Explanatory NOTES, Referr'd to, in the POEM.
[19](1) I Call Ruſſia The Land of Night, not only Literally, as its general Diſtance from the Sun occaſions tedious and uncomfortable Winters, but alſo in a Me⯑taphorical Senſe, becauſe an almoſt total Abſence of the Arts (till this Czar's Reign) had wrapt the Country in a Night of Ignorance.
(2) In that Contracted Name. Czar is a Contraction of the Word Caeſar, and is us'd to ſignify a King, or Emperor, not only in the Ruſſian Tongue, but the Scla⯑vonian, and ſome others; and, no doubt, deriv'd its Riſe from that Title of the Roman Emperors. Nor is there any other Difference in the Words than the Contraction only, ſince the antient Latin Pronunciation was not Caeſar, as we ſpeak it, but the C being pronounc'd as a K, made Kaiſar, and, in that Manner, it was undoubtedly ſpoken by the Romans. The Germans have no other Title for the Emperors to this Day, than Kaiſar, which the ſmalleſt Variation changes into Czar, according to the Ruſſian Appellation.
(3) Almoſt ow'd Diſtinction to his Hand. Tho' the Czars of Ruſſia have for many Ages been poſſeſs'd of very large Dominions, and a Power as extenſive, and un⯑bounded, as moſt other Princes; yet, partly by their diſtant Situation, and partly by their Want of Skill in Arms and Arts, it is certain that they are but lately become Known to theſe Parts of Europe, and were never formidable, 'till they ow'd it to the Genius of their preſent Monarch.
(4) Gave their ſcatter'd Limbs a Head. Every Body knows that Theſeus gather'd the Athenians into a Body, from a diſpers'd and ſolitary Way of living; and founded and peopled the City of Athens, which was before but a little Village, tho' a Kingly Seat, where he brought them to a Reliſh of Society, and uſefully, inſtructed them in the Knowledge of improving their united Power.
(5) Nations, Numberleſs as Lybian Sands. The Hyperbole may plead more than Poetical Licence to excuſe it; for, if, according to the Practice of Great Part of the Eaſt, and the Weſt-Indies, each diſtinct Tribe or Herd, may be indulg'd in their Ambition to be thought a particular Nation, as moſt Writers have practis'd, Then may the petty Herds of Tartars, almoſt every where ſurrounding Ruſſia, added to the wild Variety of Inhabitants in Siberia, Samoieda, &c. who depend upon the Czar, be call'd Numberleſs, without much Help from the Hyperbole.
(6) The Shaggy Samoid. The Samoiedes are a People ſubject to the Czar, and in⯑habiting a large Tract of Land, from Nova Zemla, to the Neighbourhood of Arch⯑angel, and extending along the Tartarian Sea. They neither Plough nor Sow, their Country being too cold to produce Corn; ſo that they live chiefly on dry'd Fiſh and Turneps, and the Fleſh of a Kind of Deer, which feeds on the Moſs of their Heaths: And, with the Skins of theſe Deer, having a very thick, warm Fur, they cloath and defend themſelves from the Sharpneſs of the Froſt, and covering them⯑ſelves all over, keep the Snow from blowing in at their Necks; and live three Months, in the Year, without Sight of the Sun.
(7) O'er Lands, where ſcarce the Ruſſian Name has paſt. Notwithſtanding the juſt Notion, which Europe has conceiv'd for ſome Years paſt, of the formidable Power of the Ruſſian Arms, yet is their Country ſo little known, to the Generality of other Nations, that it is almoſt Univerſally called Muſcovy, tho' that is only the Name of its old Capital Muſcow: And the Engliſh might, with the ſame Juſtice, in fo⯑reign Countries, be called by no other Name than The Londoners.
(8) Thence ſudden Fleets have ſhadow'd Diſtant Seas. It is known, that the Cza [...] has on a ſudden, cover'd the Baltick, with a powerful Fleet of Men of War and Gallies; which was ſufficiently ſeen, when He tranſported His Army to join with the King of Denmark, in the intended Deſcent upon Schonen: And on the other Side of His Dominions, He has built a Fleet againſt the Turks, to ſerve upon the Black-Sea, moſt of which Ships, being of very great Force, were built at Vero⯑nize, a Town ſeated on a Branch of the famous Tanais, and falling into the Palue Maotis, not far from the City of Azoph.
[20] (9) The V [...]rgin Caſpian. The Czar has caus'd Ships to be ſent down the Volga into the Caſpian-Sea, to make Diſcoveries on the Side of Georgia, Perſia, Armenia, and independant Tartary, and a conſiderable Trade, for the Products of the Eaſt-Indies, is already carried on, from ſeveral Ports in that Sea, to Aſtracan, and thence diſpers'd over Ruſſia, by the Volga and the Don. This Sea is call'd the Virgin-Caſpian, becauſe it has no known Communication with any other, being the largeſt Lake in the Univerſe, about five hundred Miles long, and, in Breadth, four hundred; and by Means of this Sea, the Czar has at all Times, an Inlet into the Heart of Perſ [...]a and the Indies, whenever he ſhall think of extending His Conqueſts that Way.
(10) A Rival Power, in Naval Struggle try'd. The Turks, 'till the Reign of this Illuſtrious Prince the Czar, poſſeſs'd Entire Dominion in the Euxine: But the Ruſſian Fleets can now diſpute their Title; and, of this, the Turks have had Ex⯑perience ever ſince the Year 1696. when the Loſs of Azoph was the Conſequence of an Overthrow at Sea, by the Ruſſian Gallies, commanded by the Czar in Per⯑ſ [...]n. The Terror this Defeat occaſion'd at Conſtantinople was ſo great, that they built new Caſtles on the Boſphorus, and took all poſſible Precautions to prevent ſome future Attempt that Way, by the Ruſſian Navy; but ſo much in Vain, that I am convinc [...]d and could juſtify it by Reaſon and Demonſtration, that, if the Czar ſhou'd, as it is now likely he will, declare War againſt the Turks, he may, with the ſmalleſt Expence, or Hazard, imaginable, begin his Succeſs by laying Conſtantinople in Aſhes, or poſſeſſing it, if he pleaſes, and maintaining it againſt all poſſible Efforts of the Ottoman Power.
(11) Yok'd Helleſpont. The Paſſage of this famous Chanel is guarded, and made as the Turks falſly believe, impoſſible to be forc'd, by two old Caſtles, called the Dardanelles; one ſeated on the Aſian Side, the other on the European, about three Quarters of a Mile aſunder; and having each a Platform of prodigious out⯑of-Size Artillery, carrying Stone Bullets of two or three Foot Diameter.
(12) Now greet their Ruſſia by an untry'd Way. If Conſtantinople were in the Hands of the Czar; and the Helleſpont; by that Means ſubject to Him, His Ships from the South Parts of His Dominions, bordering on Circaſſia, might, thro' the Boſphorus, Propontis, Helleſpont, and Aegean, paſs into the Mediterran an, and coming thro' the Streights Mouth, ſail Northward, and reach Ruſſia again, at the Port of Archangel.
(13) Feel their Pride ſhake, &c. The Chineſe, tho' vaſtly diſtant from Ruſſia, have been warr'd upon by that Nation, and made to conceive very different Idea's of them, from thoſe which their Pride had before ſuggeſted to them: And the Czar duely ſenſible of the many Advantages, which may ariſe from a perfect Diſ⯑covery of that Immenſity of Deſart, which divides Him from China, has com⯑pleated that Deſign, and built Forts and large Towns, all the Way, at proper Di⯑ſtances, for the Defence, and Entertainment of His Subjects, who travel, every Year from one Empire to the other by Land, carrying out and bringing back ſuch Commodities, as are moſt in Demand by the Merchants of both Nations. They ſet out, when the Winter has cover'd all the Country with Snow, and the Surface of that Snow is ſo harden'd by Froſt, that they are drawn with great Swift⯑neſs over it, in Sleds, by a large Kind of Deer; they, who ride in the Sled, being cover'd with thick, and warm Furs, for Defence againſt the Severity of the Cold.
(14) Where Proud Diſcov'ry has ſo oft been loſt. Abundance of Ships have been loſt, and great Numbers of excellent Mariners been frozen to Death, in the Search of a North Eaſtern Paſſage to China and Japan, by the Way of Nova Zemla, and the great Sea of Tartary. If there is ſuch a Paſſage, as there muſt be, unleſs the Ruſſian Dominions are join'd on the North, to America, The Czar has a Deſign to diſcover it; and will undoubtedly ſucceed in it, becauſe His Situation affords him an Advantage, which no other Monarch is Maſter of.
(15) Prophetic Greece re-hopes Her own. There has, long, been a Prophecy among the Greeks. that their Redemption from the Turkiſh Yoke, ſhall be owing to a fair, white hair'd People from the North; and they are ſtrongly, and univerſally per⯑ſwaded, that the Ruſſians are the People, meant in the Prophecy.
(16) And, when eight hundred lab'ring Tears were paſt. Tho' the Romans, aſſiſted by the Strength of their National Virtue, in the Infancy of their Power, grew ſud⯑denly Glorious, yet they reach'd not the Height of their Empire, till the Days of Trajan; which Summit of Authority is hinted at by the Aſpiring to Rule, and Panting after Fame, in the Poem.
- Rechtsinhaber*in
- University of Oxford, License: Distributed by the University of Oxford under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License [http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/]
- Zitationsvorschlag für dieses Objekt
- TextGrid Repository (2016). TEI. 3468 The northern star A poem Written by Mr Hill. . University of Oxford, License: Distributed by the University of Oxford under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License [http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/]. https://hdl.handle.net/11378/0000-0005-D1B5-2