T° THE CHALLENGE. A COURT BALLAD. To the Tune of "To all you Ladies now at Land, &c.” I. one fair lady out of court, Who think the Turk* and Popet a fport, Come, these foft lines, with nothing stiff in, With a fa, la, la. II. What NOTES. * Warton has a note upon these words, Urick, the little Turk." One is tempted to fay, in the language of the Author of the Critic, "The interpreter is the hardest to be underflood of the two." The expreffion of the "Turk and the Pope," is very common; it is here applied equivocally, to the author, and perhaps to one of the Turks, who came to England with George the Firft. †The Author. Mifs Lepell has been spoken of before. Mary Bellenden, the most beautiful and lovely woman of her time, maid of honour to Caroline when Princefs of Wales, was daughter of Lord Bellenden. She is thus defcribed, fays Mr. Coxe, in an old ballad, made upon the quarrel between George the First and the Prince of Wales at the chriftening, when the Prince and all his household were ordered to quit St. James's: "But Bellenden we needs must praise, Sings, "Over Hills, and far away," This lovely and elegant woman rejected the addreffes of the Prince, and efpoused in 1720 John Campbell then groom of the bed chamber to the Prince of Wales, and afterwards Duke of Argyle. See Coxe's Memoirs. II. What paffes in the dark third row, And garrets hung with green; III. And ev'ry speech with Zounds end; IV. Alas! like Schutz I cannot pun, Tell Pickenbourg how flim fhe's grown, With a fa, la, la. NOTES. *Ireland.. + Mentioned before in the Verfes to Mrs. Howe. V. In V. In truth, by what I can discern, Of courtiers 'twixt you three, From court, than Gay or Me: VI. At Leicester-Fields, a house full high, (A Milliner I mean ;) There may you meet us three to three, VII. But fhou'd you catch the prudish itch, With a fa, la, la. NOTES. Lady Rich was a correfpondent of Lady M. W. Montagu. + Mrs. Howard, miftrefs to George II. afterwards Countess of Suffolk. See "Verfes to a Lady at Court," in this Volume. VIII. And thus, fair maids, my ballad ends; God fend the king fafe landing*; And make all honeft ladies friends To armies that are standing; Preferve the limits of thofe nations, And take off ladies limitations. With a fa, la, la. NOTES. *This Ballad was written anno 1717. NOTWITHSTANDING Pope's affected contempt of the Court, he was proud of the acquaintance of fome of the beautiful young women belonging to it. In 1776 were published, two small volumes, intitled, Additions to Pope's Work. Warton has filently adopted all the notes, and the information that the Turk, alluded to in the first stanza, "little Ulrick." Are we to infer that Warton was the editor of the two volumes I have mentioned? was The Ladies mentioned in this Ballad, Pope (peaks of in a letter : "I met the Prince, with all his Ladies on horfeback, coming from hunting. "Mrs. B-(Bellenden) and Mrs. L-(Lepell) took me into protection (contrary to the law against harbouring Papifts), and gave me a dinner.” Letters to feveral Ladies. THE THREE GENTLE SHEPHERDS. OF F gentle Philips will I ever fing, With gentle Philips fhall the vallies ring. My numbers too for ever will I vary, With gentle Budgell, and with gentle Carey. Or if in ranging of the names I judge ill, With gentle Carey and with gentle Budgell, Oh! may all gentle bards together place ye, Men of good hearts, and men of delicacy. May fatire ne'er befool ye, or beknave ye, And from all wits that have a knack, God fave ye. 10 5 NOTES. Ambrofe Philips. VER. 10. And from al wits that have a knack,] Curl faid, that in profe he was equal to Pope, but that in verfe Pope bad merely a particular knack. VER. 1. Philips] |