OLIVER GOLDSMITH'S LIFE AND TIMES. [BOOK m. 1764. English feeling which they shared, and their common cordial MJ$6. hatred of the falsehoods and pretences of the world, was left to be accomplished in the grave.* Be it not the least shame of the profligate politics of these three disgraceful years, that, arraying in bitter hostility one section of the kingdom against the other, they turned into unscrupulous personal enemies such men as these; made a patriot of Wilkes; statesmen of Sir Francis Dashwood, Lord Sandwich, and Bubb Dodington; and, of the free and vigorous verse of Churchill, a mere instrument of perishable faction. Not without reason on that ground did Goldsmith condemn and scorn it. It was that which had made it the rare mixture it so frequently is, of the artificial with the natural and impulsive; which so fitfully blended in its' author the wholly and the partly true ; which impaired his force of style with prosaical weakness; and controlled, by the necessities of partisan satire, his feeling for nature and for truth. Yet should his critic and fellow-poet have paused before, in this dedication to the Traveller, he branded him as a writer of lampoons. To Charles Hanbury Williams, but not to Charles Churchill, such epithets belong. The senators who met to decide the fate of turbots were not worthier of the wrath and the scourge of Juvenal, than the men who, reeking from the gross indulgences of Medmenham- abbey, drove out "William..Pitt from the cabinet, sat clown by the side of Bute, denounced in the person of Wilkes their own old profligate associate, and took the public morality into keeping. Never, that he might merely fawn upon power or trample upon weakness, had Churchill let loose his pen. There was not a form of mean pretence or servile assump- tion, which he did not use it to denounce. Low, pimping * The present writer may here avow the authorship of an article on Churchill in the Edinburgh Review (hood. 46-88), in which this view is taken in more detail. h success.