NOTE1850
POPE'S REVISION OF SPENCE'S ESSAY ON THE ODYSSEY
By S. W. SINGER.
Spence's almost idolatrous admiration of, and devotion to, Pope, is evident from the pains he took to preserve every little anecdote of him that he could elicit from conversation with him, or with those who knew him. Unfortunately, he had not Boswell's address and talent for recording gossip, or the *Anecdotes* would have been a much more racy book. Spence was certainly an amiable, but I think a very weak man; and it appears to me that his learning has been overrated. He might indeed have been well designated as "a fiddle-faddle bit of sterling." I have the original MS. of the two last Dialogu…
Topics: Literature, Translation Criticism, Classical Literature, Poetry
Locations: Litchfield