I.
Know
then
thyself,
presume
not
God
to
scan;
The
proper
study
of
mankind
is
man.
Plac'd
on
this
isthmus
of
a
middle
state,
A
being
darkly
wise,
and
rudely
great:
With
too
much
knowledge
for
the
sceptic
side,
With
too
much
weakness
for
the
stoic's
pride,
He
hangs
between;
in
doubt
to
act,
or
rest;
In
doubt
to
deem
himself
a
god,
or
beast;
In
doubt
his
mind
or
body
to
prefer;
Born
but
to
die,
and
reas'ning
but
to
err;
Alike
in
ignorance,
his
reason
such,
Whether
he
thinks
too
little,
or
too
much:
Chaos
of
thought
and
passion,
all
confus'd;
Still
by
himself
abus'd,
or
disabus'd;
Created
half
to
rise,
and
half
to
fall;
Great
lord
of
all
things,
yet
a
prey
to
all;
Sole
judge
of
truth,
in
endless
error
hurl'd:
The
glory,
jest,
and
riddle
of
the
world!
Go,
wondrous
creature!
mount
where
science
guides,
Go,
measure
earth,
weigh
air,
and
state
the
tides;
Instruct
the
planets
in
what
orbs
to
run,
Correct
old
time,
and
regulate
the
sun;
Go,
soar
with
Plato
to
th'
empyreal
sphere,
To
the
first
good,
first
perfect,
and
first
fair;
Or
tread
the
mazy
round
his
follow'rs
trod,
And
quitting
sense
call
imitating
God;
As
Eastern
priests
in
giddy
circles
run,
And
turn
their
heads
to
imitate
the
sun.
Go,
teach
Eternal
Wisdom
how
to
rule—
Then
drop
into
thyself,
and
be
a
fool!
Superior
beings,
when
of
late
they
saw
A
mortal
Man
unfold
all
Nature's
law,
Admir'd
such
wisdom
in
an
earthly
shape,
And
showed
a
Newton
as
we
shew
an
Ape.
Could
he,
whose
rules
the
rapid
comet
bind,
Describe
or
fix
one
movement
of
his
mind?
Who
saw
its
fires
here
rise,
and
there
descend,
Explain
his
own
beginning,
or
his
end?
Alas
what
wonder!
Man's
superior
part
Uncheck'd
may
rise,
and
climb
from
art
to
art;
But
when
his
own
great
work
is
but
begun,
What
Reason
weaves,
by
Passion
is
undone.
Trace
science
then,
with
modesty
thy
guide;
First
strip
off
all
her
equipage
of
pride;
Deduct
what
is
but
vanity,
or
dress,
Or
learning's
luxury,
or
idleness;
Or
tricks
to
show
the
stretch
of
human
brain,
Mere
curious
pleasure,
or
ingenious
pain;
Expunge
the
whole,
or
lop
th'
excrescent
parts
Of
all
our
Vices
have
created
Arts;
Then
see
how
little
the
remaining
sum,
Which
serv'd
the
past,
and
must
the
times
to
come!
II.
Two
principles
in
human
nature
reign;
Self-love,
to
urge,
and
reason,
to
restrain;
Nor
this
a
good,
nor
that
a
bad
we
call,
Each
works
its
end,
to
move
or
govern
all:
And
to
their
proper
operation
still,
Ascribe
all
good;
to
their
improper,
ill.
Self-love,
the
spring
of
motion,
acts
the
soul;
Reason's
comparing
balance
rules
the
whole.
Man,
but
for
that,
no
action
could
attend,
And
but
for
this,
were
active
to
no
end:
Fix'd
like
a
plant
on
his
peculiar
spot,
To
draw
nutrition,
propagate,
and
rot;
Or,
meteor-like,
flame
lawless
through
the
void,
Destroying
others,
by
himself
destroy'd.
Most
strength
the
moving
principle
requires;
Active
its
task,
it
prompts,
impels,
inspires.
Sedate
and
quiet
the
comparing
lies,
Form'd
but
to
check,
delib'rate,
and
advise.
Self-love
still
stronger,
as
its
objects
nigh;
Reason's
at
distance,
and
in
prospect
lie:
That
sees
immediate
good
by
present
sense;
Reason,
the
future
and
the
consequence.
Thicker
than
arguments,
temptations
throng,
At
best
more
watchful
this,
but
that
more
strong.
The
action
of
the
stronger
to
suspend,
Reason
still
use,
to
reason
still
attend.
Attention,
habit
and
experience
gains;
Each
strengthens
reason,
and
self-love
restrains.
Let
subtle
schoolmen
teach
these
friends
to
fight,
More
studious
to
divide
than
to
unite,
And
grace
and
virtue,
sense
and
reason
split,
With
all
the
rash
dexterity
of
wit:
Wits,
just
like
fools,
at
war
about
a
name,
Have
full
as
oft
no
meaning,
or
the
same.
Self-love
and
reason
to
one
end
aspire,
Pain
their
aversion,
pleasure
their
desire;
But
greedy
that
its
object
would
devour,
This
taste
the
honey,
and
not
wound
the
flow'r:
Pleasure,
or
wrong
or
rightly
understood,
Our
greatest
evil,
or
our
greatest
good.
III.
Modes
of
self-love
the
passions
we
may
call:
'Tis
real
good,
or
seeming,
moves
them
all:
But
since
not
every
good
we
can
divide,
And
reason
bids
us
for
our
own
provide;
Passions,
though
selfish,
if
their
means
be
fair,
List
under
reason,
and
deserve
her
care;
Those,
that
imparted,
court
a
nobler
aim,
Exalt
their
kind,
and
take
some
virtue's
name.
In
lazy
apathy
let
Stoics
boast
Their
virtue
fix'd,
'tis
fix'd
as
in
a
frost;
Contracted
all,
retiring
to
the
breast;
But
strength
of
mind
is
exercise,
not
rest:
The
rising
tempest
puts
in
act
the
soul,
Parts
it
may
ravage,
but
preserves
the
whole.
On
life's
vast
ocean
diversely
we
sail,
Reason
the
card,
but
passion
is
the
gale;
Nor
God
alone
in
the
still
calm
we
find,
He
mounts
the
storm,
and
walks
upon
the
wind.
Passions,
like
elements,
though
born
to
fight,
Yet,
mix'd
and
soften'd,
in
his
work
unite:
These
'tis
enough
to
temper
and
employ;
But
what
composes
man,
can
man
destroy?
Suffice
that
reason
keep
to
nature's
road,
Subject,
compound
them,
follow
her
and
God.
Love,
hope,
and
joy,
fair
pleasure's
smiling
train,
Hate,
fear,
and
grief,
the
family
of
pain,
These
mix'd
with
art,
and
to
due
bounds
confin'd,
Make
and
maintain
the
balance
of
the
mind:
The
lights
and
shades,
whose
well
accorded
strife
Gives
all
the
strength
and
colour
of
our
life.
Pleasures
are
ever
in
our
hands
or
eyes,
And
when
in
act
they
cease,
in
prospect,
rise:
Present
to
grasp,
and
future
still
to
find,
The
whole
employ
of
body
and
of
mind.
All
spread
their
charms,
but
charm
not
all
alike;
On
diff'rent
senses
diff'rent
objects
strike;
Hence
diff'rent
passions
more
or
less
inflame,
As
strong
or
weak,
the
organs
of
the
frame;
And
hence
one
master
passion
in
the
breast,
Like
Aaron's
serpent,
swallows
up
the
rest.
As
man,
perhaps,
the
moment
of
his
breath,
Receives
the
lurking
principle
of
death;
The
young
disease,
that
must
subdue
at
length,
Grows
with
his
growth,
and
strengthens
with
his
strength:
So,
cast
and
mingled
with
his
very
frame,
The
mind's
disease,
its
ruling
passion
came;
Each
vital
humour
which
should
feed
the
whole,
Soon
flows
to
this,
in
body
and
in
soul.
Whatever
warms
the
heart,
or
fills
the
head,
As
the
mind
opens,
and
its
functions
spread,
Imagination
plies
her
dang'rous
art,
And
pours
it
all
upon
the
peccant
part.
Nature
its
mother,
habit
is
its
nurse;
Wit,
spirit,
faculties,
but
make
it
worse;
Reason
itself
but
gives
it
edge
and
pow'r;
As
Heav'n's
blest
beam
turns
vinegar
more
sour.
We,
wretched
subjects,
though
to
lawful
sway,
In
this
weak
queen
some
fav'rite
still
obey:
Ah!
if
she
lend
not
arms,
as
well
as
rules,
What
can
she
more
than
tell
us
we
are
fools?
Teach
us
to
mourn
our
nature,
not
to
mend,
A
sharp
accuser,
but
a
helpless
friend!
Or
from
a
judge
turn
pleader,
to
persuade
The
choice
we
make,
or
justify
it
made;
Proud
of
an
easy
conquest
all
along,
She
but
removes
weak
passions
for
the
strong:
So,
when
small
humours
gather
to
a
gout,
The
doctor
fancies
he
has
driv'n
them
out.
Yes,
nature's
road
must
ever
be
preferr'd;
Reason
is
here
no
guide,
but
still
a
guard:
'Tis
hers
to
rectify,
not
overthrow,
And
treat
this
passion
more
as
friend
than
foe:
A
mightier
pow'r
the
strong
direction
sends,
And
sev'ral
men
impels
to
sev'ral
ends.
Like
varying
winds,
by
other
passions
toss'd,
This
drives
them
constant
to
a
certain
coast.
Let
pow'r
or
knowledge,
gold
or
glory,
please,
Or
(oft
more
strong
than
all)
the
love
of
ease;
Through
life
'tis
followed,
ev'n
at
life's
expense;
The
merchant's
toil,
the
sage's
indolence,
The
monk's
humility,
the
hero's
pride,
All,
all
alike,
find
reason
on
their
side.
Th'
eternal
art
educing
good
from
ill,
Grafts
on
this
passion
our
best
principle:
'Tis
thus
the
mercury
of
man
is
fix'd,
Strong
grows
the
virtue
with
his
nature
mix'd;
The
dross
cements
what
else
were
too
refin'd,
And
in
one
interest
body
acts
with
mind.
As
fruits,
ungrateful
to
the
planter's
care,
On
savage
stocks
inserted,
learn
to
bear;
The
surest
virtues
thus
from
passions
shoot,
Wild
nature's
vigor
working
at
the
root.
What
crops
of
wit
and
honesty
appear
From
spleen,
from
obstinacy,
hate,
or
fear!
See
anger,
zeal
and
fortitude
supply;
Ev'n
av'rice,
prudence;
sloth,
philosophy;
Lust,
through
some
certain
strainers
well
refin'd,
Is
gentle
love,
and
charms
all
womankind;
Envy,
to
which
th'
ignoble
mind's
a
slave,
Is
emulation
in
the
learn'd
or
brave;
Nor
virtue,
male
or
female,
can
we
name,
But
what
will
grow
on
pride,
or
grow
on
shame.
Thus
nature
gives
us
(let
it
check
our
pride)
The
virtue
nearest
to
our
vice
allied:
Reason
the
byass
turns
to
good
from
ill,
And
Nero
reigns
a
Titus,
if
he
will.
The
fiery
soul
abhorr'd
in
Catiline,
In
Decius
charms,
in
Curtius
is
divine:
The
same
ambition
can
destroy
or
save,
And
make
a
patriot
as
it
makes
a
knave.
IV.
This
light
and
darkness
in
our
chaos
join'd,
What
shall
divide?
The
God
within
the
mind.
Extremes
in
nature
equal
ends
produce,
In
man
they
join
to
some
mysterious
use;
Though
each
by
turns
the
other's
bound
invade,
As,
in
some
well-wrought
picture,
light
and
shade,
And
oft
so
mix,
the
diff'rence
is
too
nice
Where
ends
the
virtue,
or
begins
the
vice.
Fools!
who
from
hence
into
the
notion
fall,
That
vice
or
virtue
there
is
none
at
all.
If
white
and
black
blend,
soften,
and
unite
A
thousand
ways,
is
there
no
black
or
white?
Ask
your
own
heart,
and
nothing
is
so
plain;
'Tis
to
mistake
them,
costs
the
time
and
pain.
V.
Vice
is
a
monster
of
so
frightful
mien,
As,
to
be
hated,
needs
but
to
be
seen;
Yet
seen
too
oft,
familiar
with
her
face,
We
first
endure,
then
pity,
then
embrace.
But
where
th'
extreme
of
vice,
was
ne'er
agreed:
Ask
where's
the
North?
at
York,
'tis
on
the
Tweed;
In
Scotland,
at
the
Orcades;
and
there,
At
Greenland,
Zembla,
or
the
Lord
knows
where:
No
creature
owns
it
in
the
first
degree,
But
thinks
his
neighbour
farther
gone
than
he!
Ev'n
those
who
dwell
beneath
its
very
zone,
Or
never
feel
the
rage,
or
never
own;
What
happier
natures
shrink
at
with
affright,
The
hard
inhabitant
contends
is
right.
VI.
Virtuous
and
vicious
ev'ry
man
must
be,
Few
in
th'
extreme,
but
all
in
the
degree;
The
rogue
and
fool
by
fits
is
fair
and
wise;
And
ev'n
the
best,
by
fits,
what
they
despise.
'Tis
but
by
parts
we
follow
good
or
ill,
For,
vice
or
virtue,
self
directs
it
still;
Each
individual
seeks
a
sev'ral
goal;
But
heav'n's
great
view
is
one,
and
that
the
whole:
That
counterworks
each
folly
and
caprice;
That
disappoints
th'
effect
of
ev'ry
vice;
That,
happy
frailties
to
all
ranks
applied,
Shame
to
the
virgin,
to
the
matron
pride,
Fear
to
the
statesman,
rashness
to
the
chief,
To
kings
presumption,
and
to
crowds
belief,
That,
virtue's
ends
from
vanity
can
raise,
Which
seeks
no
int'rest,
no
reward
but
praise;
And
build
on
wants,
and
on
defects
of
mind,
The
joy,
the
peace,
the
glory
of
mankind.
Heav'n
forming
each
on
other
to
depend,
A
master,
or
a
servant,
or
a
friend,
Bids
each
on
other
for
assistance
call,
'Till
one
man's
weakness
grows
the
strength
of
all.
Wants,
frailties,
passions,
closer
still
ally
The
common
int'rest,
or
endear
the
tie:
To
these
we
owe
true
friendship,
love
sincere,
Each
home-felt
joy
that
life
inherits
here;
Yet
from
the
same
we
learn,
in
its
decline,
Those
joys,
those
loves,
those
int'rests
to
resign;
Taught
half
by
reason,
half
by
mere
decay,
To
welcome
death,
and
calmly
pass
away.
Whate'er
the
passion,
knowledge,
fame,
or
pelf,
Not
one
will
change
his
neighbour
with
himself.
The
learn'd
is
happy
nature
to
explore,
The
fool
is
happy
that
he
knows
no
more;
The
rich
is
happy
in
the
plenty
giv'n,
The
poor
contents
him
with
the
care
of
heav'n.
See
the
blind
beggar
dance,
the
cripple
sing,
The
sot
a
hero,
lunatic
a
king;
The
starving
chemist
in
his
golden
views
Supremely
blest,
the
poet
in
his
Muse.
See
some
strange
comfort
ev'ry
state
attend,
And
pride
bestow'd
on
all,
a
common
friend;
See
some
fit
passion
ev'ry
age
supply,
Hope
travels
through,
nor
quits
us
when
we
die.
Behold
the
child,
by
nature's
kindly
law,
Pleas'd
with
a
rattle,
tickl'd
with
a
straw:
Some
livelier
plaything
gives
his
youth
delight,
A
little
louder,
but
as
empty
quite:
Scarfs,
garters,
gold,
amuse
his
riper
stage,
And
beads
and
pray'r
books
are
the
toys
of
age:
Pleas'd
with
this
bauble
still,
as
that
before;
'Till
tir'd
he
sleeps,
and
life's
poor
play
is
o'er!
Meanwhile
opinion
gilds
with
varying
rays
Those
painted
clouds
that
beautify
our
days;
Each
want
of
happiness
by
hope
supplied,
And
each
vacuity
of
sense
by
Pride:
These
build
as
fast
as
knowledge
can
destroy;
In
folly's
cup
still
laughs
the
bubble,
joy;
One
prospect
lost,
another
still
we
gain;
And
not
a
vanity
is
giv'n
in
vain;
Ev'n
mean
self-love
becomes,
by
force
divine,
The
scale
to
measure
others'
wants
by
thine.
See!
and
confess,
one
comfort
still
must
rise,
'Tis
this:
Though
man's
a
fool,
yet
God
is
wise.