282
NOTES AND QUERIES, [ii s. vn. AL 12, 1913.
inn at Andover from Winchester College.
Not much, perhaps, would, be gained by
pursuing the quest beyond the poet's
great-grandfather, but it may be mentioned
that a family named Pope, some of whom
were blacksmiths, was resident at Andover
in the sixteenth century ; and in a Richard
Pope of Andover, who died in 1599, might
probably be discovered the poet's great-
great-grandfather. The last-named Richard
is called a smith, but he was not a poor man,
deriving from his trade, which consisted in
supplying his neighbours with all kinds of
iron and steel articles, an income of 501. a
year, and moreover, like the innkeeper, he
was a leaseholder under Winchester College.
Some fuller particulars will now be given of persons named in the last paragraph. Though an innkeeper, the poet's great- grandfather, Richard Pope, was a man of some property, and in deeds and similar documents is often styled " gentleman." His inn, " The Angel " at Andover, was an important hostelry, the furniture and equipment of which, according to an inven- tory taken at Richard's death, were valued at 400Z., and its master possessed 351. worth of silver plate. He was also able to portion his daughters with 3007. each when they married. What amount of learning he acquired cannot be told, but the two signa- tures affixed to his will show skilful penman- ship, and are an admirable imitation of printed letters, a kind of calligraphy in which his descendant the poet also excelled. Richard's will, dated and proved in 1633, mentions his wife Mary (she Was a sister of Robert West of Andover) and five children Richard. Alexander, John, Jane (married to a husband named Barnes), and Mary (the wife of Edmund Petty), all of whom left issue. Some second cousins of the poet, grandchildren of the innkeeper's sons and daughters, may be supposed to have lived to hear of their kinsman's fame, but perhaps they would not have been welcomed at Twickenham as his relatives.
If more were known of Alexander Pope, the Rector of Thruxton, it might be found that he was a rather remarkable man. He and his celebrated grandson had some characteristics in common. Like the poet, the Rector was "of gentle disposition " (the Words of his widow), but, when attacked, pugnacious, and not too fastidious in his choice of weapons. Both grandfather and grandson, too, were precocious in learning, made fortunes before attaining middle age. and (what is said to be more difficult) kept their fortunes, and neither lived to grow old.
The eldest of the three Alexanders matricu-
lated at Oxford in 1617, at the age of 17,
and after less than three months' residence
at Oriel College took his Bachelor's degree.
The Master's degree followed three years,
later, when he had moved to Gloucester Hall.
In 1628 he appears as chaplain to John,
eldest son of William, Marquis of W T inchester,
a post which he then seems to have occupied
for some time, and which he did not relin-
quish for another ten years. His position
in the Marquis's family contributed much to
his advancement. In 1628 he obtained the
promise of the next of the livings in the Mar-
quis's gift which should fall vacant, and Was
sufficiently shrewd to see that the promise
was embodied in a deed. But in 1631,
before the desired vacancy had occurred, the
chaplain was appointed by the University
of Oxford to the Rectory of Thruxton r
Hampshire; and in 1633 his master, John.
Marquis of Winchester, who had succeeded
his father, considered that he was fulfilling
the terms of the deed in giving him the
prebend of Middleton in the same county.
Alexander, however, was not satisfied with
this, and when, in 1638. the Rectory of
Itchen Abbas became void, claimed it as
his right in virtue of the deed. The Marquis,
resenting this action, filed a bill against his
chaplain, who countered with another suit,
so that a state of war between the two ensued.
And now Alexander, perceiving, no doubt,
that he could not hope for further prefer-
ment from the Marquis, transferred hia
allegiance, and became chaplain to the
Bishop of Winchester, with whose help he-
obtained a dispensation enabling him to hold
Itchen Abbas, together with his other
livings. Presumably the wording of the
deed favoured Alexander's contention, for
in 1639, in spite of the opposition of the
Marquis, he was instituted to the coveted
Rectory of Itchen Abbas. He was now a
rich man, the income from his three benefices
alone being estimated at 4007. a year. His
wife Dorothy was (as appears from her
will) a daughter of William Pyne, who, in
the Commonwealth period, was minister of
Micheldever, a little parish some seven mil^s
north of Winchester. Dorothy became a
widow in 1645, when she was left (as she
complained) with four small children ; but
the property left by her husband gave her
the comfortable income of 2507. a year. She
spent most of her widowhood in her father's
parish at Micheldever.
From the epitaph to the memory of the poet's father in Twickenham Church, he seems to have been born about 1642, only