He help'd to bury whom he help'd to starve."
Prologue to the Satires.
Of this species of rhyme I have noted three other instances in Dryden, and two in Pope.
As regards the rhyme charge ye and clergy, no instance, in the same words, occurs in Dryden or Pope. They did not write much in that sort of doggerel. But the brogue, even here, is nothing more than the confounding of the sounds of a and e, which is so beautifully exemplified in the following couplet in Dryden:
"For yet no George, to our discerning,
Has writ without a ten years' warning."
Epistle to Sir G. Etheredge.
Next, we have the rhyme satire and hater. The following in Dryden is quite as bad, if not worse:
"Spiteful he is not, though he wrote a satire,
For still there goes some thinking to ill-nature."