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Their stock of moisture forth where e'er it lies,

For this will ask it all.

'Twould all, alas! too little be,

Though thy salt tears came from a sea,

COWLEY

* Compare Cowley's ode on presenting his book to the Bod leian Library, with one of Milton on the same subject, Ad Johannem Rouseium, 1646, written in the true spirit of the ancient Lyrics, and an excellent imitation of Pindar. One allusion to Euripides, of whom Milton is known to have been so fond, I cannot omit:

Æternorum operum custos fidelis
Quæstorque gazæ nobilioris,
Quam cui præfuit Ion,

Clarus Erechtheides,

Opulenta dei per templa parentis,

Fulvosque tripodas, donaque Delphica,

Ion Actea genitus Creusa.

Nothing can more strongly characterize the different manner and turn of these two writers, than the pieces in question. It is remarkable, that Milton ends his ode with a kind of prophecy, importing that, however he may be at present traduced, yet posterity will applaud his work.

At

COWLEY being early disgusted with the perplexities and vanities of a court life, had a strong desire to enjoy the milder pleasures of solitude and retirement; he therefore escaped from the tumults of London, to a little house at Wandsworth; but, finding that place too near the metropolis, he left it for Richmond, and at last settled at Chertsey. He seems to have thought that the swains of Surrey had the innocence of those of Sydney's Arcadia; but the perverseness and debauchery of his own workmen soon undeceived him; with whom, it is said, he was sometimes so far provoked, as even to be betrayed into an oath. His income was about three hundred pounds a year. Towards the latter part of his life, he shewed an aversion to the company of women, and would often leave the room if any happened to enter it whilst he was present; but still he retained a sincere affection for Leonora.

At ULTIMI Nepotes,

SERIQUE POSteri,

Judicia rebus ÆQUIORA forsitan

Adhibebunt INTEGRO sinu,

Tum, livore sepulto,

Si quid MEKEMUR, SERA POSTERITAS sciet,

His

His death was occasioned by a singular accident ;* he paid a visit on foot, with his friend Sprat, to a gentleman in the neighbourhood of Chertsey, which they prolonged and feasted too much, till midnight. On their return home, they mistook their way, and were obliged to pass the whole night exposed under a hedge, where Cowley caught a severe cold, attended with a fever, that terminated in his death.

The

* There is something remarkable in the circumstances that occasioned the deaths of three others of our poets.

OTWAY had an intimate friend who was murdered in the street. One may guess at his sorrow, who has so feelingly described true affection in his Venice Preserved. He pursued the murderer on foot, who fled to France, as far as Dover, where he was seized with a fever, occasioned by the fatigue, which afterwards carried him to his grave in London.

Sir JOHN SUCKLING was robbed by his Valet-de-Chambre : the moment he discovered it, he clapped on his boots in a passionate burry, and perceived not a large rusty nail that was concealed at the bottom, which pierced his heel, and brought on a mortification.

LEE had been some time confined for lunacy, to a very low diet; but one night he escaped from his physician, and drank so immoderately, that he fell down in the Strand, was run over by a hackney-coach, and killed on the spot. These three facts are from Mr. Spence, though Orway's death has been differently related.

The verses on Silence are a sensible imitation of the Earl of Rochester's on Nothing; which piece, together with his Satire on Man, from the fourth of Boileau, and the tenth Satire of Horace, are the only pieces of this profligate nobleman, which modesty or common sense will allow any man to read. Rochester had much energy in his thoughts and diction; and though the ancient satirists often use great liberty in their expressions, yet, as the ingenious historian* observes, "their freedom no more resembles the licence of Rochester, than the nakedness of an Indian does that of a common prostitute."

POPE, in this imitation, has discovered a fund of solid sense, and just observation upon vice and folly, that are very remarkable in a person so extremely young as he was at the time he composed it. I believe, on a fair comparison with Rochester's lines, it will be found that, although the turn of the satire be copied, yet it is excelled. That Rochester should write a satire on Man, I am not surprized; it is the business of the Libertine

* Hume's History of Great Britain, Vol. II. pag. 434.

bertine to degrade his species, and debase the dignity of human nature, and thereby destroy the most efficacious incitements to lovely and laudable actions: but that a writer of Boileau's purity of manners should represent his kind in the dark and disagreeable colours he has done, with all the malignity of a discontented HOBBIST, is a lamentable perversion of fine talents, and is a real injury to society. It is a fact worthy the attention of those who study the history of learning, that the gross licentiousness, and applauded debauchery, of Charles the Second's court, proved almost as pernicious to the progress of polite literature and the fine arts, that began to revive after the Grand Rebellion, as the gloomy superstition, the absurd cant, and formal hypocrisy, that disgraced this nation during the usurpation of Cromwell.*

ARTEMISIA

Lord Bolingbroke used to relate, that his great grandfather Ireton, and Fleetwood, being one day engaged in a private drinking party with Cromwell, and wanting to uncork a bottle, they could not find their bottle-screw, which was fallen under the table. Just at that instant, an officer entered to inform the Protector, that a deputation from the Presbyterian

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ministers

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