XIV. ON EDMUND DUKE OF BUCKINGHAM, WHO DIED IN THE NINETEENTH YEAR OF HIS AGE, 1735. I' And ev'ry op'ning Virtue blooming round, "THIS epitaph," fays Johnson, " is preferred by Dr. Warburton to the reft; but I know not for what reafon. To crown with reflection, is furely a mode of speech approaching to nonfenfe. Opening virtues, blooming round, is fomething like tautology; the fix following lines are poor and profaic." XV. FOR ONE WHO WOULD NOT BE BURIED IN WESTMINSTER-ABBEY. HE EROES and KINGS! your distance keep: VER. 4. Let Horace] ANOTHER, ON THE SAME. UNDER NDER this Marble, or under this Sill, Or under this Turf, or e'en what they will; Whatever an Heir, or a Friend in his stead, Or any good creature fhall lay o'er my head, Lies one who ne'er car'd, and ftill cares not a pin What they faid, or may fay, of the mortal within : But, who living and dying, ferene ftill and free, Trufts in GoD, that as well as he was, he fhall be. NOTES. "Whose verse adorn'd a tyrant's crimes; AKENSIDE'S Odes, p. 280. 4to, END OF THE SECOND VOLUME. |