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There is in the second stanza here a close resemblance to one of the madrigals of Montreuil, a French poet, to whom Sir J. Moore was indebted for the point of his well known verses, "If in that breast, so good so pure."* Mr. Sheridan, however, knew nothing of French, and neglected every opportunity of learning it, till, by a very natural process, his ignorance of the language grew into hatred of it. Besides, we have the immediate source from which he derived the thought of this stanza, in one of the Essays of Hume, who, being a reader of foreign literature, most probably found it in Montreuil t. The passage in Hume (which Sheridan has done little more than versify) is as follows:-"Why so often ask me, How long my love shall yet endure? Alas, my Cælia, can I re

*The grief, that on my quiet preys,

That rends my heart and checks my tongue,
I fear will last me all my days,

And feel it will not last me long.

It is thus in Montreuil :

C'est un mal que j'aurai tout le temps de ma vie;
Mais je ne l'aurai pas long-temps.

+ Or in an Italian song of Menage, from which Montreuil, who was accustomed to such thefts, most probably stole it. The point in the Italian is, as far as I can remember it, expressed thus:

In van, o Filli, tu chiedi

Se lungamente durera l'ardore

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solve the question? Do I know how long my life shall yet endure?"*

The pretty lines, "Mark'd you her cheek of rosy hue?" were written, not upon Miss Linley as has been generally stated, but upon lady Margaret Fordyce, and form part of a poem which he published in 1771, descriptive of the principal beauties of Bath, entitled "Clio's Protest, or the Picture Varnished,”—being an answer to some verses by Mr. Miles Peter Andrews, called "The Bath Picture," in which Lady Margaret was thus introduced :

"Remark too the dimpling, sweet smile

Lady Margret's fine countenance wears."

The following is the passage in Mr. Sheridan's poem, entire; and the beauty of the six favourite lines shines out so conspicuously, that we cannot wonder at their having been so soon detached, like ill set gems, from the loose and clumsy workmanship around them.

"But, hark!-did not our bard repeat
The love-born name of M-rg-r-t?—
Attention seizes every ear;

6

We pant for the description here :—
'If ever dulness left thy brow,

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Pindar,' we say, 'twill leave thee now.'

But O! old Dulness' son anointed

His mother never disappointed!

The Epicurean.

And here we all were left to seek
A dimple in F-rd-ce's cheek!

"And could you really discover,

In gazing those sweet beauties over,
No other charm, no winning grace,
Adorning either mind or face,
But one poor dimple, to express
The quintessence of loveliness?
.... Mark'd you her cheek of rosy hue?
Mark'd you her eye of sparkling blue?
That eye, in liquid circles moving;
That cheek abash'd at Man's approving ;
The one, Love's arrows darting round;
The other, blushing at the wound:
Did she not speak, did she not move,
Now Pallas-now the Queen of Love!"

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There is little else in this poem worth being extracted, though it consists of about four hundred lines; except, perhaps, his picture of a good country house-wife, which affords an early specimen of that neat pointedness of phrase, which gave his humour, both poetic and dramatic, such a peculiar edge and polish :

"We see the Dame, in rustic pride,
A bunch of keys to grace her side,
Stalking across the well-swept entry,
To hold her council in the pantry;
Or, with prophetic soul, foretelling
The peas will boil well by the shelling;
Or, bustling in her private closet,
Prepare her lord his morning posset;

And, while the hallow'd mixture thickens,
Signing death-warrants for the chickens :
Else, greatly pensive, poring o'er

Accounts her cook had thumb'd before;
One eye cast up upon that great book,
Yclep'd The Family Receipt Book;
By which she's rul'd in all her courses,
From stewing figs to drenching horses.
-Then pans and pickling skillets rise,
In dreadful lustre to our eyes.

With store of sweetmeats ranged in order,
And potted nothings on the border;
While salves and caudle-cups between,
With squalling children, close the scene.”

We find here, too, the source of one of those familiar lines, which so many quote without knowing whence they come;-one of those stray fragments, whose parentage is doubtful, but to which (as the law says of illegitimate children) "pater est populus."

"You write with ease, to show your breeding,
But easy writing's curst hard reading."

In the following passage, with more of the tact of a man of the world than the ardour of a poet, he dismisses the object nearest his heart with the mere passing gallantry of a compliment :

"O! should your genius ever rise,
And make you Laureate in the skies,
I'd hold my life, in twenty years,
You'd spoil the music of the spheres.

-Nay, should the rapture-breathing Nine
In one celestial concert join,

Their sovereign's power to rehearse,
-Were you to furnish them with verse,
By Jove, I'd fly the heavenly throng,
Tho' Phoebus play'd and Linley sung."

On the opening of the New Assembly Rooms at Bath, which commenced with a ridotto, Sept. 30, 1771, he wrote a humorous description of the entertainment, called "An Epistle from Timothy Screw to his Brother Henry, Waiter at Almack's," which appeared first in the Bath Chronicle, and was so eagerly sought after, that Crutwell, the editor, was induced to publish it in a separate form. The allusions in this trifle have, of course, lost their zest by time; and a specimen or two of its humour will be all that is necessary here.

"Two rooms were first opened—the long and the round

one,

(These Hogstyegon names only serve to confound one,)
Both splendidly lit with the new chandeliers,
With drops hanging down like the bobs at Peg's ears:
While jewels of paste reflected the rays,

And Bristol-stone diamonds gave strength to the blaze :
So that it was doubtful, to view the bright clusters,
Which sent the most light out, the ear-rings or lustres.

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Nor less among you was the medley, ye fair!

I believe there were some beside quality there :
Miss Spiggot, Miss Brussels, Miss Tape, and Miss
Socket,

Miss Trinket, and aunt, with her leathern pocket,

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