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gan that adapation, which has fince been very frequent, of ancient poetry to prefent times; and perhaps few will be found where the parallelifm is better preserved than in this. The verfification is indeed fometimes careless, but it is fometimes vigorous and weighty.

The strongest effort of his Mufe is his poem upon Nothing. He is not the first who has chofen this barren topick for the boaft of his fertility. There is a poem called Nibil in Latin by Pafferat, a poet and critick of the fixteenth century in France; who, in his own epitaph, expresses his zeal for good poetry thus: -Molliter offa quiefcent

Sint modo carminibus non onerata malis.

His works are not common, and therefore I fhall fubjoin his verfes.

In examining this performance, Nothing must be confidered as having not only a negative but a kind of pofitive fignification; as I need not fear thieves, I have nothing; and nothing is a very powerful protector. In the first part of the fentence it is taken negatively; in the fecond it is taken pofitively, as an agent. In one of Boileau's lines it was a queftion, whether he should ufe à rien faire, or à ne rien faire; and the firft was preferred, because it gave rien a fenfe in fome fort pofitive. Nothing can be a fubject only in its pofitive fenfe, and fuch a fenfe is given it in the first line :

Nothing, thou elder brother ev'n to fhade.

In this line, I know not whether he does not allude to a curious book de Umbra, by Wowerus, which, having told the qualities of Shade, concludes with a poem in which are thefe lines:

Jam primum terram validis circumfpice clauftris
Sufpenfam totam, decus admirabile mundi

Terrafque tractufque maris, campofque liquentes
Aeris & vafti laqueata palatia cœli—
Omnibus UMBRA prior.

The positive sense is generally preferved, with great 23 fkill, through the whole poem; though fometimes, in a fubordinate fenfe, the negative nothing is injudiciously mingled. Pafferat confounds the two fenfes.

Another of his most vigorous pieces is his Lampoon on Sir Car Scroop, who, in a poem called The Praise of Satire, had fome lines like these * :

He who can push into a midnight fray
His brave companion, and then run away,
Leaving him to be murder'd in the street,
Then put it off with some buffoon conceit;
Him, thus dishonour'd, for a wit you own,
And court him as top fidler of the town.

This was meant of Rochefter, whofe buffoon conceit was, I fuppofe, a saying often mentioned, that every Man would be a Coward if he durft; and drew from him those furious verfes; to which Scroop made in reply an epigram, ending with these lines:

Thou canft hurt no man's fame with thy ill word;
Thy pen is full as harmless as thy fword.

Of the satire against Man, Rochester can only claim what remains when all Boileau's part is taken away.

In all his works there is fprightliness and vigour, and every where may be found tokens of a mind which study might have carried to excellence. What more can be expected from a life fpent in oftentatious contempt of regularity, and ended before the abilities of many other men began to be difplayed?

* I quote from memory. Orig. Edit.

Poema

Poema Cl. V. JOANNIS PASSERATII,

Regii in Academia Parifienfi Profefforis,
Ad ornatiffimum virum ERRICUM MEMMIUM.

Janus adeft, feftæ pofcunt fua dona Kalendæ,
Munus abeft feftis quod poffim offerre Kalendis.
Siccine Caftalius nobis exaruit humor?
Ufque adeò ingenii noftri eft exhaufta facultas,
Immunem ut videat redeuntis janitor anni?
Quod nufquam eft, potius nova per veftigia quæram.
Ecce autem partes dum fefe verfat in omnes
Invenit mea Mufa NIHIL, ne defpice munus.
Nam NIHIL eft gemmis, NIHIL eft pretiofius auro.
Huc animum, huc igitur vultus adverte benignos;
Res nova narratur quæ nulli audita priorum,
Aufonii & Graii dixerunt cætera vates,
Aufonix indictum NIHIL eft Græcæque Camoenæ.
E cœlo quacunque Ceres fua profpicit arva,
Aut genitor liquidis orbem complectitur ulnis
Oceanus, NIHIL interitus & originis expers.
Immortale NIHIL, NIHIL omni parte beatum.
Quòd fi hinc majeftas & vis divina probatur,
Num quid honore deûm, num quid dignabimur aris?
Confpectu lucis NIHIL eft jucundius almæ,
Vere NIHIL, NIHIL irriguo formofius horto,
Floridius pratis, Zephyri clementius aura;
In bello fan&tum NIHIL eft, Martifque tumultu :
Juftum in pace NIHIL, NIHIL eft in fœdere tutum,
Felix cui NIHIL eft, (fuerant hæc vota Tibullo)
Non timet infidias ; fures, incendia temnit ;
Sollicitas fequitur nullo fub judice lites,
Ille ipfe invictis qui fubjicit omnia fatis
Zenonis fapiens, NIHIL admiratur & optat.
Socraticique gregis fuit ifta fcientia quondam,
Scire NIHIL, ftudio cui nunc incumbitur uni.
Nec quicquam in ludo mavult didiciffe juventus,

Ad

Ad magnas quia ducit opes, & culmen honorum,
Nofce NIHIL, nofces fertur quod Pythagorea
Grano hærere fabr, cui vox adjuncta negantis,
Multi Mercurio freti duce vifcera terræ
Pura liquefaciunt fimul, & patrimonia miscent,
Arcano inftantes operi, & carbonibus atris,
Qui tandem exhaufti damnis, fractique labore,
Inveniunt atque inventum NIHIL ufque requirunt.
Hoc dimetiri non ulla decempeda poffit:

Nec numeret Libycæ numerum qui callet arenæ :
Et Phœbo ignotum NIHIL eft, NIHIL altius aftris..
Túque, tibi licet eximium fit mentis acumen,
Omnem in naturam penetrans, & in abdita rerum,
Pace tua, Memmi, NIHIL ignorare vidêris.
Sole tamen NIHIL eft, & puro clarius igne.
Tange NIHIL, dicefque NIHIL fine corpore tangi.
Cerne NIHIL, cerni dices NIHIL abfque colore.
Surdum audit loquiturque NIHIL fine voce, volátque
Abfque ope pennarum, & graditur fine cruribus ullis
Abfque loco motuque NIHIL per inane vagatur.
Humano generi utilius NIHIL arte medendi.
Ne rhombos igitur, neu Theffala murmura tentet
Idalia vacuum trajectus arundine pectus,
Neu legat Ideo Dictæum in vertice gramen.
Vulneribus fævi NIHIL auxiliatur amoris.

Vexerit & quemvis trans moeftas portitor undas,
Ad fuperos imo NIHIL hunc revocabit ab orco.
Inferni NIHIL inflectit præcordia regis,
Parcarúmque colos, & inexorabile penfum.
Obruta Phlegræis campis Titania pubes
Fulmineo fenfit NIHIL effe potentius i&tu :
Porrigitur magni NIHIL extra moenia mundi:

Diíque NIHIL metuunt. Quid longo carmine plura
Commemorem? virtute NIHIL præftantius ipfa,
Splendidius NIHIL eft; NIHIL eft Jove denique majus.
Sed tempus finem argutis imponere nugis:

Ne tibi fi multa laudem mea carmina charta,

De NIHILO NIHILI pariant faftidią verfus.

**THE

** The particulars of fo immoral a life as that of the Earl of Rochester, were it not for his penitence at the close of it, had per haps better have been suffered to fink into oblivion than recorded. Nevertheless, it is faid that his manners were elegant, and that they are truly represented in the perfon of Dorimant, a character in Sir George Etherege's comedy of the Man of Mode, drawn with exquifite art and from the life. Biogr. Brit. 1843, in not.

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