Poema Cl. V. JOANNIS PASSERATII, Regii in Academia Parisiensi Professoris. Ad ornatissimum virum ERRICUM MEMMIUM. Janus adest, festæ poscunt sua dona Kalendæ, Usque adeò ingenii nostri est exhausta facultas, Quod nusquam est, potius nova per vestigia quæram. Ausoniæ indictum NIHIL est Græcæque Camœnæ. Vere NIHIL, NIHIL irriguo formosius horto, Socra Socraticique gregis fuit ista scientia quondam, 4 Nec numeret Libycæ numerum qui callet arenæ : P Diique Diique NIHIL metuunt. Quid longo carmine plura Ne tibi si multa laudem mea carmina charta, ROSCOMMON. WENTWORTH DILLON, earl of Roscom= mon, was the son of James Dillon and Elizabeth Wentworth, sister to the earl of Strafford. He was born in Ireland* during the lieutenancy of Strafford, who, being both his uncle and his godfather, gave him his own surname. His father, the third earl of Roscommon, had been converted by Usher to the Protestant religion; and when the Popish rebellion broke out, Strafford thinking the family in great danger from the fury of the Irish, sent for his godson, and placed him at his own seat in Yorkshire, where he was instructed in Latin: which he learned so as to write it with purity and elegance, though he was never able to retain the rules of grammar. Such is the account given by Mr. Fenton, from whose notes on Waller most of this account must be borrowed, though I know not whether all that he relates is certain. The instructor whom he assigns to Roscommon is one Dr. Hall, by whom he cannot mean the famous Hall, then an old man and a bishop. *The Biographia Britannica says, probably about the year 1632; but this is inconsistent with the date of Strafford's viceroyalty in the following page. C. When the storm broke out upon Strafford, his house was a shelter no longer; and Dillon, by the advice of Usher, was sent to Caen, where the Protestants had then an university, and continued his studies under Bochart. Young Dillon, who was sent to study under Bochart, and who is represented as having already made great proficiency in literature, could not be more than nine years old. Strafford went to govern Ireland in 1633, and was put to death eight years afterwards. That he was sent to Caen, is certain: that he was a great scholar, may be doubted. At Caen he is said to have had some preternatural intelligence of his father's death. "The lord Roscommon, being a boy of ten years "of age, at Caen in Normandy, one day was, as "it were, madly extravagant in playing, leaping, getting over the tables, boards, &c. He was "wont to be sober enough; they said, God grant. "this bodes no ill-luck to him! In the heat of this extravagant fit, he cries out, My father is dead. "A fortnight after, news came from Ireland that "his father was dead. This account I had from "Mr. Knolles, who was his governor, and then "with him, since secretary to the earl of Straf"ford; and I have heard his lordship's relations "confirm the same." Aubrey's Miscellany. The present age is very little inclined to favour any accounts of this kind, nor will the name of Aubrey much recommend it to credit; it ought not, however, to be omitted, because better evidence of a fact cannot easily be found than is here offered; and it must be by preserving such relations that we may |