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mük-white Hind, defends her tenets against the church of England, represented by the Panther, a beast beautiful, but spotted.

A fable which exhibits two beasts talking Theology, appears at once full of absurdity; and it was accordingly ridiculed in the City Mouse and Country Mouse, a parody, written by Montague, afterwards earl of Halifax, and Prior, who then gave the first specimen of his abilities.

The conversion of such a man, at such a time,, was not likely to pass uncensured. Three dialogues were published by the facetious Thomas Brown, of which the two first were called Reasons for Mr. Bayes's changing his religion : and the third, the Reasons of Mr. Hains the player's conversion and re-conversion. The first was printed in 1688, the second not till 1690, the third in 1691. The clamour seems to have been long continued, and the subject to have strongly fixed the publick attention.

In the two first dialogues Bayes is brought into the company of Crites and Eugenius, with whom he had formerly debated on dramatick poetry. The two talkers in the third are Mr. Bayes and Mr. Hains.

Brown was a man not deficient in literature, nor destitute of fancy; but he seems to have thought it the pinnacle of excellence to be a merry fellow; and therefore laid out his powers upon small jests of gross buffoonery, so that his performances have little intrinsick value, and were read only while they were recommended by the novelty of the event that occasioned them.

These dialogues are like his other works: what sense or knowledge they contain is disgraced by the garb in which it is exhibited. One great source of pleasure is to call, Dryden little Baves. Ajax, who happens to be mentioned, is," "he that wore as many cow-hides upon his shield as would have furnished "half the king's army with shoe-leather."

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Being asked whether he has seen the Hind and Panther, Crites answers: "Seen it! Mr. Bayes, why I can stir no where but it pursues me; it haunts "me worse than a pewter-buttoned serjeant does a decayed cit. Sometimes I "meet it in a band-box, when my laundress brings home my "times, whether I will or no, it lights my pipe at a coffee-house; some"times it surprises me in a trunk-maker's shop; and sometimes it refreshes. "my memory for me on the backside of a Chancery-lane parcel. For your "comfort, too, Mr. Bayes, I have not only seen it, as you may perceive, " but have read it too, and can quote it as freely upon occasions as a frugal "tradesman can quote that noble treatise the Worth of a penny to his extravagant 'prentice, that revels in stewed apples, and penny custards."

The whole animation of these compositions arises from a profusion of ludicrous and affected comparisons. "To secure one's chastity," says Bayes, "little more is necessary than to leave off a correspondence with the other sex, "which, to a wise man, is no greater a punishment than it would be to a fana"tic parson to be forbid seeing the Cheats and the Committee; or for my Lord 66 Mayor

"Mayor and Aldermen to be interdicted the sight of the London Cuckolds." This is the general strain, and therefore I shall be easily excused the labour of more transcription.

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Brown does not wholly forget past transactions: "You began," says Crites to Bayes," a very indifferent religion, and have not mended the matter in your last choice. It was but reason that your Muse, which appeared first "in a Tyrant's quarrel, should employ her last efforts to justify the usurpations of the Hind."

Next year the nation was summoned to celebrate the birth of the prince. Now was the time for Dryden to rouse his imagination, and strain his voice.. Happy days were at hand, and he was willing to enjoy and diffuse the anticipated blessings. He published a poem, filled with predictions of greatness and prosperity! predictions, of which it is not necessary to tell how they have been verified.

A few months passed after these joyful notes, and every blossom of popish hope was blasted for ever by the Revolution. A papist now could be no longer Laureat. The revenue, which he had enjoyed with so much pride and praise, was transferred to Shadwell, an old enemy, whom he had formerly stigmatised by the name of Gg. Dryden could not decently complain that he was deposed; but seemed very angry that Shadwell succeeded him, and has therefore eclebrated the intruder's inauguration in a poem exquisitely satirical, called Mac Flecknoe; of which the Dunciad, as Pope himself declares, is an imitation, though more extended in its plan, and more diversified in its incidents.

It is related by Prior, that Lord Dorset, when, as chamberlain, he was constrained to eject Dryden from his office, gave him from his own purse an allowance equal to the salary. This is no romantick or incredible act of generosity; an hundred a year is often enough given to claims less cogent, by men less famed for liberality. Yet Dryden always represented himself as suffering under a public infliction; and once particularly demands respect for the patience with which he endured the loss of his little fortune. His patron might, indeed, enjoin him to suppress his bounty; but if he suffered nothing, he should not have complained.

During the short reign of king James he had written nothing for the stage*, being, in his opinion, more profitably employed in controversy and flattery. Of praise he might perhaps have been less lavish without inconvenience, for James was never said to have much regard for poetry: he was to be flattered only by adopting his religion.

Times were now changed: Dryden was no longer the court-poet, and was to look back for support to his former trade; and having waited about two years, either considering himself as discountenanced by the publick, or perhaps expecting a second Revolution, he produced Don Sebastian in 1690; and in the next four years four dramas more.

* Albion and Albianus must however be excepted. E,

In 1693 appeared a new version of Juvenal and Persius. Of Juvenal he translated the first, third, sixthr, tenth, and sixteenth satires; and of Persius the whole work. On this occasion he introduced his two sons to the publick, as nurselings of the Muses. The fourteenth of Juvenal was the work of John, and the seventh of Charles Dryden. He prefixed a very ample preface in the form of a dedication to lord Dorset ; and there gives an account of the design which he had once formed to write an epic poem on the actions either of Arthur or the Black Prince. He considered the epick as necessarily including some kind of supernatural agency, and had imagined a new kind of contest between the guardian angels of kingdoms, of whom he conceived that each might be represented zealous for his charge, without any intended opposition to the purposes of the Supreme Being, of which all created minds must in part be ignorant.

This is the most reasonable scheme of celestial interposition that ever was formed. The surprizes and terrors of enchantments, which have succeeded to the intrigues and oppositions of pagan deities, afford very striking scenes, and open a vast extent to the imagination; but, as Boileau observes, and Boileau will be seldom found mistaken, with this incurable defect, that in a contest between heaven and hell we know at the beginning which is to prevail; for this reason we follow Rinaldo to the enchanted wood with more curiosity than terror.

In the scheme of Dryden there is one great difficulty, which yet he would perhaps have had address enough to surmount. In a war justice can be but on one side; and, to entitle the hero to the protection of angels, he must fight in defence of indubitable right. Yet some of the celestial beings, thus opposed to each other, must have been represented as defending guilt.

That this poem was never written, is reasonably to be lamented. It would doubtless have improved our numbers, and enlarged our language, and might perhaps have contributed by pleasing instruction to rectify our opinions, and purify our manners.

What he required as the indispensable condition of such an undertaking, a public stipend, was not likely in these times to be obtained. Riches were not become familiar to us, nor had the nation yet learned to be liberal.

This plan he charged Black more with stealing: only, says he, "The guar"dian angels of kingdoms were machines too ponderous for him to manage." In 1694, he began the most laborious and difficult of all his works, the translation of Virgil; from which he borrowed two months, that he might turn Fresnoy's Art of Painting into English prose. The preface, which he boasts to have written in twelve mornings, exhibits a parallel of poetry and painting, with a miscellaneous collection of critical remarks, such as cost a mind stored like his no labour to produce them.

In 1697, he published his version of the works of Virgil; and, that no opportunity of profit might be lost, dedicated the Pastorals to the lord Clifford,

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the Georgics to the earl of Chesterfield, and the Æneid to the earl of Mulgrave. This oeconomy of flattery, at once lavish and discreet, did not pass without observation.

This translation was censured by Milbourne, a clergyman, styled by Pope "the fairest of criticks," because he exhibited his own version to be compared with that which he condemned.

His last work was his Fables published in consequence, as is supposed, of a contract now in the hands of Mr. Tonson; by which he obliged himself, in consideration of three hundred pounds, to finish for the press ten thousand

verses.

In this volume is comprised the well known ode on St. Cecilia's day, which, as appeared by a letter communicated to Dr. Birch, he spent a fortnight in composing and correcting. But what is this to the patience and diligence of Boileau, whose Equivoque, a poem of only three hundred and forty-six lines, took from his life eleven months to write it, and three years to revise it!

Part of this book of Fables is the first Iliad in English, intended as a specimen of a version of the whole. Considering into what hands Homer was to fall, the reader cannot but rejoice that this project went no further.

The time was now at hand which was put an end to all his schemes and labours. On the first of May 1701, having been some time, as he tells us, a cripple in his limbs, he died in Gerard-street, of a mortification in his leg.

There is extant a wild story relating to some vexatious events that happened at his funeral, which at the end of Congreve's Life, by a writer of I know not what credit, are thus related, as I find the account transferred to a biographical dictionary:

"Mr. Dryden dying on the Wednesday morning, Dr. Thomas Sprat, then "bishop of Rochester and dean of Westminster, sent the next day to the lady "Elizabeth Howard, Mr. Dryden's widow, that he would make a present of "the ground, which was forty pounds, with all the other abbey-fees. The lord "Halifax likewise sent to the lady Elizabeth, and Mr. Charles Dryden her son, that, if they would give him leave to bury Mr. Dryden, he would inter "him with a gentleman's private funeral, and afterwards bestow five hundred pounds on a monument in the Abbey; which as they had no reason to refuse,

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they accepted. On the Saturday following the company came; the corpse "was put into a velvet hearse, and eighteen mourning coaches, filled with "company, attended. When they were just ready to move, the lord Jefferies, "son of lord chancellor Jefferies, with some of his rakish companions com"ing by, asked whose funeral it was: and being told Mr. Dryden's, he said, "What! shall Dryden, the greatest honour and ornament of the nation, "be buried after this private manner! No gentlemen, let all that loved "Mr. Dryden, and honour his memory, alight and join with me in gaining my lady's consent to let me have the honour of his interment, which shall be after another manner than this; and I will bestow a thousand pounds on a

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"monument in the Abbey for him.' The gentlemen in the coaches, not "knowing of the bishop of Rochester's favour, nor of the lord Halifax's ge

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nerous design (they both having, out of respect to the family, enjoined "the lady Elizabeth and her son to keep their favour concealed to the world, "and let it pass for their own expence), readily came out of the coaches and "attended lord Jefferies up to the lady's bed-side, who was then sick. He "repeated the purport of what he had before said; but she absolutely refusing, "he fell on his knees, vowing never to rise till his request was granted. The "rest of the company by his desire kneeled also; and the lady being under a "sudden surprize, fainted away. As soon as she recovered her speech, she " cried, No, no. Enough, gentlemen, replied he; my lady is very good, she "says, Go, go. She repeated her former words with all her strength, but in "vain; for her feeble voice was lost in their acclamations of joy; and the "lord Jefferies ordered the hearsemen to carry the corpse to Mr. Russel's, "an undertaker in Cheapside, and leave it there till he should send orders for "the embalment, which, he added, should be after the royal manner. His "directions were obeyed, the company dispersed, and lady Elizabeth and her "son remained inconsolable. The next day Mr. Charles Dryden waited on "the lord Halifax and the bishop, to excuse his mother and himself, by "relating the real truth. But neither his lordship nor the bishop would ad"mit of any plea; especially the latter, who had the Abbey lighted, the "ground opened, the choir attending, an anthem ready set, and himself "waiting for some time without any corpse to bury. The undertaker, after "three days expectance of orders for embalment without receiving any, "waited on the lord Jefferies, who pretending ignorance of the matter, turned it off with an illnatured jest, saying, that those "who observed the orders of a drunken frolick 'deserved no better; "that he remembered nothing at all of it; and that he might do "what he pleased with the corpse. Upon this, the undertaker waited upon "the lady Elizabeth and her son, and threatened to bring the corpse home "and set it before the door. They desired a day's respite, which was granted. "Mr. Charles Dryden wrote a handsome letter to the lord Jefferies, who re"turned it with this cool answer, That he knew nothing of the matter, "and would be troubled no more about it." He then addressed the lord Halifax "and the bishop of Rochester, who absolutely refused to do any thing in it. "In this distress Dr. Garth sent for the corpse to the College of Physicians, "and proposed a funeral by subscription, to which himself set a most) "noble example. At last a day, about three weeks after Mr. Dryden decease, was appointed for the interment. Dr. Garth pronounced a fine latin oration, "at the College, over the corpse; which was attended to the Abbey by a "numerous train of coaches. When the funeral was over, Mr. Charles Dryden "sent a challenge to the lord Jefferies, who refusing to answer it, he sent "several others, and went often himself; but could neither get a letter deli"vered, nor admittance to speak to him; which so incensed him, that he resolved,

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