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forrow, for the lofs of the learned, are foon worn out by the tumults of life.' This is very true; but the observation will not apply more peculiarly to the learned than to other men: perhaps lefs; for the memories of the learned and ingenious are preferved in their works, while others leave nothing behind them to make mankind regret their departure.

Art. 25. Sophronia and Hilario; an Elegy. By Charles Crawford, Efq; Author of the Differtation on the Phaedon of Plato. 4to. 1 s. 6d.

Becket. 1774:

If Mr. Crawford intended this poem as an effay toward discountenancing the foolish and butcherly custom of duelling, he is to be commended for his defign. Of his poetry our Readers will judge from the following specimen :

.J

To the appointed place both punctual went,

The ground was meafur'd, and the fight began;
In vain their milile load, the pifto's fent,
Each 'gainst the other bent his rage in vain.
His fword HILARIO brandifh'd in the air,

"Come on (he faid) come on, thou damned thing!"
Manly he mov'd, devoid of coward fear:
But o'er his head Death flaps his raven wing.
E'en when he deem'd the victory his own,
And rufh'd to meet his foe with furious hate;
His eager foot tripp'd on an unfeen ftone:
Then ghaftly fmil'd, well pleas'd, malignant Fate.
His foe, ungen'rous, ftabb'd him to the heart,
Stabb'd him ignobly as the hero fell;

The blood ran gufhing from the gaping part:-
What tongue can this to fweet SOPHRONIA tell!
When in the agonies of death he lay,
Fierce and distorted betwixt rage and pain;
When groaning unreveng'd his foul away,

That thus he fell, e'en thus ignobly flain ;--

His friend, the murd'rer with his fword approach'd,
"Defend thee, coward knave! (HORATIO Cried)
"Or be for ever by the brave reproach'd,
"That thus by unfair means HILARIO died."

His arm the weapon to that bofom fent,
In which it burn'd to flake its eager thirst;
The foul full instant from the body went;
-His arm the dying worthless FLORIO Curft.
Inftant the blood into his hand he took,
And plac'd it tepid on HILARIO's cheek,
Well-pleas'd HILARIO caft a grateful look,
› And falter'd these last words in accents weak :

"Thanks to my noble friend! (he fmiling faid)
"Ofpare SOPHRONIA, God! my children fpare!"
On the dank heath then fell his gen'rous head;
His foul flew upwards to the ambient air.

Dd 4

Thus

Thus when the Theban and as WOLFE of late,
The joyful news of victory receiv'd;

No more they dreaded the chill ftroke of Fate;

Nor at th' approach of death while conqu'ring griev'd.

This is not the most pleafing poem of the kind that we ever perufed but we forbear; not being ambitious of the honour of having our names joined with thofe venerable ones of antiquity, which this fweet-blooded gentleman has treated with fuch extraordinary marks of reverence in his Differtation on Plato, &c. See Review, vol. xlix, P. 437.

Art. 26. Poems by Mr. Fenton. 4to. 6s. Kearfly. 1774. We fuppofe this honelt ancient Briton will hardly think us niggards in our approbation, when we allow that he does no difcredit to his name. His poems are mifcellaneous, many of them easy and pretty, and it gives us pleafure to fee them prefaced with fuch a noble fubfcription lift of the Author's countrymen. Art. 27. Poems by Mr. Jerningham. 8vo. 2 s. 6 d. fewed,

Robfon. 1774•

ewed.

Mr. Jerningham's prefatory advertisement informs his readers that the favourable reception these poems met with, as they separately appeared, has induced him to collect them into a little volume, and prefent them, with fome emendations, to the Public;' and he hopes that the indulgence which first attended them, will not forfake them in their prefent appearance.'

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We are always pleafed with the modefty and becoming diffidence with which this ingenious Writer adds his literary mite, as he expreffes it, to the treasure of English poetry.' Of the true value of that mite, we have frequently given our impartial eftimate; and fhall only now give a lift of the pieces contained in the prefent edition of his works, viz.

The Magdalens-Yarico to Incle-The Nun-The Deferter-}} Latte-Matilda-The Swedish Curate-The Funeral of Arabert— and a few fmaller pieces; moft of which, if not all, feem to be now first published: the laft, entitled The Nunnery, in imitation of Mr. Gray's Elegy, is concluded, in courfe, by The Epitaph; in which the Author has thus, very properly, glanced at his own poetical character; By Death's flern hand untimely fnatch'd away,

A youth unknown to fame thefe vaults infold;

He

gave to SOLITUDE the pensive day*,

And PITY, &c.

*. In the advertisement above-quoted, Mr. J. takes notice, that out of refpect to the public opinion, he has excluded fome poems from this collection, choofing rather to fubmit to the voice of his cotemporaries, than make a prefumptuous appeal to pofterity.' How different this from the conduct of fome were felf-fufficient bards, who have feemed rather inclined to bully the Public into an approbation of their writings!

* The word is thus, in our copy, fo faintly printed, that we are in fome doubt whether the Author did not write lay.

PHILO

PHILOSOPHICA L.

Art. 28. An Efay on Electricity; containing a Series of Experiments introductory to the Study of that Science. 8vo. 3 s. Briftol printed, and fold by Becket in London. 1773.

DRAMATIC.

This compendium is well drawn up, and will be of use to those who wish to be initiated into the principles of electricity, and to acquire a knowledge of the principal experiments that have been made in this branch of fcience; fome of which likewife are here agreeably enough diversified. The Effay is enlarged by various obfervations on medical electricity, and still more by the hiftories of the feveral cures that have been performed by means of the electrical apparatus; collected from the different writers who have treated this fubject, B. Art. 29. Codrus, a Tragedy. 8vo. I s. 6d. Johnfon. 1774. The Author of this Tragedy, in a very fenfible prefatory letter, informs us, that it was not intended for the stage. It breathes, however, the genuine fpirit of Liberty and Virtue, and for the fake of thofe honelt old principles, which we remember to have heard fome-. thing about many years ago, we can with pleasure pass over a few de fects of compofition. Art. 30. Henry and Emma, a new Poetical Interlude, altered from Prior's Nut-brown Maid, with Additions, and a new Air and Chorus, (the Mufic by Dr. Arne) as performed on Wednesday, April 13, 1774, at the Theatre Royal in Covent Garden, for the Benefit of Mrs. Hartley. 8vo. 6d. Davies.

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Hardly any skill could alter Prior's Nut-brown Maid, fo as to atone to the Audience, or to the Reader, for the regret which they would feel at the omiffion of any of its beautiful and pathetic paffages.

MISCELLANEOUS.

W. Art. 31. The Roman Hiftory, in a Series of Letters from a Nobleman to his Son. 12mo. 6s. Snagg.

A few years ago, we had a pocket history of England, in Letters from a Nobleman to his Son, or fome title fimilar to this; it was not inelegantly written; and as the plan was well adapted for the inftruction and entertainment of young Gentlemen, the work was favourably received; and it has, confeffedly,' given rife to the prefent performance:

The Roman Hiftorians, fays the Editor, have been time immemorial, read in our fchools, in detached pieces, and in fuch a manner as could give neither entertainment nor inftruction to the persons who perused them. Here the Author has laid before the Reader the leading facts, and drawn fuch conclufions from them, as must make a lafting impreffion on the memory of every person who perufes it. Virtue is delineated in its most amiable characters, and vice fo as to deter the rifing generation from becoming its votaries.'

There is no queftion but that abftracts of this kind, written in an eafy, familiar ftyle, and illuftrated with fuitable reflections, will prove both agreeable and useful to young readers; and that while they are engaged, perhaps, merely in the fearch of amufement, (of which they will find an almost inexhauftible store in the Roman

History)

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History) they will, at the fame time, as our Editor obferves, acquire knowledge of things of the utmost importance."

This history is, for the most part, written in a familiar and pleafing ftrain; but it is unequal, frequently inaccurate in the details, and generally fo incorrectly printed, that there is much left for the Editor to do, in a fecond edition. Of the Writer's inaccuracy, a fingle fpecimen may fuffice, as well as a greater number, which we have noted in the course of our perusal.

Speaking of the memorable eruption of Mount Vefuvius, which happened in the reign of the Emperor Titus, the Writer mentions the death of the great Pliny, in the following terms:

Pliny, the Author of the Natural Hiftory, loft his life on this memorable occafion, for a curiofity peculiar to himfelf, having led him too near the mouth of the Volcano, he was swallowed up and devoured in the flames.”

Would not any reader, not previously informed of the real circumftances of the fact, conclude, from this account of it, that Pliny had, in fome meafure, voluntarily fhared the fate of Empedocles, and that he had actually perithed in the very Crater from whence the fames iffued? Whereas the truth is, that this celebrated obferver of ature was not on the, mountain, nor even within feveral miles of it, at the time of the eruption; that his curiofity, fatal as it proved, led him no nearer to it than Stabia, and that he died by fuffocation, at the fea fide, in the neighbourhood of that town, as he was endeavouring to escape from thence to his fhips. The circumftance is thus related by his nephew:- 'He fell down dead; fuffocated, as Fconjecture, by fome grofs and noxious vapour, having always had weak lungs, and frequently fubject to a difficulty of breathing. As foon as it was light again-his body was found intire, and without any mks of violence upon it, exactly in the fame pofture that he fell, and looking more like a man afleep than dead. This was three days after he fell; two of his fervants were with him at the time of this melancholy accident.

Notwithstanding the little defects of a work probably compiled in hafte, (for Noblemen as well as Plebeian writers may have cogent reafons for falt-writing) we can recommend this compilement as an agreeable and useful introduction to a more intimate knowledge of the rife, progrefs, revolutions, and declenfion of the greatest Empire that ever fubfifted upon earth:-the hiftory of which, however, as was faid on a fimilar † occasion, "has been fo often written, both in ancient and modern languages, that it would be impofture to pretend to new discoveries, or to offer any thing which other works of the fame kind have not given."

Art. 32. A Journal of a Voyage to the South Seas, in his Majefty's Ship the Endeavour, faithfully tranfcribed from the Papers of Sydney Parkinson, &c. Folio. 11.5 s. Boards. Richardfon. 1773. This performance is compiled from certain manufcripts of the late Mr. Parkinson, Draughtfman to Mr. Banks, in his late expedition

* Melmoth's Translation of Pliny's Letters.

+ Vid. our account of Goldfmith's Roman Hiftory, Rev. vol. xli. R. 183..

round

round the world, procured from feveral of the officers and others be longing to the Endeavour, by the Editor; who complains of the lofs, or the unjuft detention, of the fair copy of the journal kept by his brother; in a long preface, where he arraigns, not in the most civil or guarded terms, the conduct of Mr. Banks, the late Dr. Hawkfworth, and others, towards him.

We have already fo largely gratified the curiofity of the Public with regard to the voyage of the Endeavour, by the extracts which we have given from the journals of Captain Cook and Mr. Banks, compiled and methodifed by Dr. Hawkefworth, that we fhall only obferve that the Writer of the prefent journal feems to have been a well difpofed young man, who kept a regular diary of fuch occur, rences as fell within the sphere of his knowledge and obfervation that the work is enlarged by fome pretty copious fpecimens of the language of Otaheite and other parts which he vifited, and that this journal is illuftrated by twenty feven plates, which perhaps may be thought to conftitute the most valuable part of it. Art. 33. A Letter addreffed to Dr. Hawkefworth, and humbly recommended to the Perufal of the very learned Deifts. 8vo. 6d. - Payne. 1773:

bab.

B.

This literary fungus, which fuddenly fprung up from under the fhade of the grand compilation of the South Sea Voyages, was overlooked by us at the time of its starting up. We need fay no more of it, than that it is a very inoffenfive excrefcence; nor is its flavour fuch as to recommend it to the relish of any of the learned Deifts to whom it is meant to be ferved up. B. Art. 34. Letters to Men of Reason, and the Friends of the Poor, on the Hardships of the Excife Laws relating to Malt and Beer; more especially as they affect the Inhabitants of Cities and Great Towns. With a few Remarks on the late Regulations in the Corn Trade. 8vo. 1 s. Almon.

An earnest remonftrance on the hardships the Brewers labour under, from the heavy and unequal duties to which they are fubjected, as well as from the impolitic regulations of the hop trade, and from the frauds of hop-jobbers. We cannot pretend to enter into the various particulars, but the Writer appears to underftand his fubject, and to have confidered it with due attention; his reprefentations therefore merit immediate examination, no less from motives of juftice to fo great a body of manufacturers, and to the labouring poor, than from the national importance of the brewery and corn trade. Art. 35. An Appeal to the Public, relative to a Caufe lately determined in the Court of Chancery; in four Letters to Mr. John Vernon, of Southampton-buildings, Sollicitor. 4to. Wheble. 1774.

I s. 6 d.

The Appellant complains of the ill-ufage he has received at the hands of a Mrs. M. a Lady of eafy Virtue, once his Friend, but now the "kept Madam of a Sollicitor ;" who joins with faid Madam in a most unrighteous perfecution of the Author; bringing actions against him" on account of demands already fatisfied, though not legally discharged; propagating flanders, iffuing writs, commencing Mr. M, of Poland-ftreet,

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