VERSES ON TWO CELEBRATED MODERN POETS. BEHOLD, those monarch oaks, that rise, Have large proportion'd roots that grow If this to clouds and stars will venture, That, had I been the god of wit, Should Young and Philips drudge together.* *This is to be understood as a censure only of the poetical character of those gentlemen. As men, the Dean esteemed them both; and on Philips in particular conferred many signal acts of friendship. N. UPON CARTHY'S* THREATENING TO You have undone Horace,-what should hinder DR. SWIFT WROTE THE FOLLOWING EPIGRAM ON ONE DELACOURT'S COMPLIMENTING CARTHY, A SCHOOL MASTER, ON HIS POETRY. CARTHY, you say, writes well-his genius true; * Carthy, a scribbling schoolmaster, wrote some severe lines on Dr. Swift and his friends. F. END OF THE ELEVENTH VOLUME. U. S. VAN WINKLE, PRINTER, |