EXTRACT S. In his elegant Latin poem on the Immortality of the Soul, Isaac Hawkins Browne, Esq. supposes man in a degenerat state of nature, unsanctified and unenlightened by Divine revelation, to hold similar language to the infidel Libertines, spoken of in page 107, of Euthanasia: Quare age, vina liques: epulæ, convivia, lusus, LIB. 1.-18. and, after describing mere Nature to be incapable of affording any prospect of a better state of things, thus pleasingly speaks of that immortal principle in man which will live forever. Gaudia quinetiam non hæc fugientia poscit, No fleeting joys she asks, which must depend JENYNS. A few more gleanings from this highly-cultivated field of classic literature shall adorn these notes, to illustrate the present work; its author being honoured with the friendship of a relation of the writer of that justly admired poem. Præteria esse aliquid verè quod pertinet ad nos, Morte obita, nemo secum non concipit; intus, That there's a self, which after death shall live, All are concern'd about, and all believe; That something's ours, when we from life depart This truth, the public voice declares the same; JENYNS. Finely does he thus reprove the Epicureans noticed in page 121, &c. of Euthanasia. I nunc, usuram vitæ mirare caducam; Pervolita, rorem deliba, vescere et aura Hæccine vitai summa est? Sic irrita vota? Go then, forgetful of its toil and strife, Are these man's great pursuits,--is this to live? JENYNS. The ills incident to age,man going to his long home, and the mourners passing along the streetsso pathetically described by the pen of Solomon, as introduced page 49, are briefly alluded to in these lines: Qui prior abscedit, portum prior occupat; Eja! Who first set The wretched privilege daily to deplore And age surrounded with a thousand snares. JENYNS. After painting, in strong colours, the inquietudes of vice, during life, and its horrors, on the approach of death, from an anticipation of that eternity in woe to which the polluted soul will be doomed after death, the author contrasts the happiness of one -Who Virtue's radiant course has run, concluding the pleasing picture with a fine eulogy to "Worcester's good Bishop," who is introduced in Euthanasia, page 131, 132. Hic, sese excutiens sibi plaudit et aureus ut Sol Usque sub occasum diffuso lumine ridet; Hic, matura dies cum mortis venerit, ævum His thoughts, triumphant, Heav'n alone employs, -So good, so blest, the illustrious HOUGH we find, Or like some victor in the Olympic games, Who, having run his course, the crown of glory claims. JENYNS. EXTRACT FROM A POEM ON THE SOUL, DEDICATED TO QUEEN ELIZABETH, By SIR JOHN DAVIS. And as the moisture, which the thirsty earth Long doth she stay, as loth to leave the land, She tastes all places, turns to ev'ry hand, |