[42] Dryden, perhaps, recollected the poem of Fitzpayne Fisher on Cromwell's death, entitled, Threnodia Triumphalis in obitum serenissimi Nostri Principis Olivari, Angliæ Scotiæ Hiberniœ cum dominationibus ubicunque jacentibus Nuperi protectoris, (Qui obiit. Septemb. 3tio.) Ubi stupendæ passim victoriæ, et incredibiles domi forasque successus, Heroico carmine, succinctim perstringuntur. Per Fitzpaynæum Piscatorem. Londini, 1658.

[43] [Note 1.]

[44] Alluding to the fable of Hercules supporting the heavenly sphere when Atlas was fatigued.

[45] A very ill-timed sarcasm on those, who petitioned Charles to call his parliament. See p. [311.]

[46] 2 Kings, chap. xx.

[47] [Note II.]

[48] [Note III.]

[49] An eagre is a tide swelling above another tide, which I have myself observed in the river Trent.—Dryden. This species of combat between the current and the tide is well known on the Severn; and, so far back as the days of William of Malmesbury, was called the Higre. Unhappy is the vessel, says that ancient historian, on whom its force falls laterally. De Gestis Pontificum, Lib. IV.—Drayton describes the same river,

——With whose tumultuous waves,

Shut up in narrower bounds, the Higre wildly raves,