[ [43] Geor. II. 108.

[ [44] Hor. 1. Od. 6.

[ [45] L. 2. Od. 9

[ [46] L. 2. Od. 9

[ [47] Lib. 2. Od. 8.

[ [48] 'Tis the Business of the Poet to give Life, Motion, or Sound to almost every Thing he describes, which in Oratory would be ridiculous: Thus, for Example, put into Prose, Juvenal's——jam tum mihi barba sonabat, or Virgil's Description of an Oak grafted on an Elm,——Glandemque sues fregere sub ulmis; with these lively Images you would gain the Reader's Smile, not his Admiration.

[ [49] Geor. I. 471.

[ [50] Æn. IV. 1.

[ [51] 65.

[ [52] 77.