To give a Milton birth, ask’d ages more.

Thus Genius rose and set at order’d times,

And shot a day-spring into distant climes,

Ennobling every region that he chose;

He sunk in Greece, in Italy he rose;

And, tedious years of gothic darkness pass’d,

Emerged all splendour in our isle at last,

Thus lovely halcyons dive into the main,

Then show far off their shining plumes again.

In Bishop Gibson’s edition of Camden’s Britannia, there is a very free translation of some old monkish verses on S. Oswald by Basil Kennet, brother of Bishop White Kennet. The last line, to which there is nothing corresponding in the Latin, seems to have been copied from the last line of Dryden’s epigram: