[103] There is not one beauty in this charming speech but what hath been borrow'd by almost every tragic writer.
[104] Mr. Banks has (I wish I could not say too servilely) imitated this of Grizzle in his Earl of Essex:
"Where art thou, Essex," &c.
[105] The Countess of Nottingham, in the Earl of Essex, is apparently acquainted with Dollallolla.
[106] Grizzle was not probably possessed of that glue of which Mr. Banks speaks in his Cyrus:
"I'll glue my ears to every word."
"Screech-owls, dark ravens, and amphibious monsters,
Are screaming in that voice."—"Mary Queen of Scots."
[108] The reader may see all the beauties of this speech in a late ode, called the "Naval Lyrick."