Serm. XXIV. § 5. p. 625.—"Lysander was πανουργος."—Plutarch, Lysand. c. 7.
NOTE ON TAYLOR'S HOLY DYING.
(Eden's Edit.)
Cap. III. Sect. 7. § 7. p. 340.—"When men saw the graves of Calatinus, of the Servilii, the Scipios, the Metelli, did ever any man amongst the wisest Romans think them unhappy?" Translated from Cicero (Tusc. Disc. 1. c. 7. § 13.)
Cap. III. Sect. 8. § 6. p. 345.—"Brutus, ... when Furius came to cut his throat, after his defeat by Anthony, he ran from it like a girl."—Valer. Max. ix. 13. § 3 Senec. Epist. 82.
J.E.B. MAYOR.
Marlborough College, May 13.
UNPUBLISHED EPIGRAMS IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM.
I am not aware that the following epigrams have ever been printed. I transferred them to my note-book some time ago from the letters of Mr. Martyn, a littérateur of temporary fame in the first half of the eighteenth century, addressed to Dr. Birch; which are among the Birch MSS. in the British Museum. Mr. Martyn, if I remember right, gives them as not his own. You may think them worth printing in your agreeable Miscellany:—