Page:The Lives of the Most Eminent English Poets, Volume 1.djvu/115

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DENHAM.
105
"A new and nobler way thou dost pursue,
"To make translations and translators too.
"They but preserve the ashes, thou the flame,
"True to his sense, but truer to his fame."

The excellence of these lines is greater, as the truth which they contain was not at that time generally known.

His poem on the death of Cowley was his last, and, among his shorter works, his best performance: the numbers are musical, and the thoughts are just.

"Cooper's Hill" is the work that confers upon him the rank and dignity of an original author. He seems to have been, at least among us, the author of a species of composition that may be denominated local poetry, of which the fundamental subject is some particular landscape, to be poetically described, with the addition of such embellishments as may be supplied by historical retrospection or incidental meditation.

To trace a new scheme of poetry has in itself a very high claim to praise, and its praise is yet more when it is apparently copied by Garth and Pope[1]; after whose

  1. By Garth, in his "Poem on Claremont," and by Pope, in his "Windsor Forest." H.
names