Page:The Lives of the Most Eminent English Poets, Volume 1.djvu/427

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J. PHILIPS.
417

There is a Latin ode written to his patron St. John, in return for a present of wine and tobacco, which cannot be passed without notice. It is gay and elegant, and exhibits several artful accommodations of classick expressions to new purposes. It seems better turned than the odes of Hannes[1].

To the poem on Cider, written in imitation of the Georgicks, may be given this peculiar praise, that it is grounded in truth; that the precepts which it contains are exact and just; and that it is therefore, at once, a book of entertainment and of science. This I was told by Miller, the great gardener and botanist, whose expression was, that there were many books written on the same subject in prose, which do not contain so much truth as that poem.

  1. This ode I am willing to mention, because there seems to be an error in all the printed copies, which is, I find, retained in the last. They all read;
    Quam Gratiarum cura decentium
    O! O! labellis cui Venus insidet.

    The author probably wrote,
    Quam Gratiarum cura decentium
    Ornat; labellis cui Venus insidet.Dr. J.

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