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An Epistle in Verse, occasioned by the death of James Boswell, Esquire

of Auchinleck -- Addressed to the Rev. Dr. T. D. By the Rev. Samuel Martin

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What share had nature, what his birth, his friends,
His company, his principles, his ends,
'Tis not for us to say; but,. certes, here
Genius and eccentricity appear:
Somewhat original did Nature feel,
And Boswell made it more peculiar still.
“I leave the beaten path; I am, I shall
Be celebrated, an original.”—
So Pride, or rather Vanity, has said:
And very clowns originals are made:
And had much wiser been, with honest folk,
Nor hatching, nor exhibiting, a joke;
Nor hunters of anecdote, nor quite keen
Of new, and rare, and odd, or heard or seen;
And willing to submit to toil and care,
And pence, for the outré and the bizarre;
To be, or to be thought, queer, quaint, and new,
And much obtrusive on the public view.

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Much better had that care, and pence, and toil,
And flagitated talk, and midnight oil,
On what is plain and useful, been expended,
On something good acquir'd, or bad amended;
Science to cultivate, or to attain
Professional eclat, or honest gain;
To please a father, or to choose a wife;
In short, to be respectable in life.