EPIGRAM ON LORD ORRERY'S REMARKS. 213 EPIGRAM ON LORD ORRERY'S REMARKS ON SWIFT'S LIFE AND WRITINGS. A sore disease this scribbling itch is! What! libel his friend when laid in ground: For what he writes George Faulkner prints. Had Swift provoked to this behaviour, TO DOCTOR DELANY, ON HIS BOOK ENTITLED OBSERVATIONS ON LORD ORRERY'S REMARKS. Delany, to escape your friend the Dean, * Lord Orrery translated the letters of the younger Pliny. 3 You kindly own his Gulliver profane, But if for wrongs to Swift you would atone, And please the world, one way you may suc ceed, Collect Boyle's writings and your own, And serve them as you served THE DEED. EPIGRAM On Faulkner's displaying in his shop the Dean's bust in marble, (now placed in the great aisle of St Patricks church) while he was publishing Lord Orrery's Remarks. FAULKNER! for once you have some judgment shewn, By representing Swift transformed to stone; AN INSCRIPTION, Intended for a compartment in Dr Swift's monument, designed by Cunningham, on College Green, Dublin. SAY, to the Drapier's vast unbounded fame, What added honours can the sculptor give? None. 'Tis a sanction from the Drapier's name Must bid the sculptor and his marble live. June 4, 1765. AN EPIGRAM. OCCASIONED BY THE ABOVE INSCRIPTION. WHICH gave the Drapier birth two realms contend; Through life's low vale, she, grateful, gave him bread; 1766. W. B. J. N. |