Page:The Lives of the Most Eminent English Poets, Volume 3.djvu/106

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102
FENTON.

into blank verse will find few readers, while another can be had in rhyme. The piece addressed to Lambarde is no disagreeable specimen of epistolary poetry; and his ode to lord Gower was pronounced by Pope the next ode in the English language to Dryden’s Cecilia. Fenton may be justly styled an excellent versifier and a good poet.

WHATEVER I have said of Fenton is confirmed by Pope in a letter, by which he communicated to Broome an account of his death.

TO
The Reva. Mr. BROOME.
At Pulham, near Harleston
Nor
Suffolke

By Beccles Bag.

DR SIR.

I Intended to write to you on this melancholy subject, the death of Mr. Fenton, before yrs came; but stay’d to have informed

myself