< Page:Biographia Hibernica volume 1.djvu
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BOYSE after another, with sach unfeeling contempt and ingrati- tude, that we are not to wonder at his living the precarious life of an outeast, of a man who belongs to no society, and whom no society is bound to maintain. Among his patrons were many persons of high rank and opulence, whom he rendered ashamed of their patronage, and perbaps pre- vented from the exercise of general kindness, lest it might be disgraced by the enconragement of those who dissipate every favour in low and wanton excesses What can be urged in his favour from internal evidence ought not to be concealed. We do not find in bis works much of the cant of complaint: and, although he sub- mitted to every mean art of supplication, he does not seetn to have resented a denial as an insult, nor to have taken much pains to make the worse appear the better cause. In his private letters, indeed, he sometimes endeavoured, by false professions and imaginary misfortunes, to impose upon others, but he did not impose upon himself. He had not perverted his own mind by any of the impious sophistries, which, by frequent repetition, become mis- taken for right reason, He was not, therefore, without his hours of remorse; and towards the latter part of bis life, when his heart was softened by a sense of inward decay, he resolved in earnest to retrieve his character 91 As a poet, his reputation has been chiefly fixed on the production entitled " DEITY," which, although irregular and monotonous, contains many striking proofs of poetical genius. The effort indicates no small elevation of mind, even while we mustallow that success is beyond all human power. His other pieces may be regarded as curiosities, as the productions of a man who never enjoyed the undis- turbed exercise of his powers, who wrote in circumstances of peculiar distress, heightened by the consciousness that hie could obtain only temporary relief, that he had forfeited the respect due to genius, and could expect to be re- warded only by those to whom he was least known. We are told that he wrote all his poems with ease, and even

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