"The idle drone, that labours not at all, Suckes up the sweete of honny from the bee: Who worketh most, to their share least doth fall; With due desert reward will never be. "The swiftest hare, unto the mastive slowe "So he that takes the payne to penne the booke, THOMAS SACKVILLE, LORD BUCKHURST, AND EARL OF DORSET. Ir is not my business to enter into the life of this peer as a statesman: it is sufficient to say, that few first ministers have left so fair a character. His family disdained the offer of an apology for it against some little cavils, which "spreta exolescunt; si irascare, agnita videntur." It is almost as needless to say, that he was the patriarch of a race of genius and wit3. He early quitted the study of the law for the flowery paths of poetry, and shone both in Latin and English composition 4. In his graver 2 • Lloyd's Worthies, p. 680. [To lord Buckhurst Campian dedicated his Observations on English Poesie, 1602; which called forth Daniel's Defence of Ryme.] 3 [Himself a poet, says Dr. Anderson, he encouraged the art which he improved, by his liberality; and left his wit and patronage of polite literature to his descendants, of whom was Charles Sackville, earl of Dorset, the well-known patron of Dryden and Prior: -Whose great forefathers every grace, Reflecting and reflected in his race; Where other Buckhursts, other Dorsets shine, And poets still, or patriots, deck the line.” British Poets, vol.i. p. 653.] 4 [Having been in his younger days, according to Wood, poetically inclined, he wrote while he continued in Oxon, |