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Enrich'd with myftic figures quaint and dark, And many a fage, and many a fhrewd remark; While to his penetrating eye appears

The color of his ALLAN's future years!

END OF THE SECOND BOOK.

By CADELL and DAVIES, Bookfellers, in the Strand; DILLY, in the Poultry; and JOHNSON, in St. Paul's Church-Yard, London; and TREWMAN and SON, Exeter:

I.

THE HISTORY OF DEVONSHIRE. Vol. I. Part I. Folio.

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Twenty-two DISCOURSES, &c. In two Vols. Octavo. Second Edition.

V.

A DISCOURSE, preached Dec. 30th, 1792. OƐlavo.

VI.

A DISCOURSE, preached Aug. 27th, 1797. Octavo.

VII.

A Volume of POEMS, including the ENGLISH ORATOR. Quarto. Third Edition.

VIII.

POEMS, by Gentlemen of DEVON and CORNWALL. Two Volumes. Octavo.

IX.

THEOCRITUS, BION, MOSCHUS, TYRTÆ US, &c. &c. In English Verse. Two Volumes. Octavo. Second Edition.

X.

THE INFLUENCE OF LOCAL ATTACHMENT, with refpect to Home, in Seven Books; and Odes, with other Poems. In two Volumes. Octavo. Second Edition.

XI.

SKETCHES IN VERSE, with Profe Illuftrations. Duodecimo. Second Edition, with feveral additional Poems.

I.

THE HISTORY OF DEVONSHIRE, Vol. I. Part II. including the Roman, Saxon, and Norman periods; with a great variety of new Engravings. Folio.

II.

DISCOURSES; Vol. III. and IV. Octavo.

III.

SERMONS ON THE RELATIVE DUTIES. In Two Volumes. Octavo.

IV.

The Third Book of the OLD ENGLISH GENTLEMAN.

With Plates. Octavo.

"In this corrupted age, lefs prone to err

"More virtuous than the miners, I aver.
"We feel not, brethren, artificial want,
"Tho' this thro' England be the current cant.
"Of wheat, in Cornwall, there's a fearful lack:
"And scarcely have I seen an unthresht stack.

"That farmers let the mould destroy one half,

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"And rats voracious turn the reft to chaff,

"Is but the watch-word of a rebel race

Who fuch a season of distress embrace

"To spread fedition, and fubvert the state, "And, in one ruin as they whelm the great, "Themselves with all the spoils of rapine deck, "And with the ftain of murder close the wreck. "Yes! since those miscreants, to degrade the bench, "From trembling juftice dar'd her † stilliards

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+ A fymbol not the most elegant: yet it comes with more propriety from a Cornish knight than from the claffical Sir Joshua Reynolds; who, in the great window at New College, Oxford, has reprefented Juftice with a pair of ftilliards.

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