AND ITS AUTHOR.



martial elegy ever given to the world. Each
will be remembered for two or three short but
finished productions, and both sleep at last
amid the scenes and near the objects clothed
with the glory of their inspiration. Gray
slumbers in sight of the "antique towers" of
Eton College, whose praises he sung, and in
the churchyard where oft-

  "The curfew tolled the knell of parting day."

  O'Hara reposes in sight of the tomb of-

            " the brave o;d Pioncer."

whose deathless dirge he sung, and in that
cemetery where sleep thl  wzrriors hose re-

quiem he chanted, and where-

       "Glory guards with solemn round
       The bivouac of the dead."



73