The Waif Woman
f his sister Mary, erected by their father the lord D
mple of unta
sdom, and pa
fferings, and
ise, without pr
rd, in ev'ry t
h but what the
anners, unaf
e, and friend
eav'n's eternal
lt thy mort
t maid! attend
follow'd to t
course to the s
ng, and now t
e only bliss s
love and to e
e tears, mort
re your joys, fo
tes, a stone, a
ther, all a f
ave no character at all, have little that distinguishes them from others equally good or bad, and, therefore, nothing can be said of them which may not be applied with equal propriety to a thousand more. It is, indeed, no great panegyrick, that there is inclosed in this tomb one who was born in one year, and died in another; yet many useful a
orrow from himself. The fourteen epitaphs, which he has written, comprise about a hundred and forty lines, in which there are more repetitions than will easily be found
is borrowed from Dryden. The conclusion is the same with th