Are richer, dearer to this filial heart, And soon my dust, sweet shade! shall mix with thine. The epitaph on lady Berry's monument in Stepney church-yard, forms a striking contrast to the assuming airs of a dashing female of the modern ton. Come, ladies, ye that would appear The elegant inscription on the tomb of Mrs. Newte, written by her husband, is not a testimony to her excellence only, but also to his affection. I weep on earth, while thy triumphant soul, Thy eye was intellect, thy lip was love; Soon was the blessing from my bosom torn, When scarce possess'd, tho' innocence was thine, Mild as the lucid softness of the morn. Yet was not innocence alone thy praise, Bless'd be the day when love oppos'd thy fate, The word of the all-ruling God is past, The following, written by Gray on Mrs. Jane Clerke, displays forcibly the virtues of a matron : Lo! where this silent marble weeps, Her infant image, here below, Genius and virtue seem to have been closely united in the character of Dr. Rose of Chiswick, as commemorated by Mr. Murphy, in the following epitaph : Whoe'er thou art, with silent footsteps tread Oft heard, and oft admir'd, yet ever new; The heart that melted at another's grief: Flattery is so generally confined to the great, that we have but little reason to suspect the truth of those praises which are bestowed upon such as have lived in the humble rank of an obscure situation. Dr. Hawkesworth did not think it beneath the dignity of his pen, to record the virtues of a person of this class, in an inscription on a tomb in Bromley church-yard, which runs thus : Near this place ELIZABETΗ ΜΟΝΚ, who departed this life on the 27th of August, 1753, She was the widow of John Monk of this place, Blacksmith, her second husband, to whom she had been a wife near fifty years, by whom she had no children (and of the issue of her first marriage none lived to the second) but virtue would not suffer her to be childless. An infant, to whom, and to whose father and mother she had been nurse (such is the uncertainty of temporal prosperity) became dependant upon strangers for the necessaries of life: to him she afforded the protection of a mother. This parental charity was returned with filial affection, and she was supported in the feebleness of age, by him whom she had cherished in the helplessness of infancy. Let it be remembered, that there is no station in which industry will not obtain power to be liberal, nor any character on which liberality will not confer honour. She had been long prepared by a simple and unaffected piety, for that awful moment, which, however, delayed, is universally sure. How few are allowed an equal time of probation! How many, by their lives, appear to presume on more! To preserve the memory of this person, but yet more to perpetuate the lesson of her life, this stone was erected by voluntary contribution. DUKE DE MONTPENSIER. THE daily vicissitudes of human life present an inexhaustible theme for reflection. Youth, beauty, talents, grandeur, and riches, are often only the pageants of a day, and elude the fond grasp of their possessors: the young must become old; the handsome lose their charms, from disease, or the natural alterations of time; the wit becomes a dotard; and the rich often become poor. It is, however, a consoling circumstance, that adversity strengthens the mind, and sometimes counterbalances the sufferings it occasions, by the lessons it imparts. Many characters have shone with |