OLIVER GOLDSMITH'S LIFE AND TIMES. !»<«•« '• " flowery pasture along the banks of the Rtraam, they «rc M. 27. « furnished with sweets before unrifled j and thus n single " floating beo-houso yields the proprietor a considerable " income. Why a method similar to this him never been " adopted in England, where we have more gentle riven*, " and more flowery banks, than any other part of the world, " 1 know not." After this, proofs of his having neon Florewts Verona, Mantua, and Milan,are apparent; and in Cnrmthm the incident occurred with which his famous couplet has too hastily reproached a people, when, milking with fatigue, after a long day's toilsome walk, ho was turned frum a peasant's hut at which he implored a lodging. At i*udua he is supposed to have stayed some little time j and here, it has been asserted, though in this case also the offlctn! records are lost, he received his degree, Here, or at Lou vain, or at some other of these foreign universities where* ho alwnyH boasted himself hero in. the disputations to which his philo- sophic vagabond refers, there can hardly be a question that the degree, a very simple and accessible matter at nny of thorn,* was actually conferred. "Sir," said Bcmwc'll to Johnson, " he disputed MB passage through Europe."* Of his Laving also taken a somewhat close survey of thoHe count- less academic institutions of Italy, in the midst of which Italian learning at this time withered, evidence is* not wanting; and he always thoroughly discriminated the character of that country and its people, But small the bliss that sense alon© And senatial bliss is all the nation know*; la florid beauty groves and fields appear—- Man seems the only growth that dwindles here ! * Life, \l 189. whioh 5s the reading of the ftrwt