GOLDSMITH'S LIFE AND TIMES. II. i W. " a representation of what Pindar now appears to be At89. "though perhaps not what he appeared to tho States of " Greece, when they rivalled each other in his applause, " and when Tan himself was noon dancing to hia melody," * Nothing could be happier than this lant allusion, Of tho capabilities of dray's genius, misdirected as he thus believed it to bo, it in witiHfiUjtoiy to mark Goldsmith's strong appreciation. Ho apeak* of him, in tho eiuphatic line of tho Cinmtrji Kltgy, an one whom the muse had marked for her own. Ho graven that «Btich a genius" Hlumld not do juried to itnelf, by tainting wore implicitly to it,B own powers j mid ({Uult-H pasHagtm from tho Html to support MH belief that thry tin* an great " OH anything of " that gpceiuH of computation which IIHH hitherto appeared " in our language, the Or/« of Drydim lihiwolf not oxwiptod." Certainly to tho two exct«ptmiiH which, wliilo (JoltlHinitli wrote, Gray ww doHcribing to Hurtl("my friendn tell me " that the Odm do not 8um«ml, and writi* inti many topics of " ooiiH«»latiou on that hcud: 1 have hwird of nobody but an a actor and a dod,or i»f divinity tlmt prtifoBH their eateem for them "), might with Homo rwwon lmv« bi-t^n iiddt-d the poor monthly oritio of Tlio Duncind. I wwh I eouhl Hay, that, in later and more nuwHHful tlityn, In? ruHi8t«d with pqiud good tiiBtti nnd good KOUBU Uw inlltifiu'cj of JoluiHon'H'lmbituia and Btninga dislike to »n«, <,f tho moat nmmblo men mid dt'lightfttl writem tu bo met with in our Ktigliuh literature, spirit of