OLIVER GOLDSMITH'S LIFE AND TIMES. [BOOK n. 1759. natured Goldsmith, as lie scraped together Ms answer to ifilsi. that humble petition, pointed with a smile to a description of the fate of poets which he had just published there. " There "is a strong similitude," he had said, reviewing a new edition of the Fairy Queen, " between the lives of almost " all our English poets. The Ordinary of Newgate, we " are told, has but one story, which serves for the life of "every hero that happens to come within the circle of "his pastoral care; however unworthy the resemblance "appears, it may be asserted, that the history of one " poet might serve with as little variation for that of any " other.—Born of creditable parents, who gave him a pious " education; however, in spite of all their endeavours, in " spite of all the exhortations of the minister of the parish " on Sundays, he tinned his mind from, following good things, t! and fell to------- writing verses!—Spenser, in short, lived " poor, was reviled by the critics of his time, and died at " last in the utmost distress." * He was again working for Hamilton. Smollett himself had not seen his new reviewer, but, the success of the Ovid papers having proclaimed the value of such assistance,! he appears to have sent the publisher with renewed offers to Green Arbour Court. Goldsmith had resumed with this notice of Spenser; a discriminating proof of his appreciation of all true mastery in the divine art. Popular and practical himself, he wonders not the less at the "great magician:" suddenly taken " from the ways of the present world," and far from Drury Lane alehouses or Auburn villages,—in the * Critical Review, vii. 105, February 1759. t Dr. AiMn (who had the means of knowmg) adopts and confirms a statement of Glover's to the effect that "it was the merit which Goldsmith discovered in ".criticising a despicable translation of Ovid's Fastil>y a pedantic schoolmaster, " and his Enquiry into Polite Literature, which first introduced him to the acqnaint- " ance of Dr. Smollett." could there be any