Gray lost his mother, upon whose grave he placed this inscription— BESIDE HER FRIEND AND SISTER, HERE SLEEP THE REMAINS OF DOROTHY GRAY, WIDOW THE CAREFUL TENDER MOTHER OF MANY CHILDREN; ONE OF WHOM ALONE HAD THE MISFORTUNE TO SURVIVE HER. During the following three years Gray wrote the "Ode on the Progress of Poetry," and "The Bard." In the year 1756, he left Peter House, and "migrated" to Pembroke Hall, where he spent all his later years. In 1768 the Professorship of Modern History at Cambridge became vacant, and Gray received the appointment from the Duke of Grafton; who in the very next year was elected Chancellor of the University, when Gray wrote the Installation Ode, entitled "For Music," which was received with great applause. In the autumn of 1770, in order to recover his health, he made a tour in Wales; but the symptoms of his illness increased, and in July in the next year he was seized with an attack of gout in the stomach, from which he died on the 30th of the same month. Gray's Letters written to his friends West and Horace Walpole, and afterwards to Mr. Mason, to whom he left all his books and papers, are among the most charming that have ever been printed. His Latin poems are also justly extolled for their elegance and grace. He was considered the most learned man of his day, and it is much to be regretted that he did not devote more of his time to authorship. His "Letters and Poems," with "Memoirs of his Life and Writings," were published by his friend Mason, four years after his death. Drawn by Birket Foster, and Engraved by The ploughman homeward plods his weary way, 53 Ornamental head and tail pieces drawn by W. HARRY ROGERS, and engraved by EDMUND EVANS. |