Page:Dictionary of National Biography volume 18.djvu/55

Eusden speaks of Eusden as ‘by fortune rais'd, by very few been read, by fewer prais'd;’ and Sheffield, duke of Buckingham, in his ‘Session of the Poets,’ says that Apollo's troubles were ended when

Between 1722 and 1725 Eusden took orders in the English church, and was appointed chaplain to Richard, lord Willoughby de Broke. Through the favour of Mr. Cotesworth he was instituted to the rectory of Coningsby in Lincolnshire, and died there on 27 Sept. 1730. Gray, in a letter to Mason dated 19 Dec. 1757 (Works, ed. 1884, ii. 345), says that ‘Eusden was a person of great hopes in his youth, though at last he turned out a drunken parson,’ a judgment which is confirmed by the lines of Pope. In the ‘Dunciad,’ book i. 293, we are told that ‘Eusden thirsts no more for sack or praise;’ line 425 of book ii. of the same poem originally ran, ‘How Laurus lay inspir'd beside a sink;’ and Eusden is generally considered the ‘parson much bemus'd in beer’ of the epistle to Arbuthnot, verse 15. He left behind him in manuscript a translation of part of Tasso's works and a life of the poet. His library is said to have been sold in 1763.

Southey's censure (Later English Poets, i. 280) is a just criticism of Eusden's poems, ‘a strain of fulsome flattery in mediocre poetry,’ but his poetical translations are sometimes eulogised for possessing ‘some command of language and smoothness of versification.’ His works were: 1. ‘The Royal Family; a Letter to Addison on the King's Accession,’ 1714. 2. ‘Original Poems and Translations by Mr. Hill, Mr. Eusden, &c.,’ 1714. 3. ‘Translations from Claudian and Statius,’ poem to Lord Halifax on reading the critique in the ‘Spectator’ on Milton, &c., in Steele's ‘Poetical Miscellanies,’ 1714. 4. ‘Verses at the Last Publick Commencement at Cambridge,’ 1714, two editions; more animated than most of Eusden's compositions, but not infrequently indecent. 5. ‘Poems by the Earl of Roscommon, Duke of Buckingham, and Richard Duke,’ 1717. Roscommon's essay on translated verse in this edition is printed with a Latin version by Eusden. 6. ‘Poem on Marriage of the Duke of Newcastle to Lady Henrietta Godolphin,’ 1717. 7. ‘Poem to Her Royal Highness on the Birth of the Prince,’ 1718. 8. ‘Ode for the New Year,’ 1720; the first of a series of such productions satirised by Pope in the lines

9. Three poems addressed to Lord-chancellor Macclesfield and his son, Lord Parker, 1722. 10. ‘The Origin of the Knights of the Bath,’ 1725. 11. Three poems to the king and queen, 1727. Steele mentions Eusden in No. 555 of the ‘Spectator’ as among his assistants in that journal, and he is usually credited with a curious letter in the number for 7 June 1711 on ‘Idols,’ with some ‘amusing illustrations of customs.’ He is supposed to have contributed to its successor, ‘The Guardian,’ a letter in No. 124, which is entitled ‘More Roarings of the Lion,’ and he was certainly the author of the poetical translations from Claudian in Nos. 127 and 164. In the translation of Ovid's ‘Metamorphoses,’ which appeared in 1717 under the name of Dr. Garth and others, and was reissued in Whittington's ‘British Poets,’ vols. xciv. and xcv., he rendered portions of books iv. and x. Eusden was one of the fortunate few who were permitted to prefix commendatory verses to Addison's ‘Cato.’ Pope sneers at him again in the ‘Dunciad,’ book i. line 104, as eking out ‘Blackmore's endless line,’ and he was the ‘L. E.’ of Pope and Swift's treatise of the bathos. The best specimens of Eusden's muse will be found in Nichols's collection of poems, iv. 128–63, 226–49.

[Austin and Ralph's Poets Laureate, 239–45; Hamilton's Poets Laureate, 140–5; Chalmers's Essayists, xvi. xx.; Cibber's Poets, iv. 193–7; Jacob's Poets, ii. 51–3; Nichols's Illustrations of Lit. ii. 617, and Lit. Anecdotes, iii. 637; Notes and Queries, 5th ser. xi. 28, 152–3, xii. 336; Trin. Coll. Records.]  EUSTACE (d. 1215), bishop of Ely, ecclesiastic and statesman, ‘vir multæ scientiæ et discretionis’ (Annal. Winton. ii. 66), ‘vir literatura tam humana quam divina insignis’ (, ii. 585), was of unknown origin. He secured the confidence of Henry I and of Richard I. He became vice-chancellor and keeper of the royal seal, and ultimately chancellor ( i. 544; Annal. Winton. u.s.) He was also dean of Salisbury. At that period all the chief posts in the church of York and its suffragan sees were, as a rule, employed to provide for royal officials. During the suspension of Geoffrey, archbishop of York [q. v.], by the pope, in 1195, Richard appointed Eustace in 1196 treasurer of York, on the death of Bouchard de Puiset, and in the same year gave him the enormous and lucrative archdeaconry of Richmond. In 1197 Richard