so again does the Water-poet, who describes Fortune,
"Like a Janus with a double-face."
But Shakespeare hath somewhere at Latin Motto, quoth Dr. Sewel; and so hath John Taylor, and a whole Poem upon it into the bargain.
You perceive, my dear Sir, how vague and inde|terminate such arguments must be: for in fact this sweet Swan of Thames, as Mr. Pope calls him, hath more scraps of Latin, and allusions to antiquity than are any where to be met with in the writings of Shakespeare. I am sorry to trouble you with trifles, yet what must be done, when grave men insist upon them?
It should seem to be the opinion of some modern criticks, that the personages of classick land began only to be known in England in the time of Shakespeare; or rather, that he particularly had the honour of in|troducing them to the notice of his countrymen.
For instance, — Rumour painted full of tongues, gives us a Prologue to one of the parts of Henry the Fourth; and, says Dr. Dodd, Shakespeare had doubtless a view to either Virgil or Ovid in their description of Fame.
But why so? Stephen Hawes in his Pastime of Plea|sure had long before exhibited her in the same manner,
"A goodly Lady envyroned about
With tongues of fyre."—