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H. Marshall, M.D.
Ode on the Burial of Sir John Moore.
The Courier  No. 10,287  (3 November 1824)
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THE COURIER.




No. 10,287. WEDNESDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 3, 1824. Price 7D.




ODE ON THE BURIAL OF SIR JOHN MOORE.

TO THE EDITOR OF THE COURIER.

J. S. Taylor, Lord Byron and Charles Wolfe
Globe & Traveller, Ballad of Sir John Moore

Sir,—Permit me, through the medium of our highly respectable journal (which I have chosen as the channel of this communication, from my having been a subscriber to it for the last fifteen years), to observe, that the statement lately published in the Morning Chronicle, the writer of which ascribes the lines of the burial of Sir John Moore to Woolf, is false, and as barefaced a fabrication as ever was foisted on the public. The lines in question are not written by Woolf, nor by Hailey, nor is Deacoll the author, but they were composed by me. I published them originally, some years ago, in the Durham County Advertiser, a journal in which I have at different times inserted several poetical trifles, as “The Prisoner’s Prayer to Sleep”—“Lines on the lamented Death of Benjamin Galley, Esq.” and some other effusions.

I should not, Sir, have thought the lines on Sir John Moore’s funeral worth owning, had not the false statement of the Chronicle met my eye. I can prove, by the most incontestable evidence, the truth of what I have asserted. The first copy of my lines was given by me to my friend and relation, Capt. Bell, and it is in his possession at present; it agrees perfectly with the copy now in circulation, with this exception—it does not contain the stanzas commencing with “Few and short,”" which I added afterwards at the suggestion of the Rev. Dr. Alderson, of Butterby.

I am, Sir, yours &c. H. Marshall, M.D.
South-street, Durham, Nov. 1, 1824.