The poem is an imitation of an epigram of Martial. The Roman poet had satirized, in his usual uninhibited fashion, a certain meddlesome moralist who was too busy decrying the vices of other men to put his own house in order. Adapting Martial's format adroitly to his purposes, Watson makes it the vehicle for a sharp attack on a contemporary literary critic who has exasperated him by carping continually at his writings:
In invidum quendam, sub Oli nomine, quern taxat Martialis.
Epigramma.
Antigonen Sophoclis malè vertimus? Ole quid ad te,
Quid faciat versu nostra Thalia suo?
Peccavi patriis in rithmis? Ole quid ad te?
Non tua, quae scripsit, sed mea pluma fuit.
Vulnus amatori sanavimus? Ole quid ad te?
Est illo solus carmine laesus Amor.
Non dignè psalmos transcripsimus? Ole quid ad te?
Non tua proptereà, sed mea fama perit.
Phyllida tarn ploro iuvenillius? Ole quid ad te?
Non tua, quam ploro, sed mea Phyllis erat.
Noster hiat versus, vel claudicat? Ole quid ad te?
Forsan at exemplis linea nulla caret.