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Shouldst fall an easy conquest on the field."
The prince replies: "Ah cease, divinely fair,
Nor add reproaches to the wounds I bear;
This day the foe prevail'd by Pallas' power:
We yet may vanquish in a happier hour:
There want not gods to favour us above;
But let the business of our life be love:
These softer moments let delights employ,
And kind embraces snatch the hasty joy.
Not thus I loved thee, when from Sparta's shore
My forced, my willing heavenly prize I bore,
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Ove a l'usa de l'arme si riserba,
Fugge, e libero al fiu per largo calle
Va tragl' armenti, o al fiume usato, o a l'herba."
Gier, Lib. ix. 75.
177 --_Casque._ The original word is stephanae, about the meaning of
which there is some little doubt. Some take it for a different kind
of cap or helmet, others for the rim, others for the cone, of the
helmet.
178 --_Athenian maid:_ Minerva.
179 --_Celadon,_ a river of Elis.
180 --_Oileus, i.e._ Ajax, the son of Oileus, in contradistinction to
Ajax, son of Telamon.
181 --_In the general's helm._ It was customary to put the lots into a
helmet, in which they were well shaken up; each man then took his
choice.
182 --_God of Thrace._ Mars, or Mavors, according to his Thracian
epithet. Hence "Mavortia Moenia."
183 --_Grimly he smiled._
"And death
Grinn'd horribly a ghastly smile."
--"Paradise Lost," ii. 845.
"There Mavors stands
Grinning with ghastly feature."
--Carey's Dante: Hell, v.
184 "Sete o guerrieri, incomincio Pindoro,
Con pari honor di pari ambo possenti,
Dunque cessi la pugna, e non sian rotte
Le ragioni, e 'l riposo, e de la notte."
--Gier. Lib. vi. 51.
185 It was an ancient style of compliment to give a larger portion of
food to the conqueror, or person to whom respect was to be shown.
See Virg. Ćn. viii. 181. Thus Benjamin was honoured with a "double
portion." Gen. xliii. 34.
186 --_Embattled walls._ "Another essential basis of mechanical unity in
the poem is the construction of the rampart. This takes place in the
seventh book. The reason ascribed for the glaring improbability that
the Greeks sho