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Semel erraveris agmine fratrum,
Seu quis te teneat specus,

Seu qua te latebra, forsan unde vili
Callo tereris institoris insulsi,
Lætare felix; en! iterum tibi
Spes nova fulget posse profundam
Fugere Lethen, vehique superam
In Jovis aulam remige pennâ:

40

STROPHE 3

Nam te Roüsius sui

Optat peculi, numeroque justo
Sibi pollicitum queritur abesse,
Rogatque venias ille, cujus inclyta
Sunt data virûm monumenta curæ;
Teque adytis etiam sacris

Voluit reponi, quibus et ipse præsidet
Æternorum operum custos fidelis,
Quæstorque gazæ nobilioris
Quam cui præfuit Ion,

Clarus Erechtheides.

50

Opulenta dei per templa parentis,

Fulvosque tripodas, donaque Delphica,
Ion Actæâ genitus Creusâ.

60

ANTISTROPHE

Ergo tu visere lucos

Musarum ibis amœnos;

Diamque Phœbi rursus ibis in domum

Oxoniâ quam valle colit,

Delo posthabita,

Bifidoque Parnassi jugo;

Ibis honestus,

Postquam egregiam tu quoque sortem

Nactus abis, dextri prece sollicitatus amici.

Illic legeris inter alta nomina

Authorum, Graiæ simul et Latinæ

Antiqua gentis lumina et verum decus.

70

EPODOS

Vos tandem haud vacui mei labores,
Quicquid hoc sterile fudit ingenium,
Jam serò placidam sperare jubeo
Perfunctam invidia requiem, sedesque beatas
Quas bonus Hermes

Et tutela dabit solers Roüsî,

Quò neque lingua procax vulgi penetrabit, atque longè Turba legentûm prava facesset;

At ultimi nepotes

Et cordatior ætas

Judicia rebus æquiora forsitan
Adhibebit integro sinu.

Tum, livore sepulto,

Si quid meremur sana posteritas sciet,
Roüsio favente.

.

IN SALMAȘII HUNDREDAM

QUIS expedivit Salmasio suam Hundredam,

Picamque docuit verba nostra conari?
Magister artis venter, et Jacobæi

Centum, exulantis viscera marsupii regis.

Quòd, si dolosi spes refulserit nummi,

Ipse, Antichristi qui modò primatum Papæ
Minatus uno est dissipare sufflatu,

Cantabit ultrò Cardinalitium melos.

IN SALMASIUM

GAUDETE, Scombri, et quicquid est piscium salo,
Qui frigidâ hieme incolitis algentes freta!
Vestrum misertus ille Salmasius Eques
Bonus amicire nuditatem cogitat;
Chartæque largus apparat papyrinos
Vobis cucullos, præferentes Claudii
Insignia, nomenque et decus, Salmasii:
Gestetis ut per omne cetarium forum
Equitis clientes, scriniis mungentium
Cubito virorum, et capsulis, gratissimos.

1:

80

P.L.

C.

GLOSSARY

Paradise Lost.

P.R. Paradise Regained.
S.A.Samson Agonistes.

Comus.
When the page alone is given=Poems.

Abaddon, a name of hell. See |

Prov. XV. II Abarim, a mountain range in Moab, of which Nebo was the highest peak Abassin, Abyssinian Abbana, a river flowing through Damascus

abide, pay for, P.L. iv. 87 abortive, full of abortive or monstrous things, P.L. ii. 441 Academe, a garden near Athens, where Plato taught Accaron, Ekron, one of the five

chief cities of the Philistines Acheron, River of Woe, one of

the rivers of the infernal regions in Greek mythology Achilles, the great hero of the

Grecian army before Troy, described in Homer's Iliad acquist, acquisition, S.A. 1755 Ades, or Hades, Greek name of

the king of the infernal regions, or the place itself Adiabene, a district in Assyria admire, wonder, P.L. i. 690; P.R. i. 214

Adonis, a river rising in Lebanon, whose waters in flood were tinged with red. The name was applied to Aphrodite's lover, a beautiful youth, whose death was celebrated each year by a dramatic feast, when "Gardens of Adonis were planted in his honour

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Africa, P.R. ii. 199; Scipio Africanus, at the capture of New Carthage, when he was twenty-four years old, restored a noble captive lady of Spain to her lover African, Scipio Africanus agast, terrified, P.R. i. 43 Agonistes," the struggler " (Gr.) Ahab, 1 Kings xxii. 6 Ahax, King of Judah, who persuaded the Assyrians to conquer Damascus. He made an altar in Jerusalem on the pattern of one he saw in Damascus

Aialon (Ajalon), a valley near Jerusalem, where Joshua defeated the Canaanites Aladule, Armenia, so called from its last king Aladules Albracca, the city of Gallaphrone, King of Cathay, in Boiardo's Orlando Innamorato. It is besieged by Agricane, King of Tartary, to win Angelica, Gallaphrone's daughter (Masson)

Alcairo, Cairo, the modern city built near the ruins of Memphis

Alcestis, wife of Admetus, brought back to him from the dead by Hercules alchymy, a composite metal, so called because made by the alchemists, P.L. ii. 517 Alcides, Hercules (Herakles), son of Jove, who received from his wife a robe dipt in venom, which burnt his flesh and killed him

Alcinous, King of Scheria, a fabulous land of plenty described in Homer. His famous garden is described in Odyssey, Bk. vii. Alexander's tutor, Aristotle

alleostrophic, consisting of two or more stanzas, corresponding to each other Almansor, Caliph of Bagdad, a

A

famous conqueror Alpheus, a river in Arcadia. youth so named loved a nymph Arethusa: she fled to Sicily, and he, changed to a river, flowed thither by a hidden channel under the sea Amalthea, according to one legend beloved of Ammon, and mother of Bacchus. Nurse of Zeus during his infancy in Crete. He was fed on the milk of a goat (or, as another legend has it, A. was the goat); and when one of its horns broke off, Zeus gave this the virtue of a wishinghorn

Amara, a mountain where the Abyssinian kings kept their children safe amarant, properly an adj., unfading, P.L. iii. 352 amarantine, unfading

(amaranth is a flower-name), P.L. xi. 78 Amazons, a race of female warriors

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ambrosia, immortality," the mythological food of the gods, P.L. v. 57 ambrosial, immortal, P.L. ii. 245; P.R. iv. 589 amice, properly a sacerdotal vestment of fine linen, P.R. iv. 427

Ammon, a god who had an oracle in Libya (Jupiter Ammon)

Ammonian Jove, a Libyan deity. Alexander the Great liked to be thought the son of this deity, and there was a legend to that effect Amphisbæna, a serpent supposed to have a head at each end, P.L. x. 524 Amphitrite, a Nereid, wife of Poseidon (Neptune) and goddess of the sea Amram's son, Moses amused, astonished, P.L. vi. 581 Amymone, a woman beloved by

musing,

Poseidon (Neptune) in Greek mythology

Anak, a giant, Deut. ii. 10 Andromeda, a constellation. Beneath it is a sign of the Zodiac called the Ram, which is therefore said to bear it, P.L. iii. 558 Angelica, see Albracca Angola, on W. coast of Africa Anguilla, a Latinising of Ely Anna, Luke ii. 36 Antaus, one of the giants, who were called "earth-born” in Greek

Antigonus, see Hyrcanus Antioch, capital city of the Syrian Seleucida

Antiochus Epiphanes, entered the Holy of Holies, as also afterwards did Pompey Antiopa, beloved by Zeus (Greek mythology) Antipater, the Idumæan, ap

pointed King of Judæa by Pompey; he had great riches Anubis, a dog-headed Egyptian deity, son of Osiris and Nephthys, reared by Isis Aonian mount, Helicon

in

Boeotia, home of the Muses apolelymenon, set free, i.e. not

restricted to a single metre Apollo, Greek god of song and music, later also of the Sun; he had a famous oracle at Delphi appellant, accuser, challenger, S.A. 1119

Appian Road, a great Roman high-road built by Appius Claudius, leading to Brundusium

Aquilo, the North Wind; used for the Greek Boreas, who carried off Oreithyia Arachosia, now part of Afghanistan

Araxes, a river of Armenia,

flowing into the Caspian (Aras or Eraskh)

arbitress, spectator, P.L. i. 785 Arcadia, a district in S. Greece,

proverbial for pastoral simplicity Archimedes, of Syracuse (287212 B.C.), one of the greatest mathematicians of the world

ardors, seraphim, a translation | aspects, technical term in astro

for

of the Hebrew word seraph, P.L. v. 249 areed, advise, P.L. iv. 249 Arethusa, a fountain in Syra

cuse

Argestes, N.-W. wind

Argo, a mythical vessel that carried the heroes in search of the Golden Fleece Argob, later called Trachonitis, a volcanic region in Bashan Argus, a guardian set by Hera to watch Io; he had eyes all over his body. Hermes sent him to sleep with the music of his pipe and killed him Ariel," lion of God" Aries, the Ram, a sign of the Zodiac

Arimaspian, a fabulous tribe of one-eyed men, supposed to steal gold from the griffins, who dug it up Arioch," fierce lion " Armoric, Breton Arnon, river forming the boundary between Moab and Ammon

Aroar, a city on the Arnon Arsaces, founder of the Parthian Empire, revolted from the Seleucida

Artaxata, capital city of Armenia

Artaxerxes, King of Persia Ascalon, one of the five chief Icities of the Philistines Ascalonite. See 1 Sam. vi. 17 Asdod, a city of the Philistines Ashtaroth, pl. of Ashtoreth (Astarte), the female deity of the Phoenicians or Canaanites Asmadai, a name of Asmodeus Asmodai, Asmodeus, an evil spirit, finally imprisoned in bonds by Raphael (see below) Asmodeus, an evil spirit who loved one Sara. She wedded seven husbands, all of whom Asmodeus killed. Then Tobias, son of Tobit, wedded her, and instructed by Raphael, burnt the heart and liver of a fish, at smelling of which Asmodeus filed away to Egypt, where he was bound by Raphael

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logy, the relations of planets by which they can send forth their influence. They are Conjunction, Sextile, Square, Trine, and Diametral Opposition. (1) Also called Synod when two planets are in one line; (2) when two are distant by a sixth part of the Zodiac; (3) when two stars look at each other at an interval of three signs; (4) when their distance is a third of the circle; (5) when opposite, distant by half a diameter. (Quoted by Masson) Asphaltic pool, the Dead Sea, P.L. i. 411

Aspramont, a town in the Netherlands

Astarte. See Ashtaroth Astracan, a city on the Caspian Astræa, Virgo, one of the signs of the Zodiac

Atabalipa, Emperor of Peru, subdued by Pizarro atheous, godless, P.R. i. 486 Atlantean, the Titan Atlas was

fabled to bear heaven upon his shoulders

Atlantic sisters, the Pleiades, daughters of Atlas

Atlas Mountains, in N.-E. Africa

Atropatia, a province of Media Atropos, one of the Fates, who

cut the thread of life Attic bird, nightingale, P.R. iv. 245 attrite, rubbed, P.L. x. 1072 Auran, a district E. of Jordan Aurora, goddess of dawn Ausonian land, Italy authentic, original, P.L. iv. 719 Azores, a group of islands in the Atlantic

Azotus, Ashdod, one of the five chief cities of the Philistines Azza, Gaza

Baal, the Phoenician sun-god Baalim, pl. of Baal, "lord," a title of Canaanite gods Baalzebub, a Phoenician deity, "lord of flies " Babel, Babylon, P.L. i. 694 Babylon, on the Euphrates, re

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