cae mas cerca del coraçon, alcansa un calor | Ajuntaõse nas praças infinitos Caes, e outros animaes, dando bramidos." "DEPOIS que no confuso laberinto FERNAO ALVARES DO ORIENTE. "AVEC son visage sans couleur et sans forme, ses yeux enfoncez, ses joues pendantes, et sa peau seche et ridée; il luy restoit si peu de traicts de la vie, qu'il sembloit qu'elle ne demeurast au monde que pour y faire voir seulement l'image de la mort... toute courbée et chancelante, comme celle qui estoit lasse de porter le faix de tant d'années, et a qui l'espasse de trois pas seulement qu'elle avoit a faire, tenoient lieu d'une fort longue carriere, et d'un exercice fort penible."-ENDYMION DE GOMBAULD. "Er combien me faisoit il gouster encore de plus douces faveurs, si la bouche qui les recevoit les ose dire? puisque mesme elle estoit teniie si close et si pressée, que cela luy sembloit recommander le silence." -Ibid. "OHAMEDRYADES! que de Cerfs et de Corbeaux dont la vie est si longue, ont eu loisir de vivre et de mourir, depuis vostre naissance."-Ibid. "A SETE companheiros que morreram E tristissimo som: mas com trombetas "MORREO Mestre Joao, varam prudente, De ousado coraçam, de vivo spirito, E muito exprimentado em Cururgia." Ibid. "Y QUANDO igualmente amados Comen assi dos casados, La Embidia, a quien todo pesa, Bien puede estar a su mesa Contandoles los bocados." Isidro, LOPE de Vega. SOLOMON's temple. "Templo, que llegue a partir no sepa à quien debe el dia viendo que de cada Almena es cada Estrella Pensil." THE Devil in hermit shape when he persuades Garin to commit murder. "Puesta la barba sobre el pecho estava, En el baculo el cuerpo reclinado, Ya los ojos abria, ya enarcava Ambas las cejas, el color mudado." El Monserrate. CRISTOVAL VIRUES. "Nos eccos da propria consciencia "QUIN et vinclorum depressas pondere Cœlo Attollunt cum voce manus." PACIECIDOS, lib. 4. EMBARKATION of the Christian prisoners. "HILARES circum dant cornua cantus, Dant litui, plausere acies, gemuere carinæ CALDERON, El Arbol del Mejor Fruto. Sub pedibus, plausumque ferunt ad littora Llevando al Parche el pifaro el contralto, Dizen, alarma! alarma! assalto! assalto!" Los Amantes de Teruel. JUAN YAGUE DE SALAS. VIRIATUS to the Lusitanians. "A princeza das Aves nos insina Como ha de ser a guerra executada : Nam vedes como dece repentina Sobre a caça, que pasce descuydada ? E que nao para nunca em tal rapina Senao que pello ar arrebatada A vem comer sobre hum penhasco duro, Que inda que bruta, julga-o por seguro." Viriato Tragico. BRAS GARCIA MAS CARENHA. "YACIA la Serpiente, y se abreviabo En mil vueltas con rueda portentosa, La cabeza en el vientre reclinaba, Y lecho de si misma en si reposa." Alphonso. Franc. Botello de Moraes y Vasconcelos. "NONDUM amabam, et amare amabam, -querebam quid amarem, amans amare." -St. Augustine's Confessions. Quaintly said, but true. "GRIEF had tongue-tied her speech, Her words were sighs and tears, — dumb eloquence, Heard only by the sobs and not the sense." Thealma and Clearchus, a pastoral historie, by JOHN CHALKHILL, an acquaintant and friend of Edmund Spencer. Published by Izaąc Walton. "THE proud waves beat With more impetuousness upon high lands Than on the flat and less resisting sands." CHALKHILL. "AND ever and anon he well might hear A sound of music steal in at his ear, As the wind gave it being."--Ibid. "DEATH'S not such a thing As can fright Memnon! He and I have met Up to the knees in blood and honoured sweat, Where his scythe mowed down legions; he and I Are well acquainted! 'tis no news to die.” Ibid. "No quiero detenerme mas en esto, pues que no es mi intencion dar pesadumbre y asi pienso pasar por todo presta huyendo de importunos la costumbre." Araucana, p. 1. "Con subita presteza el mar cortando "VOLVIO el Indio diciendo a nuestra gente. Yo no paso adelante, ni es posible seguir este camino comenzado, que el hecho es grande y el temor terrible que me detiene el paso acobardado, imaginando aquel aspecto horrible del gran Caupolican contra mi agrado quando venga a saber que solo he sido el soldado traydor que le ha vendido." Ibid. p. 33. "I SAW the mourner mount her funeral pyre, Kiss the cold corpse, and triumph in the fire, One farewell tear to parting life she shed, Sunk on his breast, and bowed her dying head. So, were the sun extinguished in his sphere, The widowed moon would perish on his bier." The Bramin, by Paul Positive, a newspaper poem. MONTGOMERY. "LET not the godly men affliction fear, God wrestle may with some, but none orethrowes, Who gives the burthen, gives the strength to bear." LORD STERLINE. Doomsday. First Houre. it is a bastard, but the child must be kept. If thou mistrust thy understanding, promise not; it is better to maintain a bastard, than to murder a child."-QUARLES. Enchiridion. "SEARCH into thyself before thou accept the ceremony of honour. If thou art a pa"THAT pompous bird which still in triumph lace, honour, like the sunbeams will make "WE furnish feathers for the wings of Death."-Ibid. Second Houre. bears 'TALIA dicta dabat; cum diceret, illa tenebat "A PROMISE is the child of the understanding and the will; the understanding Ora intenta Deæ, totamque medullitus hau begets it, the will brings it forth; he that performs it delivers the mother, he that breaks it murders the child. If it be begotten in the absence of the understanding sit. The copy of the COLUMBUS, Carmen Epicum, &c., now before me, was Southey's. It was printed at Rome 1715. J. W. W. rem Sponsa gravis veluti, bibulo si lumine sæpe | Sic torpet, non virus abest, cum vipera flo- Strata super dormit, nocituraque vulners differt Donec sopitas injuria provocet iras." THIS said Bruciad is not a good poem. e. g. "Renowned beast, (forgive poetic flight) "GESTIIT Androphagus viso hospite, deque Not less than man deserves poetic right." severâ Fronte supercilium paulum secedere jussit, "AGAINST the king to prove his matchless might, |