182 



APPENDIX. 



Bedingfield's 



Education of 



Achilles. 



Callimach. H. 



in Diaii. 



105. 



and Achilles,! " To sweep with winged feet along the level 

 plain;" nor the power of catching at force, vow^t Kvpobpofiirfs, 

 the fleetest animals of chase, like the goddess Dian ; it became 

 necessary to add to their naked powers sundry inartificial imple- 

 ments, auxiliary to the subjugation of some, the destruction and 

 expulsion of other beasts. 



Lucretii 

 L. V. 964. 



Et manuum niiri freti virtute pedumque 

 Consectabantur s^lvestria sa?cla ferarum 

 Missilibus saxis, et magno pondere clavae : 

 Multaque vincebant, vitabant pauca latebris. 



Somerville's 

 Chace. B. i. 



New and unpolish'd was the huntsman's art ; 

 No stated rule, his wanton will his guide. 

 With clubs and stones, rude implements of war, 

 He arm'd his savage bands, a multitude 

 Untrain'd ; of twining osiers form'd, they pitch 

 Their artless toils, then range the desert hills. 

 And scow'r the plains below : the trembling herd 

 Start at th' unusual sound, and clam'rous shout 

 Unheard before ; surpriz'd, alas ! to find 

 Man now their foe, whom erst they deem'd their lord, 

 But mild and gentle, and by whom as yet 

 Secure they graz'd. 



Acquiring knowledge by experience, man advanced in the 

 mechanism and variety of his hunting gear, as in other articles of 

 increasing civilization. 



Gratii Cyneg. 

 vs. 5. 



Post ali^ propiore vi&, raeliusque profecti, 

 Te sociam, ratio, rebus sumpsere gerendis. 

 Hinc omne auxilium vitse, rectusque reluxit 

 Ordo : et continuas didicere ex artibus artes 

 Proserere ; hinc demens cecidit violentia retro. 



The Times. 



Find. Nem. 



Carm. L. in. 



85. 



1. " The light-footed Greek of Chiron's school," as Churchill calls hira. 



p.ls re Koi Bpacre'i' 'Addua, 

 KreivovT i\d<povs &uev kv- 



vwv SoXitcv 6' kpKtoiv 

 TTOcrcrl "yhp Kpd-TtdKiv, 



