Page:The poetical works of Matthew Arnold, 1897.djvu/535

Rh Recalls the obscure opposer he outweighed.

Gilbert de la Porrée, at the Council of Rheims in 1148.

Of that unpitying Phrygian sect which cried.

The Montanists.

Monica.

See St. Augustine's "Confessions," book ix. chapter 11.

My Marguerite smiles upon the strand.

See, among "Early Poems," the poem called "A Memory-Picture," p. 23.

The Hunter of the Tanagræan Field.

Orion, the Wild Huntsman of Greek legend, and in this capacity appearing in both earth and sky.

O'er the sun-reddened western straits.

Erytheia, the legendary region around the Pillars of Hercules, probably took its name from the redness of the west, under which the Greeks saw it.

Of the sun-loving gentian, in the heat.

The gentiana lutea.

Ye Sun-born Virgins! on the road of truth.

See the Fragments of Parmenides:—