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Rh

Or twist the hauberk's brazen mail

And mould them greaves of silver pale:

To these has passed the homage paid

Erewhile to ploughshare, scythe, and spade:

Each brings his father's battered blade,

And smelts in fire anew:

And now the clarions pierce the skies:

From rank to rank the watchword flies:

This tears his helmet from the wall,

That drags his war-horse from the stall,

Dons three-piled mail and ample shield,

And girds him for the embattled field

With falchion tried and true."

The whole remaining portion of this seventh book is in Virgil's most spirited style. And it is here that the harp of our northern minstrel answers best to Mr Conington's touch. The gathering of the clans—for it is nothing else—the rapid sketches of the chiefs as they pass in succession with their array of followers—the details of costume—the legendary tale which the poet has to tell of more than one of them as he passes them in review—even the devices borne on the shields,—are all features in which Scott delighted as thoroughly as Virgil, and which his well-known rhythm suits better than any other which a translator could choose. Some few portions of this stirring war-like diorama must content the readers of these pages. The first who passes is the terrible chief of Agylla, who fears neither god nor man, and whose notorious cruelties have so exasperated his own people against him that he is now a refugee in the court of Turnus:—