Page:Woman in the Nineteenth Century 1845.djvu/204

198 though not a noble man, is of large mould and could admire this strange beauty which excited distaste in common minds.

Cassandra answers with a careless disdain,

With all the lofty decorum of manners among the ancients, how free was their intercourse, man to man, how full the mutual understanding between prince and "busy slave!" Not here in adversity only, but in the pomp of power, it was so. Kings were approached with ceremonious obeisance, but not hedged round with etiquette, they could see and know their fellows.

The Andromache here is just as lovely as that of the Iliad.

To her child whom they are about to murder, the same that was frightened at the "glittering plume." "Dost thou weep, My son? Hast thou a sense of thy ill fate? Why dost thou clasp me with thy hands, why hold My robes, and shelter thee beneath my wings, Like a young bird? No more my Hector comes, Returning from the tomb; he grasps no more His glittering spear, bringing protection to thee." &emsp;*** &emsp;**"O soft embrace, And to thy mother dear. O fragrant breath! In vain I swathed thy infant limbs, in vain