Feeds on the sweetness in his ears,
Such joy to th’ image did impart
Th’ eternal will.
This paper has exceeded the length we designed to give it; but, nevertheless, we beg the reader’s indulgence for a few moments longer, while we conclude with an octosyllabic version of the last thirty lines of the celebrated Ugolino story. It is unrhymed; for that terrible tale can dispense, in English, with soft echoes at the end of lines.
When locked I heard the nether door
Of the dread tower, I without speech
Into my children’s faces looked:
Nor wept, so inly turned to stone.
They wept: and my dear Anselm said,
“Thou look’st so, father, what hast thou?”