and the first and second of the following verses from Ovid (Met. I. 148, 149),
Filius | ante di|em patri|os in|quirit in | annos.
Victa ja|cet Pie|tas; et | Virgo | cæde ma-|dentes
Ultima cœlestum terras Astræa reliquit,
are read in the same way as the following from Evangeline:
And as she | gazed from the | window she | saw se|renely the | moon pass
Forth from the | folds of a | cloud, and | one star | follow her | footsteps.
Ovid's Met. I. 22,
Nam cœ|lo ter|ras et | terris | abscidit | undas,
is read in the same way as Colossians iii. 19:
Husbands, | love your | wives, and | be not | bitter a|gainst them;
and Ovid's Met. I. 36,
Tum freta | diffun | di, rapi|disque tum | escere | ventis,