[81] [Note I.]

[82] [Note II.]

[83] Essay by Dr Aikin on the Heroic Poem of "Gondibert."

[84] See stanza 146, and those which follow.

[85] Stanzas 213, 214.

[86] See stanzas 131, 132. I wish, however, our author had spared avouching himself to have been eye-witness to so marvellous a chase. The "so have I seen" should be confined to things which are not only possible, but, in a certain degree, of ordinary occurrence. Dryden's ocular testimony is not, however, so incredible as that of the bard, who averred,

So have I seen, in Araby the blest,

A Phœnix couched upon her funeral nest.

Such chaces, if not frequent, have sometimes happened. In the north of England, in ancient days, a stag and a famous greyhound, called Hercules, after a desperate course, were found dead within a few paces of each other, and interred with this inscription:

Hercules killed Hart of grece,