Repeated in “Don Juan,” i. 4; also in the Prologue to Scott’s Marmion.
In the “Lay of the Last Minstrel,” Carlisle is accented on the first syllable:
“The sun shines far on Carlisle wall.”
Pope, in his translation of the “Iliad,” says,—
“Then called by thee, the monster Titan came,
Whom gods Briar´eus, men Ægeon name.”
Shakespeare employs the name as a dissyllable:
“He is a gouty Briareus; many hands,
And of no use.”—Troilus and Cressida.
Lady M. Wortley Montagu following Spenser’s “Then came hot Ju´ly boiling like to fire,” accented July on the first syllable: