And gilded car and neighing steed.

[I omit Canto V. which corresponds to chapter XI. in Gorresio's edition. That scholar justly observes: “The eleventh chapter, Description of Evening, is certainly the work of the Rhapsodists and an interpolation of later date. The chapter might be omitted without any injury to the action of the poem, and besides the metre, style, conceits and images differ from the general tenour of the poem; and that continual repetition of the same sounds at the end of each hemistich which is not exactly rime, but assonance, reveals the artificial labour of a more recent age.” The following sample will probably be enough.

Fair shone the moon, as if to lend

His cheering light to guide a friend,

And, circled by the starry host,

Looked down upon the wild sea-coast.

The Vánar cheiftain raised his eyes,

And saw him sailing through the skies

Like a bright swan who joys to take

His pastime on a silver lake;