“There is her temple, there they stand an hundred altars meet,
Warm with Sabæan incense smoke, with new-pulled blossoms sweet.”
—Æneid, i. 415–416, Morris’ trans.
“Whence she with kindness prompt
And eyes glistering with smiles,”
Carey gives it, which is certainly English, but—
[178]. La Vie Domestique, ses Modèles et ses Règles—d’après les documents originaux. Charles de Ribbe. Paris: Edouard Baltenweck.
[179]. In regard to the heroic virtue that can be practised in the married state there can be no question. As little can there be any question that in the scale of perfection the religious is the higher state.—Ed. C. W.