Tu Marcellus eris[629],
appears in his description of the fates of Pallas and Lausus, of Euryalus and Camilla. The reverence for the purest of human affections which shines through the lines
Transiit et parmam mucro levia arma minacis,
Et tunicam, molli mater quam neverat auro[630],
and
At vero, ut voltum vidit morientis et ora,
Ora modis Anchisiades pallentia miris,
Ingemuit miserans graviter dextramque tetendit,
Et mentem patriae subiit pietatis imago[631],
may be discerned also in some of the minor incidents of the poem, as in these lines—