[L. 6.] hymne infâme. Many poems were written on the occasion of Marat's death, among which one by Audouin, a deputy.
[L. 9.] Dérobe... Robs, frustrates, glorious deeds of their due praise.
[Ll. 27-30.] Aristophanes, Thesmophoriazusae, 667.
[L. 32.] Paros. One of the Cyclades, famed for its white marble (Parian marble).
[L. 33.] Harmodius... son ami. Harmodius and Aristogiton, who conspired with a few others to murder Hipparchus, younger brother of the tyrant Hippias, and Hipparchus himself, but succeeded in slaying Hipparchus alone. Harmodius was cut down on the spot by the guards, and Aristogiton was soon captured and tortured to death. When Hippias was expelled, Harmodius and Aristogiton became the most popular of Athenian heroes (Encyclopaedia Britannica).
[L. 57.] Like Dido, when she has resolved to die. Virgil, Aen. iv. 475.
III. LA JEUNE CAPTIVE.
[This celebrated poem] was written in the prison de Saint-Lazare. La Jeune Captive was a Mademoiselle de Coigny. She had, at the age of fifteen, married the Marquis de Rosset, later on Duc de Fleury. She was twenty-five at the time of her imprisonment. She was set free after the 9th of Thermidor. This poem first appeared in the Décade philosophique, hardly six months after the death of Chénier.
[L. 11.] Pindar, Nem. vii. 77.
[Ll. 28-30.] Cf. p. 52, ll. 43, 44.