THE HESPERIAN STUDENT. m fr 1 f r I -L n skies of Italy and in nlr flllccl with poesy, is distinguish cd for tho simplicity of his statements, for his sweetness ami mellifluous harmony, nnil for the richness of his scenery anil description. Ho leads one, charmed by his sweet music, lovely figures and remarkable similes, to brighter fields of truth and virtue, and leaves us to wan der enchanted in the realms of the ideal. Ills similes lack that sublime quality found in Homer, yet he pictures life as wo really find It; not like the famous painter who tries to paint nature more beautiful than it really is. An unjust critic has attributed all this to Homer, regardless of that marvellous brauty, which characterizes Virgil. If his similes were taken from Homer, they have been res arranged to produce different, and equal, if not superior effects. He makes one sec and feel the charms of "the sparkling stream of fresh water" the "cool shade trees" and the cave with climbing vines o'er grown: the bright tender uues of violets, poppies and hyacinth; the luxuriant vegetation, clothing hill and dale, mountains and meadows, and finally, blending all into one grand, beautiful picture of harmonious loveliness. "As when spring adorns the woods, renews. the leaves, The parent earth the genial seed receives." Again he makes one hear with strange delight the mur murofthebces among the wild flowers, accompanied by the moan of the turtle dove, the low strain of the shops herd, and the gentle chant of the river, kissing the shores with its soft waves: then he harmonizes all in a melody which the tuneful Orpheus could but stop to hear. He makes one sec them toiling from first light of day until called home by the hollow murmur of evening bells, laden with honey. "As when the empty bark on billows float. With sandy ballast the sailors turn the boat; So bees bear dewy sweets, whose passing weight. Steer through the wind their homeward flight." He closes this canto by a simile which would stim ulate the most slothful mind to fire of reaction. He pic tures so vividly the uselessncss of the sluggard, not only to himself but also to his companions, by comparing him with the lazy drone, that one feels that, Idleness is the enrse or God, mid Diligence the wings wherewith we fly to heaven. "All, wlh united force, combine to drive Tho lazy drones from the laborious hive: With envy sting thay view each othors deeds. With diligence i lie fragrant work proceeds. As when Cyciops, at tlfnl mighty nod, New thunder hasten for their angry god, Subdued in Arc tho stubborn metal lies; One brawny smith the puffing bellows plies, And draws and blows reciprocating air; Others to quench tho hissing mass prepare With lifted arms they order every blow. And chime their sounding hammers in a row." The greatest of Virgil's works is the Aeneid. This may not be regarded as more perfect than the Eclogues and 3eorgies, yet it is a work of higher inspiration. He evN dently intended to make the Aeneid, as it certainly is, his crowning work. It was by this poem that he gained that place in the minds of the people which he has never lost. His name has been cherished by the poets, who came after him, with veneration. Says Bede: "Virgil casts ever me the same spell which he cast over Dante: verses from the Aeneid breaks his narratives of martyr dom, and the disciple ventures on the track of the great master, in a little eclogue descriptive of the approach of spring," a part of which has already been quoted. Dauto gave himself up to the guidance of Virgil, and wo see him even in Milton. "Burke," says Butler, "always had an old ragged Virgil at his elbow." Tho Aeneid enables us to loci in a way in which no other work of Latin can do. All thoso elements which characterize Rome and the Im perial State appear sottcned and mellowed by his mar. vellous art and humane feeling. "The Aeneid," said an able critic, "reflects the whole glory of Romo as from a mirror." The dreadful fate of Laocoon in tlte rail of Troy, for condemning the wooden horse, is one Virgil's grands est similes. He makes the heart sick by the cries and agony of Laocoon, whoso fhto tho gods decree for oppos ing the entering of tlte Grecian horso into the tower. He makes one see tho two serpents 3wecp along the swell ing tide, their ardent eyes filled with bloody deeds, their hissing jaws ready to suck ihc life blood of the two boys, nnd'gnaw away their flesh with sharpened fangs: then seize and kill Laocoon himself by fatal colls around his waist and throat, while endeavoring to resuo his two sons. "With both hands he labors at tho knots : His holy fillets the blue venom blots, His roaring fills the flittering air around, As whon an 01 receives a glancing wound, He breaks his bands, the fatal alter flics, And with loud bellowing breaks the yielding skies.' The statue itself con vcys little to one who has not read these lines. But when once the narrative is known a thousand thoughts come crowding into the mind. Again, he has produced in tho fourth book ot the Aeneid, that which only oue since his time has produced. Dido, like the true and noble Ophelia, the very emblem of purity, allowed her passion tor Aneas to kindle in her heart and fetter her in chains of love. She dreamed only of the celestial 'chords of happiness, accompanied by evcrlastiug bliss. She dreamed only of uniting the Tro jan with the Tyrian race in a lasliug league of peace and prosperity: to unite with one who alone could soothe and lieal her bleeding heart. "Sick with dosirc, and seeking him she loves, From street to street the raving Dido rovos. So, whon watchful shophcrd, from the blind, Wounds with a random shaft the careless hind, Distracted with her pain she flies the woods. Bounds o'er tho lawn, and seoks tho silent floods With fruitless care: for still tho fatal dart Sticks in her side, and rauklcs in her heart." She pleaded wilh Aeneas, but his heart never felt the pointed darts of love. She showed to him the Tyrian wealth and her lovely city: and when her hopes seemed bright as the noonday sun, all were eclipsed by deep dark gloom which clings, like filings to the magnet, around her heart. Her sister, who had always been her constant companion and consoler, now failed to calm her troubled mind. But when she learned that Aeneas had deserted her entirely, she chose, like Ophelia, to end the bitter cares of earth. Like Ophelia she shows tho true character of womanhood by her sweet temper and even by her last words "Dear pledges of my love, while heav'n so plca&'d, Receive a soul, of mortal anguish cas'd. My fatal course is finished: and I go, A glorious name, among the ghosts below." The piercing steel did tho work. The spouting blood came streaming from her heart. She raised her hands towards heaven to ask forgiveness of her darling sister, but fell fainting on the couch of the marble hearted one """ mzzEm l&.-v';- m 4