1. Where, in the midst of vast infinitude, &c. This is the conclusion of the 9th hook of the Messiah, where Obaddon, or Sevenfold Revenge, one of the angels of death, carries the Soul of Judas Iscariot to hell. —— Where, in the midst, &c. Orig. "Where God has set bounds to infinitude:" an expression authorized by Milton: "stood vast Infinitude confined." 2. From Ida's peak high Jove beheld, &c. An intelligent person suggested to the author, that to compose a new version of Homer, in the style and measure of Scott's Marmion, would be a feasible idea. He observed, that Scott's style, and his circumstantial descriptions, bore much resemblance to those of Homer and that the rapid flow of Scott's verse was happily accommodated to the swift succession of events, and fiery impetuosity of the Iliad; corresponding with the dactylic hexameter of the old poet. These hints induced the author to attempt the above translation. 3. Through these fair scenes, &c. This description has been preferred to that of the fountain of Narcissus in Ovid. Crucius, Lives of the Roman Poets. 4. Quid nos ImmeritÂ, &c. An ironical defence of piracy. 5. D. Pauli Conversio, 94. Quin etiam, ut perbibent, &c. Alluding to his transportation into the third heaven. —— 142. Æterni vulnera leti. The scripture phrase "eternal death." —— 178. Britannia. He is said by some to have passed into Britain. —— 184. Pacatusque. Alluding to the miracle on the coast of Melita. THE END.J.G. BARNARD, SKINNER-STREET, LONDON. |