The standard edition of the pictorial Shakspere . I.— ETposd myself,From certain and possessd conveniences,To doubtful fortunes.^ The Troy Book gives a different version of themotives of Calchas in going over to the appeared to the priest,— And said Calchas twice by his name;Be right well ware thoune turn againTo Troy town, for that were but in vain ;For finally learn this thing of me,In short time it shall destroyed be. ^ Scene III.— / have a womans longing,An appetite that I am sick withal,To see great Hector in his weeds ofpeacey In the Destruction of Troy we have the sameconc


The standard edition of the pictorial Shakspere . I.— ETposd myself,From certain and possessd conveniences,To doubtful fortunes.^ The Troy Book gives a different version of themotives of Calchas in going over to the appeared to the priest,— And said Calchas twice by his name;Be right well ware thoune turn againTo Troy town, for that were but in vain ;For finally learn this thing of me,In short time it shall destroyed be. ^ Scene III.— / have a womans longing,An appetite that I am sick withal,To see great Hector in his weeds ofpeacey In the Destruction of Troy we have the sameconception worthy to be received into tlie poetry ofShakspere:— The truce during, Hector went on a day untothe tents of the Greeks, and Achilles beheld himgladly, forasmuch as he had never seen him un-armed. And at the request of Achilles, Hector wentinto his tent; and as they spake together of manythings, Achilles said to Hector, I have great plea-sure to see thee unarmed, forasmuch as I havenever seen thee before. TsAQEDiES.—Vol. II. 113. [iEneas meeting Paris.] ACT IV SCENE I.—Troy. A Street. Enter, at 07ie side, ^Eneas, and Servant tvith atorch; at the other, Paris, Deiphobus, An-TENOR, DiOMEDES, tttid otkers, with torches. Par. See, ho! who s that there?Dei. T is the lord ^Eneas. jEiie. Is the prince there in person ?—Had I so good occasion to lie long,As you, prince Paris, nothing but heavenly busi-nessShould rob my bed-mate of my Thats my mind too.—Good monow, lord Ji^ A valiant Greek, iEneas; take his hand :Witness the process of your speech, whereinYou told how Diomed, in a whole week by days,Did haunt you in the j3^ne. Health to you, valiant sir. During all question of the gentle truce : *But when I meet you armd, as black defiance,As heart can think or courage execute. Dio. The one and other Diomed bloods are now in cahn; and, so long, health :But, when contention and occasion meet,By Jove, I 11 play the hunter


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