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nt and slight, and, like the manners of the people, wear an eternal sameness. The western muse, on the contrary, is nervous as her heroes, sometimes flowery as her Italian or English fields, sometimes majestically great as her Runic forests of oak and pine; and always various, as the character of her inhabitants. Yet, with all those differences of feature, several oriental fictions greatly resemble the island of Circe, and the flowery dominions of Alcina. In particular, the adventures of Prince Agib, or the third Calender, in the Arabian Tales, afford a striking likeness of painting and catastrophe. If Ariosto's, however, seem to resemble any eastern fiction, the island of Venus in Camoens bears a more striking resemblance to a passage in Chaucer. The following beautiful piece of poetical painting occurs in the Assembly of the Fowles:-- "The bildir oak, and eke the hardie ashe, The pillir elme, the coffir unto caraine, The boxe pipetre, the holme to whippis lasshe, The sailing firre, the cypres deth to plaine, The shortir ewe, the aspe for shaftis plaine, The olive of pece, and eke the dronkin vine, The victor palme, the laurir to divine. A gardein sawe I full of blossomed bowis, Upon a river, in a grene mede There as sweetness evirmore inough is, With flouris white, and blewe, yelowe, and rede, And colde and clere wellestremis, nothing dede, That swommin full of smale fishis light, With finnis rede, and scalis silver bright. On every bough the birdis herd I syng With voice of angell, in ther harmonie That busied 'hem, ther birdis forthe to bryng, And little pretie conies to ther plaie gan hie; And furthir all about I gan espie The dredful roe, the buck, the hart and hind, Squirils, and bestis smal of gentle kind. Of instrumentes of stringis, in accorde Herd I so plaie a ravishyng swetnesse, That God, that makir is of all and Lorde, Ne herd nevir a better, as I gesse, There with a winde, unneth it might be lesse, Made in the levis grene a noise soft Accordant to the foulis song en loft. The aire of the place so attempre was, That ner was there grevaunce of hot ne cold-- * * * Under a tre beside a well I seye Cupid our lorde his arrowes forge and file, And at his fete his bowe all redie laye, And well his doughtir temprid all the while The heddis in the we
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