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who govern the place, by virtue of their supernatural art and necromancy, will strip it of all its beauties, and by enchantment, transform the magic walls. The vale seems adapted for the habitation of such beings; its gloomy recesses and retirements look like haunts of evil spirits. There was no delusion in the report; we were soon convinced of its truth; for this piece of antiquity, so venerable and noble in its aspect, as we drew near changed its figure, and proved no other than a shaken massive pile of rocks, which stand in the midst of this little vale, disunited from the adjoining mountains, and have so much the real form and resemblance of a castle, that they bear the name of the Castle Rocks of St John."HUTCHINSON's Excursion to the Lakes, p. 121.

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The Saxons to subjection brought.-P. 48. l. 10. Arthur is said to have defeated the Saxons in twelve pitched battles, and to have achieved the other feats alluded to in the text.

There Morolt of the iron mace, &c.—P. 50. l. 17. The characters named in the following stanza are all of them more or less distinguished in the romances which treat of King Arthur and his Round Table, and their names are strung together according to the established custom of minstrels upon such occasions; for example, in the ballad of the Marriage of Sir Gawaine :

Sir Lancelot, Sir Stephen bolde,
They rode with them that daye,
And, foremost of the companye,

There rode the stewarde Kaye.

Soe did Sir Banier, and Sir Bore,
And eke Sir Garratte keen,
Sir Tristram too, that gentle knight,
To the forest fresh and greene.

And Lancelot, that evermore

Look'd stol'n-wise on the queen.-P. 51. l. 10, 11. Upon this delicate subject hear Richard Robinson, citizen of London, in his Assertion of King Arthur:

"But as it is a thing sufficiently apparent that she (Guenever, wife of King Arthur) was beautiful, so it is a thing doubted whether she was chaste, yea or no. Truly, so far as I can with honestie, I would spare the impayred honour and fame of noble women. But yet the truth of the historie pluckes me by the eare, and willeth not onely, but commandeth me to declare what the ancients have deemed of her. To wrestle or contend with so great authoritie were indeede unto me a controversie, and that greate.”—Assertion of King Arthure. Imprinted by John Wolfe, London, 1582.

There were two who loved their neighbours' wives,

And one who loved his own.-P. 56. l. 9, 10.

In our forefathers' tyme, when papistrie, as a standyng poole, covered and overflowed all England, fewe books were

read in our tongue, savyng certaine bookes of chevalrie, as they said, for pastime and pleasure; which, as some say, were made in the monasteries, by idle monks or wanton chanons. As one for example, La Morte d'Arthure; the whole pleasure of which book standeth in two speciall poynts, in open manslaughter and bold bawdrye; in which booke they be counted the noblest knightes that do kill most men without any quarrell, and commit fowlest adoulteries by sutlest shiftes ; as Sir Launcelot, with the wife of King Arthur, his master; Sir Tristram, with the wife of King Marke, his uncle; Sir Lamerocke, with the wife of King Lote, that was his own aunt. This is good stuffe for wise men to laugh at, or honest men to take pleasure at, yet I know when God's Bible was banished the court, and La Morte d'Arthure received into the prince's chamber.-ASCHAM's Schoolmaster.

valiant Carodac,

Who won the cup of gold.-P. 56. l. 13, 14.

See the comic tale of the Boy and the Mantle, in the third volume of Percy's Reliques of Ancient Poetry, from the Breton or Norman original of which Ariosto is supposed to have taken his Tale of the Enchanted Cup.

FRAGMENTS,

WHICH ORIGINALLY APPEARED

IN

THE EDINBURGH ANNUAL REGISTER,

For 1809.

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