Now, in the original there is not a word about "vengeance" either deep" or "deadly," but the " pernicious wrath" (ovλouέvnv μñviv ) which forms the subject of the whole poem; and it will be admitted that if particular pains ought to be taken with any part, in order that it might be correct, it should be with the statement of the poet's design. Mumford has borne this in mind much better than Derby, for the former translates as follows: "The direful wrath which sorrows numberless Brought on the Greeks." This is much nearer the original than his lordship's version, although neither is good or even tolerable. Too often, indeed, Pope's Homer is but a paraphrase; more frequently, however, he gives much more of the Homeric expression than Derby, and he does so in the present instance : “Achilles' wrath, to Greece the direful spring Of woes unnumber'd, heavenly Goddess, sing!" This sets forth the idea of Homer accurately enough, and it is poetical withal, though greatly inferior in that respect to the original. Sotheby's version is more literal than Pope's, but not so poetical; it is as follows: "Sing, Muse! Pelides' wrath, whence woes and woes O'er the Acheans' gather'd host arose." It matters little what other passage we take up, comparing different versions of it with each other; in nine cases out of ten his lordship's is at once the least poetical and least faithful to the original. Nor need we turn the second leaf for an example. The first important passage is the reply of Agamemnon to Chryses, the priest of Apollo, who comes to implore the liberation of his daughter for the large ransom which he is willing to pay for her. According to the interpretation of his lordship, the son of Atreus replies thus : "Her I release not till her youth be fled; Incense me not lest ill betide thee now."-i. 36-40. So far as the gallantry of Agamemnon is concerned, which is the principal point in this passage, nothing could be more at variance with the spirit and obvious meaning of the original. In the whole Iliad there is nothing clearer than the language of Homer in this instance. Nothing to justify the use of any such term as "master" is used in the original. The poet does not say "in my walls," as his translator does, nor "in my house," but "in our house," (nuerép évi oixw). He uses the plural because it is his intention to treat her as his wife. Had he meant to say 66 my " he would have done so, as he actually has in the following line, where he speaks of her as participating of his bed-uov léxos, (my bed). Had it not been sufficiently evident from this that Agamemnon did not mean to treat Chryseis as an ordinary mistress, much less to call himself her "master," as if she were a common servant, all doubt on this subject would have. been set aside by the language which he applies to her on subsequent occasions. Thus, for example, according to his lordship's own rendering, the hero represents Chryseis as equal to his wife Clytemnestra, both in mind and body, and not less dear to him: "To me not less than Clytemnestra dear, My virgin wedded wife; nor less adorn'd In gifts of form, of feature, or of mind.”—i. 133. This is by no means as strong language as that of the original. What the latter plainly says is that he prefers Chryseis to Clytemnestra: “Καὶ γαρ ῥα Κλυταμνήστρης Προβέβουλα κουριδίης ἀλόχου.”—i. 113, 114. Here, too, Pope is much nearer the original, and vastly more poetical: "A maid, unmatch'd in manners as in face, Skill'd in each art, and crown'd with every grace. When first her blooming beauties bless'd my arms.' Madame Dacier, while denying that avriówσav, as applied to léxos (bed), means partaking, lest it might excite indelicate ideas in the reader, and maintaining that Agamemnon only meant that Chryseis should make his bed, admits the full force of his preference, and severely censures him for his lack of prudence. Bishop Eustathius, one of the best illustrators of Homer, tries to soften down the same word for the same reason; but neither makes Agamemnon speak in the arrogant, ungallant style of Lord Derby; nor, indeed, does any other translator whose version is worth quoting. But Homer has afforded us still more conclusive proof, if possible, that Agamemnon was not the ruthless enslaver of woman that he is represented. Briseis, whom he forced from Achilles, was at least as beautiful as Chryseis; yet, when a reconciliation takes place between himself and that hero, he solemnly swears that he never had carnal intercourse with her.* That he was passionately fond of her he did not deny, but although he does not compare her mental or physical charms to those of Clytemnestra, he respected her too much to use any violence for the purpose of enjoying her charms. Now be it remembered that he treated Achilles in the most defiant manner when he forced Briseis from his custody; and when under such circumstances he treated the latter not as a servant or mistress, but as a guest, is it likely that he designed to degrade Chryseis, as represented by Lord Derby? Pope is rather indelicate in his version of the hero's reply to the lady's father; and he has been too closely imitated in that respect by Sotheby. As Mumford is the translator whose style that of his lordship most generally resembles, we transcribe the passage as rendered by the former, only premising that it would have been well had he been copied, even word for word, in this instance, as he seems to have been on other occasions: "I will not her relinquish, till old age But we shall find his lordship little more faithful or reliable in any other passage we turn to, except it be in a speech. It is worthy of remark that as he is a pretty good orator, so does he make a very good attempt at translating some of the many fine speeches in Homer; and he is most successful in those to which his own style makes the nearest approach, for it is incredible to those not familiar with the subject, how many different styles are contained in the Iliad-styles, too, which the best writers on oratory, including Quintiliant and *His lordship's own version of the oath is as follows: "These will I give; and with them will I send The fair Briseis, her whom from his tent I bore away; and add a solemn oath, I ne'er approach'd her bed, nor with her Such intercourse as man with woman holds."-ix. 152-156. Igitur, ut Aratus ab Jove incipiendem putat, ita nos rite coepturi ab Homero videmur. Hic enim quemadmodum ex oceano dicit ipse omnium vim fontiumque cursus initium capere, omnibus eloquentiae partibus exemplum et orum dedit. Hune nemo in magnis rebus sublimitate, in parvis proprietate superaverit. Cicero, have regarded as models. As it not only affords us much pleasure to apply the language of approbation to Lord Derby, whenever we think he deserves it, but, indeed, a good deal more, we will give specimens before we close of one or two of his Homeric speeches, with the view of showing how much they excel his descriptions and other various parts of the Iliad, whose chief attractions in the original consist in their poetry and beauty. But we must first compare him more extensively with other translators; as for comparing him with Homer, we might as well attempt a comparison between the owl and the nightingale. Now we turn to the first remarkable description that comes to our memory, that of Achilles approaching Hector, while the latter is soliloquizing on the probable fate of Troy. Nothing could be tamer, it will be seen, than his lordship's version of this celebrated passage: "Thus as he stood, he mus'd; but near approach'd Achilles, terrible as plumèd Mars; From his right shoulder brandishing aloft The ashen spear of Peleus, while around Flash'd his bright armor, dazzling as the glare Fear at the sight on valiant Hector seized; The fairly-flowing fount whence issu'd forth, From double source, Scamander's eddying streams. As from a furnace, clouds of steam arise; Idem læctus ac pressus, jucundus et gravis, tum copia, tum brevitate mirabilis ; nec poetica modo, sed oratoria virtute eminentissimus. (As Aratus, then, thinks that we ought to begin with Jupiter, so I think that I shall very properly commence with Homer; for, as he says, that the might of rivers and the courses of springs take their rise from the ocean, so has he himself given a model and an origin for every species of eloquence. No one has excelled him in sublimity on great subjects, no one in propriety in small. He is at once copious and concise, pleasing and forcible; admirable at one time for exuberance, and at another for brevity; eminent not only for poetic, but also for oratorical excellence.)—De Institutione Oratoria, lib. xc. 1. s. 46. 'Mid summer's heat the other rises cold Of well-wrought stone, where erst the wives of Troy The prize at stake was mighty Hector's life."-xxii. 155-191. Mumford has done vastly better than this, or rather he has not done near so badly. We do not feel justified, however, in occupying our space just now with his rendering. We prefer to make room for the version of Pope, which, although it gives but a very feeble idea of the startling vividness and grandeur of the original, is highly poetical, and well calculated to strike the imagination. "Thus pondering, like a god the Greek drew nigh, Shot trembling rays that glitter'd o'er the land; That the green banks in summer's heat o'erflows, |