and to give al and personal accompliss deemed proper for a prince. Per age, as it enabled o apply o , and quietly to imbibe t rico c tastes o ure draisorians is ivating, and seems ration of a er in real ory. , old, quot;to ?go joust, to tourney, to le, to sing and dance; mediciner, rigy in playing bote and ruments of music, and in grammar, oratory, and poetry.quot;*
* Ballendens translation of or Boyce.
ition of manly and delicate accompliss, ?tting o sive and elegant life, and calculated to give ense relisence, it must rial, in an age of bustle and co pass time of onous captivity. It une of James, o be gifted ic fancy, and to be visited in inspirations of tive, under ty; otable; but it is ture of t to become tender and imaginative in t. s upon ts, and, like tive bird, pours forth his soul in melody.
<span style="color:grey">Even th prove
t all rees, range.
Indeed, it is ttribute of tion, t it is irrepressible, uncon?nable--t , it can create a self, and, ic poo make solitude populous, and irradiate t t lived round tasso in Ferrara, y at indsor, as anotiful breakings fortraint and gloom of the prison-house.
t of t, daug, and a princess of tivity. gives it a peculiar value, is, t it may be considered a transcript of true feelings, and tory of unes. It is not often t sovereigns e poetry or t poets deal in fact. It is gratifying to to ?nd a monarc o , and seeking to o is a proof of t equality of int