Page:The poetical works of Matthew Arnold, 1897.djvu/537

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NOTES.
499

Linus-song, one of the early plaintive strains of Greek popular poetry, and used to be sung by corn-reapers. Other traditions represented Daphnis as beloved by a nymph who exacted from him an oath to love no one else. He fell in love with a princess, and was struck blind by the jealous nymph. Mercury, who was his father, raised him to heaven, and made a fountain spring up in the place from which he ascended. At this fountain the Sicilians offered yearly sacrifices. See Servius, Comment. in Virgil. Bucol., v. 20 and viii. 68.


Note 20, Page 402.

Ah! where is he, who should have come.

The author's brother, William Delafield Arnold, Director of Public Instruction in the Punjab, and author of "Oakfield, or Fellowship in the East," died at Gibraltar, on his way home from India, April the 9th, 1859.


Note 21, Page 403.

So moonlit, saw me once of yore.

See the poem, "A Summer Night," p. 280.


Note 22, Page 403.

My brother! and thine early lot.

See Note 20.


Note 23, Page 407.

I saw the meeting of two
Gifted women.

Charlotte Brontë and Harriet Martineau.


Note 24, Page 410.

Whose too bold dying song.

See the last lines written by Emily Brontë, in "Poems by Currer, Ellis, and Acton Bell."


Note 25, Page 424.

Goethe too had been there.

See Harzreise im Winter, in Goethe's Gedichte.