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his chief praise. In his early years he never tasted wine, nor would he drink out of a painted cup. He constantly slept in his armour, with his spear in his hand; nor would he use a battle-axe whose handle was inlaid with brass. He did not however persevere in this contempt of luxury, nor did he close his days with honour.

5. One evening, after hunting the gulos, or wild dog, being bewildered in a solitary forest, and having passed the fatigues of the day without any interval of refreshment, he discovered a large store of honey in the hollow of a pine.

6. This was a dainty which he had never tasted before, and being at once faint and hungry, he fed greedily upon it. From this unusual and delicious repast he received so much satisfaction, that at his return home he commanded honey to be served up at his table every day.

7. His palate by degrees became refined and vitiated; he began to lose his native relish for simple fare, and contracted a habit of indulging himself in delicacies; he ordered the delightful gardens of his castle to be thrown open, in which the most luscious fruits had been suffered to ripen and decay, unobserved and untouched, for many revolving autumns, and gratified his appetite with luxurious desserts.

8. At length he found it expedient to introduce wine, as an agreeable improvement, or a necessary ingredient to his new way of living; and having once tasted it, he was tempted by little and little to give a loose to the excesses of intoxication.

9. His general simplicity of life was changed; he perfumed his apartments by burning the wood of the most aromatic firs, and commanded his helmet to be ornamented with beautiful rows of the teeth of the reindeer. Indolence and effeminacy stole upon him. by pleasing and imperceptible gradations, relaxed the sinews of his resolution, and extinguished his thirst of military glory.

10. While Hacho was thus immersed in pleasure and in repose, it was reported to him one morning, that the preceding night a disastrous omen had been discovered, and that bats and hideous birds had drunk up the oil which nourished the perpetual lamp in the temple of Odin.

II. About the same time a messenger arrived to tell him that the king of Norway had invaded his kingdom with a formidable army. Hacho, terrified as he was with the omen of the night, and enervated with indulgence, roused himself from his voluptuous lethargy, and, re-collecting some faint and few sparks of veteran valour, marched forward to meet him.

12. Both armies joined battle in the forest where Hacho had been lost after hunting; and it so happened that the king of Norway challenged him to single combat near the place where he had tasted the honey.

13. The Lapland chief, languid and long disused to arms, was soon overpowered; he fell to the ground, and before his insulting adversary struck his head from his body, uttered this exclamation, which the Laplanders still use as an early lesson to their

children: "The vicious man should date his destruction from the first temptation.

14. "How justly do I fall a sacrifice to sloth and luxury, in the place where I first yielded to those allurements which seduced me to deviate from temperance and innocence! The honey which I tasted in this forest, and not the hand of the king of Norway, conquers Hacho."

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Lapland is a country occupying the north and north-eastern portions of the Scandinavian peninsula, and is now included partly under the dominions of Sweden and Norway, partly of Russia. The Laplanders or Lapps belong to the same family of the human race as the Finns. Hacho is an imaginary king.

A mace was a staff, borne as an ensign of office.

Odin was the chief god of the northern mythology, sometimes called the All-father, who rules heaven and earth.

Re-collecting here means gathering up again.

1. Give names of persons, recorded either in history or fable, who were distinguished for their great size or strength.

2. Explain the words martial, carolled, intrepid, furlong, impercep tible gradations, omen.

3. Parse: "The vicious man should date his destruction from the first temptation."

THE CAVE.

I.

[graphic]

HE wind is up, the field is bare :
Some hermit lead me to his cell,
Where Contemplation, lonely fair,

With blessed content has chosen to

dwell.

2.

Behold! it opens to my sight,

Dark in the rock, beside the flood; Dry fern around obstructs the light; The winds above it move the wood.

3.

Reflected in the lake I see

The downward mountains and the skies, The flying bird, the waving tree,

The goats that on the hill arise.

4.

The gray-cloaked herd drives on the cow;
The slow-paced fowler walks the heath;

A freckled pointer scours the brow;
A musing shepherd stands beneath.

5.

Curved o'er the ruin of an oak,

The woodman lifts his axe on high; The hills re-echo to the stroke;

I see I see the shivers fly!

6.

Some rural maid, with apron full,
Brings fuel to the homely flame;
I see the smoky columns roll,

And, through the chinky hut, the beam.

7.

Beside a stone o'ergrown with moss,
Two well-met hunters dwell at ease ;
Three panting dogs beside repose;
One bleeding deer is stretched on grass,

8.

A lake at distance spreads to sight,
Skirted with shady forests round;
In midst an island's rocky height
Sustains a ruin, once renowned.

9.

One tree bends o'er the naked walls;

Two broad-winged eagles hover nigh;

By intervals a fragment falls,

As blows the blast along the sky.

IO.

The rough-spun hinds the pinnace guide With labouring oars along the flood;

An angler, bending o'er the tide,

Hangs from the boat the insidious wood.

II.

But see! the gray mist from the lake
Ascends upon the shady hills;

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