“Aristogeiton! here is for thy swordA myrtle of Mount Vernon, plucked this day.”
“Aristogeiton! here is for thy swordA myrtle of Mount Vernon, plucked this day.”
“Aristogeiton! here is for thy sword
A myrtle of Mount Vernon, plucked this day.”
THE END
Printed byBallantyne, Hanson & Co.Edinburgh & London
FOOTNOTES:[1]The name in the original MS. was probably Burrowes.[2]The bracketed words are conjectures of the present writer. The MS. has suffered greatly from the damp, so as to be practically illegible in places.
[1]The name in the original MS. was probably Burrowes.
[1]The name in the original MS. was probably Burrowes.
[2]The bracketed words are conjectures of the present writer. The MS. has suffered greatly from the damp, so as to be practically illegible in places.
[2]The bracketed words are conjectures of the present writer. The MS. has suffered greatly from the damp, so as to be practically illegible in places.
Transcriber’s Note:Page 84, “n” changed to “in” (in a very clever)