line 1;
_Poetical
Works_, 1901, iv.
Byron
" (See _Modern Universal History_, 1760, xxiv.
150-152, Note C;
_Nouvelle Biographie Universelle_, art. "Bourbon. ")]
[231] {499}[The contrast is between imperial Rome, the Lord of the
world, and papal Rome, "the great harlot which hath corrupted the earth
with her fornications" (_Rev. _ ii. 19). Compare Part II. sc. iii. line
26, _vide post_, p. 521. ]
[232] {500}[Compare _Manfred_, act iii. sc. 4, line 10; and _Childe
Harold_, Canto IV. stanza cxxviii.
line 1; _Poetical Works_, 1901, iv.
131, 1899, ii. 423, note 2. ]
[233] {501}["Calvitii vero deformitatem iniquissime ferret, saepe
obtrectatorum jocis obnoxiam expertus. Ideoque et deficientem capillum
revocare a vertice assuerat, et ex omnibus decretis sibi a Senatu
populoque honoribus non aliud aut recepit aut usurpavit libentius, quam
jus laureae coronae perpetuo gestandae. "--Suetonius, _Opera Omnia_, 1826,
pp. 105, 106. ]
[234] {503}[Francis the First was taken prisoner at the Battle of Pavia,
February 24, 1525. ]
[dh] _With a soldier's firm foot_. --[MS. ]
[235] [Compare _The Siege of Corinth_, line 752, _Poetical Works_, 1900,
iii. 483. There is a note of tragic irony in the soldiers' vain-glorious
prophecy. ]
[di] _With the Bourbon will count o'er_. --[MS. ]
[236] {504}[Brantome (_Memoires, etc.
_Nouvelle Biographie Universelle_, art. "Bourbon. ")]
[231] {499}[The contrast is between imperial Rome, the Lord of the
world, and papal Rome, "the great harlot which hath corrupted the earth
with her fornications" (_Rev. _ ii. 19). Compare Part II. sc. iii. line
26, _vide post_, p. 521. ]
[232] {500}[Compare _Manfred_, act iii. sc. 4, line 10; and _Childe
Harold_, Canto IV. stanza cxxviii.
line 1; _Poetical Works_, 1901, iv.
131, 1899, ii. 423, note 2. ]
[233] {501}["Calvitii vero deformitatem iniquissime ferret, saepe
obtrectatorum jocis obnoxiam expertus. Ideoque et deficientem capillum
revocare a vertice assuerat, et ex omnibus decretis sibi a Senatu
populoque honoribus non aliud aut recepit aut usurpavit libentius, quam
jus laureae coronae perpetuo gestandae. "--Suetonius, _Opera Omnia_, 1826,
pp. 105, 106. ]
[234] {503}[Francis the First was taken prisoner at the Battle of Pavia,
February 24, 1525. ]
[dh] _With a soldier's firm foot_. --[MS. ]
[235] [Compare _The Siege of Corinth_, line 752, _Poetical Works_, 1900,
iii. 483. There is a note of tragic irony in the soldiers' vain-glorious
prophecy. ]
[di] _With the Bourbon will count o'er_. --[MS. ]
[236] {504}[Brantome (_Memoires, etc.