Alcyone
compress’d
Seven days sits brooding on her wat’ry
nest,
A wintry queen; her sire at length is
kind,
Calms every storm, and hushes every wind.
Ovid, by Dryden.
It is also said, that during the period of her incubation, she herself had absolute sway over the seas and the winds:
May halcyons smooth the waves, and calm the seas,
And the rough south-east sink into a breeze;
Halcyons of all the birds that haunt the main,
Most lov’d and honour’d by the Nereid train.
Theocritus, by Fawkes.
Alcyone, or Halcyone, we are informed, was the daughter of Aeolus (king of storms and winds), and married to Ceyx, who was drowned in going to consult an oracle. The gods, it is said, apprized Alcyone, in a dream, of her husband’s fate; and when she discovered, on the morrow, his body washed on shore, she precipitated herself into the watery element, and was, with her husband, metamorphosed into birds of a similar name, who, as before observed, keep the waters serene, while they build and sit on their nests.
Romford.
H.B.A.
* * * * *
RANSOMS.
(To the Editor.)
In a late number, you gave among the “County Collections,” with which a correspondent had furnished you, the old Cornish proverb—
“Hinckston Down well wrought,
Is worth London dearly bought.”
Possibly your correspondent was not aware that the true reading of this proverb is the following:—
“Hinckston Down well wrought,
Is worth a monarch’s ransom dearly
bought.”
The lines are thus quoted by Mr. Barrington, in his elaborate work on the middle ages, and refer to the prevailing belief, that Hinckston Down is a mass of copper, and in value, therefore, an equivalent for the price set on the head of a captive sovereign. Perhaps, as some elucidation of so intricate a subject as that of the ransoming prisoners during the middle ages, the following remarks may not be deemed altogether unworthy of insertion in your pages.
Originally, the supposed right of condemning captives to death rendered the reducing of them to perpetual slavery an act of mercy on the part of the conqueror, which practice was not entirely exploded even in the fourteenth century, when Louis Hutin in a letter to Edward II. his vassal and ally, desired him to arrest his enemies, the Flemings, and make them slaves and serfs. (Mettre par deveres vous, si comme forfain a vous Sers et Esclaves a tous jours.) Rymer. Booty, however, being equally with vengeance the cause of war, men were not unwilling to accept of advantages more convenient and useful than the services of a prisoner; whose maintenance might be perhaps a burden to them, and to whose death they were indifferent.