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ro, _Cani_ a gentilitate, _Magno_ a merito rerum gestarum. Neque enim _Canis_ ab illo _latranti animali_ dictus est, ut recte monet Jovius, sed quod lingua Windorum, unde principes Veronenses oriundos vult, _Cahan_ idem est, quod lingua Serviana _Kral_, id est Rex, aut Princeps. Nam in gente nostra multi fuerunt Canes, Mastini, Visulphi Guelphi."--P. 17. This letter consists of about 58 pages, and stands first in the edition of 1627. It is addressed "ad Janum Dousam," and was written to vindicate his family from certain indignities which he conceived had been put upon it. Sansovino and Villani, it appears, had referred its origin to Mastin II., "qui," to use Scaliger's version of the matter,-- "Qui primus dictator populi Veronensis perpetuus creatus est, quem et _auctorem_ nobilitatis Scaligerae et _Scalarum_ antea _fabrum_ impudentissime nugantur hostes virtutis majorum nostrorum." It was bad enough to ascribe their origin to so recent a date, but to derive it from a mere mechanic was more than our author's patience could endure. Accordingly he is not sparing of invective against those who so disparage his race. _Vappa_, _nebulo_, and similar terms, are freely applied to their characters; _invidia_, [Greek: kakoetheia], &c., to their motives. The following is a specimen of the way he handles them:-- "Dantes Poeta illustrissimum Christianissimorum Regum Franciae genus a laniis Parisiensibus deducit, utique tam vere, quam ille tenebrio nostrum a scalarum fabro: quas mirum, ni auctor generis _in suspendium eorum parabat_, quos vaticinabatur illustri nobilitate suae obtrectaturos." Now the charge of a ladder upon their shield was certainly borne by the several branches of this family long before any of them became masters of Verona; and I should suggest that it originated in some brilliant escalade of one of the first members of it. Thus, of course, it would remind us all of perhaps the earliest thing of the kind--I mean the shield and bearings of Eteoclus before Thebes: "[Greek: Eschematistai d' aspis ou smikron tropon;] [Greek: Aner d' hoplites klimakos prosambaseis] [Greek: Steichei pros echthron purgon, ekpersai thelon.]" Sept. c. Thebas, 461. WALDEGRAVE BREWSTER. H----n, Jan. 28. 1851. * * * * * INEDITED BALLAD ON TRUTH. I send you herewith a copy of an ancient ballad
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