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ous watch The dogs. A capture done with passion and boldness he is wont to compare to wolves (I. xvi. 352):-- As rav'ning wolves that lambs or kids assail. Bravery and constancy he shows by wild boars, panthers, and lions, dividing to each one what belongs to its nature. From boars, the onslaught they have, in fighting, making it irresistible (I. iv. 253):-- Idomeneus of courage stubborn as the forest boar. From panthers, inexhaustible daring (I. xxi. 577):-- As when a panther by the spear transfixed does not remit her rage. From lions, hesitation, finally bravery, as (I. xx. 171):-- And with his tail he lashes both his flanks and limbs. Again the rush of a valiant man he likens to a horse which has had a full meal (I. vi. 506):-- As some proud steed, at well-fill'd manger fed. And, on the contrary, one slow to move; but in endurance not easily overcome, he shows in this way (I. xi. 558):-- As near a field of corn, a stubborn ass o'powers his boyish guides. The kingly temper and dignity he expresses in the following (I. ii. 480):-- As 'mid the thronging heifers in a herd Stands, proudly eminent, the lordly bull. He does not omit similes taken from marine creatures, the perseverance of a polypus and the difficulty of removing it from a rock (O. v. 432):-- As when the cuttlefish is dragged forth from his chamber. The leadership and prominence of the dolphin over the rest (I. xxi. 22):-- As fishes flying from a dolphin. Oftentimes things made by men he compares to others similarly made, as in this (I. xi. 67):-- The rival bands of reapers mow the swathe. Showing the resistance and bravery of men. But one lamenting ignobly, he blames in a clear comparison (I. xvi. 7):-- Why weeps Patroelus like an infant girl? He dared to compare human actions to the elements of nature, as in the following passage (I. ii. 394):-- From th' applauding ranks of Greece Rose a loud sound, as when the ocean wave, Driv'n by the south wind on some lofty beach, Dashes against a prominent crag expos'd To blasts from every storm that wars around. In these it is plain he used Hyperbola and Amplification, for he was not satisfied with comparing the clamor to the sound of the wind, but to the waves beating on a craggy shore, where the high sea makes the noise greater. Nor is the tempest
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