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Choosing a fit opportunity, Brutus with his countrymen withdrew to the woods and hills, as the safest place from which to expostulate, and sent this message to Pandrasus: "That the Trojans, holding it unworthy of their ancestors to serve in a foreign land, had retreated to the woods, choosing rather a savage life than a slavish one. If that displeased him, then, with his leave, they would depart to some other country." Pandrasus, not expecting so bold a message from the sons of captives, went in pursuit of them, with such forces as he could gather, and met them on the banks of the Achelous, where Brutus got the advantage, and took the king captive. The result was, that the terms demanded by the Trojans were granted; the king gave his daughter Imogen in marriage to Brutus, and furnished shipping, money, and fit provision for them all to depart from the land.

The marriage being solemnized, and shipping from all parts got together, the Trojans, in a fleet of no less than three hundred and twenty sail, betook themselves to the sea. On the third day they arrived at a certain island, which they found destitute of inhabitants, though there were appearances of former habitation, and among the ruins a temple of Diana. Brutus, here performing sacrifice at the shrine of the goddess, invoked an oracle for his guidance, in these lines:-

      "Goddess of shades, and huntress, who at will

       Walk'st on the rolling sphere, and through the deep;

       On thy third realm, the earth, look now and tell

       What land, what seat of rest, thou bidd'st me seek;

       What certain seat where I may worship thee

       For aye, with temples vowed and virgin choirs."

To whom, sleeping before the altar, Diana, in a vision thus answered:-

      "Brutus! far to the west, in the ocean wide,

       Beyond the realm of Gaul, a land there lies,

       Seagirt it lies, where giants dwelt of old;

       Now, void, it fits thy people: thither bend

       Thy course; there shalt thou find a lasting seat;

       There to thy sons another Troy shall rise,

       And kings be born of thee, whose dreaded might

       Shall save the world, and conquer nations bold."

Brutus, guided now, as he thought, by Divine direction, sped his course towards the west, and, arriving at a place on the Tyrrhene sea, found there the descendants of certain Trojans who with Antenor came into Italy, of whom Corineus was the chief. These joined company, and the ships pursued their way till they arrived at the mouth of the river Loire, in France, where the expedition landed, with a view to a settlement, but were so rudely assaulted by the inhabitants that they put to sea again, and arrived at a part of the coast of Britain now called Devonshire, where Brutus felt convinced that he had found the promised end of his voyage, landed his colony, and took possession.

The island, not yet Britain, but Albion, was in a manner desert and inhospitable, occupied only by a remnant of the giant race whose excessive force and tyranny had destroyed the others. The Trojans encountered these and extirpated them, Corineus in particular signalizing himself by his exploits against them; from whom Cornwall takes its name, for that region fell to his lot, and there the hugest giants dwelt, lurking in rocks and caves, till Corineus rid the land of them.

Brutus built his capital city, and called it Trojanova (New Troy), changed in time to Trinovantum, now London;* and, having governed the isle twenty-four years, died, leaving three sons, Locrine, Albanact, and Camber. Locrine had the middle part, Camber the west, called Cambria from him, and Albanact Albania, now Scotland. Locrine was married to Guendolen, the daughter of Corineus; but, having seen a fair maid named Estrildis, who had been brought captive from Germany, he became enamored of her, and had by her a daughter, whose name was Sabra. This matter was kept secret while Corineus lived; but after his death, Locrine divorced Guendolen, and made Estrildis his queen. Guendolen, all in rage, departed to Cornwall, where Madan, her son, lived, who had been brought up by Corineus, his grandfather. Gathering an army of her father's friends and subjects, she gave battle to her husband's forces, and Locrine was slain. Guendolen caused her rival, Estrildis, with her daughter Sabra, to be thrown into the river, from which cause the river thenceforth bore the maiden's name, which by length of time is now changed into Sabrina or Severn. Milton alludes to this in his address to the riverand in

"Severn swift, guilty of maiden's death";-

his "Comus" tells the story with a slight variation, thus:-

    "There is a gentle nymph not far from hence,

     That with moist curb sways the smooth Severn stream;

     Sabrina is her name, a virgin pure:

     Whilom she was the daughter of Locrine,

     That had the sceptre from his father, Brute.

     She, guiltless damsel, flying the mad pursuit

     Of her enraged step-dame, Guendolen,

     Commended her fair innocence to the flood,

     That stayed her flight with his cross-flowing course.

     The water-nymphs that in the bottom played

     Held up their pearled wrists and took her in,

     Bearing her straight to aged Nereus' hall,

     Who, piteous of her woes, reared her lank head,

     And gave her to his daughters to imbathe

     In nectared lavers strewed with asphodel,

     And through the porch and inlet of each sense

     Dropped in ambrosial oils till she revived,

     And underwent a quick, immortal change,

     Made goddess of the river," etc.

"For noble Britons sprong from Trojans bold,

And Troynovant was built of old Troy's ashes cold."

SPENSER, Book III, Canto IX. 38.

If our readers ask when all this took place, we must answer, in the first place, that mythology is not careful of dates; and next that, as Brutus was the great-grandson of AEneas, it must have been not far from a century subsequent to the Trojan war, or about 1100 years before the invasion of the island by Julius Caesar. This long interval is filled with the names of princes whose chief occupation was in warring with one another. Some few, whose names remain connected with places, or embalmed in literature, we will mention.

BLADUD.

Bladud built the city of Bath, and dedicated the medicinal waters to Minerva. He was a man of great invention, and practised the arts of magic, till, having made him wings to fly, he fell down upon the temple of Apollo, in Trinovant, and so died, after twenty years' reign.