circa 1875, the other for Mr. Leyland, circa 1878. In the earlier and better of the two, groups of lovers re-united in heaven are introduced in the background, but not in the other.
103. Daughter of Priam, King of Troy, who possessed the gift of prophecy. Apollo ordained that she should be discredited. She was captured, on the fall of Troy, by Agamemnon, and executed at Mycenæ by Clytemnestra. The picture shows Hector sallying forth to his last fatal battle, and his sister prophesying his death. Helen, who is arming Paris, is incensed at some words which Cassandra has let fall concerning her. As the princess, though she always presaged the truth, was never credited, her brother Deiphobus is endeavouring to silence her.
104. Mr. W. M. Rossetti points out that the date of this incident could not be later than 1868 or so, and that the Proserpine picture was not painted until 1872 or 1873, and cannot have been at Cheyne Walk till late in 1874. After it was painted, he doubts if Swinburne was ever once in the house, and says the same remark applies still more strongly to The Blessed Damozel picture. There might, however, he adds, have been some drawings of both subjects in the studio, and it is to these, perhaps, the author of these Recollections refers.
105. Painter, b. 1841, d. 1902.
106. See Note 28.
107. Edward Hughes, painter, and nephew of Arthur Hughes, another good painter.
108. The Rev. Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, b. 1832, d. 1898.
109. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, American poet, 1807.