[Footnote 171: The narrative of Livy (i. 28) is weighty and
solemn. At tu, Albane, maneres, is a harsh reflection,
unworthy of Virgil's humanity, (Aeneid, viii. 643.) Heyne,
with his usual good taste, observes that the subject was too
horrid for the shield of Aencas, (tom. iii. p. 229.)]
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