OF CHRISTENDOM. 435 He chose to be shot by the hands of a virgin. The Spanish champion was then bound to a tree, and his breast laid bare to receive the blow ; but none of the virgins who were called for- ward would do the cruel deed. The princess royal, above all, was so much moved by the courage of the gallant stranger, that she threw herself at her father’s feet, and begged him to repeal his dreadful sentence. The king granted her request, but declared that if ever he should attempt to enter Palestine again he should suffer death. The princess then untied St. James; and gave him a rich diamond ring as a token of her esteem. He took it with thanks, and got ready to leave the kingdom of her crucl father. After riding some miles, he got off his horse to rest in a shady forest, and there began to think that he ought not to have left a princess who had saved his life. He at length resolved to return, and to enter the palace as a stranger in want of employ. He did so, and wasstraight taken into the service of the princess: and while rival princes were try- ing which of them should get her for a wife, he found means to make himself known to her, and to persuade her to go away with him to Spain, where these faithful lovers arrived in safety. Mean- time, St. Anthony of Italy pursued his journey till he came toa strong castle, in which a giant lived whom no man had ever dared toattack. In thiscastle wereseven daughtersof thekingof Thrace, six of whom were changed into swans, and the other was forced tosing the giant tosleep. St. Anthony killed the giant, and then made haste to Thrace, to give the king vews about his daughters. St. Andrew of Scotland, in the course of his travels, came at length to this castle, and found the king of Thrace calling to Heaven in behalf of his daughters. St. Andrew told the king that, ifhe would become a Christian, his daughters should again appear in their own forms. The king was in a rage at this offer, and ordered his knights to attack the stranger; but he FF?