Marks with his teeth the furious joy. Francis.
Plutarch tells us that Flora, the mistress of Cn. Pompey, used to say in commendation of her lover, that she could never quit his arms without giving him a bite.
C. xi. v. 5. In the Classics, Arabs always appear as a soft effeminate race; under primitive Christianity as heretics; and after the seventh century as conquerors, men of letters, philosophers, mediciners, magicians and alchemists.—R. F. B.
v. 20. Ilia rumpens. More exactly rendered by Biacca:
E sol di tutti
Tenta l'iniqua ad isnervar i fianchi.
Guarini says of a coquette, that she likes to do with lovers as with gowns, have plenty of them, use one after another, and change them often.
C. xiii. v. 9. I understand this, "Thou shalt depart after supper carrying with thee all our hearts."—R. F. B.
C. xiiii. v. 15. Whence our Christmas-day, the Winter Solstice connected with Christianity. There are only four universal festivals—"Holy days,"—and they are all of solar origin—The Solstices and the Equinoxes.—R. F. B.