[718:4] Omne ignotum pro magnifico (Everything that is unknown is taken to be grand).—Tacitus: Agricola, 30.

[718:5] See Sir Thomas Browne, page [218].

[718:6] Madame d'Abrantes relates that when Bonaparte was in Cairo he sent for a serpent-detecter (Psylli) to remove two serpents that had been seen in his house. He having enticed one of them from his hiding-place, caught it in one hand, just below the jaw-bone, in such a manner as to oblige the mouth to open, when spitting into it, the effect was like magic: the reptile appeared struck with instant death.—Memoirs, vol. i. chap. lix.

[719:1] This is alluded to by Cicero in his letters to Atticus, and is mentioned by Ælian (Animated Nature, book vi. chap. 41). It is like our proverb, "Rats leave a sinking ship."

[719:2] See Burton, page [186].

Not unlike the bear which bringeth forth

In the end of thirty dayes a shapeless birth;

But after licking, it in shape she drawes,

And by degrees she fashions out the pawes,

The head, and neck, and finally doth bring