115
116
117
G. Sforza,
118
119
120
121
122
Amiel,
123
Clément,
124
W. Irving,
125
Verga,
126
Forbes Winslow,
127
Forbes Winslow,
128
129
Dendy,
130
131
132
Tertullian,
133
134
Pouchet,
135
Masi,
136
Laura had eleven children and Petrarch himself two when he dedicated to her 294 sonnets. In politics he turned from Cola di Rienzi to his enemy Colonna and from Robert to Charles IV. (
137
138
139
140
Cottrau,
141
Matthew x. 34-36; Luke xii. 51-53.
142
Luke xii. 49. See the Greek text.
143
Luke xviii. 29-30.
144
Luke xiv. 26.
145
Matthew x. 37, xvi. 24; Luke v. 23.
146
Matthew viii. 21; Luke v. 23.
147
Fiorentino,
148
149
Mastriani,
150
151
Max. du Camp,
152
Schilling,
153
Zimmermann,
154
155
156
157
Maxime du Camp,
158
Brunetière,
159
Maxime du Camp,
160
“A une Heure du Matin,” in
161
Bufalini,
162
163
Littré,
164
W. de Fonvielle,
165
166
Byron said, also, that intermittent fevers came at last to be agreeable to him, on account of the pleasant sensation that followed the cessation of pain.
167
“One day I thought I heard very sweet harmonies in a dream. I awoke, and I found I had resolved the question of fevers: why some are lethal and others not – a question which had troubled me for twenty-five years” (
“In a dream there came to me the suggestion to write this book, divided into exactly twenty-one parts; and I experienced such pleasure in my condition and in the subtlety of these reasonings as I had never experienced before” (
168
“Jewels in sleep are symbolical of sons, of unexpected things, of joy also; because in Italian
169
Buttrini,
170
Bertolotti (
171
“I shall live in the midst of my torments, and among the cares that are my just furies, wild and wandering; I shall fear dark and solitary shades, which will bring before me my first fault; and I shall have in horror and disgust the face of the sun which discovered my misfortunes; I shall fear myself, and, for ever fleeing from myself, I shall never escape.”
172
Brewster’s
173
Brewster’s
174
175
176
Bugeault,
177
178
Schurz,