13
“Athenæus” xiii., ch. 78.
14
See Plutarch’s “Eroticus,” §xvii.
15
See “Natural History of Man,” by J. G. Wood. Vol: “Africa,” p. 419.
16
See also Livingstone’s “Expedition to the Zambesi” (Murray, 1865) p. 148.
17
Though these two plays, except for some quotations, are lost.
18
Mantegazza and Lombroso. See Albert Moll, “Conträre Sexualempfindung,” 2nd ed., p. 36.
19
Though in translation this fact is often by pious fraudulence disguised.
20
W. Pater’s “Renaissance,” pp. 8-16.
21
Among
22
I may be excused for quoting here the sonnet No. 54, from J. A. Symonds’ translation of the sonnets of Michel Angelo:—
The labours of von Scheffler, followed by J. A. Symonds, have now pretty conclusively established the pious frauds of the nephew, and the fact that the love-poems of the elder Michel Angelo were, for the most part, written to male friends.
23
See an interesting paper in W. Pater’s “Renaissance.”
24
For a fuller collection of instances of this Friendship-love in the history of the world, see “Ioläus: an Anthology,” by E. Carpenter (George Allen, London. 3/– net). Also “Liebling-minne und Freundesliebe in der Welt-literatur,” von Elisar von Kupffer (Adolf Brand, Berlin, 1900).
25
As in the case, for instance, of Tennyson’s “In Memoriam,” for which the poet was soundly rated by the
26
Jowett’s “Plato,” 2nd ed., vol. ii., p. 30.
27
Jowett, vol. ii., p. 130.