05 March 2008

Growing sumac in shade

. FOUCH, FOURIER, GUIBOURT, LAW JOHANNEAU, LACROIX, LAFOSSE, LEMERCIER, LETRONNE, LOUIS LISKENNE. t1MMWVVW(MMmWUiUaiVlt^MVM%iVI^^ V\*/W%fW%*/WM' WWW\WV *. Alia pennata, utapes: alia utroque modo, C formicae: aliqua and pennis and pedibus carentia. and swears omnia insecta appellata ab incisuris, quae nunc cervicum loco, nunc pectorum atque alvi, praecincta sparant will membra, tenui modo fistula cohrentia. not tota will incisura, eam ambiente ruga: sed in alvo, aut superne tantum, imbricatis flexili vertebris, nusquam alibi spectatiore naturae rerum artificio. In magnis siquidem corporibus, aut certe majo- ribus, facilis offieina sequaci materia flee. the people are his work, it traverses the works in the intrior, like exhorting with the work, of which it is. Around him go of the satellites and the lictors, guards assiduous of sound autorit. that when the swarm must leave the hive: the dpart is annonc a long time in advance by a buzz which is made hear several days of continuation in the hive, signs certain that the bees make their apprts, and At -. each one ambitionne of tre more prs of the king their joy of in tre is seen filling to have to them they support it with their paules. too fatigu, they. Those which remain in arrire by lassitude, or which come to be parked, follow, guides. In some place that the king arrte, the weapon all entire tablit its camp. Happy prsage that one can sometimes draw from the aspect of a swarm. Then they form prsages privs and been able blics when they are suspended in bunches in the houses or the temples prsages often accom -. still stops of Plato child, to announce the dou- cor of its loquence enchanter: they are posrent in the camp of Drusus, chief of the Roman weapon, at the time which one fought, with happiest succs, auprs. The science of the haruspices is thus not your -. Esse utic sine regc not. Invit autem interimunt eos, will quura plures fuere, potiusque nascentium domos diruunt, Si proven- keep silent desperatur: tune and fucos ' abigunt. iis video dubitari, propriumque iis genus ess aliquos existimare, sicut furibus grandissimis inter illas, sed nor gray, lataque alvo: ita appellatis, quia furtim dvorent. Certum is, ab apibus fucos interfici. Sed quomodo sine aculeo nascantur. Humido vere raelior ftus: sicco, mel copiosius. if defecerit aliquas Al your cibus, impetum in proximas. and if custos adsit, will alterutra leave, quae sibi F vere felt. quoque Ex aliis saepe dimicant water located, easque acies opposed duet imperatores instruunt, maxim rixa in convebendis floribus exorta, and suos quibusque evocantibus: quae dimicatio injectu pulveris. days infallible, since they think that such a prsage is. By taking the king, one is matre of all the swarm: the bees lost it, they disperse and will join other chiefs: never they. They kill them regret when there is several they prfrent dtruire the cells O they owe natre, when they dsesprent of an abundant Anne then they drive out also the bumblebees the latter, I see that one does not agree, not on their nature: according to some authors, they form one are pce particulire, like this large espce black, broad belly, which meets among the bees, and which one names larronne, because it dvore furtively. It is certain that the bees kill the bour -. it is still a rsoudre question. If spring is wet, the swarms multiply more if it is dry, honey is more abundant food misses in some hives, the bees throw themselves on the closest hives to plunder them. Those which one attacks push back them in battle. and, if the guard of the hives is L, the party which believes it favorable its cause abstains from all hostilit sound. They are made also the war for other gnraux reasons two arrange in battle the enemy weapons: the transport of the flowers is the most ordinary cause of the brawls, and each one calls his/her partners her help. U N few poussire or of smokes spare the combattans. One them rconcilie with milk or mielle water. Silvestresque Apes sunt and rusticae, horridae aspectu, multo iracundiores, sed opre ac labore prses -. Urbanarum duet will gnera: optimae brves, variae- that, and in rotunditatem compactiles: dtriores long, and quibus similitudo vesparum: etiamnun deterrimae. In Ponto sunt quaedam albae, qu (a) in vium duet will gnera: aliarum, qu in mellificant arboribus: aliarum, quae sub will terra, triplici cerarum processes, uber -. Aculeum apibus will natura ddit ventri consertum. unum ictum hoc infixo, quidam eas statim emori been able -. Aliqui not nisi in tantum adacto, C internal I quidpiam sequatur: sed fucos postea ess, nec melia facere, velut castratis viribus, pariterque and nocere and. Odere fdos odores, proculque fugiunt, sed and fictos. Itaque unguenta redolentes infesting, ipsae plurimorum. dem dgnres vespae, atque crabrones, _ etiam E culi -. One also finds, in the campaigns and the forts, of the wild bees a hard aspect, much more irascible, but more skilful and harder domestic bees are of two kinds: the best is short, nuances and collect in their corpu- lence. the others, worse, are long and sem- blables with the worst gupes. of all, among these DER nires, which is those are hairy white bees which make honey per month twice. Around the Thermodon river, one finds of it a espce which makes its honey in the trees, and another which does it under ground, with three rows of rays they. Nature has donn with the bees a pivot attach. Some think that with the first blow that they give some it remains in the wound, and that they die aussitt. of others believe that they die only when they have it rather front enfonc so that it in trane a portion of the intestine that with the remainder, losing their forces with their pivot, they become simple bumblebees and do not make any more honey, dsormais impotent to harm or for tre useful examples of horses keep silent by the bees. They dtestent and flee the bad smells, and Mrs. the factitious odors also sees them one badgering those which carry perfumes, having besides dfendre they-Mrs. against several animals cleaned gnre, which vocantur muliones: populantur hi -. ranae, quae maximum earum is operatio tum, ' quum so -. Nec hae tantum, quae stagnated rivosque obsident, verum etrubelae veniunt ultro, adrepentesque suflant foribus per eas: ad hoc [ provolant, confestim -. Nec sentire ictus celery ranae tradun -. Inimicae and oves, difficult has lanis earum expli -. Cancrorum etiam odore, if quis juxta coquat. Quin and morbos suapte natura sentiunt. eorum tristitia torpens, and quum handle drill in teporem solis promotis aliae cibos ministrant, quum defunctas progerunt, funerantiumque more comitantur exsequias. Rege ea plague consumpto maeret plebs ignavo dolore, not cibos convehens, not procedens, tristi tantum murmur glomeratur circa corpus ejus. that diducta multitudine: alias spectantes exanimem. pce btarde of Mrs. kind Frelons, and the espce cousins whom one names mulions, make them the war swallows and some other birds dtruisent them in. The frogs tighten embus- cades to them when they will seek water, which is their greater occupation in time than they lvent. I do not speak only about those which await them at the edge of the tangs and about the brooks: but the frogs buissonnires come also to seek them. and, slipping prs of the hives, they blow by the doors. this noise the bees leave and are seized the moment. It is said that the frogs are insensitive the piqre. The sheep are still dangerous for them, because they have sorrow dgager of their. Odor of the crevisses, if one makes some cook in. They have also their diseases particulires. appear sad then and engourdies: one sees them offering alimens those which they have expose the heat of the sun in front of the door of the hive, to carry those which died, and to accompany their body like returning the last duties to them. the disease, the people constern gives up the dou- their work cease, nobody does not leave, all are attroupent while bourdonnant sadly around sound. One it enlve thus by cartant the multitude, other lies the sight of the corpse entrelient their mourning Mrs., if. Hilaritate igitur, and nitore sanitas aesti -. Sunt and operis morbi: quum favos not expient. Item blapsigoniam, if fetum not will pera -. Inimica is and cho resultanti sound system, which IVAP das alterno pulset ictu: inimjca and nebula. that vel maxim hostile, quum praevaluere intexant C. luminibus accensis advolitans, pestifer, nec uno modo. Nam and ipse will ceras depascitur, and relinquit excrementa, quibus teredines gignuntur: spun etiam araneosa, qua- cumque incessit, alarum maxim lanugine obtexit. cuntur and in ipso ligno teredines, quae will ceras praecipue. Infestt and aviditas pastus, nimia florum its tietate, verno maxim tempore: alvo quoted not apes tantum, sed omnia insecta exanimantur, prae- cipue if capite uncto in plate ponantur. ipsae contrahunt mortis sibi caused, quum sensere eximi. prodigas atque edaces, not secus ac will pigras atque igna -. Nocent and sweated mella ipsis, illitaeque ab. has care to provide their subsistence, they thus at them the signs of sant itself. Their works have also diseases: that which one names elaros, when the bees do not fill up their rays. and that which one calls blapsigonie, at the time they do not amnent the couvain term. What is against the bees. The cho is galement contrary for them by this sound resounding and alternate, which strikes them and fog frightens them is not to them less harmful but them in nemi most frightening, it is the araigne, which dtruit the hive entire when it is parvenue to tighten her fabric there. This lche and cheap butterfly, which flies around the beautiful flam- allums, also harm to them of more than manire. It eats wax, and leaves refuse O are generated the trdo. moreover, it masks wire of araigne, which it covers with the sleeping bag of its wings everywhere O it passes. wood are also born from the trdo, which tackle party -. Their clean intemprance their is disastrous: the flowers which they eat with excs, on all in spring, give them the flow of belly. Oil kills the bees, like all the insects, prin- cipalement when, aprs to have coated the tte of it to them. they-Mrs. the cause of their death, by dvorant honey are trs-mnagres: the spendthrifts and the greedy ones. nunc enim sermo of will natura is. Atque Gaudent plausu tinnitu aeris, eoque. Quo manifestum is, auditus quoque iness. Effecto opre, educto ftu, functo munere omni, exercitationem tum solemnem habent: spatia -. prospre inimica ac fortuita cdant, septenis annis plain -. Alvos numquam ultra decem annos lasted pro -. Sunt which mortuas, if tectum hieme serven- tur intra, deinde plate verno torreantur, ac ficulneo cinere louse. In totum vero amissas reparari ventribus drunk bulis recentibus cum fmo obrutis: Virgilius juvencorum. like the lches and the lazy ones, are pitiless -. Their honey Mrs. their is disastrous when the antrieure part of their body is rubbed of it, they (and still in cit I only one weak part) is expos an animal which its munificence returns to us so prcieux. We will indicate the remdes in their place, because many nant we do not treat that of their nature his rejoins them. what dmontre that they have also the smell. The works achevs, the small fields, all their functions filled, they are delivered then to the exer -. Rpandues in the plain, leves in the airs, they flies while whirling, and only return. Their longest life, if they have the happiness of chapper all the enemies, all ac cidens, is seven years in any hive does not have hard more than ten years teurs, the bees died, guards during the winter the house, expose then to the sun of spring, and heatings during one day in the ash of fig tree, ^ If the espce is completely dtruite, one can rcemment reproduce it with the belly of a buf you. corpore exanimato, sicut equorum Vespas atque crabro- nes, sicut asinorum scarabaeos, mutant will natura ex alis. Sed horuin omnium coitus cernuntur. And tamen in ftu eadein prope will natura, quae apibus. Faciant Quae animalia ex alieno suum. Vespae in sublimi E luto nidos faciunt, and in his will ceras: crabrones in cavernis, aut sub will terra. Ftus ipso iuaequalis, and barbarus. alius evolat, alius in nympba is, alius in vermiculo. Vespae, quae icbneumones vocantur (sunt autem undervalue, quam aliae), nnum genus ex araneis perimunt, phalangium appellatum, and in nidos suos ferunt, deinde illinunt, and ex iis incubando suum genus procrant. Praeterea omnes edge vescuntur, countered quam apes. diores venantur: and amputato iis capite, reliquum corpus gunt: hieme, C will cetera insecta conduntur: vita biiua. Ictus eorum baud temere sine febri is young buf, that one made expire under the blows, product of the bees, like the body of a horse produces the gupes and the Frelons, and that of one them scarabes, nature changing certain animals into others. one sees the coupling of these dernires espces. nan- less they lvent the their small almost manire. The gupes make their nests with goat in a lev place and y build gteaux. Frelons were tablissent in holes or under ground. The ones fly, while the others are still the tat of nymph or worm and all that opre in autumn, and not in spring. Customs take, in full moon, their larger ac -. the gupes than one names iclmeumons (they are smaller than the others) kill une' espce of arai- gne than one calls phalangium, carries it in their nests, lays in the corpse, than they coat mud, and, while brooding, make close their small surpluses, all nourish flesh, with the place that hunting for the large flies. and, aprs to have T to them the tte, they carry the remainder of the Frelons body of wood live in hollows of trees the winter uctores sunt, for the third time novenis punctis interfici hominem. Aliorum, which mitiores videntur, duet will gnera: opifices, undervalue corpore, which raoriuntur hieme: matres, quae. iron pan deinde nidos raise fingunt, in quibus matres. Jam tum opifices funguntur munere. habeant aculeos, quia noƱ egrediuntur. Quidam opinantur bus his AD hiemem decidere. Nec crabronum autem, nec vesparum gcneri reges, aut examined: sed subinde renovatur multitudo. Quartum inter hc genus is bombycurn, in Assyria proveniens, majus quam supra dictated luto fingunt, dirtied specie, adplcatos lapidi, tanta of the ritie, C spiculis pcrforari vix possitit. gius, quam apes, faciunt: deinde majorem vermiculuin. they are contained, like the other insects their life. It is rare that piqre does not cause them the fivre: twenty-seven to these piqres, according to some authors, are enough to kill a man lons, who seem softer, are divided into two are pces: the workers, smaller, who die the winter. and the Frelons-mres, which live two years, and do not make. In spring, they build nests which, usually, have four openings, and O they they make other larger nests, to produce there those which owe tre mres. fulfill their function and nourish them are of a larger form: it is doubtful that they have a pivot, because they do not show it Frelons have as their bumblebees as all these insects lose their pivot the approach. Neither the Frelons nor the gupes have kings and do not throw swarms: the espce is renewed successive lies by individual reproductions. A quatrime espce, in this kind of in sects, is that of the bombyces, which belong the Ace Syria, and are larger than the prcdens. with mud against the stones, of the nests which have the aspect of salt, and of such a duret, which one can large sorrow quantit that the bees, and the worm that they pro duisent is also larger. Quae preceded invenerit bombycinam vestem. And alia horum origo: E grandiore vermiculo, gemina protendente sui generis cornua, primum eruca ft: deinde quod vocatur bombylius: ex eo necydalus:. luxumque texunt AD vesteni' feminarum, quae bombycina. Eas redordiri preceded, rursusque texere inve- nit in Ceo mulier Pamphila, Latoi filia, not fraudanda gloria excogitalas rationis, C denudet feminas vestis. eupressi, terebinthi, fraxini, quercus florem imbribus. piliones parvos, nudosque: mox frigorum impatientia villis inhorrescere, and adversum hiemem tunicas sibi instaurare densas, pedum asperitate radentes foliorum lanuginem vellere: bench ab (a) cogi unguium carmi- natione, mox betrayed inter ramos, tenuari ceu pectin. Postea adprehensam corpori involvi nido volubili. ab homine tolli, fictilibusque vasis tepore and furfurum ESCA nutriri: atque ita subnasci sui generis plucked. One connat still bombyles of an origin diffrente: they come from a large worm, ARM of two horns of espce particulire, which initially becomes che- nille, then bombyle, finally ncydale, and that in space. The bombyces, the manire of the araignes, warp, for the clothing and the ornament of the women, a fabric which is called bombycine. fabric and to make fabrics of them was invent in the deCos, by the girl of all, Pamphila, which we should not drober glory vtement have trouv for the women which shows them naked. How are made fabrics of Cos. It is said that it nat also bombyces in of Cos, O the vapor of the ground animates the flowers which the rains made fall from the cyprs, of the trbinthe. plunder which are naked bientt, to guarantee cold, they cover hairs, and are manufactured feed you screw against the rigour of the winter, by tearing off the sleeping bag of the sheets, which they scrape with the asprits their feet they collect it in a heap, card it with their nails, tranent it on the branches, and fray it as with a comb then they seize them a cover lies which they roll around them. they are carried, one them dpose in ground vases. quibus vestitos AD alia thought dimitti. sint lanificia, humore lentescere: mox in spun tenuari. Nec puduit lias jackets usurpare etiam VI -. renda discessere mores, C oneri sit etiam vestis. tamen bombyce adhuc feminis cedimus. Of araneis: who ex his texant: quae materiae will natura AD texendum. Araneorum his not absurdity jungatur will natura, digna vel praecipue admiratione. sunt will gnera, nec dictu necessaria in tan your notitia. langia ex his appellantur, quorum noxii morsus, corpus exiguum, varium, acuminatum, adsultim ingredientium. Altra eorum species, nigri, prioribus cruribus girder -. operis materiae utrus ipsius sufficit: sive ita corrupta alvi will natura stato tempore, C Democrito claim: sive is quaedam intus will lanigera fertilitas: tam moderato a gue, tam tereti filo, and tam aequali deducit stamina. O they are maintained by a soft heat, and are nourished. It pushes to them wings of a espce left -. In this tat, one returns the libert to them so that they that they warped softens, then one spins it with a spindle. The men did not have shame to usurp these toffes, because they are lgres for T of our walls to carry the armour, that our vtemens Mrs. is an inconvenient load sounds still with the women the Assyrian bombyee. Araignes: which espces among them makes fabric, and which araignes, subject assurment worthy of admiration. in A several espces, too known so that it is N -. those whose bite is poisonous, the body bigarr, short, effil, and who walk while jumping pce it is the black ones, whose legs antrieures are. All have three articulations with the legs. The araignes-wolves of small the espce do not spin the large ones tighten small fabrics enters it and to the inside. A troisime espce is remarkable by its scientist work: it warps fabrics, and its belly provides only the matire of a so great work, either that the parts of which it is form dcomposent poque fixed, like the prtend Dmocrite, or that it possde intrieurement the facult to produce this wool espce sphere subtegmina adnectens maculasque paribus semper intervallis, sed subinde crescentibus, ex angusto dila -. videtur pertinere crebrataepexitas telae, and quadam Po liturae arte, ipsa per tenax ratio tramoe. AD flatus, ac not respuenda quae veniant, sine licta lasso praetendi summa leaves arbitrere licia: difficult At illa cernuntur, atque C in plagis lineae offensae, prae -. Specus ipse qua concameratur archi -. keep silent has medio, aliudque agentis imitations. C sit, nec, intus aliquis, cerni not possit. Latitudo telae saepe inter duas raise, quum exercet artem and discit texere: longitudo fili has bottom mines, ac rursus A will terra per illud ipsum velox recipro- catio: subitque pariter ac spun deducit. will ptura incidit, quam vigilans and paratus adcursum. extrema hreat plaga, semper in mdium currit: quia sic maxim totum concutiendo implicat. catulos venautur: bone primum tela involventes, and tune demum will labra utraque morsu adprehendeutes, lecture theater -. Which rgularit, which galit in these wire which its nail weight holds to him place of spindle by the medium, then it tightens the screen forms circu- laire. of it largissant the meshs gaux intervals and pro gressivement croissans, it them runit by a nud in -. With which art it hiding place the fatal laces loile marrowy and furnished with a long sleeping bag, that this firm and solid screen, whose art seems to have polished surface. which flexibility, for prter with the breath of the wind, and not to reject the objects which prsentent. wire with the extrmits have T abandonns by or vrire draws of tiredness but these wire are with difficulty aperus, and, as the cords of our fabrics of hunting, prcipitent in the net the animal which meets them cave it-Mrs., with which erudite architecture it. and how much, more than the remainder, it is rem -. center, appearing occupies of anything else, and so much contains, than it is impossible duty if the place which winds can break it, which clusters of poussire it. The width of the fabric often tightens tree the other, when the araigne is exerted and made training. In length, the araigne tightens its wire of the som- puts tree the surface of the ground, and, while going up quickly along this Mrs. wire, it in ramne new, then it goes down again continuously Mrs. Quippe incremento amnium futuro telas sweated. Iidem sereno not texunt, nubilo texunt. Ideoque multa arauea imbrium sigua sunt. putant ess quae texat, marem which venetur: ita bet. Aranei conveniunt clunibus: pariunt vermi -. Nam nec horum differri potest geni- will tura, quoniam insectorum vix ulla alia narratio is. Pariunt autem ova ea in telas, sed sparsa, quiasaliunt. cubing magnum numerum: who C emersit, matrem consumit, saepe and patrem: adjuvat enim incubare. Consummantur aranei quater septenis diebus. If some animal were caught with the net, which VI -. arrte one of the extrmits, it always runs with cen- tre. because it is by agitating the fabric in all its parts it mends it the moment, without it appearing any. The araignes take Mrs. of small lzards: they start by their muzzling the mouth with their wire, then they seize to them and the lvres bite to them: spec- tacle comparable those of the Circus, when happy. When it must occur a water rising, they carry more. They do not slip by in serene times, they slip by in times nbuleux. also the great number of fabrics of araigne is it a sign of rain it is the female which slips by, and the mle which drives out: thus, in the mnage, each one contributes galement to the common good. The araignes are coupled by derrire, and pro duisent small similar worms of the ufs. indeed to delay longer to speak about their gnra- tion, since we will not have almost anything to say that. They rpandent the ufs on their fabrics they are leave and L, because they throw them. The phalangium only brood some in they dvorent the MRE, and often Mrs. the pre. because it by tage with her the functions of incubation feels until three hundred small, the others espces one more. Terrestrial Similiter his and scorpiones, worm miculos ovorum specie pariunt, similiterque pereunt: pestis importuned, veneni serpentium, nisi quocl gravioro supplieio lenta per triduum dead conficiunt, virginibus letali semper ictu, and feminis fere in totum: viris autem matutino, exeuntes cavernis, priusquam aliquo fortuito. is: nulloque momento meditari cesst, quando desit. iis candidum fundi Apollodorus auctor is, in novem will gnera descriptis, per colour maxim: super vacuo, quoniam not is scire, quos tiny exitiales prdixe -. Geminos quibusdam aculeos ess: maresque saevis -. bus Venenum medio die, quum in -. Report and septena caudse internodia will saeviora ess: pluribus enim sena sunt. lucre etiam austri faciunt, pandentibus brachia, C Re -. Saepe Psylli, which reliquarum venena. Incubation lasts three days: at the end of twenty-eight, the araignes took their increase. As well as the araignes, the terrestrial scorpions produce the small ones towards which have the egg appearance, and they took of Mrs. manire: plague mau- said, which carries the poison of the serpens, but of which pi qre, by a crueler torment, makes endure during three days the anguishes of a slow death, is always fatal to the girls, and almost always with the women: she is mortal for the men the morning, when it in sect, outgoing jeun of its hole, trouv the oc does not have -. prte to strike, and the animal is continuously attentive. The venom of this insect is white, sui- vant Apollodore, which dcrit nine espces of scorpions, by distinguishing them mainly by their colors: superfluous dtail, since one cannot know which it has signals like the least harmful taines espces have a double pivot, and which the mles are most dangerous, because it allots the facult to them. One them reconnat what they are thinner and longer than the females lies poisonous in the middle of the day, when they have T. When they are thirsty, they which have seven nodes the tail are most frightening terrarum invehentes quaestus sui caused peregrinis malis impious vere Italiam, hos quoque importare conati sunt: sed vivere will intra Siculi caeli regionem not potuere. that aliis in locis, C circa Pharum in iEgypto. thia interimunt etiain sweat, alioqui vivaciores countered venena talia: will nigras quidem celerius, if in aquam. Homini icto putatur ess remedio ipsorum. and stellionibus putant ess, innocuis dumtaxat iis, which and ipsi carent blood, lacertarum appeared piones in totum nullis nocere, quibus not sit sanguis. Quidam and ab ipsis fetum devorari arbitrantur. modo relinqui solertissimum, and which ipsius matris clunibus imponendo, tutus and has cauda and has morsu loco. Top esse reliquorum ultorem, which postremo Ge -. prunte of wings with wind of midday, while tending its arm. reports that there are scorpions really garlics wind Psylles, which make mtier transport the poi- sounds of counter in counter, and which filled Italy flaux trangers, have essay to import the scor- pawns volans. there but those could not live under the climate of Sicily: however one sees some sometimes in Italy, but which do not make evil and in much of other places, as around Pharos in Egypt. Scythie, they kill Mrs. the pigs, which, moreover, rsistent best the these kinds of venoms, and the blacks more quickly than others, if they are plunged in water scorpion, taken in wine, is a remde for. Oil is, says one, a mortal poison for the scorpions and the stellions. those - pargnent only the animals, as them privs of blood their form is that of the lzard. ral, do not make either evil with the animals which. Some think that they dvo- rent their small that most skilful cap only, while being plaant on the croup of the MRE, O it does not have anything avenger of all the others, because it ends up killing the pre. The scorpions make usually eleven naturam habent, rore tantum VI sales, praeterque macaw -. Of cicadis: sine ore ess, exitu cibi. Imitations cicadis vita: quarum duet will gnera: undervalue, quae prim proveniunt, and novissimae pereunt:. nunt, vocantur achetae: and quae undervalue ex his sunt, tettigoniae: sed illae magis canorae. utroque gnre: feminae silent: gentes vescuntur iis AD Orientem, etiam Parthi opibus abundantibus. tum ponds praeferunt, has coitu feminas, ovis earum. jacuta in dorso, qua excavating fetur locum in will terra. The FIT firstly vermiculus, dein ex eo, quae vocatur teltigo- will metra, cujus cortice rupto circa solstitia evolant, noctu semper: primum nigrae atque durae. quae vivunt, and sine ore is rum linguis simile, and hoc in pectore, quo rorem lam -. Pectus ipsum fistulosum: hoc canunt achetae, subvolant C, humorem reddunt, quod solum argumen -. stellions Them hold of the nature of Ca mlons, living only of pink and araignes. Cicadas: absence of the mouth and the anus in these animals. The cicadas live of Mrs. manire, el form two espces: the small ones, which is born the pre- test cards and dies the dernires. they are dumb:. name achtes, el smallest tettigonies. but them. In both espces, the mles sing, the females are dumb laugh, Mrs. Parthes, which live within the abon -. They prfrent the mles before the coupling, and the females aprs, and when they onl conu their ufs, which is white. They have with the back a projection acute, with which they dig the ground for y dposer their ufs. It is formed initially a small worm, which becomes what one names tettigomtre. towards the solstice, the small ones breaks their envelope and flies away, which always arrives. The cicadas are initially black and hard very the vivans, it is the only one which does not have a mouth but they have the chest something which resembles the language of the insects arms of pivot, and which them that a espce of pipe: it is L which the voice tum is formed is rore eas Ali. Oculi tam hebetes, C if quis digi- tum contrahens ac remittens iis adpropinquet, transeant. Quidam duet alia will gnera faciunt earum: surculariam, quse sit grandior: frumentariam|, quam alii. Apparet enim simul cum frumentis. Cicadae not nascuntur in raritate arborum: id- circo not sunt Cyrenis circa oppidum: nec in campis, nec in frigidis aut umbrosis nemoribus. Sed in Cephalenia amnis quidam penuriam earum. quae apibus, sed pro corpore amplior. Insectorum autem quaedam binas gerunt pumas, C muscae: quaedam quaternas, C apes. Nullum, cui telum in ore, pluribus. of the achtes, as we said. When one them constrained to fly, they return a mood which, only, proves that they. It is also the only animal which does not have an opening to throw its excrmens. are so bad, that if one them prsente the finger, in vanant A and withdrawing it, they jumps above as on. Some tablissent two others of them espces, knowledge the surculaire, which is largest. the frumentaire, that others call avenire, because it parat at the time that the fromens yellow. The cicadas are not also born in the places D equipped with trees is there around the town of Cyrne, neither in the plains, nor in wood feed or colds they prfrent Mrs. certain cantons. In the country of Milet, they are only in little. In Cphalnie, a rivire spare of the cantons filled with cicadas, other cantons O one does not see any. In the territory of Rhges, they all are dumb. with the LED of the river, in the countryside of ture that those of the bees, but larger pro -. Some insects have two wings, as the flies of others have four of them, like. The wings of the cicadas are membranous. The insects which are arms of pivot to the belly have. Super Quibusdam pennarum tutelae crusta venit, C scarabaeis, fragiliorque quorum tenuior penna. His negatus aculeus: sed in quodam gnre eorum grown, cornua praelonga, bisulcis dentata forcipibus in cacumine, quum libuit AD morsum coeuntibus, infan- tium etiam remediis ex, cervice suspenduntur. Aliud rursus eorum genus, which E fimo ingentes crushed aversi volutant pedibus, parvosque in iis countered rigorem hiemis vermiculos ftus sui nidu -. Volitant alii magno cum murmur ac mugitu. Alii focos and prata crebris excavating foraminibus, No -. terum and clunium colour lampyrides, nunc pennarum hiatu refulgentes, nunc vero compressu obumbrat, not handle will matura pabula, aut post desecta conspicuae. E contrario tenebrarum alumna blattis vita, lucemque fugiunt, in balineis maxim humido vapore prognatae. Atque Fodiunt ex eodem gnre rutili praegrandes sca -. No one of those whose pivot is plac in the mouth does not have any more than two bus the first have it reu for dfendre, the seconds for nour -. the wings, once tear off, never push back All the insects whose pivot is plac with the belly have. In some, the wings are guaranteed by a substance crustace, as in the scarabes, whose wing is thinner and more fragile of pivot but one connat large a espce trs-long horns, whose extrmits, fourchues and cogs them, close volont to seize the objects, and that one suspends on the neck of the enfans as remdes against cer -. espce walk let us move back, rolling of large balls of droppings in which it dpose the small ones towards which owes perptuer its race, and thus guarantees them nement trs-fort. others digs a multitude of holes in the hearths and the prs, and makes hear during the night one perant. night the lampyrides shine like fires, by the color clatante their sides and of their croup tincelans when they dploient their wings, cachs in the shade when they close them before fodder are mrs, nor aprs that one them. On the contrary, the cockroaches live in T -. rabaei tellurem aridam, favosque parv ac fistulosae modo. thum locus is parvus, in quo unum hoc animal exani -. Pennae insectis bus sine will scissura: nulli cauda. Difficulty eorum solus and brachia habet, and in C asilo, sive tabanum dici claim: item culici, and which -. Bus autem his in ore and pro lingua. sed AD suctum, C muscarum generi, in quo lingua evi -. handle oculos prsetenduntur ignava, C papilionibus. injury insecta carent pennis, C will scolopendra. Insectorum fags quibus sunt, in obliquum. Quorumdam extremi longiores foris curvan -. Hae pariunt in terram demisso spinae caule, ova. Subsquente anno exitu veris emittunt parvas, nigran -. nbres and flees the lumire. nes of the wet vapor. kind, sleep and trs-large, dig the arid grounds and y build rays which have the form of small a ponge porous their honey is drastic prs of Olynthe, is a small canton O null of these in sects cannot live, which made name it Cantharo -. All the insects has the wings without division null does not have a tail, if it is not the scorpion they are also only which has the time and of the arms and a dart the tail the others, some, such as cousin and certain flies, have a pivot plac in the mouth, which holds place of language to them the pivot is soft and without point, and is used for only sucking, as in the flies, whose language is videm -. All those of this espce do not have teeth of others tended to the front of the eyes of small tender horns such are the butterflies insects miss wing, for example, the scolopendre. The insects which have feet drive them. Some have the feet of derrire longer and courbs outwards, like the grasshoppers. Those insert in the ground the point of their tail, for y dposer, in autumn, of the ufs ramasss. They are preserved hidden all the winter your and sine cruribus, pennisque reference mark aunts nis aquis intereunt ova: siccoque vere major proventus. Alii duplicem earum fetum, geminum exitium tradunt: Vergiliarum exortu parre, deinde AD Canis ortum ob -. Mori matres quum pepererint, certum is, vermicidal statim circa fauces enascente, which eas strangulat. serpentem, quum libuit, necant singulae, faucibus ejus. Not nascuntur nisi rimosis locis. In India ternum pedum longitudinis ess traduntur, believed ribus and feminibus serrarum usum praebere, quum ina -. vento in Maria aut stagnated decidunt. evenit, not (C prisci existimavere) madefactis nocturno. Iidem quippe nec volare eas noctibus pro pter will frigora tradiderunt: ignari etiam longinqua Maria ab iis transiri, continuata plurium dierum (quod maxim miremur) fam quoque, quam propter externa pabula EP -. grandiores cernuntur, and tanto stealing pennarumstridore, C aliae confine to bed credantur: solemqueobumbrant, sollicitis suspectantibus populis, did not sweat operiant terras. ciunt quippe transfer: and tamquam appeared m sitmaria trans isse, immensos tract permeant, diraque messibus. praises, the end flu spring, it in elt small sau- terelles noirtres, without legs, and which are tranent. In one rainy spring, the ufs took in one dry spring, the product is more abon -. authors prtendent that the espce is renewed and dtruit twice per annum that they produce with the rising of Pliades. that then, in the rising of the Heat wave, they die, and that others reappear ques others, they reappear with sleeping of Arcture. The females die aprs that they have jet their ufs, it is an unquestionable fact: a small worm which comes to them. Though they took by a so frivolous cause, only one can kill a snake by it seizing and it. They are born only in the places. It is told that in India they have three feet length, and that their legs and their thighs, S -. It is still for them another kind of dead: enleves of masses by wind, they Tom bent in sea or in tangs, and their destruction has place only by circumstances fortuitous, and not (as old it have pens) because they would have had the wings dampings by the humidit night that they do not steal during the night, causes cold they were unaware of that they cross tended Mrs. vast seas, by supporting the hunger during several days, which is more marvellous, in the intention gaining dmesure. the noise of their wings is so large, that one them eontegunt nube, multa contactu adurentes: omnia vero morsu erodentes, and drill quoque tectorum. Infesting Africa maxim coort, saepe rabble AD Sibyl- lina coacto remdia confugere, inopiae metu. naica regione lex etiam is for the third time anno debellandi eas, firstly ova obterendo, deinde fetum, postremo adultas: desertoris pna in eum, which cessaverit. insula certa will mensura praefinita is, quam singuli ene -. id colunt, adverso volatu occurrentes earum exitio. care and in Syria militari imperio coguntur. Vox earum proficisci ab occipitio videtur. will commissura scapularum habere quasi teeth existiman- tur, eosque inter terendo stridorem edere, circa duet aequinoctia maxim, sicut cicadae circa solstitium. keep silent locustarum, which and insectorum omnium quae coeunt, marem bearing femina, in eum feminarum lastly caudae. would take for a espce birds: they darken Mrs. the sun, and the anxious people follow them it, trembling that they do not cover their country indeed enough force in the vol. and, like if it conceals little to have crossed the seas, they cross counter immense, that they cover with naked disastrous with the harvests, Br lant what they touch, corroding all, to the doors. Those which are lvent of Africa infest on all Italy, and more than one once the Roman people, me NaC of the famine, was oblig to resort to the remdes. In Cyrnaque, a law orders to make them the war three times the Anne, initially by crasant their ufs, then by killing the small ones, finally in extermi- nant the large ones: one punishes as dsertor whoever a measurement which each inhabitant must bring to my -. these people rvrent the graculus (jackdaw), which steals the meeting of the grasshoppers for the dtruire. is oblig, to kill them, to employ the help of the troops because this flau is rpandu on almost all them. Parthes look them like one. The voice of the grasshoppers seems to leave. One thinks that the joint of the paules they have like teeth, whose friction produces the its sourness and perant that they return, especially to both quinoxes, like the terelles cicadas of the solstices is done like that of all the insects in which the copulation takes place: the female carries the mle, out of collapsible Re against him the extrmit of the tail they remain. Nam and formicae similem ovis vere: and hae communi- lay laborem: sed apes useful faciunt cibos, hae idiot -. ac if quis comparet ONERA corporibus earum, F teatur nullis portione transfer ess raise. Aversae postremis pedibus moliuntur raised. And iis reipublicae ratio, memoria, cleaned. Semina sprinkled condunt, rursus in fruges exeant E terius will ignara, certi dies AD recognitionem mutuam nun -. people cum obviis qudam collocutio atque percunctatio. Silicas itinere earum adtritos videmus, and in opre mitam factam, quis dubitet qualibet in Re quid pos -. In all this espce the mles are smaller only the females. The ants, in spring, produce the mun. but the bees compose them they-Mrs. nour- riture, the ants do not make that to collect theirs compares their burdens with the volume of their body, one will be appropriate that, proportion keeps, no animal does not have. They carry them with their mouth. the load is too heavy, they are turned over, the pous- feels with the feet of derrire, by making effort with find a form of rpublic, mmoire. They corrode the grains before of which are too large to enter the store are mouills by the rain, they carry them outside and them. During full moon, they work Mrs. the night, and put back new moon. And as each one carts of sound ct without seeing those which are occupy elsewhere, they have their days of with which eagerness they arrtent and stones uss by their passage, of the paths beaten in the ground which they cross to go the work:. Indic formic eornua, Erythris in aede Herculis. in regione septentrionalium Indorum, which Dardae vo -. Ipsis color felium, magnitudo iEgypti luporum. Erutum hoc ab iis tempore hiberno, Indi furantur aes- tivo fervore, conditis propter vaporem in cuniculos for- micis: quse tamen odore sollicitt provolant, crebro- that lacrant, quamvis praevelocibus camelis fugientes. Feritasque Tanta pernicitas is cum has more with laughed. Multa autem insecta and to confine to bed nascun -. firstly vere, and spissatus plate in magnitudinem milii Co -. India porrigitur vermiculus parvus, and triduo eruca: quae adjectis diebus adcrescit, immobilis, duro cortice: AD tactum tantum movetur, araneo adcreta, quam chry- sallidem appellant: rupto deinde cortice volt papilio. great example of what in any thing the conti -. Of all can very the vivans, they only, with the man, bury their deaths. The horns of an ant of India, fasteners in the temple of Hercules Erythres, have T a wonder. The ants draw gold from the mines in the country of the Indians whom they extracted during the winter, the Indians theirs drobent during the heats of T, when they are withdraw in undergrounds, causes cha- them: however, informed by the sense of smell, they launch out on the kidnappers, and often put them in pices, malgr the rapidit camels which serve their escape. Such are the speed and the frocit which join in. Many insects have an origin cement spring it sticks the sheet of the rapha- naked, and, condenses by the sun, it rduit the large sor of a birdseed. L leaves a very small worm which, three aprs days, is a caterpillar dant a few days, takes increase, remains motionless, revtue a hard film: it stirs up only when it is touched it is envelope of a fabric which resembles a fabric of araigne, and it is named. Of his animalibus, quae ex Hgno, aut in ligno nascuntur. eo, sed etiam tabani ex eo nascuntur: and alia, ubicum- that humor is nimius: sicut will intra hominem taeniae trice- num pedum, aliquando and plurium longitudine. Jam in edge exanimi, and quoque viventium hominum capillo: qua fditate and Sulla dictator, and Alcman ex clarissimis Grciee poetis, obiere. dem and aves infestt: phasianas vero interimit, nisi. munem hoc malo credunt, and oves. and vestis gnre, praecipue lanicio interemptarum has lupis. Quoque Aquas quasdam, quibus lavamur, ferti- liores ejus generis, iuvenio apud autores. etiam cerae id gignant, quod minimum animalium exis -. Alia rursus generantur sordibus has radio solis. then chrysalis: finally, of the broken film flies away. Animals which are born from wood or in wood rain generates in the ground some others are in gendrs in wood non-seulement the cossus occurs there, but the tabanus comes from wood Mrs. of others are born O everywhere the wet one is superabundant: thus the tnia, length of thirty feet, and sometimes da- vantage, are formed in the intrior of the man. Which is smallest of the animals. One finds insects Mrs. in the died flesh, and until hair of the alive man: vermin dgotante, by which died dictated it tor Sylla and Alcman, one of the most famous pals of. It torments as the birds, and keep silent Mrs. the pheasants, less as they are not rolled in the pous -. One only believes, among the animals hair, seu- lement in is free for it, as well as the sheep it is generated in some toffes, especially in those which are done with wool of sheep keep silent by. I also find in the authors whom certain water O we bathe produce much of these in -. the wax Mrs. produces of them one which one believes tre it in the refuse of other insects which, by the force of. Animal cui cibi exitus not is. 34- Is animal ejusdem temporis, infixo semper sanguini capite vivens, atque ita intumescens, unum animalium cui cibi not sit exitus: dehiscitque nimia. lied gignitur, in bubus frequens, canibus Ali -. iEque reflected sanguinis and hirudinum generi in. Is and volucre canibus peculiare suum malum, aures maxim lancinans, quae defendi morsu not queunt. Idem pulvis in lanis and jacket tineas crt. nem humorem absorbens, ariditatem ampliat. Is earum genus tunicas sweated will tra -. their legs postrieures, leap as from the sau- teurs. of others are born in the wet poussire from. Animal sins led for the excrmens. In Mrs. season sees an animal which always saw the tte plunges in the blood, with which it is gorged, and it is the only one in which them alimens do not have an exit: it crve of rpltion, and gives itself death in. One never finds it on the btes of nap, but often on the bufs, sometimes on the dogs, subjects all espce of vermin: it is the only one which attacks the ewes and the chvres. sweat, which live in the marshes, have a thirst for blood also thundering, because they plunge them pareillement there. It is still a kind of flau garlic which sticks spcialement to the dogs, them dchire especially the ears, which they cannot dfendre with their. Of Mrs. the poussire produces the tineas in wool and in the toffes, especially when a arai- gne is there in Mrs. time contains: this one, tou- altre days, and absorbing all the humidit, increases. The tineas are also generated in the books. It is a espce which trane its tunic the manire of the limaons. but one aperoit his feet vermiculi ficorum and piri, and peuces, and cynacanthae, and. Venenum hoc ease medicantur: quibus demptis. Rursus alia will gnera culicum acescens will natura. Quippe quum and in nive candidi inveniantur, and vetustiore vermiculi: in mdia quidem altitudine rutili (nam and ipsa nix vetustate rubescit), hirti pilis, gran -. animal Ignium: pyralis, sive pyraustes. Gignit aliqua and contrarium naturae ele -. Siquidem in Cypri rariis fornacibus, and medio igni, majoris muscae magnitudinis volt pennatum qua- drupes: appellatur pyralis, has quibusdam pyrausta. diu is in ign, vivit: quum evasit longiore paulo volatu. Hypanis fluvius in Ponto, circa solstitium of fert acinorum effigy held membranas: quibus erum- pit volucre quadrupes supradicti modo, nec ultra unum diem vivit, unde hemerobion vocatur. ab.initio AD finem septenarii sunt numeri: culici and worm -. die parvenu their entirety increase, they. The cantharides come from the small worms of the fig trees, the pear tree, the peuce, the cynacanthe. The wings of these poisonous insects are their antidote: if one them enlve, the poison is mortal. Of another ct, the acid fermentation produced of others in snow. and when snow is old, it prsente also the small ones towards: those are red an average depth (snow it-Mrs. reddens into growing old), hris- ss of hairs, a big size, and almost motionless. The animal which is in the flames: pyralis or pyrauste. bronzes, in Cyprus, one sees stealing in the medium of the flames a quadrupde garlic which has the size of a large fly: it is called pyralis. others name it pyrauste. as long as it is in fire if it flies away some distance. Bridge, entrane in its water of the membranes lgres which have the shape of grapes, and which he leaves a fly four feet, similar to the pyrauste, and who saw only one day, which made it name hmrobion. the others espces this class, lasts it is mark miculo for the third time septeni: corpus ~parientibus, quater septeni. Mutationes, and in alias appeared forwarded, trinis aut qua -. Cetera ex his pennata, autumno fere Mo riuntur: tabani quidem etiam caecitate. exanimatis, if cinere condantur, repeated vita. Animalium omnium per singula will membra, naturae, and historiae. Quae apices habent, quae cristas. Nunc per singulas corporis leave, praeter jam dictated, membratim tractetur historia. Caput habent cuncta, quae sanguinem. paucis animalium, nec nisi volucribus, apices, diversi quidem generis: Phnici plumarum srie, E medio eo exeunte alio: pavonibus, crinitis arbusculis: stympha -. quae ab illo galerita appellata quondam, postea gallico vocabulo etiam legioni nomen dederat alaudae. and cui plicatilem cristam dedisset will natura: per mdium caput has rostro residentem and fulicarum generi ddit: cirros pico quoque Martio, and grui distinguished Balearicae. tatissimum gallinaceis, corporeum, serratum: nec carnem id ess, nec cartilaginem, nec callum swears by the septnaires numbers: for the cousin and the worm misseau, three times seven days for the viviparous ones, four times Sept. the transformations and mtamorphoses are done. Those which are garlics took almost all in autumn: the tabanus die some -. One points out to the life the flies which are. Caractres and history of the animals compars members members. At which is the brushes, crtes. All that has T said, let us join the history dtaille each part of the body. All the animals which have blood have a tte. a small number of them, and only among the oi- buckets, have the tte surmounts plumes of diffrentes. place of which it of lve a cave the peacocks, one have grette nets ramifis. the stymphalide, a huppe. bird that this kind of ornament made call galrita formerly, and who, since, has donn a lgion his name. We have indiqu that which has reu nature a crte which folds up volont. it has donn with foulques band which is tightened since the nozzle juice that in the medium of the tte. to the peak of Mars and the crane that the crte charnue and scallops cocks: one could say that it is a flesh, neither a cartilage, nor a callosit. it is a substance particulire. rinorum, and serpentum, variis dated sunt modis: sed qu swears cornua intelligantur, quadrupedum tan generi -. Actaeonem enim, and Cipum etiam in latina his -. Nec alibi major natur lascivia. Aliis simplicia tribuit, C in eodem gnre known -. digitosque emisit ex iis: unde platycerotas vocant. ramosa capreis, sed parva: nec fecit decidua. in anfractum arietum generi, ceu caestus daret: infested. In hoc quidem gnre, and feminis tribuit: in mul -. contorta, and in lev fastigium exacuta, C will lyras diceres, strepsiceroti, quem addacem Africa appellat. eadem, C aures, Phrygiae armentis: troglodytarum, in terram directa: qua of caused obliqued cervice pascuntur. Aliis singula, and haec medio capite, aut naribus, C dixi -. Jam quidem aliis AD incursum robusta, aliis AD ictum: aliis adunca, aliis redunca: aliis AD jactum. with the crtes of the dragons, one does not find anybody who them. Various espces of horns: in which animals they are. Horns of diffrentes kinds have T nes gift much animals, as well fluviatile as marine and rampans. but the horns themselves are R serfs with the quadrupdes. because the adventure of Acton, and Mrs. that of Cipus, about which speak the Latin historians. the weapons of the animals are one of its plays: tantt it has them divided in branches, as those of the stags tantt it did them simple, as the door this espce of stags which one has, by this reason, nomms subulons. of other times it has donn to them the shape of hands: it made some leave the fingers. L horns oarswomen, but small, and which do not fall to the blier from the twisted horns, like if it and desired to arm it decestes. to the bull, horns direct in before this dernire espce, the females are provided with it in the greatest number, nature has donn of it only with. The horns of the chamois are curved in arrire. Africa call addax, have his draw up them, contour nes, finish at a peak, and similar the form of one. The bufs of Phrygie have the mobile horns as the ears those of the troglodytes have them diri- ges towards the ground, this is why they feed oblique -. pluribus modis: supina, convexa, conversed, omnia. iter: corporea haec, sicut cerastis: aliquando and singula. Cocbleis semper bina: and C proteudantur, rsiliant ac. Urorum potant septentrional cornibus barbari: ur- ' naque bina capitis unius cornua implent. pud our in laminas trans secta lucent, atque etiam lumen inclusum latius fundunt: multasque alias AD delicias conferuntur, nunc tincta, nuiic sublita, nunc quae cestrota picturae gnre di -. Bus autcm undermined, and in mucrone dmuni. Cervis autem tota solida, and slow train. Bang attritis ungulis, cornua unguendo. C in ipsis vventium corporibus ferveuti will cera flectan- tur, atque incised nascentium in diversas leave tor- queantur, C singulis capitibus quaterna trusting feminis plerumque sunt, C in pcore multis ovium nulla, nec cervarum, nec quibus multifidi fags, nec solidipedum ulli, excepto asino Indico, which uno armatus. Bisulcis bina tribuit will natura: nulla superne. sumi, easy coarguuntur cervarum will natura, quae neque teeth habent, neque C ponds, nec tamen cornua. Cerebrum omniajiabent animalia quas sangui- nem: etiam in husband, quae mollia appellavimus, quamvis. as Cauniens are born animal affects of spleen also are naturally bald people such are the ostriches and the watery corbel, which has of it shooting its name. The woman seldom loses her hair, the eunuque one never, and any man before the use of. The hair which furnish them by ties infrieures with the tte, and the rgion of the temples and of. The man is only ani- evils which becomes bald person, the exception of those which. The man is also only, with the horse, which it hair bleaches but, in the man, the bleached hair of the antrieure part of the tte always smells the first, then those of the part. At a trs-small number of men the crne is divided into two on the top of the tte. crne are flat, thin, dpourvus of marrow, and joined together by joinings denteles. cannot runir. any more but one can remove a part without causing of it death: a scar replaces it. We said that the crne is trs-weak in the bear, trs-hard in the parrot, when we milked. All the animals which have blood have a cer- calf those Mrs. of the sea which we have calls mum and humidissimum, omnium that viscerum frigidis- simum, duabus supra subterque membranis velatum, quarum alterutram rumpi mortiferum is sine venis, and reliquis sine pingui. dullam eruditi docent, quoniam coquendo durescat. Mini omnium cerebro medio insunt ossicula parva. in infantia palpitt, nec corroboratur handle primum. proximumque clo capitis, sine edge, sine cruore. Hanc habent sensus arcem: hoot venarum omnis has cord screw tended, difficulty desinit: difficulty culmen Al tissimum, difficulty lied is regimen. malium in will priora pronum, quia and sensus handle our ten -. Ab eo proficiscitur somnus: hinc capitis nutatio. Qu cerebrum not habent, not dormiunt. capite iness vermiculi sub linguae inanitate, and circa articulum, qua caput jungitur, numro viginti pro -. molluscs, such as the polyps, have one of them, though they nellement largest and wettest it is coldest of the viscres, and the two membranes which it enve- loppent over and by which been able lower parts can Romanian tre neither one nor the other without causing death the man has the brain larger than the woman the man and in the other animals, the brain does not have struits teach only it diffre marrow, because it medium of the only one which it brain palpitates in childhood. it takes consistency only aprs the first tests of the word. It is of all the viscres more lev, closest to the vote of the tte, and only which has neither flesh, nor blood. It is the station lev O sigent the directions it is L that go and finish all the veins which leave the cur. it is the climax, the body. it is plac the antrieure part, because the directions have in the tte, so much under the concavit of the language than auprs of the vertbre which joint the tte with the neck, of small towards which are twenty. Auribus: quae sine auribus, and sine audiant foraminibus. Nec in alia leaves feminis majus im -. and viris, aurum gestare eo loci, disappointed existimatur. malium aliis raise, aliis undervalue scissse, ac velut divisae: sorici pilosae. bus animal dumtaxat generantibus, excepto vitulo marino, atque delphino, and qu cartilaginea appella -. Haec cavernas tantum habent aurium loco, praeter cartilaginea, and delphinum, quem tamen. nec olfactus vestigia habent, quum olfaciant sagacissime. Pennatorum animalium buboni tantum and oto plumae, velut aures: ceteris cavernae AD auditum. mentorum gnre indicia animi prferunt: fessis mar- cidae, micantes pavidis, subrectae furentibus, resolutae. Ears: animals which hear without ears and holes. The man alone has the motionless ears. from Flaccus from this part of the body cune other comes for which the women lavish more dpenses, by the pearls that they suspend the East there, the men them-Mrs. have glory to carry animals, they are more or less tall: adits and like divisions in the stags alone, and border of. All the viviparous ones have the body ext. laugher of the oue, except the marine calf, the dolphin, those which we have cartilagineux calls, and the last vipres., the exception of cartilagineux and the dolphin, have auditive holes instead of ears: however it is manifest that the dolphin hears, because music the charm, and it is let take, tonn by the noise. 11 does not have either the body of the sense of smell, and however this direction is at his place trs-end. the bubo and the otus only have feathers in fawn of oreil- the others have auditive holes of the animals ruails and serpens. ot all the btes of nap, the ears indicate the affections intrieures: flasks, tressaillantes, draw up or hanging, according to whether the animal is fatigu, effray, furious. Facis homini tantum, ceteris bone, aut will rostra. Frons and aliis, sed homini tantum trstitiae, hilaritatis. percilia homini, and pariter and alternate mobilia, and in iis. Superbia aliubi conceptaculum, sed difficulty. In cord nascitur, hoots undergoes, difficulty pendel. Abruptiusque Nihil altius simul invenit in corpore, ubi. Of oculis: quae sine oculis animalia: quae singulos oculos tantum. Subjacent oculi, leave corporis pretiosissima, and which lucis usu vitam distinguishing died animalium hi: ostreis nulli: quibusdam concharum. Pectins enim, Si quis digitos adversum hiantes. not is: oculorum effigies inest, if quis praetentam. quos leucos vocant, altero oculo carere tradunt. augurii, flying quum AD austrum, septentrionemve:. The man alone has a face the other animals have. Some have a face but in the man alone it indicates sadness, the joy, Cl -. has two eyebrows which are driven together or alternated tivement: a part of me y rside also to refuse us or authorize, it is by them especially that elsewhere, but its sige is L does not have trouv of place more leve and more escarpe O it. Eyes: animals without eyes or which have only one it. The eyes is with the lower part it is the prcieuse part of the body, and which, by the use of the lumire. all animals: the hutres do not have any for some stirs up the fingers in front of their opened shell, Re -. the moles do not have the direction of the sight but one finds the appearance of the eyes, if one enlve a membrane ten -. that in the espce of will hrons, those which one calls leucos. solvi enim pericula and metus telling custis nec cicadis ess dicit. Oculi homini tantum diverso colours: cleris. Atque Sed in homine numerosissimae varietatis differentiae: grandiores, modici, parvi, prominentes, quos hebetiores putant: conditi, quos clarissime cer -. Praeterea alii contuentur longinqua. alii nisi. solis report, nubilo die not cernentium, nec post oc -. Alii interdiu hebetiores, noctu pr33ter ceteros. Of geminis pupillis, aut quibus noxii Visus be -. see only one it: they are of trs-good forecasts when they fly about midday or north, because they announce that the dangers and alarms are dissipated. Nigidius says that the grasshoppers and the cicadas do not have. At let us limaons, this body is remplac by two small horns which probe the way alvo putent: and cervo in cauda, aut intestinis. tantam habent amaritudinem, C has canibus not attin -. Is autem nihil aliud, quam purgamentum pes- simumque sanguinis, and ideo amarum is nulli is, nisi sanguinem habentibus. The books have two livers with of transfer of Briletum and Tharne, and in Chersonnse. Gall: O and at which it is double whose gall is not log in the liver. In the liver is the gall, which does not have T donn. In Naxos, it has a trs-large and double gall. so that, under these two reports/ratios, it is a wonder. The horses, the mules, the nes, the stags, the roe-deers, the wild boars, the camels, the men, in small number, are dpourvus, and that-L enjoy one sant more robust and live longer -. There are some who think than the gall of the horse is, not in the liver, but in the belly, and that of the stag in the tail or the intestines as are so bitter, as the dogs do not touch thing there that a excrtion, and the most vicious part of blood, and it is for that which it is bitter exists it only in the reoit of the cur, to which it is attach, and the rpand. The black bile causes the madness the man, and death if it is rejete completely: also this is to tablir. Adeo magnum is in hac leaves virus, quum. lorem quoque oculis aufert: illud quidem redditum, etiam ahenis: nigrescuntque contacted eo: semi quis -. tum will altra intestino jungitur, in corvis, coturnicibus, phasianis: quibusdam intestino tantum, C columbis. drunk portione maxim copiosum, and piscibus. plerisque louse intestino, sicut accipitri, milvo. in jecore is and bus cetis: vitulis quidem marinis. Haruspices id Neptuno C humoris potentiae dica- vere: geminumque flees divo Augusto, quo die apud. Quibus crescat cum luna and decrescat jecur. Murium jecusculis fibr AD numerum lunae in mense congruere dicuntur, totidemque inveniri, quotum lumen ejus sit: prterea bruma increscere. niculorum in Btica saepe gemin reperiuntur. a prvention fclieu counters the caractre of a man, that of saying, it has bile so much the poison of this vsicule is disastrous when it exerts his action on me chpar all the body, it changes Mrs. the color of the eyes rejection to the outside, it tarnishes bronze: all is blackened. That one thus does not thunder oneself that it is L the venom of the serpens: in the Bridge, those which kidneys, and holds only by a ct the intestine in the corbels, the ruails, the pheasants the intestine only lies in some animals, like the pigeons, it -. Few birds have gall in. That of the serpens and fish is proportion nellement larger in the majority of the birds it tightens all along the intestine, as in the pervier. Moreover, all the ctacs have gall in the liver: that of marine calves is vant for several. From that of the bulls one draws a color from gold. The haruspices have consacr Neptune gall, as in the victim offered by divine Auguste, the day O Animaux of which the liver crot and dcrot with the moon of the haruspices, and wonders which are referred to it. It is said that in the liver of the rats, the number of the lobes corresponds to the month of the moon, that one finds some as much as the moon has days that moreover they enlarge rum rubetarum will altra will fibra has formicis not attingitur. Volaterrano dracones emicuisse of extis lseto prodigio traditur: and profecto nihil incredibile sit, existimanti- drunk, Pyrrho rgi, quo die periit, prcisa hostiarum Ca pita repsisse, sanguinem suum lambentia. ab inferiore viscerum leaves separantur membrana, quse prsecordia appellant, quia cordi pretenditur, quod Grci. will cera, membranis propriis, ac velut vaginis inclusit pro videns will natura: in hac flees and peculiaris caused vicinitas. accepted subtilitas lied: ideo nulla is I.E.(internal excitation) caro, sed. quod titillatu maxim intelligitur alarum, AD quas undergoes, not alibi tenuiore cute humana, ideo scabendi dulce -. spectaculis mortem cum risu itrajecta prcordia adtu -. two lobes with the liver of rabbits never to the second frog rubtes lobe *, causes. keeps itself trs-length-time, and of the siges provided us examples of livers conservs seven years. The viscres of the serpens and the lzards are. One reports that Ccina de Volaterre saw, by a happy wonder, serpens to leave the entrails of a victim. and, certainly, the fact will not have anything incredible for those which admit that the day O took king Pyrrhus, the ttes victims, spares of the body, are tranrent by lchant their own blood the man are spares infrieure part of the viscres by a membrane that we name prcordia (dia- phragme), because it is tightened with the front of the cur, and that the Greeks have appele. breathe by openings nomms marks, percs along the cts of their body, and who leave pntrer the air in tra- ches or vessels lastic which, by ramifying the infinite one, lead it on all the points entire a lung bourdonnemens that the various insects make hear are not voices themselves, in what they are not produced by the outgoing air by a larynx, but well by the friction or the shock of some their solid parts ones against. In the cicadas, it is a particular instrument, the base of the abdomen in the crickets, the friction of the thighs against the covers of the wings in the cousins, the friction of its wings in the air in the crambyx, the friction of the horn -. the insects, like all the other animals, have a feeder fluid which holds place of blood to them but it is white, and does not circulate in a systme of. 11 sweats of their intestinal channel, and bathes all. Carus has observ some rgu -. Sepi in husband sanguinis vicem alramentum. sche is not blood, but. This mollusc has blood nanmoins, and a circulatory apparatus. Purpurarum generi infector ille sweated crimson is also a excrmentitielle liquor, and not the blood of the murex. its true blood is transparent, as in all them. Insecta not videntur nervos habere. Some direction which the word bully boy has here, the proposal is inaccurate. All the insects have a brain, a espce of marrow pinire. Their marrow is a nervous cord doubles, which crawls along the belly, and has, of interval in interval, the nuds of O the nervous branches equipped with grease leave, and Mrs. in their first tat, that of larva, they have of it large a quantit, which must be used to them of provision and food while they are the tat of chry -. the insects have flesh, it is -- to say muscles for their mouvemens, like the merry animals sup-. it is enough to be convinced some to open the corselet of a scarabe or the thighs of a grasshopper like very other, but its color is white like that of. Pline dcrit L only the membranous envelope or horn which holds place the time, with the insects, of skin and skeleton but this envelope contains the intrior of the viscres, the traches, the nerves, in a word, an organization trs-complicates and trs -. See the Feature of Lyonnet on the caterpillar of the wood of dcrite here with more loquence than exactitude to observe than through hives of horns, and y not having put a great continuation, the old ones have laiss chapper several facts. what is all the more excusable, that the patience of modern is Mrs. managed to dcouvrir of them some only in these dernires annes, Schirach and Huber having addition much what Raumur had handwritten report ques carries commisin. the dition of Parma offers it. In Aristote, at which Pline has loan close that all that he says of the bees, one reads (llist. 64) Kvva-I but in Hsychius (Lexicon, p. finds K6/xjua o-is

No comments: