Appendix 403 



Page 



" And take with thee " — 1 A'ings xw. 3 260 



Honey brought to David's army — S Samuel x\u. 2^ . 260 

 Manna " and the taste of it " — Exodus xwi. ^i • ■ • 260 



First fruits — 2 Chronicles xxi. 5 260 



" Ye shall burn " — Leviticus \\. 11 260 



Bees unclean — Leviticus xi. 22.23 260 



Honey as first fruits, see Criiden's Concordance (com- 

 plete edition) " Honey " 260 



" He shall not see " — Jobxx. 17 . . . .... 260 



" He should have fed thee " — Psalms Ixxxi. 16 . . 261 



" Thus wast thou" — Ezekiel xvl is ■ ■ 261 



"iVIyraeat" — Ezekiel xy\. i<) 261 



"Judah" — Ezekiel xxvW. ly . 261 



Story of Samson — Judges x\v 261 



" He made him ride " — Z?£«/^r(7«o;«y xxxii. 13 . . . 262 



'' And they gave him " — Luke xxiv. 42 262 



" And I went unto " — Revelation x. <).\o . ... 262 



In the " Curious History of Insects," by Frank Cowan, we 

 read, " The Septuagint has the following eulogism on the 

 bee in Proverbs vi. 8, which is not found in the Hebrew 

 Scriptures. 



" ' Go to the bee, and learn how diligent she is, and what a 

 noble work she produces, whose labors kings and private men 

 use for their health ; she is desired and honored by all, and 

 though weak in strength, yet since she values wisdom she pre- 

 vails.' — Smith's Dictionary of the Bible." 



" There were figs and grapes " — Warner Library 



WorWs Best Literature. Egypt. Lit. . ... 262 



Greek and Roman Bee — see Clock's Symbolik der 



Bienen 264-5 



" Nor scythe nor famine " — Hesiod : Works and Days 266 

 " With milk and nectar " — Ovid : Meta., hk. i. ■ . . 266 



" The very cradle " — Virg, : Buc. Eel., iv 266 



" Hyrcania is very fertile " — Strabo : Geog. of Greece, xi. 7 267 

 metretes = about seven gallons 

 sixty medimni = " twelve " 

 " Here Mincius " (the river Mincius) — Virg. : Eel., vii, 267 



