Appendix 403 



Page 



"And take with thee " — 1 Kitigs -lav. 2, 260 



Honey brought to David's army — 2 Satmiel xvn. 29 . 260 



Manna " and the taste of it " — Exodus xvi. 31 ... 260 



First fruits — 2 Chronicles xxi. 5 260 



" Ye shall burn " — Leviticus n. 11 260 



Bees unclean — Leviticus xi. 22.23 260 



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

 plete edition) " Honey " 260 



" He shall not see " — Job xx. 17 260 



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



" Thus wast thou " — Ezekiel xm. 13 261 



" My meat " — Ezekiel x\\. 19 261 



"Judah" — Ezekiel xxvn. 17 261 



Story of Samson — Judges x\v 261 



" He made him uAe'''' — Deuterono7ny xxxii. 13 . . . 262 



"And they gave him" — Luke xxiv. /^2 262 



" 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, wliich 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 Libraiy 



VVorld^s 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. \. . . . 266 



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



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

 metretes = about seven gallons 

 si.xty medimni := " twelve " 

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



