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[7] et solaciolum: the general sense is, ‘My love in playing with her sparrow finds amusement,—yes, and comfort, too, for by this means she stills the torturing flames of her passion.’ The play with the sparrow is indulged in both for its own sake and as a distraction from fiercer passion. Vv. 7 and 8 contain, therefore, a sort of rhetorical after-thought, and may properly be considered parenthetical; and while a noun could not stand directly as the subject of libet, solaciolum may yet, by virtue of the remote character of its modification in the afterthought, be allowed as an appositive to the subject. See Crit. App.


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