Both Uses of
lascivious
in
The Count of Monte Cristo
- He took Cucumetto one side, while the young girl, seated at the foot of a huge pine that stood in the centre of the forest, made a veil of her picturesque head-dress to hide her face from the lascivious gaze of the bandits.†
Chpt 33-34
- The two brigands looked at each other for a moment—the one with a smile of lasciviousness on his lips, the other with the pallor of death on his brow.†
Chpt 33-34 *
Definition:
-
(lascivious) excessively driven by, demonstrating, or provoking sexual desires