Footnotes
[784:9] See Shakespeare, page [101].
[785:1] See Shakespeare, page [46].
[785:2] See Bacon, page [167].
[785:3] See Shakespeare, page [71].
[785:4] He had a face like a benediction.—Jarvis's translation.
[785:5] See Shakespeare, page [44].
[785:6] See Heywood, page [18].
[785:7] See Heywood, page [17].
[785:8] See Heywood, page [19].
[785:9] See Middleton, page [172].
[785:10] See Shakespeare, page [143].
[786:1] See Shakespeare, page [45].
[786:2] See Butler, page [211].
[786:3] See Chaucer, page [5].
[787:1] See Scott, page [493].
[787:2] See Heywood, page [10].
[787:3] See Heywood, page [20].
[787:4] See Wither, page [200].
[787:5] See Shakespeare, page [93].
[787:6] See Heywood, page [18].
[787:7] See Heywood, page [15]. Also Plutarch, page [740].
[787:8] See Marlowe, page [41].
[787:9] See Middleton, page [172].
[788:1] I would do what I pleased; and doing what I pleased, I should have my will; and having my will, I should be contented; and when one is contented, there is no more to be desired; and when there is no more to be desired, there is an end of it.—Jarvis's translation.
For let our finger ache, and it endues
Our other healthful members even to that sense
Of pain.—Othello, act iii. sc. 4.
[788:3] The painter Orbaneja of Ubeda, if he chanced to draw a cock, he wrote under it, "This is a cock," lest the people should take it for a fox.—Jarvis's translation.
[788:4] See Pliny the Younger, page [748].
[789:1] See Rabelais, page [773].
[789:2] Spenser: Britain's Ida, canto v. stanza 1. Ellerton: George a-Greene (a Ballad). Whetstone: Rocke of Regard. Burns: To Dr. Blacklock. Colman: Love Laughs at Locksmiths, act i.
[789:3] See Heywood, page [9].
[789:4] See Fortescue, page [7].
[789:5] See Rabelais, page [773]. Also Shakespeare, page [77].
[789:6] See Heywood, page [13].
[790:1] Sit thee down, chaff-threshing churl! for let me sit where I will, that is the upper end to thee.—Jarvis's translation.
This is generally placed in the mouth of Macgregor: "Where Macgregor sits, there is the head of the table." Emerson quotes it, in his "American Scholar," as the saying of Macdonald, and Theodore Parker as the saying of the Highlander.
[790:2] See Burton, page [187].
[790:3] See Heywood, page [18].
[790:4] See Spenser, page [28].
[790:5] See Middleton, page [173].
[790:6] See Heywood, page [11].
[790:7] See Chaucer, page [5].
[790:8] See Publius Syrus, page [708].
[790:9] See Rabelais, page [773].
[791:1] To everything there is a season, and a time to every purpose.—Ecclesiastes iii. 1.
[791:2] See Sterne, page [378].
[791:3] See Publius Syrus, page [712].
[791:4] See Chaucer, page [4].
[791:5] See Heywood, page [20].
[791:6] See Heywood, page [11].
[791:7] See Burton, page [193].
[792:1] See Middleton, page [172].
[792:2] See Middleton, page [174].
[792:3] Blessing on him who invented sleep,—the mantle that covers all human thoughts, the food that appeases hunger, the drink that quenches thirst, the fire that warms cold, the cold that moderates heat, and, lastly, the general coin that purchases all things, the balance and weight that equals the shepherd with the king, and the simple with the wise.—Jarvis's translation.
[792:4] See Heywood, page [15].
[792:5] See Longfellow, page [613].
[792:6] See Byron, page [554].
[[793]]
BARTHOLOMEW SCHIDONI. 1560-1616.
I, too, was born in Arcadia.[793:1]