[32:1] Ibid., ii., 98.
[32:2] The chief sources from which this description is compiled are:—“The Pilgrim,” iii. 6, iv. 3, v. 5; “The Honest Whore,” v. 12, 13; “The Changeling,” i. 2, iii. 3, iv. 3, v. 3; “Northward Ho,” iv. 1. For obvious reasons the specific references to every quotation are not given.
[41:1] Another interesting passage, no doubt satirical, but too long for quotation at length, occurs in “The Duchess of Malfi,” Act iv., Sc. 2: It begins:
“A mad lawyer and a secular priest
A doctor that hath forfeited his wits
By jealousy,” etc., etc.
CHAPTER III.
The Presentation of Madness—from the Standpoint of Literature.
“This mirthful comic style