Two distincts, division none,

Number there in love was slain.”

And,—

“Property was thus appalled,

That the self was not the same;

Single nature’s double name

Neither two nor one was called.”

[165]. Reusner adopts this first line from Ovid’s Fable of the Phœnix (Metam., bk. xv. 37. l. 3),—

“Sed thuris lacrymis, & succo vivit amomi.”

[166]. To render it still more useful, the words should receive something of classification, as in Cruden’s Concordance to the English Bible, and the number of the line should be given as well as of the Act and Scene.