[273] ] Sir George Etherege’s Man of the Mode, or Sir Fopling Flutter, act iv. sc. 1, 1676.
[274] ] Otway’s Friendship in Fashion, act ii. sc. 1, 1678.
[275] ] Etherege’s She wou’d if she cou’d, act iv. sc. 2, 1668.
[276] ] Sir Charles Sedley’s Mulberry Garden, act ii. sc. 2, 1668.
[277] ] Otway’s Friendship in Fashion, act i. sc. 1, 1678.
[278] ] Shadwell’s Virtuoso, act ii. sc. 2, 1676.
[279] ] By Dr. Charleton, and published as late as 1692.
[280] ] Oldham’s Paraphrases from Horace, book i. ode xxxi., 1684.
[281] ] Oldham’s Works, &c., 1684.
[282] ] Butler’s Hudibras, part ii. canto i., 1664. Stum is unfermented wine; and the term brisk applied to Champagne is here employed not to denote effervescence, but to indicate the contrast between the thick immature fluid and the clear carefully-made wines of the Champagne.