I need hardly refer to the well-known line in Macbeth.
PAGE 44.
Cassius the rake, and Maenius the buffoon.
This is nearly identical with a line in Howes, of which it may very possibly be an unconscious remembrance. Here and in other places I have called Nomentanus, metri gratia, by his family name Cassius, though it is nowhere, I believe, applied to him by Horace. Pantolabus is supposed to be the same as Maenius, whom Horace mentions elsewhere, and I have been only too glad to take the supposition for granted. Generally, where a Horatian personage is known to have had two names, I have used that one which the exigences of the verse recommended.
PAGE 61.
O heaven-abandoned wretch! is all this care.
O inconsistent wretch! is all this coil.
GIFFORD'S Juvenal, Sat. xiv.
PAGE 94.
And each man's lips are at his neighbour's ear.
Perhaps a recollection of Pope's line (Satires of Dr.
Donne), "When half his nose is in his prince's ear."