[435] “Naples’ canker”—the pox.

[436]Cf. Hall, Prol. B. iii. ‘Satyres ... packstaff plain.’”—Grosart.

[437] “There is a certain kind of people to whom it is naturally given, either by touching or sucking, to cure the wounding of venomous serpents; called Psylli (a people of Libya) and Marsi, people of Italy, bordering upon the Samnites, and Aequiculania, and those that were called by the ancient writers Ophiogenes, which dwelt about Hellespont, as both Pliny, Aelianus, and Aeneas Silvius do witness.”—Topsel’s Hist. of Serpents, ed. 1658, p. 624.

[438] Washed with Cosmetics.

[439] Gr. κίναιδος.

[440] The measures—a stately dance.

[441] The author of a treatise (Περὶ Απίστων) on mythology.

SATIRE II.

Difficile est Satiram non scribere.Juve.

I cannot hold, I cannot, I, endure
To view a big-womb’d foggy cloud immure