Sc. 3.
"The slave of nature and the son of hell."
So in The Honest Whore (Part I. i. 6) we have,
"You [harlots] are the miserablest creatures breathing,
The very slaves of nature."
But that expression may have been taken from this very place.
"Why strewest thou sugar on that bottel'd spider?"
This is the orthography of the folio; the 4tos read here botled, but in iv. 4 as the folio. Now as bottled has, as far as my knowledge extends, but one sense, and one which would give no meaning here, it may be intended to show that the verb comes from bottel or bottle in the sense of truss, bundle, as a bottle of hay or straw, a sense which it retains in various compounds in the provincial dialects. 'Bottel'd spider' would then answer to 'bunch-back'd toad' a few lines further on. If this should not satisfy, we might read bloated spider, as in Cowper, Task. v. 442.