To the lascivious pleasing of a lute!"—Rich. III. I. 1. Do.
[848] "All precious stones in general are improved in brilliancy by being boiled in honey, Corsican honey more particularly."—Hist. of World, XXXVII. 74. Bohn.
[849] Mullet.
[850] Cornish for brill and turbot.
[851] "Deceived and intoxicated with unreasoning affection." F.
[852] Refute.
[853] During the preceding dialogue Diogenes has probably come in with his tub. Going to a remote part of the stage, he has put it down and crawled into it.
[854] For the original of this scene and for some of the speeches, see North's Plutarch, IV. 311-312, Nutt; see also Lives of Philosophers, VI. 413.
[855] Does Diogenes go out here, or crawl into his tub, to emerge when Crysus speaks to him, III. iii?
[856] The house of Apelles: first inside, then in front.