[39] Appendix, p. 466.
[40] King James's Works, fol. from page 214 to 222.
[41] Naturall and Morall Historie of the Indies, p. 289.
[42] Silva Silvarum—Lassitude.
[43] History of life and death. Lord Bacon's Works, vol. iii. p. 377.
[44] Howell's Epist. Hoel. or Familiar Letters, p. 405.
[45] In the TEXNODAMIA or Marriage of the Arts, by Barten Holiday, 1680, there is a singular poem on the subject of Tobacco, where, in successive stanzas, if is compared to a musician, a lawyer, a physician, a traveller, a crittike, an ignis fatuus, and a whyffler. Beloe's Sketches, vol. ii. p. 10.
[46] Notes on Virginia, pp. 278, 279.
[47] Davies' Hist. of the Carriby Islands, fol. p. 192.
[48] Ramazzini also says that the breath of those who labour at tobacco is intolerably offensive, "efficit, ut tabacariarum semper fœteant animæ."