Book v
. Chapter xxviii._
FOOTNOTES:
[770-3] Je m'en vay chercher un grand peut-estre.
[771-1] "Revenons à nos moutons,"--a proverb taken from the French farce of "Pierre Patelin," edition of 1762, p. 90.
[771-2] My appetite comes to me while eating.--MONTAIGNE: _Book iii. chap. ix. Of Vanity._
[771-3] See Heywood, page 11.
[771-4] See Heywood, page 14.
[771-5] See Heywood, page 11.
[771-6] See page 810.
[771-7] See Heywood, page 20.
[772-1] See Ovid, page 707.
[772-2] See Johnson, page 375.
[772-3] See Swift, page 292.
[772-4] See Heywood, page 18.
[772-5] See Plutarch, page 725.
[772-6] See Bacon, page 170.
[772-7] See Shakespeare, page 85.
[772-8] See Shakespeare, page 44.
[773-1] See Garrick, page 388.
[773-2] See Lyly, page 33.
[773-3] See Franklin, page 361. Also Diogenes Laertius, page 762.
[773-4] See Shakespeare, page 68.
[773-5] See Shakespeare, page 71.
[773-6] Isocrates was in the right to insinuate that what is got over the Devil's back is spent under his belly.--LE SAGE: _Gil Blas, book viii . chap. ix._
[773-7] I have other fish to fry.--CERVANTES: _Don Quixote,