Page:The Deipnosophists (Volume 3).djvu/408

This page needs to be proofread.

Slave. Good-bye; you fit your master to a wrinkle.

Cook. It is we cooks who clip the victim's hair,
And sacrifice, and offer up libations,
Because the gods attend to us especially,
As it was we who made these great discoveries,
Which tend especially towards holy living.

Slave. Pray leave off talking about piety!

Cook. I beg your pardon. Come and take a snack
Along with me, and get the things prepared.—Anon.

Cratinus. (Book xiv. § 81, p. 1057.)

On the light wring of Zephyr that thitherward blows,
What a dainty perfume has invaded my nose;
And sure in yon copse, if we carefully look,
Dwells a dealer in scents, or Sicilian cook!—W. J. B.

Bato. (Book xiv. § 81, p. 1058.)

                Good, good, Sibynna!
Ours is no art for sluggards to acquire,
Nor should the hour of deepest midnight see
Us and our volumes parted:—still our lamp
Upon its oil is feeding, and the page
Of ancient lore before us:—What, what hath
The Sicyonian deduced?—What school-points
Have we from him of Chios? sagest Actides
And Zopyrinus, what are their traditions?—
Thus grapple we with mighty tomes of wisdom,
Sifting and weighing and digesting all.—Anon.

Amphis. (Book xv. § 42, p. 1103.)

A. Milesian hangings line your walls, you scent
Your limbs with sweetest perfume, royal myndax
Piled on the burning censer fills the air
With costly fragrance.

B. Mark you that, my friend!
Knew you before of such a fumigation?—J. A. St. John.