notwithstanding are seldom set on the table, but each
one, as necessity urgeth, calleth for a cup of such
drink as him listeth to have, so that, when he has
tasted of it, he delivered the cup again to some one
of the standers by, who, making it clean by pouring
out the drink that remaineth, restoreth it to the
cupboard from whence he fetched the same. By this
device (a thing brought up at the first by Mnesitheus
of Athens, in conservation of the honour of Orestes,
who had not yet made expiation for the death of his
adulterous parents, Aegisthus and Clytemnestra) much
idle tippling is furthermore cut off; for, if the full
pots should continually stand at the elbow or near
the trencher, divers would always be dealing with
them, whereas now they drink seldom, and only when
necessity urgeth, and so avoid the note of great drinking,
or often troubling of the servitors with filling of
their bowls. Nevertheless in the noblemen’s
halls this order is not used, neither is any man’s
house commonly under the degree of a knight or esquire
of great revenues. It is a world to see in these
our days, wherein gold and silver most aboundeth,
how that our gentility, as loathing those metals (because
of the plenty) do now generally choose rather the
Venice glasses, both for our wine and beer, than any
of those metals or stone wherein before time we have
been accustomed to drink; but such is the nature of
man generally that it most coveteth things difficult
to be attained; and such is the estimation of this
stuff that many become rich only with their new trade
unto Murana (a town near to Venice, situate on the
Adriatic Sea), from whence the very best are daily
to be had, and such as for beauty do well near match
the crystal or the ancient murrhina vasa whereof
now no man hath knowledge. And as this is seen
in the gentility, so in the wealthy communalty the
like desire of glass is not neglected, whereby the
gain gotten by their purchase is yet much more increased
to the benefit of the merchant. The poorest also
will have glass if they may; but, sith the Venetian
is somewhat too dear for them, they content themselves
with such as are made at home of fern and burned stone;
but in fine all go one way—that is, to
shards at the last, so that our great expenses in
glasses (beside that they breed much strife toward
such as have the charge of them) are worst of all
bestowed in mine opinion, because their pieces do
turn unto no profit. If the philosopher’s
stone were once found, and one part hereof mixed with
forty of molten glass, it would induce such a metallical
toughness thereunto that a fall should nothing hurt
it in such manner; yet it might peradventure bunch
or batter it; nevertheless that inconvenience were
quickly to be redressed by the hammer. But whither
am I slipped?