with(document) {
  getElementById('_orpharion').caption = 'The orpharion was essentially a wire-strung lute, with both instruments sharing the same tuning. This particular instrument has been copied from one made by Francis Palmer; its fingerboard was based on an exhibit from a museum in Frankfurt.';
  getElementById('_cittern').caption = 'The cittern was played with a plectrum, and was popular in both the 16th and 17th centuries. It was louder than the lute, and might be played in a crowded alehouse where the lute would be simply too quiet to be heard.';
  getElementById('_english-guitar').caption = 'In spite of its name, the English guitar had little in common with the guitar as we know it. It was more like a revival of the cittern, and was popular in England in the latter part of the 18th century. During the Napoleonic wars, it was taken by British troops to the Iberian Peninsula, where it was adopted by the Portuguese, and later became known as the Portuguese guitar.';
}
