7° Mote.; his Sele-denyalt. youandyour Fathers houle that trou- bles 1 frae1 rum'Herode.r audivit, non licet tibi fratrl-S tui Philippi ux.oremhabere: quarr kguoque Habuit ante ipus», qui d1cebat:A- hab ® non cg®,'ed tu & dornrispatràs tui Ifraëlempcrvert c, a Seneca ep. 4.rag- vanimosnos. natura Pro- duxit,nobk gloriofum& extel(nt fpiritu t de- dit q'rceren- tern ubi ho neftimé, non uhi tu- tiJrné vat. Where `ore leek toget that Nobility of mint wich thePhrophets had, and Apoftles had,whlch fuch as ferver°ich s cannot have; for nothing takes away the libertyof the fpirit io much as the de fireof woldly things: thus .Ghrifo- f orne. It is beneath true Noblen°ifeof fpirit,toaime at no higher pitch in your delires and endeavours, then to pro- vide for your owne cafe and fafety, when publike ca.ufes for God and his people call you out to venture your felvcs. a Seneca in one of his Epiil tes, (peaking of a true raifed excellent fpi- rit, defc-ibex it to b° filch a one as feekes, where it may live moll horsefly and not 'moll fafely. Nature^ hath brought us forth magnanimaus, fayes he, it hath givenus a glorious and bfty fpirit ; what is that feeking where it may live hefl,nor whcreit may be mod fecure. What though you fhould tuf- fer fou thing ; it will be your honour, that
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