l'an.z. Sect-3- Remedies againft difcontents. Memb.5 • behad.Butwaslhegood~ Had lhebeenforryed peradvenwreasrhatE- 34r _ phejian widow in Petronizu, by fome fwaggering fouldier, lhee might nor ---- have hddout. Many aman would be willingly rid ofhis: before thou wall: ·' boun'd,now thou art free i "and'tt$ but afolly to love thyfetters tho,.gh they ustulti'ft {;( ofgold.Come into a third place,you ll1all have an ag,d father ftghing for ~~~;;,:;;~;~: afoo,a prettie cl)ilde, . t In;pube pec1m quale velmtpta t Hor. - · Motltret Thracumpec1ora. --He now lyesalleepe, Would make an impious Thracian weepe. , Or fome fine daughter that died young,Nondum exptrta novi gaudiaprifJM tori. Ora forlorn [on for his deceafed father.But why~ Priorexiit,prtor intr_dyit jhecame firll:,and he mull: go firll:. • Ttt fmjfrapitu, heu,&c. What • Hor,lib. ' · wouldlt thou have rhelaws ofnature alterd,and him ro live alwaiesf 'Jtd, od.'•· C.2far,At•gujlw,Aicibiadu,Galen, Arijlot!e, loll their fathers young~ And whyontheotherlide lhouldll:thoufoheavily take rhe death of thy little fon, ~t N111JJ quia neefato,meritanec morte pert bat, . >+ Pirg+vEn. sed mtfor ante dteflt-- hce died beforehis rime per_ haps; notyercome to thefollhce ofhis age, yet, wa~ he not morralk Hear that divine • Epic1etzu, Ifthou covet thy JVije,friends,children jhottldlive al. • cap. • 9· si id waics, thot<art afoolc. He was a ~ne childe_indeed, dignas Apollineio lachry- ~:::;::,~;,~~"' 1/'U,a fweer,1lovmg,a fa1re,a wmy chrlde,ofgreat hope,auorher Eteonew, P"P""" vijVhom Pindarta the Poet, and Artjlidesthe Rhetorician fo much lament, ••"t,flulzuser but who can tell whether he.would have beene an honell: man~ Hee might have proved a theefe, a rogue,a fpendthrift, a difobedient fon, vexed and_ galled thee more then all the worId !:>'fide, hee might have wrangled with thee & difagteed,or with his brothers, as Eteocles andPolynices, and broke, x_7Jeur.quor thy heart, he is now gone to eternity as another Gar.ymede in the' floure of ~~~f:'J.:C~!'~' hisyourh,.u ifhe had ri(en,faith YP!tttarch, ftom the llJidftofafeaft, before y co/.fol.ad ~ he was dr.unk, the longerhe hadlived, the JVorfe he riiou!rUwve bew, & quo %!~;',f~;~~"' vztalong.or( Ambroje thmks) ctelpa nunJerojior, more linfull, more to an- jlor' dmj]it, fwer for bee wouldhave had. Ifhe was naught, thou mailf beeg!Jd he is '"' '•" ad •- gone; ifgood,be glad thou hadll: fuch afon. 0 r art thou lure he was good r ~';,"ffu~:,~;: Ir tn'ly be he was·an hypocnre· as many are, and howfoever he fpakethee qu•mhonvifaire, peradventure he prard am?ngll: the relhhat Icaro ·Mcnippus heard ac ~fq::::;:.'.f.;:: }t,pzt,:s whtfpenng place mLt~ctan, for hts fathers death,_ be~aufe be now ""''liqu,me kept h1m ll1orr,he was to mhent much goods, and many £11reManors after temultt~ziJinhis·death . Or put cafehewasvery good, fuppofethebelt, n•aynotrhy crd:"''·j." 1" p~<d, fon cxpoll:ulate with thee; as he did in thefame '- Lucian, why doft ~J ~fcfde~~~ .. thottlamertt !IIJ dcat;h, or call mee miforable that am lltllch more happy then lmt. thy felft~ what misfortrme M befalnepJ~ f Is it becaufe I am not bald, crooked, ~'~~~~:-~IJ.i old, rotten, a.s thou art'!_ Wha~ h_a71e I loft,fome fi[Ynter good cheare,gay cloathes, m~ mortuum ~?~ttfi~ke,finging, dtfnctng, ktrmg,merry _meettngs,thalami lubentias,&c._fs ;~~~[u::~~ that.t.t? !; tt~ot mu.ch better not to hunger at aUthen to eat: not to thirft the'! to feliciort <?tJt tot/rznk toflztts.fte thtrft:. no~ ~obe eole! ther: tl1en to pM o~ ~~o~hes todrivcarvay 17'~,~;::!:,~:~ <old~ Tote had more neederc]oyce that I amfreedftom difeafes, aguu, cares, gi~?anquia , . . . . . . Mn fom m~l"~~ fhe_x, ut tu, fa~te wgof~. meuMJru, &c. 0 Jemmr,qwJ ttbt 1ndewrin 'lJita boni .? nimirmn amici dicir ctrntU,~G. Longe l!lelt/14 llOn~furtrcqt~am edere;noJ~ fit ire, &c. Gaudt potiur quod morbor & febrts effugerim, angorera animt~ &c. E~ JUlatur qutd prodejf, quid lachryrme, &c. . X x· z anxieties,
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