Burton - PR2223 A1 1638

Love:M elan~holy. 450 ned his impudence, and infolency) that he wilhed it had been more and t Tib. ! mag- much better(he loved him dearely)lor hisfweet lake. No wonh is'emi- :~~~.'~i/,, nem in fuch lively perfons, all imperfections hid, non enim fa~ite de hu capacupu· quos plurimum ditigimll4, tttrpitudinem [ujpie~mur, for hearing, fioht tantquam. 4 tOilch,&c.ollr mindeand all ourfcnfes are captivated, omnes f~n{tu for: ~::;::~7:,. mofosdetel1At. Many men have bcene preferred tor theirperfonalone, tlon..it. chofen Kings,asamongft the Indians, .. rerjians. vEthiopians, ofold, the propcrcft man ofperfon the country could afford, was elected their Soveraigne Lord,qratior eft ptt!~hro veniens e ~or pore virtus,and fo have many other n:~tions thought and done, as t Curtit~s obfervcs, Ingcns e_ nim in ~orpori& majeJfate veneratio eft, tor there is a majellicall prefeAce in fuch men,and lofarre was beauty adored amongfi them, that nomaa wasthoughditto reigne, that was not in all parts compleat and fupereminent. AgiJ King of La~ed£mon had like tohave been depofcd,becaufe . hemarriedalidewife! they would not have their royal! ilfuedeaene- • . . . rare. Who would ever have thought that Adrian the!ourth, an EgalitlJ ~o~~ft~;:'" Monke'sbaftard(as •r•piritiS vuajfovius wrires in his life) inops a"'[ttu Rom. retillus ,[qt~alidus & mifer, a pooreforfaken child fiJOuld ever come to Ire Pope ot Rome. ButwhywJs it~ Er at a~riingeni•, fa~rmdiJ expeditJ • w .• cap.6 • tleganti (Drpore,fociefir l.tta ac hitari,(as he folloWes it out of • Nuhr.igt;_ ' fis,for hee plow_es with his heifer,)hee :naswile,Iearncd,doquenr,of a pleafant apromtlingcoumenaoce, a goodly proper man, bee had,ina word,a winning looke of his owne, and that carried it, for that he was cfpecially advanced. So Saul WM agoodlyperfonand afaire.VUaximintH elected Emperour,&c. Branchtu the fonncof Apoll•, whom he begot of lance,SII~~ronsda11ghter (faith Laflantitu )when he kept .King Admetus ;.~i:.l;•~~- beards in The.J!A!y, now growne aman was an earneft fuiterto his mother mag••.L•b ,, to know his father, theNymph denied him,bccaufe Apollo had conjured "'""""·cap. her to the contrary, yet overcome by his importunity atlaft the fent him ~~;:,;;t,'~~- to his father; whc~ he ~a me into Apollo's prefence, m~!tU Dei reverenter pido'Pauper ofculatru, bee earned htmfelfe fowdl, and was fo faue a young man, abundeefl<lo· that Apollo was infinitely taken with the beauty of his perfon, he could n~~'""' fcarce looke olfhim' an~lfaid he. \~as ~orthy 0~ fych parents, gave him plure~ ob for: acrowne of gold ,the fpmt ofDtvwanon, and tn coc!ufion, made him a :;.1~;~:';: Demi-god. o viJ[t,perb•for?".e,aGod~e!febeamy ts,whom .thev~ry depti font Gods adore, nam pt~!~hros dtj Amant' ale IS Amort J JomtnA,Ioves harbm. quam ob reli- ger,loves Ioadftone,a witch, a charme,&c.Beauty is a dowre ofit felf~, ~;~ .. ~:;" a fufficient·patrimony, an ample commendation , an accurareepiftlc, as gLoci.,Tom. b Ltl~ian, c Ap11leius ,Tiraqrullrts ,and fome others conclude• .Imperio dig4· cbarid£· 1 naforma, Beauty defervesa Kingdome; faith Abulenfts,paradax. z.cap. :;:;;· ;::;;~".: 110 , immortality; and d mort bavt got ·thiJ h1nour and eternity for their pul 'Deott!l' beauty ,thenfor .a other vertues befides: and fuch as are faire are worthy to 't.!:t,;;;;~t.f;eehlnourtdofofG_od andmen. That Jd~lian Ganymedes was ther~fore h M ut.; com- fetched by Juptttr tnto Heaven, Heph£J1ton deare to Alexander,Antmous lnlnratiD,q~a- to Adrian, Plato calls beauty for that caufe a priviledge of Nature, NA• ""%~~~· tur.egattdentis opus, natures mafter-piece, a dumbe commem, Theophrad~':,,ffi,.uior. Jf 11 s afilent fraud, ftill rhetoricke Carnt•des, that perfwadcs without fpee~h, akingdomewithoutaguard , becaufe beautifullperfonscommand

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