Thatworldly things bringanendlef defreofchange. 94, ly vanities fatisfie nor, yet theybringwith them cloyingfa- tietie, the which being accompaniedwith loachiome con- tempt, enforceth the mind which naturallyaffeeîeth happi_ nes, and full contentment (though it bec ignorant of the mcans whereby it may he attained) to fixe the delires vpon newobie6s,to feeifit can find that in them,whichwas wan- ting in the other, wherein finding as little contentment as before, they leauealfo them andafle&nzw; till hauing run ouerall which they thinke worth the defiring, and hauing triedall things which theworld calleth excellent (ifatleafè they can with all their care and labour attaine vnto them) at length (like thole who affe& new fafhions and ffrangeat- tires) when theyhaue tired their inuention, and know not what more to delire, theyarefaine to takevp the old againe which before they loathed,and after their gluttedappetite is a littlefharpned with abfence and difcontinuance,theyplace vpon it afreib their Toonewearied delight, till their renued loathingmoueth them vnto anew change. And thus world- ly men (like the bode in themill) tire thetnfelues in trauel_ ling this endlelllecircle,ending wheretheybegan,andbeing at the night ofdeath as far from the iorney endoftheir de- fires, as when they began their daies trauaile:and not hauing fixed their hearts,andgrounded theirhopes vpon that neuer failing foundation, God all-fufficient and theeternallioyes ofhiskingdome, they haue nothing folid and fubfl;antiall to refi vpon, but like a feather in theaire they are toiled to andfrowith euerywinde,feekingyell but finding none.And hauing long tired themfelues in vaine, after manifold trials andnew conclufions,findingnocontentutent,atlafl they re- folue to placeall their delight in often change; and that which they cannot find in the fublîance or fufficiencieof worldly things, they looke for incontinual( varietic,fothat Nibil elflucks. now there is nothingpleafing vnto them which varietieand dum ki fr qued change refrefheth not : like vnto thofe lying inbed, andnot reficii variety íleeping ortaking refi, who being weariedwith waking, do (pend the whole night in tumbling and toflingfrom one fide to another,Peeking forcafe in theiroften change, which they cannot findby quiet lying oneither fide. And as chofe C g who
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