Oftheeiutiveilswhich;nerldly thingsbringto their owners. y t9 little extraordinarypaines,itis grieuousveto them, and the abfenceoftheirferuants wholeminiflery they vfe,is astrou- blelome vnto them, as if they wanted their hands or feet : whereas the poore labouringman is not hurt either with the cold ofwinter,or heat offummer, but as it were dare th the nippingwinds and fcorching Sun with his vncouered head, bare face and openbrefl,being bell at eafe, and even tinging or whiffling to expreffehis inward ioy, when he isbuuefl at his labours: which when theyareended, he cheerfully and with a good ffomacke feedeth on his courCe fare, and after fleepeth quietly in hisbard bed. And therefore feeing riches hauefomany infirmities attendingon them, & fubieél thofe thathaue them to fo many wants, from all which the poore elate ispriuiledgedand exempted; there is no reafon why weshould dote fo vpon them with immoderate loue, and Elie the other withfuch feareand hatred; feeing in this re- fpeélthemeane condition hath tuffpreeminence:forthough it be goodto hauemuch,yetit isbetter to want nothing;fee- ingwecome neerell to the eflate ofthe bleffed Saints &An- gels, not in poffefling worldly abundance, but inlittlenee- ding fuch fupplies. To which purpofe one faith, that how- foeuer a rich man may feemegreat and happie, becaufe he hathhorfes, cofflyprouifion, leruants and attendance : and though he may feetnc to hauegreat power, becaufe he hath many atcommand, appointing to euery one their feuerall bufineffe; yet in truth thole words ofcommand, (hew ra- mafeiix, verbs therinfirmitie and inlufficiencie, then abilitie andpower; quaum¡K- feting that which theycannot do themfelues, they arecon-perbia ditunt Brained to do by theminifferie ofothers: and their great diuites.funtin- Rore and prouifion doch but argue the greatneffeof theirf'rmitatis.non want,andconlequentlyof their miferie; we being thena- fac tat:s.AU _ lonetruely bleffedwhen hauing all our fufficiencie in God,fcft.Paf<hz, wee nand in needofnothing. The like all() may befaidofTom..te> voluptuous pleafures, whichwhofoeuer haue inabundance, and let their hearts on them with immoderateloue, theyare fo farre frombeingperfeóled by them, that they addemuch to their imperfeétion. For though at firfl they were but meere fuperfluities, yet being by cufome inured to them, they
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