Downame - Puritan-02038 v2

fos Thai worldly things are vaprofitable. Cbryfoft.in pleafures ofall forts, which doe more hurt and torment vs, Plulip.;.fer.to. then moll.cruell mailers their flaues and bondmen. Lathy, they prepare the feeds for all fickneffes and difeafes through their idleneffe; for making it not only a matter of cafe, but ofhonor and Date, to abflaine from all labour themfelues, and to do all their bulneffe by their feruants and deputies, they lofe that needful' exercife which preferueth health, and forwant ofllirring, Puffer hurt full humors tò increafe and a. bound in them : neither haue they that flomacke and appe- tite to their meat, which they that labour haue, but come to their full tables,with faller bellies and cloyed appetites, and fo either cace nothing, or that which is worfe, againfl their Domacks. And whereas they who take paines need no ocher fauce but fait and hungerto fharpen their appetite, becaufe exercife helpeth their digellion, and renueth their hunger,. Which giueth a good rellifh to their courfeflfare,andmaketh itwholefome nourifhment for their bodies coñtrariwife, they who fpend their time in (loth and idlenes, wanting this helpe for their conco6iion, come to the table, hauing their flomackes full of the lab meales crudities, which maketh them to loath their grearef dainties, and fo eitherto fail, or toreplenifh and cram their bellies with renued gluttonie. And as this abundance being vfually abafed Both impaire health, fo being ficke, it commonly doth not helpe vs, but hinder our recouerie : and whereas the poorer fort are much leffe prone vnto ficknelhe, orbeingficke, commonly need not thePhyfitians helpe,haui ng only fosne kitchin phyficke, and knowne remedies, which being helped with the flrfgth of their nature, do eafily rebore them to their health ; the . richer fort doe more eafily, and often fall into difeafes, of which through their effeminate weaknes, and want ofnatu- rail Drengíh they cannot recoeer; and therefore are faine to flie to the Phyfition vpon euery flight occafion, from many of whichthey receiue fo much the flower heip,by how much the greater Dore ofmoney they haue to bellow vpon them ; and if they be not men of the better confcience, all the good their wealth doth, is to betray th vnto further torment, and to make their hues to become a prey. By all which it appea- tech

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