ti 4. The Living l ettlple. Part II. And even from hence that V r ei anv k i rtue is voluntary ? Vice is )4KII0V Anti ti rr.e1at 7ò +tq.xíaV àx2o.av v- by another, concluded to be in- 71)P * &. voluntary. r ( fags that Alcinous Cap. 30 Author) who can willingly, in the moil lovely, and mofi noble part of /irifelf, choofe that which is the greate 1 ofall Evils ? Eteetning vicious Incli- nation the reof repugnant thing to Liber- ty, (as it is indeed in the moral Senfe) and thegreat l Slavery. Whereupon, another enquiring,frnce God doth nothing but what is good, whence Evils fhould come, re- Max. Tyr. Dir- folves that whatfoever is good fru 25. is from Heaven, but all Evil from our f ifnatural ilenefs. And 7a 2ra p¢ cpS'w Tai another f _ ca': s of an Evil ad- àu ìtu v xaxay. Hie- Bering to our Being, and not ro. in -Caren. Pythag. only acquired, but even con- natural to us. Tea, and this Evil isPaid to he the very Death of the Soul. The fad nefs of the common Cafe of Man, in this refpeft, hash been there- fore emblematically reprefent- ?K5 (K?ae;3vo/igof e+f s(ev aoiiH acv =s ed by a potion of Error, and .,ívanv àrr« ói N:V Ignorance, prefrated to every arr.e9y, aì N''?ev* one at their burr fi coming into Tab. CebeIis. the I ? orld, and whereof it is fail all do drink, more or lefs ; a Wo- gran
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