116 the L i iiig Temple. Part H. on more deeply natural . than incited it is. And fo taxed and blamed Na- ture, .inx they Cafe ofAlan, as to be too. liable to imply'd Refle6tions even on the bleed Author of Nature himfelf Whereto the /nown Principles of, the. Sect ofthe STO 1KS, do too plainly D. Laert. tend, who give in fo vail a Catalogue L. 7 of the Dilèafes and Diftempers of the ut p;r- y Mind M Taking of : x every thin ha13rrte . _ have been fimewhat mifunderlbod by their prcq.udicml Oppofers, ór fonte unwary Lxprefons of theirs been firetche bey nd what rnas. meant. For though they r Ikon 'Log- arvong the Di e'mpers` of the Mind; ','et fo afterwards they do rivexerwoly;,, too. Whence its probable they intended to place ér.e ameng the E- oils of Man's Nature ;np otherwife, than as;it; fhould include undue Perturbation in it, or as it might urge thofe who are more apt to be gaffbi7àte\ipon f^èh Occafns, than juf} and wife, to the doing.:of unPct or unfafonalle things for the afJii- Fled Perfons Relief Than. which nothing is more fuppofable. iVhi h_occa/'oned that famous General Agefilaus, when his Sick'F'r tend imttortuntd him withcars, to gap the (then"'ne cef%ary) march of his Army for his fake, (looking fadly back atpon him) to fay, aic X,pt,e7rów £Sts, 41,ec+V How hard is it, to be Pitiful, and Wife ? Plutar. Apotheg. Laco». And that étera-ards making àvv e e nizowín' vicious too, their, meaning was, that a calm and'edate Will or Propenfion to re- lieve Perfens in Di/lrefs was the Tlertue, both the other the oppoTte Vices. Which leems more likely than Menagius's Way of falving the évuclao¢ari', by fuppofing à+ere iouo`n here to have been mifprinted for imnr'oCwin, byfoie' very grunting 7ranfcribcr.r, that were frilling rather to exprefs their own Blind than their Authors. Obferv. in Locum. into
RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy OTcyMjk=