m farinae hominibus, damnosas illas
voluptates repetunt, quod et scortatoribus insitum, &c.
3296. Instutitur ista exercitatio, non lucri, sed valetudinis et
oblectamenti ratione, et quo animus defatigatus respiret, novasque
vires ad subeundos labores denuo concipiat.
3297. Latrunculorum ludus inventus est a duce, ut cum miles intolerabili
fame laboraret, altero die edens altero ludens, famis oblivisceretur.
Bellonius. See more of this game in Daniel Souter's Palamedes, vel de
variis ludis, l. 3.
3298. D. Hayward in vita ejus.
3299. Muscovit. commentarium.
3300. Inter cives Fessanos latrunculorum ludus est usitatissimus, lib. 3.
de Africa.
3301. "It is better to dig than to dance."
3302. Tullius. "No sensible man dances."
3303. De mor. gent.
3304. Polycrat. l. 1. cap. 8.
3305. Idem Salisburiensis.
3306. Hist. lib. 1.
3307. Nemo desidet otiosus, ita nemo asinino more ad seram noctem laborat;
nam ea plusquam servilis aerumna, quae opificum vita eat, exceptis
Utopiensibus qui diem in 24. horas dividunt, sex duntaxat operi
deputant, reliquum a somno et cibo cujusque arbitrio permittitur.
3308. Rerum Burgund. lib. 4.
3309. Jussit hominem deferri ad palatium et lecto ducali collocari, &c.
mirari homo ubi se eo loci videt.
3310. Quid interest, inquit Lodovicus Vives, (epist. ad Francisc. Barducem)
interdiem illius et nostros aliquot annos? nihil penitus, nisi quod,
&c.
3311. Hen. Stephan. praefat. Herodoti.
3312. "Study is the delight of old age, the support of youth, the ornament
of prosperity, the solace and refuge of adversity, the comfort of
domestic life," &c.
3313. Orat. 12. siquis animo fuerit afflictus aut aeger, nec somnum
admittens, is mihi videtur e regione stans talis imaginis, oblivisci
omnium posse, quae humanae vitae atrocia et difficilia accidere
solent.
3314. De anima.
3315. Diad. 19.
3316. Topogr. Rom. part. 1.
3317. Quod heroum conviviis legi solitae.
3318. Melancthon de Heliodoro.
3319. I read a considerable part of your speech before dinner, but after I
had dined I finished it completely. Oh what arguments, what
eloquence!
3320. Pluvines.
3321. Thibault.
3322. As in travelling the rest go forward and look before them, an
antiquary alone looks round about him, seeing things past, &c. hath a
complete horizon. Janus
|