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quando et Theologi se his juvari et juvare illaesis moribus volunt? 4429. Hist. lib. 12. cap. 34. 4430. Praefat. quid quadragenario convenit cum amore? Ego vero agnosco amatorium scriptum mihi non convenire: qui jam meridiem praetergressus in vesperem feror. Aeneas Sylvius praefat. 4431. Ut severiora studia iis amaenitatibus lector condire possit. Accius. 4432. Discum quam philosophum audire malunt. 4433. In Som. Sip. e sacrario suo tum ad cunas nutricum sapientes eliminarunt, solas aurium delitias profitentes. 4434. Babylonius et Ephesius, qui de Amore scripserunt, uterque amores Myrrhae, Cyrenes, et Adonidis. Suidas. 4435. Pet. Aretine dial. Ital. 4436. Hor. "He has accomplished every point who has joined the useful to the agreeable." 4437. Legendi cupidiores, quam ego scribendi, saith Lucian. 4438. Plus capio voluptatis inde, quam spectandis in theatro ludis. 4439. Prooemio in Isaim. Multo major pars Milesias fabulas revolventium quam Platonis libros. 4440. "This he took to be his only business, that the plays which he wrote should please the people." 4441. In vita philosophus, in Epigram, amator, in Epistolis petulanus, in praeceptis severus. 4442. "The poet himself should be chaste and pious, but his verses need not imitate him in these respects; they may therefore contain wit and humour." 4443. "This that I write depends sometimes upon the opinion and authority of others: nor perhaps am I frantic, I only follow madmen: But thus far I may be deranged: we have all been so at some one time, and yourself, I think, art sometimes insane, and this man, and that man, and I also." 4444. "I am mortal, and think no humane action unsuited to me." 4445. Mart. 4446. Ovid. 4447. Isago. ad sac. scrip. cap. 13. 4448. Barthius notis in Coelestinam, ludum Hisp. 4449. Ficinus Comment. c. 17. Amore incensi inveniendi amoris, aniorem quaesivimus et invenimus. 4450. Author Coelestinae Barth. interprete. "That, overcome by the solicitations of friends, who requested me to enlarge and improve my volumes, I have devoted my otherwise reluctant mind to the labour; and now for the sixth time have I taken up my pen, and applied myself to literature very foreign indeed to my studies and professional occupations, stealing a few hours from serious pursuits, and devoting
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