ee, more happy who hears, a god who enjoys
thee."
5480. Lod. Vertomannus navig. lib. 2. c. 5. O deus, hunc creasti sole
candidiorem, e diverso me et conjugem meum et natos meos omnes
nigricantes. Utinam hic, &c. Ibit Gazella, Tegeia, Galzerana, et
promissis oneravit, et donis. &c.
5481. M. D.
5482. Hor. Ode 9. lib. 3.
5483. Ov. Met. 10.
5484. Buchanan. Hendecasyl.
5485. Petrarch.
5486. Cardan, lib. 2. de sap ex vilibus generosos efficere solet, ex
timidis audaces, ex avaris splendidos, ex agrestibus civiles, ex
crudelibus mansuetos, ex impiis religiosos, ex sordidis nitidos atque
cultos, ex duris misericordes, ex mutis eloquentes.
5487. Anima hominis amore capti tota referta suffitibus et odoribus:
Paeanes resonat, &c.
5488. Ovid.
5489. In convivio, amor Veneris Martem detinet, et fortem facit;
adolescentem maxime erubescere cernimus quum amatrixeum eum turpe
quid committentem ostendit.
5490. Plutarch. Amator. dial.
5491. Si quo pacto fieri civitas aut exercitus posset partim ex his qui
amant, partim ex his, &c.
5492. Angerianus.
5493. Faerie Qu. lib. 4. cant. 2.
5494. Zened. proverb. cont. 6.
5495. Plat. conviv.
5496. Lib. 3. de Aulico. Non dubito quin is qui talem exercitum haberet,
totius orbis statim victor esset, nisi forte cum aliquo exercitu
confligendum esset in quo omnes amatores essent.
5497. Higinus de cane et lepore coelesti, et decimator.
5498. Vix dici potest quantam inde audaciam assumerent Hispani, inde pauci
infinitas Maurorum copias superarunt.
5499. Lib. 5. de legibus.
5500. Spenser's Faerie Queene, 3. book. cant. 8.
5501. Hyginus, l. 2. "For love both inspires us with stratagems, and
suggests to us frauds."
5502. Aratus in phaenom.
5503. Virg. "Who can deceive a lover."
5504. Hanc ubi conspicatus est Cymon, baculo innixus, immobilis stetit, et
mirabundus, &c.
5505. Plautus Casina, act. 2. sc. 4.
5506. Plautus.
5507. Ovid. Met. 2.
5508. Ovid. Met. 4.
5509. Virg. 1. Aen. "He resembled a god as to his head and shoulders, for
his mother had made his hair seem beautiful, bestowed upon him the
lovely bloom of youth, and given the happiest lustre to his eyes."
5510. Ovid. Met. 13.
5511. Virg. E. l. 2. "I am not so deformed, I lately saw myself in the
tranquil glassy sea, as I stood upon the shore."
5512. Epist. An u
|