ia.
5697. Ter.
5698. Virg. Ecl. 2. "For what limit has love?"
5699. Lib. de beat. vit. cap. 14.
5700. Longo usu dicimus, longa desuetudine dediscendum est. Petrarch,
epist. lib. 5. 8.
5701. Tom. 4. dial. meret. Fortusse etiam ipsa ad amorem istum connihil
contulero.
5702. Quid enim meretrix nisi juventutis expilatrix, virorum rapina seu
mors; patrimonii devoratrix, honoris pernicies, pabulum diaboli,
janua mortis, inferni supplementum?
5703. Sanguinem hominum sorbent.
5704. Contemplatione Idiotae, c. 34. discrimen vitae, mors blanda, mel
sclleum, dulce venenum, pernicies delicata, mallum spontaneum, &c.
5705. Pornodidasc. dial. Ital. gula, ira, invidia, superbia, sacritegia,
latrocinia, caedes, eo die nata sunt, quo primum meretrix
professionem fecit. Superbia major quam opulenti rustici, invidia
quam luis venerae inimicitia nocentior melancholia, avaritia in
immensum profunda.
5706. Qualis extra sum vides, qualis intra novit Deus.
5707. Virg. "He calls Mnestheus, Surgestus, and the brave Cloanthus, and
orders them silently to prepare the fleet."
5708. "He is moved by no tears, he cannot he induced to hear her words."
5709. Tom. 2. in votis. Caivus cum sis, nasum habeas simum, &c.
5710. Petronius.
5711. Ovid.
5712. In Catarticis, lib. 2.
5713. Si ferveat deformis, ecce formosa est; si frigeat formosa, jam sis
informis. Th. Morus Epigram.
5714. Amorum dial. tom. 4. si quis ad auroram contempletur multas mulieres
a nocte lecto surgentes, turpiores putabit esse bestiis.
5715. Hugo de claustro Animae, lib. 1. c. 1. "If you quietly reflect upon
what passes through her mouth, nostrils, and other conduits of her
body, you never saw viler stuff."
5716. Hist. nat. 11. cap. 35. A fly that hath golden wings but a poisoned
body.
5717. Buchanan, Hendecasyl.
5718. Apol. pro Rem. Seb.
5719. 6 Ovid. 2. rem.
5720. Post unam noctem incertum unde offensam cepit propter foetentem ejus
spiritum alii dicunt, vel latentem foeditatem repudiavit, rem faciens
plane illicitam, et regiae personae multum indecoram.
5721. Hall and Grafton belike.
5722. Juvenal. "When the wrinkled skin becomes flabby, and the teeth
black."
5723. Mart.
5724. Tully in Cat. "Because wrinkles and hoary locks disfigure you."
5725. Hor. ode. 13. lib. 4.
5726. Locheus. "Beautiful cheeks, rosy lips,
|