s
liberabanto.
5925. Praecepto primo, cogatur nubere aut mulctetur et pecunia templo
Junonis dedicetur et publica fiat.
5926. Consol. 3. pros. 7.
5927. Nic. Hill. Epic. philos.
5928. Qui se capistro matrimonii alligari non patiuntur, Lemn, lib. 4. 13.
de occult. nat. Abhorrent multi a matrimonio, ne morosam, querulam,
acerbam, amaram uxorem perferre cogantur.
5929. Senec. Hippol.
5930. Caelebs enim vixerat nec ad uxorem ducendam unquam induci potuit.
5931. Senec. Hip. "There is nothing better, nothing preferable to a single
life."
5932. Hor.
5933. Aeneas Sylvius de dictis Sigismundi. Hensius. Primiero.
5934. Habeo uxorem ex animi sententia Camillam Paleotti Jurisconsulti
filiam.
5935. Legentibus et meditantibus candelas et candelabrum tenuerunt.
5936. Hor. "Neither despise agreeable love, nor mirthful pleasure."
5937. Ovid.
5938. Aphranius. "He who chooses a wife, takes a brother and a sister."
5939. Locheus. "The delight of mankind, the solace of life, the
blandishments of night, delicious cares of day, the wishes of older
men, the hopes of young."
5940. Bacon's Essays.
5941. Euripides.
5942. "How harmoniously do a loving wife and constant husband lead their
lives."
5943. Cum juxta mare agrum coleret: Omnis enim miseriae immemorem,
conjugalis amor eum fecerat. Non sine ingenti admiratione, tanta
hominis charitate motus rex liberos esse jussit, &c.
5944. Qui vult vitare molestias vitet mundum.
5945. [Greek: tide bios tithe terpnon ater chrysaes aphroditaes.] Quid vita
est quaeso quidve est sine Cypride dulce? Mimner.
5946. Erasmus.
5947. E Stobeo.
5948. Menander.
5949. Seneca Hyp. lib. 3. num. 1.
5950. Hist. lib. 4.
5951. Palingenius. "He lives contemptibly by whom no other lives."
5952. Bruson. lib. 7. cap. 23.
5953. Noli societatem habere, &c.
5954. Lib. 1. cap. 6. Si, inquit, Quirites, sine uxore esse possemus, omnes
careremus; Sed quoniam sic est, saluti potius publicae quam voluptati
consulendum.
5955. Beatum foret si liberos auro et argento mercari, &c.
5956. Seneca. Hyp.
5957. Gen. ii. Adjutorium simile, &c.
5958. Ovid. "Find her to whom you may say, 'thou art my only pleasure.'"
5959. Euripides. "Unhappy the man who has met a bad wife, happy who found a
good one."
5960. E Graeco Valerius, lib. 7. cap. 7. "To marry, and not to marry, are
|