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acies, deos rogabis, Totum te faciant, Fabulle, nasum. ENGLISHED. Fabullus, I will treat you handsomely Shortly, if the kind gods will favour thee. If thou dost bring with thee a del'cate messe, An olio or so, a pretty lass, Brisk wine, sharp tales, all sorts of drollery, These if thou bringst (I say) along with thee, You shall feed highly, friend: for, know, the ebbs Of my lank purse are full of spiders webs; But then again you shall receive clear love, Or what more grateful or more sweet may prove: For with an ointment I will favour thee My Venus's and Cupids gave to me, Of which once smelt, the gods thou wilt implore, Fabullus, that they'd make thee nose all ore. <--------------------> MART. LIB. I. EPI. 14. Casta suo gladium cum traderet Arria Paeto, Quem de visceribus traxerat ipsa suis; Si qua fides, vulnus quod feci non dolet, inquit: Sed quod tu facies, hoc mihi, Paete, dolet. ENGLISHED. When brave chast Arria to her Poetus gave The sword from her own breast did bleeding wave: If there be faith, this wound smarts not, said she; But what you'l make, ah, that will murder me. <--------------------> MART. EPI. XLIII. LIB. I. Conjugis audisset fatum cum Portia Bruti, Et substracta sibi quaereret arma dolor, Nondum scitis, ait, mortem non posse negari, Credideram satis hoc vos docuisse patrem. Dixit, et ardentes avido bibit ore favillas. I nunc, et ferrum turba molesta nega. IN ENGLISH. When Portia her dear lord's sad fate did hear, And noble grief sought arms were hid from her: Know you not yet no hinderance of death is, Cato, I thought, enough had taught you this, So said, her thirsty lips drink flaming coales: Go now, deny me steel, officious fools! <--------------------> MART. EP. XV. LIB. 6. Dum Phaetontea formica vagatur in umbra, Implicuit tenuem succina gutta feram, Dignum tantorum pretium tulit illa laborum: Credibile est ipsam sic voluisse mori. ENGLISHED. Whilst in an amber-shade the ant doth feast, A gummy drop ensnares the small wild-beast, A full reward of all her toyls hath she; 'Tis to be thought she would her self so die. <--------------------> MAR. LIB. IV. EP. 33. Et latet et lucet, Phaetontide condita gutta Ut videatur apis nectare clausa suo. Sic modo, quae fue
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