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APHORISMS, ADAGES, AND PROVERBS,
OF ALL AGES AND NATIONS,
,                                FROM
JACOB CATS AND ROBERT FARLIE.
WITH ILLUSTRATIONS FREELY RENDERED,
FROM DESIGNS FOUND IN THEIR WORKS,
BY JOHN LEIGHTON, F.S.A.
THE WHOLE
TRANSLATED AND EDITED, WITH ADDITIONS,
BY RICHARD PIGOT,
Member of the Leyden Society of Netherlands Literature.
THIRD EDITION.
LONDON:
LONGMANS, GREEN. READER, AN! DYE!
1865.
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VIRTUTE AC LABORE.
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BY VIRTUE AND TOIL.
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LIBROS Y AMIGOS,
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TO
WILLIAM STIRLING, ESQRE. (OF KEIR) M.P.
A LEARNED COLLECTOR OF THE PROVER-
BIAL PHILOSOPHY OF ALL AGES AND
NATIONS, THIS ATTEMPT TO REVIVE
A LOVE FOR EMBLEMATICAL
LITERATURE AND ART
IS DEDICATED
BY
JOHN LEIGHTON.
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POCOS Y BUENOS.
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Qvr5<a^ LABOUR IS THE SALT OF LIFE.
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DAYS, BUT A GOOD
GLORIOUS IS THE FRUIT OF GOOD LABOUR.
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CONSCIA MENS RECTI.
PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION.
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^                      The reception given to the First Edition (i860) of this selection from the
I              Emblematic Poems of Jacob Cats has already called for a reprint of the book :
q              and the expression of a wish on the part of many readers for a more detailed
account of his writings than was given in the Introduction to the First Edition,
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              has led to the belief that a few remarks on the motives that led him to the
choice of his subjects, and the method he followed in the execution of his task
may not be without interest
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>                     The plan of the present Volume, as a selection from several works, not only
UJ              Precluded an adherence to the original order of the pieces. selected, but tended in
some degree to conceal the unity of purpose that underlies the whole series. The
^              Emblematic Writings of Jacob Cats form no mere collection of Fables or Parables
q-             strung together at random : they are the result of wide observation and mature
l_              thought, and embody a whole system of Moral Philosophy. Few writings more
Q-              completely bring before us a man who has striven to act up to a high standard
U              o Christian duty, and whom the memory of his own struggles has impelled to
warn, instruct, and encourage others. With this design, he has not merely made
use of familiar facts or incidents in the physical world to enforce a lesson in
j !            morals; he has not merely, like older writers, exposed the follies or the vices
of men under fables and allegories, but he has carefully analysed the several
h              stages in human life, and adapted his teaching to the needs and the dangers of
each. But, living in an age in which the profession of a moral purpose sufficed
generally to deter readers from opening a book, he felt that he must draw attention
to his work by something like a stratagem. If, however, he prefixed to his " Sinne
en Minne Beelden" the title of " Proteus," he did so not merely to suit the fashion
ft [|                 his time, but to express the general view he had taken of human life. To
him that life appeared to be divided into three distinct stages, in the first of
which the natural affections and sentiments predominate, while in the second, the
man feels himself concerned in the wider interests of his fellow-citizens j and in
the third turns his thoughts to that unseen world' which he is so soon to enter. The
first stage is the season of love and marriage; the second is taken up with the
discharge of civil duties • while the third is the period of devout meditation,
n which the man is drawn away from the world into more immediate communion
with God. These stages he accepts as an appointed order: the first is to him as
pure and fitting as the last; and the idea of urging on a premature development
EAM/E MENDACIA RIDET.
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GODLINESS IS PROFITABLE UNTO ALL THINGS.
Preface to the Second Edition.
of the second or the third is wholly absent from his mind. Without the slightest
tinge of monastic or ascetic philosophy, he sums up for each his conclusion, that
"in the natural man we should live temperately; in the civic man, justly; and in
the Christian man, godly."
If the form of his " Proteus" was suggested by the prevailing taste for
Emblematic writing which had already produced a literature of its own, yet the
completion of his design bears evidence of his personal growth in a simple and
manly piety. In his youth he had, in his own words, "penned some Amatory
Emblems, that is, foolish conceits, which at the time were laid aside." These he
afterwards found among some old papers, and seeing in them "the mirror of his
condition in the wild season of youth," he resolved to associate with the Emblems
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of Love certain other Emblems more in accordance with his later dispositions,
and so to depict the changeful course of human life, that men might learn, in
passing from one stage to another, to replace their former inclinations by higher
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              and better desires. And if he sought to impress on his readers a high standard
0              of duty by fable and allegory, he felt that he was following the example of the
Divine Teacher, who, under the images of seed-time and harvest, conveyed His
HI               warnings to a careless generation.
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h                      His work was done : what its success might be, he knew not; but, with a
true humility, he adds, "this we know; that a firm resolve has sprung up within
us to strive daily more and more towards the change and renovation of our
dispositions and life in Christ Jesus." He had taught and trained himself, before
.               he came forward to teach and instruct others; and he was content to let his
h              work go forth in the hope that, it might impart to his readers something more
**               than the amusement of a passing hour.
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ready to assist.—Lord Bacon.
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A GOOD NAME IS BETTER THAN A GOLDEN GIRDLE.
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INTRODUCTION.
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                      Although the Typification of Moral truths and Doctrines by Symbolical              r
3              Images and Devices had its origin in remote antiquity, and subsequently became a              0
jr              favourite method of imparting counsel and instruction with the Greeks and Romans,             
it was not until the middle of the sixteenth century that it began to assume (first              U.
m              in Italy) the character of a distinct kind of literature.                                                                    q,
J                                                                                                                                                                         Q.
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Towards the end of that century, the poetic genius of the erudite Andrea              2
Alciati, of Milan, imparted so pleasing an impress to this new style of literature,              <
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favourite medium for the diffusion and popularization of moral maxims applicable              0
p. to all the phases and circumstances of human life.                                                                       ' h
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The Emblems of Alciati, written in Latin verse, and eulogized by such men            j j
D as Erasmus, Julius Scaliger, Toscan, Neander, and Borrichius, were soon translated              [j-
£ into the Italian, French, and German languages, and became so highly esteemed            ; ft:
^ i that they were publicly read in the Schools, to teach youth the Art of Emblematic              q
writing.                                                                                                                                               W ,
111 S                                                                                                                                                0 I
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Thus established, as an elegant and useful method of inculcating, both by              Q
0 Word and Eye-pictures, the virtues of civil life; men of learning, poets, and states-              ^
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men, in France, Holland, Germany, Spain, and England, vied with each other, as              Q_
it were, throughout the seventeenth century, in the cultivation of this branch of              Q
Composition, insomuch that it had become a favourite and admired medium for
the diffusion of Religious, Social, and Political maxims, and maintained that position
in public favour, up to the end of the eighteenth century.                                                              <
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In the seventeenth century, Printing, and its sister art Engraving, had attained
in Holland to a higher grade of perfection than in any other country of Europe;
and, favoured by circumstances so auxiliary to the artistic illustration of works in
the then not inaptly termed "Picture Language," the poetic genius of a Jacob
Cats found, in the pencils of Jan and Adrian Van De Venne, and the burins
of Matham, Peter de Jode, Verstralen, Van Bremden, and others, artistic exponents
worthy of his muse, and equal to his most ardent desires.
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WISDOM IS BETTER THAN RUBIES
Introduction.
D. Jacob Cats, the eminent Dutch Jurisconsult, Statesman, and Poet, was born
at Brouwershaven in the Isle of Schouwen, province of Zeeland, on the ioth
November, 1577. His father was a counsellor of some standing; and his son Jacob
was first destined to the profession of the law. Having completed his course of
philosophy, he proceeded to the University of Leyden, to study jurisprudence. From
thence he went to France, and was some time at the University of Orleans, where
he took the degree of Doctor of Laws. He subsequently went to Paris, and was
very desirous to visit Italy; but his family opposed his going thither, and he was
obliged to return to Holland. Arrived at the Hague, he applied himself wholly to
jurisprudence, and was assiduous in his attendance at the Public Pleadings of the
most distinguished lawyers. To perfect himself still more in his profession, he put
himself under the direction of the jurisconsult, Cornelius Van der Pol, one of the
most eminent pleaders of the Dutch Bar. Some time afterwards, Cats practised with
distinction at Zieuwrikzee, and at Brouwershaven. At this period it would seem he
applied himself no less assiduously to Poetry, and not only became distinguished
among the literati of Holland for the purity and elegance of his Latin verses, but
soon took rank as one of her first lyrists in his native tongue. Falling seriously
ill of an hectic fever, induced by over-application to study, he was advised by his
physicians to seek a change of air.
Hereupon he repaired to England, and visited the Universities of Cambridge
and Oxford. When in London he consulted the then celebrated physician, Dr.
Butter, on the subject of the obstinate fever which still afflicted him; but that
physician was not more fortunate in his prescriptions than those of Holland. Upon
his return to his native country, he was eventually cured, says his biographer, Moreri,
by an old alchemyst.
Distinguishing himself by his legislatorial and statesmanlike qualifications, no
less than he had done by his poetic genius, Jacob Cats rose subsequently to high
Official rank, and for several years filled the post of State Pensionary and Chief
Magistrate of Middleburg and Dordrecht. He was eventually promoted to the
rank of State Counsellor and Grand Pensionary of the province of West Friesland,
and made Keeper of the Great Seal of Holland. After filling these important Offices
for eighteen years, having now attained the age of seventy-two, he requested per-
mission to retire into private life; which was at length granted by the States. His
valuable services were, nevertheless, once more required, and he was solicited to
form a member of the Embassy sent at that time to England, to arrange a treaty of
commerce between the two countries. After discharging the important duties
therein delegated to him, he retired wholly into private life, and devoted himself
with faculties still unimpaired to the Muses, up to the advanced age of eighty-three
years, when he may be said to have expired with the pen in his hand. Few men
have left behind them greater proofs of indefatigable industry than Jacob Cats;
and his numerous lyrical works are as rich in poetic genius as they are replete with
evidence of world-knowledge, and genial with the love of mankind.
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ITS FRUIT IS BETTER THAN GOLD.
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HONOUR TO WHOM HONOUR IS DUE.
Introduction.
Would the limits allotted to this Introduction permit of a more detailed
account of the life and works of this highly gifted, good man, numerous incidents
and passages in both might be adduced, which would awaken in the breasts
of Englishmen and women (for he was especially the poetic champion of the
worth and virtues of the fair sex) an appreciation and esteem of his genius and
character, as great almost as that felt for him in his own country : where " Father
Cats," as he is affectionately called, is honoured as the bard of Home and of the
Domestic hearth, the still popular and revered instructor of his countrymen in the
Virtues of Social life, and in the Maxims of purest world-wisdom.
'                                                                 111
The "Moral Emblems" of Jacob Cats, to which Daniel Heinsius rendered              3
his tribute of eulogy, as also two of Holland's greatest lyrists, Hoogstraaten and               £
Zeeuwes, are almost unknown, even by name, in England, from being chiefly written             , >
in the Dutch language, of which it has been truly said, that " it has been a language
too hastily neglected and despised by Englishmen."
                                                                       q
They form, nevertheless, in the collect, a series of the most admirable com-
positions in Emblematic Literature which any language can boast, though written at
               ^
a period when the Dutch tongue, like the rest of the northern European languages,
was yet rigid and quaint in its structure, and so different in its orthographical style
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and idiom to the Dutch of the present day, that to most modern Dutch scholars his
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earlier works are almost a sealed book. Nevertheless, when Cats wrote in the verna-
cular of his day, the Dutch language, like that of his contemporary, Shakespeare, had
been developing capabilities of harmony combined with vigour of expression, quite
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equal to our own, as an exponent of poetic thought and imagery, and was one in j q-
which no writer of his day knew better how to speak to the feelings of his country-
men, and win their hearts by the pleasantly conveyed wisdom of his "household
_____                   ________________________________         I
words" than Jacob Cats.                                                                                                                  h
By his " Sinne en Minne Beelden," and his " Emblemata Moralia et CEcono-               0
mica," Jacob Cats first established his fame, both as a classical writer, an amiable
moralist, and a popular poet. The former written in Dutch and Latin verse, each
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theme accompanied by a short distich in French verse, gave evidence both of the               <
versatility of his poetic genius and of his linguistic talent. The success achieved               jjf
by these compositions encouraged him to carry out his predilection for this style of
writing in a yet more extended form; and some time after he gave to the world his
" Spiegel van den Voorleden en Tegenwoordigen Tyt," or " Mirror of the Past and
Present Time," in which he emblematised, in Dutch verse, the numerous proverbs
and sayings of antiquity, together with the most popular and current adages of his
day, in most of the European languages.
The above-named Emblematic works comprise many hundred subjects, in the
treatment of which he evinced as much ingenuity as poetic grace, in working them
out so as to render them a charming Code of Moral Instruction, addressed alike to
the Youth of both sexes, and applicable to every phase of Civil and Political life.
INGENIO STAT SINE MORTE DECUS.
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INGENUAS DIDICISSE FIDELITER ART ES,
Introduction.
To every subject of his Word-Pictures, he appends, in support of the moral he
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               inculcates, the most pertinent quotations from the Ancient writers, and a most inte-
[r               resting collect of Popular adages, bearing upon the sense of each theme.
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From so rich a mine of Emblematic lore, the present volume forms, of course,
but a selection from each of the above-named series, the subjects of which could not
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               therefore be placed in the same order as in the originals; but embodied in the
n               present form will, it is hoped, be found a pleasing collect, well calculated to give
|-               an idea of the diversity of subject treated by the Author.
                       Sir Joshua Reynolds, when a youth, was much influenced by the Artistic
q               excellence of Adrian Van de Venne's Designs for the illustration of the Dutch
0               Folio Edition of Cats' Works, of which he made careful copies; and Sir Wm.
9               Beechy, in his Life of Reynolds, states that " Sir Joshua's richest store was Jacob
Cats' Book of Emblems, which his grandmother, a native of Holland, had brought
with her from that country."
Q                       The Proverbs of the different nations,—that wisdom which of all others sprang
from the bosom of the Peoples in every land, and was handed down from generation
to generation, rather orally than by books,—form so pleasing and instructive a feature
LJ               in the Emblems of Cats, that they have been for the most part preserved in their literal
garb of Cats' day, an adhesion to the original which it is believed will have a greater
charm and interest for the student of Languages, curious to see the shape in which
the traditionally acquired wisdom of long past days was expressed, until it reached us
in the more polished garb of modern times.
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^                       Wherever admissible, passages from English and other Authors, having an affinity
CO               in sense, and moral, to the Emblem or theme, have been introduced, by way of
elaborating, or giving more extension to the doctrine inculcated by the Author. The
0               appendage to this selection from Cats' Moral Emblems of a reprint of the now
y               exceedingly rare and curious Poems and Emblems of his contemporary Emblematist,
the pious Scot, Robert Farlie, published in London under the title of " Lychnocausia,"
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in 1638, will, it is hoped, be considered a not unpleasing associate for the Dutch
moralist, and their juxtaposition in the same volume give an additional interest
to the whole.
THE TRANSLATOR.
:mol_i_it mores, nec sinit esse feros.
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NON S^UO, SED S(UOMODO.
LIST OF
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0                   Portrait of Jacob Cats—Under allegorical figure of Universal Justice, supported on one side
2                              by Solomon, Confucius, and ^Esop; upon the other by Age instructing Infancy and
3   !                        Adolescence, in the presence of Labour and Travel ; in the background Peace and
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                           Plenty are contrasted with the violent acts of man against the will of Supreme Power. In
                           the centre foreground is a vase of flowers surrounded by choke-weeds—type of elevated
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                           nature a constant prey to the coarser elements. On the base are sculptured bas-reliefs,
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                         " Suum cuique"—Let each apply to himself that which fits him; "Bonus cum bonis"-
                           The just with the true ..... Frontispiece, engraved by Leighton.
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    None can clean their dress from stain, but some blemish will remain . . LeigHTON.
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          I lurke and shine..........Green.
W 7    Act wisely and thou shall't be free........Dalziel.
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to         Diogenes Lanteme .......... Dalziel.
® I ii    Whither the breath of my mistress calls me Green.
14            Whilst 1 breathe, I hope......... Leighton.
15     If poor, act cautiously..........Whymper.
18           Light onely is my praise . . . . . . . •                  Leighton.
19     Rest content where thou art.........Green.
22           Better with a little . '.........De Wilde.
23     Love takes possession of the mind insensibly......Leighton.
26           I lay open here onely . .........De Wilde.
27     The inexpert are wounded.........Green.
30           Hence commeth my filth          .7.......Leighton.
31     While we draw, we are drawn . .'.....• • Green.
34          Upward.......■ . . . . . Leighton.
MANY MEN, MANY MINDS.
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S^2?^- LABOUR IS THE SALT OF LIFE. -§>2^^
Contents and Illustrations.
Both sides should be seen ....... Engraved by Leighton.
Darknesse addeth glory to me . . . . . . .        Leighton.
Who is hurtful to himself, benefits no one......        Green.
So I am undon by doing good ........        Leighton.
The pot goeth so long to the water, til at last it commeth broken home .        Green.
Whither my soule ....... ....        Green.
Play, but chastely...........        Green.
My life is my death..........        Leighton.
Hasten at leisure...........        Leighton.
So to die is miserable..........        Leighton.
Let your light shine before men . . . . . . . .        Green.
The Lanterne leades the way ........        Green.
Smoke is the food of Lovers........ .        Green.
Fire follcweth smoake.........        Leighton.
Each deplores his own lot ........ .        Green.
I nourish myselfe ..........        Dalziel.
Every flower loses its perfume at last........        Dalziel.
I will dye, but I shall ascend........        Leighton.
Many a slip 'twixt the cup and the lip.......        Green.
Light me, I shal sigh no more........        Leighton.
Love, like a ball, requires to be thrown back ......        Dalziel.
Quickly or I am consumed........        De Wilde.
The biter bitten...........        Green.
My light is not the lesse .........        Green.
The branches may be trained, but not the trunk . . . ' . .        Leighton.
In vaine thou puttest me out ........        Leighton.
When slovenly servants get tidy, they polish the bottoms of the saucepans       Leighton.
' 7'is better to tarry ..........        Leighton.
Grease the fat sow ..........        Smythe.
Altero extingiwr, Altero accendor. (The one puts me out, the other kindles me) Green.
Play with the dog, and he'll spoil your clothes .....        Green.
I am consumed more, and shine less. (Magis consumor minus luceo) .        Green.
Bees touch no fading flowers.........        Dalziel.
You feared me whilst Ishifted ........        Leighton.
One rotten apple infects all in the basket......       Jackson.
Farewell ............        De Wilde.
I am touched, not broken by the waves .......        Green.
/ envie not thy light . . . . . . . . . .        Green.
Birdes of one feather will flocke together......       Jackson.
If thou abroad, I at home . . . ... ■ . ■ ■ .        Leighton.
The ripe pear falls ready to the hand.......        Leighton.
My light escapes thee..........        Leighton.
PERSEVERANCE VIENT A BOUT DE    TOUT.
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BEAUTIFUL
USEFUL AND THf
THi
Contents and Illustrations.
Page 119
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142
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Engraved by Green.
Green.
Green.
Leighton.
Bolton.
Leighton.
Leighton.
De Wilde.
Thomas.
Leighton.
Dalziel.
Dalziel.
Green.
Green.
What is insensible to Love ? .
Hero's light .....
The higher the rise the greater the fall .
Death finds the way ....
The hunchback sees not his own hump, but he sees
his neighb
In -vaine thou coverest me .
Enter not, or pass through
Helpe, or else I dye ....
A hen lays every day, but an ostrich only once a year
So you are borne for others
When the eyes are won, love is begun .
My light is darkness to thee
Who cuts off his nose, spites his own face
Spare me for future use ....
to drink
Green.
force the hors
Though taken to the water's brink, no blows can
0  morning starre, shew ye day .
Excess of liberty leads to servitude
Nauplius his lights .
Who would learn to shave well, should first practise
At the bottom least and worst
What the sow does the little pigs must pay for
On mine own cost .....
A ship aground is a beacon at sea .
1 seeke mine hurt .....
The goose hisses well, but it don't bite .
The end tryeth all .....
With unwilling hounds it's hard to catch hares
Thus must I be consumed quickly
A whole mill to grind a peck of corn
Not under a bushell . . . . .
The dogs and the bone .....
Idoe not put out myselfe ....
Green.
Green.
Green.
beard
Swain.
. fool
De Wilde.
Dalziel. .
Dalziel.
Green.
Leighton.
Green.
De Wilde.
Leighton.
Leighton.
Bolton.
Leighton.
Leighton.
Leighton.
Harral.
De Wilde.
Leighton.
Leighton.
Green.
Green.
Swain.
Leighton.
Green.
Green.
No one can love Thetis and Galatea at the same
time
The Virgins lampe .....
Within is emptiness
It is a token that I shined ....
When the wolf comes, the oxen leave oft' fighting
/ save others, I waste myself
While she weeps, she devours
Fessa tibi nunc lampada trado. (I weary give
By yielding thou may'st conquer .
Compare small with great ....
187
109
191
194
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198
199
202
self-defence
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'S*&*<Sr<s^^s± ARE NEVER APART •^^•^j^'Ss^.
XV
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AS MUSIC TUNES THE EAR, AND COLOURS TUTOR THE EYE,
Contents and Illustrations.
Page 203
Great cry and little wool...... . Engraved by Swain.
206
Sursum Peto deorsum trahor. (I bend up, and am drawn down) . Leighton.
207
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Fire, Cough, Love, and Money are not long concealed .... LEIGHTON.
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Aut splendors aut situ consumor. (Either by light or mouldiness I die) De Wilde.
ODE
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Hares are not caught with beat of drum, nor birds with tartlets . . Evans.
222
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How great a light ..........Leighton.
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Like melons, friends are to be found in plenty, of which not even one is
good in twenty..........Smythe.
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231
Every fowl scratches towards itself .......... Leighton.
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The End. Study me in thy prime, bury death and -weary time. Leightcn.
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INTRODUCE
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cS^S^O^O* NO CROSS, NO CROWN. -s^^^S^
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SPARE TO SPEAK AND SPARE TO SPEED.
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WHO HAS NO TEACHER.
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__WITH HONOUR, FAITH, AND WITH THE EYE, TRIFLE NOT.
On ne -peut decrotter sa robe sans emporter le ■poll.
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NONE CAN CLEAN THEIR DRESS FROM STAIN,
BUT SOME BLEMISH WILL REMAIN.
I've splafh'd and foil'd my gown,
With this gadding through the town !
How bedraggled is my llcirt,
Trapefing through the hye-ftreet's dirt :
In what a ftate for me to be,
From this Town-life gaiety !
S^-g^ EHRE, GLAUBE, UND AUGE, KEIN SCHERTZ. -=&^-^iJ
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FILLE TROP EN RUE, EST TOST PERDUE.
Come girls here, come all I know,
Playmates mine, advife me, fhew
In this plight that I'm come to,
What is beft for me to do ?
How fhall I remove this ftain,
And reftore my gown again ?
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Or elfe gives a darker fhade :
If I cut it out, there'll be
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2                                    If I rub it hard, 'twill take
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0                                    Yet more plain, the ftain that ne'er
q.                                    Honeft maiden's drefs fhould bear.
^                                    Pray then tell me, fome of you,
l~ i                                  What in this miftiap to do ?
CE                                      Thus fo flut-like to be ftain'd,
0.                                    Makes me of myfelf afham'd ;
Uj                                     For wherever I may go,
=                                    People will look at me fo,—
j                                    And think perhaps,—fuch dirt to fee,
q                                    I'm not what I ought to be.
z                                    Say, can none of you fuggeft,
What in fuch a cafe is beft ?
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No ?—then this I plainly fee,
11                                    You muft warning take by me
If you would not foil your gown,
Go not gadding through the town :
In the ftreets who plays the flirt,
Never yet efcaped fome dirt:—
Run not therefore Eaft and Weft,
Home for girls is much the beft.
SS*^ RARO VAGA VIRGO PUDICA EST. -§>=S
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VEEL. OP DE STRAET, LICHT OP DE PRAET.
Maidens, wherefoe'er you go,
Walking, travelling to and fro ;
Over land or over fea,
In whatever way it be;
In the Country or the Town,
Over meadow, dale or down,
Over hill or over moor,
In the houfe or out of door,                                                       j
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A    GOOD name is rather to be chosen than great riches, and loving favour
<                                             rather than silver and gold.—Proverbs xxii. i. D
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p:                                         Redire, cum periit, nescit pudor.—Senec. Agam.
jj>                                          Ego ilium periisse puto, cui periit pudor.—Plaut. q
Omnia si perdas; famam servare memento;
Qua semel amissa postea nullus eris.
^ Etiam sanato vulnere cicatrix manet.                                                                  ^
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Although the wound be healed, it always leaves a scar.
£                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                CD
0) Of schoon de wond'al is genesen,                                                                       D
W Daer sal noch al een teycken wesen.—Old Dutch Proverb.                             ^
2 Die in een quaet geruchte kommt, is half gehangen.—Ibid.                             <~
2 Who comes to an evil repute is half hanged.                                                    c
^ Give a dog a bad name and hang him.
0 Conduct thyself always with the same prudence, as though thou wert observed         Q
Q         by ten eyes, and pointed at by ten fingers.—Confucius.
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CL                  Put a curb upon thy desires if thou would'st not fall into some disorder.—Aristotle.          CD
It is better to be poor, and not have been wanting in discretion, than to attain           uj
the summit of our wishes by a loose conduct.—Diogenes.
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Be discreet in your discourse, but much more in your actions; the first evaporates,
the latter endure for ever.—Phocylides.
Shun the society of the depraved, lest you follow their pernicious example, and lose
yourself with them.—Plato.
Eer is teer. Honour is tender.
The finest silk will spoil the soonest.
Celle n'est pas entierement chaste qui fait douter de sa pudicite.
MUCH IN THE STREET, LIGHT OF REPUTI
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LASSES AND GLASSES ARE ALWAYS IN DANGER.
BEFORE my Light was to the winds a fcorne,
My body likewife fubjecl to be torne;
Now for a fafeguard I this lanterne have,
So whilft I fhine from wrong it doth me fave;
Even as the Diamond his light forth fends,
And with his hardneffe ftill himfelfe defends.
Honour is fubjed to unconftant chance,
Nor can it without envy 't felfe advance:
Vertue to honour is a brafen wall,
Guarded with which, it is not hurt at all ;
And how fo ever Fortun's ftormes doe blow,
Yet Glory lurking thus, his light can ftiow.
Farlie's Emblems.
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STRAW BANDS WILL TIE A FOOL'S HANDS.
Fac Sapias, et Fiber eris.
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ACT WISELY, AND THOU SHALL'T BE FREE
UCH men do is Folly merely ;
J «A And if aflced the reafon, why ?
Seldom, truthfully and clearly,
To the queftion they reply.
If reply they make, 'tis ever,
With them all, the fame excufe;
And fome think the anfwer clever :
'"Tis the Fafhion"—" cuftom "—"ufe
CE S^UE ME LIE, C'EST MA FOLIE. -^*g
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EVERY MAN HATH A FOOL IN HIS SLEEVE
Thus it ever is with fools;
Cuftom more than Reafon rules:
And where Reafon mould be law,
Famion—Cuftoms, flight as ftraw,
Stronger chains on them impofe,
Bonds more binding far than thofe,
Tyrants flnce the world began,
Laid upon their fellow man.
He vainly boafts that he is free,
Who fears t' infringe on Fafhion's rule;
For worfe than flave, already, he
Is both at once—a flave, and fool.
TNTER causas malorum nostrorum est, quod vivimus ad exempla, nee ratione com-
ponimur, sed consuetudine abducimur. Quod pauci faciunt, nolumus imitari: quum
plures facere cceperunt, quasi honestius sit, quia frequentius, sequimur, et recti apud
nos locum tenet error; &c.—Sen. Epist. 58.
Qui veut, il peut.
~VX 7" HAT less, than Fool, and greater Fool, than he,
Who knows no Heaven but his mistress' smiles,
And bows his reason to the tyranny
Of her caprice and ever changing wiles?
Than he, whose brain-sick fantasy can find
Subject for Love, in each insensate whim,
And in her very faults of heart and mind,
A grace, to none apparent but to him!
Who sees not, when she most affects the Dove,
She but derides the passion he reveals;
And that most false when most she vows her love,
'Tis but to seem what least she is—and feels.
If true that, he who wills it may be free :
Who hath no Will, must have a lack of brains;
A straw-tied Fool! who for his stultity,
In Love, as in aught else, deserves his chains.
A wise man's heart is at his right hand, but a fool's heart is at bis left.—Ecclesiastcs x. 2.
FOLLY IS THE POVERTY OF THE MIND.
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^^^-S^Sy^xs^S^N E FAITES MESSAGERS DES FOLS.'&®*&2>«^&S
TJ" E that sendeth a message by the hand of a Fool, cutteth off the feet, and drinketh
damage.—Proverbs xxvi. 6.
As a dog returneth to his vomit, so a Fool returneth to his folly.—Proverbs xxvi. n.
Non ex omni ligno fit Mercurius.
Magna Negotia viris magnis committenda.
By so much the more are we inwardly foolish, by how much we strive to seem
outwardly wise.—S. Greg.
Ex thymbra nemo lanceam conficiet;
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                                                   Neque ex Socrate bonum militem.-—Athen. lib. v.
It
a.                                                                                        ...                                                                              q
'Tff upward soaring spirit ever                                                                Uj
q                                                             Craves the joys of heaven to know,                                                 0
®                                                   But alas ! the vain endeavour !                                                                   
Bondslave of the flesh, below:                                                                2
Though they be but frail as straw,                                                    y
0                                                                 Worldly joys more strongly draw.
1                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    LU
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For, brethren, ye have been called unto liberty; only use not liberty for an occasion
0 the flesh, but by love serve one another.—Galatians v. 13.                                                              j-
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The weak may be laughed out of anything but their weakness.—M. de Genlis.                  0
r~                                                                                                                                                                                              Z
III           Yv ta^ °^ ac<luirmg a habit! we should rather say being acquired by it. Habit is          jjj
2 i                    t'le janissary power in man ! Passion and Principle the antagonist revolutionary         <
Powers for evil and for good.
V^OTJ may as well go stand upon the beach,                                                y.
And bid the main flood 'bate his usual height;                                      [l_
q                                         You may as well use question with the wolf,
Why he hath made the ewe bleat for the lamb;
You may as well forbid the mountain pines
To wag their high tops, and to make a noise
When they are fretted with the gusts of heaven,
As seek to soften that (than which what's harder?)
A foolish heart.—Shakespeare.
A Nation deserves no better laws than those it will submit to.—Goethe.
The Nation, like the man who would be free,
Must merit first the rights of liberty.
A FOOL IS
LIKE OTHER MEN AS LONG AS HE IS SILENT.
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FOOLS AND THE PERVERSE
HOSE purchafe was his pouch, his houfe a tun,
"
         Criticke of actions whatloever done,
That learned dogge, at noone-tyde tinn'd his light,
Searching for one, whole actions were upright.
The Eagles young ones by the Sunne are try'd,
Mens actions by the lamp are best espy'd;
For men in day time mafkt with vizards goe,
Of truth and faith making an outward fhow.
But when they can nights fecret filence find,
Before the lamp they doe unmafke their mind.
Happy is he whom Sunne and Lamp fees one,
Who's honeft ftill, though witnefle there be none.
Farlie's Emblems.
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AS THE WIND BLOWS, SO THE WEVELL GOES.
Dominie, quo me vocat, aura.
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WHITHER THE BREATH OF MY MISTRESS
CALLS ME.
|y) PORT or thy miftrefs' fickle mind,
Haplefs lover! turning ever
Like the wevell with the wind,
Haft not ftrength fuch bonds to fever ?
Look around thee, fenfelefs lover!—
Fair as fhe thou'llt many find;
Many who pofTefs moreover,
Far more charms of heart and mind.
®^s?^S<§, OU G^UE SPIRE, ME TIRE, -^v?-s^^S
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^0*c2r<&. El_ SABIO MUDA CONSEJIO, ll_ NECIO, NO. -'<S^S-^s>S>
Slave of her defpot frown or fmile;
Haft no other will to guide thee,
Than her changeful will, who while
Ruling thee, doth but deride thee ?
He who thus fubjects his reafon
To a fickle woman's rule,
Merits juft as much derifion
As the witlefs ftraw-tied fool.
Q'
AM misere servit, cui mulier imperat, cui leges imponit, praescribit, jubet, vetat
quod videtur : qui nihil imperanti negare potest, nil recusare; poscit, dandum
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         est; ejicit, abeundum : vocat, veniendum ; minatur, extimescendum !—Cicero.
LU                  Imponit leges vultibus ilia tuis.—Ovid.
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£                                                     £>uo nos Numen agit.
W                                                 Whither God directs us.
^                                              [TE is the wisest, who has school'd his mind
UJ                                                          T' adopt the current of the ruling wind.
^                                             Blow whence it will, prepared for all event,
(3                                             With fortune's dispensations e'er content,
                                             Who with discernment both in time and place,
Bends his opinion with a cheerful grace;
0                                            To him unknown the troubles which impart
J                                             The constant fever of the stubborn heart,
0
That 'mid a world of change would stand aloof,
To stem the torrent with his vain reproof.
To change opinion and yet constant be,
Is possible alone to such as he
Whose strength of mind is in its pliancy.
TT acerbitates multas ac molestias evitemus, consilia ad eventus ac tempora flectenda
sunt.—Seneca.
Oportet enim tanquam in talorum jactu, ad id quod ceciderit, res suas accommodare.
Plato.
Leve fit quod bene fertur onus.—Ovid.
Quoniam id fieri quod vis non potest, velis id quod possis.—Terence.
Tempori enim cedere, id est necessitati parere, semper sapientis habitum est.—Cicero.
Decet id pati aequo animo;
Si id facietis, levior labos erit.—Plautus.
THE WISE MAN CHANCES HIS OPINION----THE FOOL. NEVER.
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GOD GIVES THE WILL, NECESSITY GIVES THE LAW.
PHROW aside prejudice and thou art saved. Who prevents thee from doing so?—
Marcus Aurelius.
All things change—You yourself continually change, and destroy yourself in some
part. It is the same with the whole world.
We should take counsel of reason upon that which befalls us, and correct by our
prudent conduct the injustice of fortune, as a gamester repairs a stroke of ill luck by
his skill.—Plato.
A sure means to become inaccessible to disappointment, is to become penetrated
with the inconstancy of fortune, and to be prepared for all her capriciousness.—Plutarch.
Necessitati ne quidem Dii resistunt.—Erasmus.
Les hommes legers et flottans,
Perdent toujours leur avantage :
Aussi n'appartient-t'il qu'au sage,
De sgavoir bien prendre son temps.—Gomberville.
The goal of yesterday will be the starting-point of to-morrow.—Carlyle.
When things will not suit our will, it is wise to suit our will to things.—Arabic. Prov.
All our undertakings should be bent in accordance with the circumstances of the
moment.
In Domino quies.
Reft is in God.
~CTX'D to no point, the wevell sways about,
Obedient to th' uncertain wav'ring blast;
But when the wind has ceas'd to blow in doubt,
The wevell to one point is fix'd at last.
Vain heart! go search the world's remotest nook,
Pry into all, examine every book,
With equal thirst and hunger still oppress'd,
In God, the Lord, thou'llt find alone true rest.
(^OME unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.—
Matthew xi. 28.
Whom have I in heaven but thee ? and there is none upon earth that I desire
beside thee.—Psalm lxxiii. 25.
Take my yoke upon you and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart: and
ye shall find rest unto your souls; for my yoke is easy and my burden is light.—
Matthew xi. 29, 30.
S^iP^ |[_ SAVIO, FA DELLA NECESSITA VIRTU. -s^S-®^
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WHAT CAN'T BE CURED MUST BE ENDURED.
jC]f THOUSAND evils this my life doth ipend;
J At length fierce Boreas thereto puts an end :
My light, my heat, my flame and all is pari;
Onely, whilft breathe remaines, my hope doth laft.
This life of ours is toft to and againe,
Time and unconftant Fortune workes our bane :
Care kils us, griefe, difeafes doth outweare
This life, Death dragges us to the dolefull biere.
Fortune takes what fhe in the morning gave;
Or enemies robbe and spoile what e're we have;
Strength, beauty, perifh, honours flye away,
Falfe friends, when meanes are gone, they will not ftay.
Hope's onely conftant in adverfity,
Before fhe's kild by death, fhe will not fly.
Farlte's Emblems.
IL. FAUT SOUFFRIR CE QU'ON NE PEUT GUERIR.
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^^- THE WEAKEST GOES TO THE WAUL. ^S>&
Pauper agat caute.
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IF POOR, ACT CAUTIOUSLY.
I f ITTLE fifh! why come you fkimming
•"J On the furface as you do ?
Deeper down you fhould be fwimming,
That's the fitter place for you.
Here above, great fea-mews hover,
Keen of eye, and fwift of flight;
And for fuch as you moreover,
Have a wondrous appetite.
HE WHO CLIMBS TOO HIGH, IS NEAR A FAUU.
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S*5^ CHACUN A SA PLACE. -§*2:
Here alone, the kings of ocean
CO                                         May with fafety dare the light,
>                                    But how came you by the notion
Hi                                         Thus to brave the eagle's fight?
Every kind of little creature
A                                        Should its proper nation know;
x                                    And your fitter place by nature,
Z                                        Is much rather—down below.
X                                    But if little Bleaks difport them,
Like the porpoife and the whale,
(0                                     While fo heedlefs they comport them,
j                                        Danger muft their lives aflail
W                                    Little filhes undertaking
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<;                                        What the great alone may do,
Like all, who their part miftaking,
j                                        Soon or late their folly rue.
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I                      be no where.—Danish Proverb,
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CC                                           An ounce of discretion is better than a pound of wit.
Uj                                                       Who always does that which pleases him,
^                                                      Does not always what he ought.
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(/)                                                      Sempre ha torto il piu debole.
A                                                     A cader va chi troppo in alto sale.
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[j                       On ne doit jamais pretendre a, des droits qu'on ne sgauroit soutenir.
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q                                                      Quien siempre hace lo que quiere,
I                                                      No hace siempre lo que debe.—Spanish Protrerb.
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X                            Traspasa el rico las leyes, y es castigado el pobre.
The rich man transgresses the law, and the poor man is punished.
AI_1_ THINGS IN THEIR PLACES.
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HE WHO STANDS HIGH IS SEEN FROM AFAR. -§*S>"§>^
^EEKEST thou great things for thyself? seek them not : for, behold, 1 will bring evil
upon all flesh, saith the Lord.—-Jeremiah xlv. 5.
As a bird that wandereth from her nest, so is a man that wandereth from his
place.—Proverbs xxvii. 8.
A prudent man foreseeth the evil, and hideth himself; but the simple pass on, and
are punished.—Proverbs xxvii. 12.
He that exalteth his gate seeketh destruction.—Proverbs xvii. 19.
W
O shall go about
To cozen Fortune and be honourable
Without the stamp of merit! Let none presume
To wear an undeserved dignity.—Shakespeare.
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                                         Poor and content, is rich, and rich enough.—Ibid.                                          |J
[[                                         Thraso is Gnatho's prey.—Lord Bacon.                                                           E
UJ                                          True happiness is to no place confined,                                                             (/)
But still is found with a contented mind.
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                 When we have reached the summit of a vain ambition, we have only reached a | <j
2         Pmnacle where we have nothing to hope, but everything to fear.—Colton. Lacon.                   I
2                                                                                                                                                        H
<                                                                                                                    -------------------------                                                                                                                    UJ
0                                                                                                                                           z
TDARVUM parva decent.—Horace.                                                                 U-
Felix est qui sorte sua contentus vivit.—Horace.                                 fl)
J                                                            Ne te qusesiveris extra.—Ibid.
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^                                         Cui non conveniat sua res, ut calceus olim,                                                      <(
Si pede major erit subvertet, si minor uret.—Ibid.
Ne quid nimis.—Terence.
Haud facile emergunt quorum virtutibus obstat
Res angusta domi.—Juvenal.
Pauper amet caute, timeat maledicere pauper,
Multaque divitibus non patienda ferat.—Ovid.
Quid fuit ut tutas agitaret Daedalus alas,
Icarus immensas nomine signet aquas?
Nempe, quod hie alte, demissius ille volaret,
Nam pennas ambo non habuere suas,
Crede mihi, bene qui latuit, bene vixit, et intra.
Fortunam debet quisque manere suam.—Ovid.
Nullum Numen abest si sit Prudentia.—Juvenal.
__WHO PITCHES TOO HIGH WON'T GET THROUGH HIS SONG.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    ?
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S<&. S*S,cS=<a- CONTENTEMENT PASSE RICHESSE. ^S^-^S-s^
f * IGHT is the Torches life of heavenly kind,
Thus to a fraile and greafie malTe combind,
To which the Painter beauty doth impart,
Giving it gloiTe and colour from his Art.
The painting's nought, light doth the Torch commend
Which iirft was framed onely for this end.
It is our mind that doth our life approve,
Shewing our race derived from above.
Blind Fortunes goods, kins generofity,
Youths ftrength, and beauties curiofity
Make not, unlelTe the fpirit doe us feafon
With that Heav'n-bred fparkle of divine reafon.
Farlie's Emblems.
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PRIDE THAT DINES ON VANITY, SUPS ON CONTEMPT.
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G^UI EST BIEN, G^U'IL SY TIENNE.
Fry daer gy zyt.
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REST CONTENT WHERE THOU ART.
HERE is a Fifh, fo Fiftiers fay,
Of mood fo giddy and fo gay;
So fond of glare and dazzling light,
That even in the darkeft night,
'Twill crowd thereto in fportive play,
And e'en more ready than by day
Become the wily Fifher's prey.
WHOSO IS WELL, LET HIM KEEP SO.
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cg<&-2^FATTI Tl M1ELE E Tl MANGERAN l_E MOSCHE.*5-M
The Fifher who thefe fim would get,
Needs neither baited hook nor net:
A blazing torch, his only lure,
Fix'd in his boat, is far more fure
Than bow-net, feine, or hook and bait,
His fkifF in little time to freight.
For while his mates propel the boat,
As up and down the ftream they float;
The fifh enchanted with the light
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                                    That makes a mimic day of night,
W                                    From far and near toward the blaze
~                                    Directing their enraptur'd gaze,
I                                    Swim up in fhoals, and fport around,
0                                        Till giddy with delight they bound
Into the fifher's bark, and there
£                                    Forfeit their life for love of glare.
IU                                                                                                                                       °
>                                     Thofe who on Love or Pleafure bent,
IU                                                                                              .
Z                                    Leave their own home and element;
And wander far to court the grace
Or win the fmile of ftranger face,
01                                        Of whom they nothing farther know,
Than their mere outward charm and fhow;
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Have frequent reafon to repent
O                                    They were not with their home content;
And like the fifhes of our tale,
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Their folly, when too late, bewail.
HI                                     Wooers and wooed! to both of you,
0                                    Alike applies a maxim true,
Which cannot be too oft repeated :—
Who far away a-courting goes,
Where one of t'other little knows,
Or goes to cheat—or to be cheated.
QUIEN lejos va a casar,
O va engafiado
O va a' enganar.
MAKE THYSELF HONEY AND THE FLIES WILL EAT THEE.
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J^ NEAR NEIGHBOUR IS BETTER THAN A DISTANT COUSIN.
Fallitur ignotis, aut fallit amator in oris.
Ut cephalum Venetis fallat piscator in oris,
Prsefiget parvse lumina magna reti:
Mox piscis, qua teda micat, salit, inque phaselum
Cum ruit, in prcedam navita promptus adest.
Quid tibi cum flammis, cum sint tua regna sub undis,
Quid salis in Cymbam stulte, natare tuam est:
Ni cupiat vel fraude capi, vel fallere quemquam,
Errat, in ignoto littore si quis amat.
Domus arnica, domus optima.
'pHE finger of God points to home, and says to us all, "There is the place to find
your earthly joy!"—Rev. J. Abbott.
If you find a young man who does not love home, whose taste is formed for other
J°ys, who can see no happiness in the serene enjoyment of the domestic circle, you may
depend upon it he is not to be trusted.—Ibid.
'Mid pleasures and palaces though we may roam,
Be it ever so humble, there's no place like home;
A charm from the sky seems to hallow us there,
Which, wherever we rove, is not met with elsewhere.
Home ! Home ! sweet, sweet home !
There's no place like home !—B. Cornwall.
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BREAD AT HOME IS BETTER THAN ROAST MEAT ABROAD.
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TRUST, BUT NOT TOO MUCH.
;Y Light is beft maintain'd with little Oyle,
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          Too much of that which feeds me, doth me fpoile.
Deluge of waters drownes the fertile ground,
Soft dropping raines makes it with grafTe abound :
Riot in cheere, the body kils and minde,
The meaneft fare, the beft for both we finde :
Rather in Mica than Apollo dine,
If thou wouldft wit and health ftill to be thine.
Far lie's Emblems.
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TIME BRINGS ALL THINGS TO LIGHT.
Sensim amor sensus occwpat.
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LOVE TAKES POSSESSION OF THE MIND
INSENSIBLY.
'HOUGH fcarce at firft apparent to the fight,
The words which on the tender bark we write
Yet how diftinc~t, 'ere long, the letters mew,
In fize increafed, as with the rind they grow !
So by degrees, as on that lettered bark,
Doth Time expand to flame, Love's flighteft fpark:
So to the germ of Vice in early youth,
Time gives the increafe with the body's growth;
:2*^s=<&-5»^ SLOW AND SURE. -s^S^a^-S^
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A LITTLE LEAVEN, LEAVENS A GREAT MASS.
And errors deem'd at firil too flight to trace,
Spread to a depth no efforts can efface.
From fmall beginnings rife the fiercer!, ftrife;
Nor Love, nor Vice, at once leap into life:
The breeze at firft fo zephyr-like and warm,
Is but too oft the prelude of the ftorm.
That fo it is; how many have to grieve!—
The mifchief when full-grown we can perceive ;
But how it grew—we fcarcely can believe.
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OR neque nos statim, neque vehementer ab initio, quemadmodum ira, invadit;
neque facile ingressus, decedit, quamvis alatus : sed sensim ingreditur ac molliter,
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           manetque diu in sensibus.—Plutarch.
Labitur sensim furor in medullas,
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Igne furtivo populante venas,
Non habet latam data plaga frontem,
Sed vorat tectas penitus medullas.—Senec Hippol.
Long-waiting love doth entrance find
(!)                                             Into the slow-believing mind.—Sydney Godolphin.
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2                There is no argument of more antiquity and elegancy than is the matter of Love;
Uj         for it seems to be as old as the world, and to bear date from the first time that man
q         and woman was : therefore in this, as in the finest metal, the freshest wits have in all
0         ages shown their best workmanship.—Robert Wilmot.
"\A7"E are not worst at once—the course of evil
Begins so slowly, and from such slight source,
An infant's hand might stem its breach with clay;
But let the stream get deeper, and Philosophy—
Aye, and Religion too—shall strive in vain
To turn the headlong torrent.— Old Play.
7'em-pus omnia revelat,
Tertullian.
There is nothing covered that shall not be revealed; and hid that shall not be
known.—Matthew x. 26.
&*&< PEU IDE LEVAIN AIC3RIT GRAND' PATE
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S^s^s^s^s^ EX UMBRA IN SOLEM. *s*£'§>g>§*g:'S*2>s§*2;
Tenera Pietatis principia.
By degrees, until Chrift be formed in you.—Galatians iv. 19.
we all come in the unity of the Faith, and of the Knowledge of the Son of
God, unto a perfect man, unto the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ.
~~£pkesians iv. 13.
T^\ESPAIR not that the writing on the tree,
So indistinct at first appear to thee :
Of one day's growth was Virtue never known;
LU                                              The Light of Grace spreads by degrees alone:
q-                                            Until throughout illumin'd by its ray,
0                                            The Soul of Man made perfect in each way
By Faith and Works, is fitted to partake
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UJ                 Although the operations of Nature are hidden, we must acknowledge the hand of
a Power which acts in secret, as we acknowledge a force which attracts heavy bodies
q           ° the earth, or which carries light bodies upwards.—Marcus Aurelius.
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Medium Sol aureus orbem
®*                                   Occupat, et radiis ingentibus omnia luftrat.
r~PHE pitchy darkness of the night
Is not immediate changed to Light:—
'Ere morning shows his ruddy face,
First breaks the dawn with gentle pace;
And then, the Sun, the World's bright eye,
Rises and gradual mounts the sky;
Until at last his fullest ray,
Floods sea and earth with brightest day.
Better is the end of a thing than the beginning thereof: and the patient in spirit
!S better than the proud in spirit.—Ecclesiastes vii. 8.
—___DESERVE SUCCESS AND YOU SHALL. COMMAND IT.
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THE SUN WILL BRING TO LIGHT WHAT LAY UNDER THE SNOW.
ijm& HIS little rift and chap workes all my woe,
li Whilft thorow it fierce Boreas doth blow;
A crevice is a city gate to death,
Who ftill in ambufh feekes to flop our breath:
A little chink dothe drowne the loaded barke,
A ftately houfe is burned with a fparke:
And one difeafe doth this our health annoy,
One wound our life is able to deftroy :
One finne can Soule and Body overthrow
Into the hell, and darknefTe that's below.
Doe not a danger which is meane defpife,
From meaneft caufes greater!; evils arife.
Farlie's Emblems.
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BIRD BUILDS ITS NEST. ^^
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WITHOUT KNOWLEDGE MEDDLE NOT.
Laedit ineptos.
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THE INEXPERT ARE WOUNDED.
(H S food for man, like many other fifh,
J A well dreff'd Thornback is a dainty difh;
But in the cooking, lefs of art there lies,
Than how to hold it when you've caught the prize
For he who doth not know this fifh's ways,
And grips him juft as he would take another,
CUSTOM MAKES ALL THINGS EASY.
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:g<&,:2^S<&. NESSUNO NASCE MAESTRO.'M^^'W
Moft dearly for his want of knowledge pays
With unexpected pain, too great to fmother :
While the more ikill'd and cautious fimer, he
Seizing him firfb by one gill, then the other,
Short work of him foon makes, and as you fee,
Laughs in his fleeve to hear his neighbour's pother.
Non omnibus omnia.
All things are not good for all.
Tl 7"HO think that they the faculty possess,
All things alike to do with like success ;
And that alike all things may be achiev'd,
Ne'er fail'd alike to find themselves deceiv'd.
Not ev'ry one is apt to ey'ry thing,
Nor the same talent to the purpose bring:
To take or this or that be what it may,
Each certain thing has its own certain way.
T achieve success in all we would acquire,
Needs something else beyond the mere desire.
And when obtain'd how oft 'tis but to find,
The thing desir'd, not suited nor design'd
Or to our talent, health, or frame of mind.
All is not good for all, though all would be
Alike possessors of some thing they see :
What joy to one imparts and is his gain,
Is both at once another's loss and pain,
And ev'ry day doth some example shew
That one man's weal is but another's woe.
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Arte citas remoque rates veloque reguntur,
Arte leves currus, arte regendus amor.—Ovid I. Amand.
Qui secundos optat eventus, dimicet arte, non casu.—Veget. lib. 3 in Prcef.
Amabit sapiens, cupient cseteri.—Apul. ex A/ran.
NO ONE IS HIS CRAFT'S MASTER IN ONE DAY.
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SAGESSE VAUT MIEUX G^UE FORCE.
Without knowledge meddle not.
Diluis helleborum certo compescere puncto
Nescius quantum ? vetat hoc natura medendi.
Wilt thou mix hellebore, who doth not know
How many grains should to the mixture go 1
The art of med'cine this forbids, I trow.
Felix quern- faciunt aliena pericula cautum.
PHAT is a twofold knowledge, which profits alike by the folly of the foolish, and
the wisdom of the wise ; it is both a shield and a sword; it borrows its security
from the darkness, and its confidence from the light.—Colton. Lacon.
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[^                                            One man's meat is another man's poison.
0)                                             One man's fault is another man's lesson.
<f                             It is better to learn late than to remain ignorant.—Phocylides.
What is the true good? Knowledge.
And the true evil 1 Ignorance.—Seneca.
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Disappointment in Marriage.
ijj          J_^ISTEN, I pray you, to the stories of the disappointed in marriage :—collect all their
0                  complaints : hear their mutual reproaches! upon what fatal hinge do the greatest
D         Part of them turn 1—" They were mistaken in the person."—Some disguise either of body
~j           r mind is seen through in the first domestic scuffle :—some fair ornament—perhaps the
vei7 one which won the heart, the ornament of a meek and quiet spirit—falls off; It is
ot the Rachael for whom I have served,
Why hast thou then beguiled me?
Be open—be honest: give yourself for what you are; conceal nothing,—varnish
Nothing,—and if these fair weapons will not do,—better not conquer at all, than con-
quer for a day:—when the night is passed, 'twill ever be the same story,—And it came
to Pass, behold it was Leah !
If the heart beguiles itself in its choice, and imagination will give excellencies
which are not the portion of flesh and blood : when the dream is over, and we awake
m the morning, it matters little whether 'tis Rachael or Leah—be the object what it
Wul, as it must be on the earthly side, at least, of perfection,—it will fall short of the
ork of fancy, whose existence is in the clouds.
In such cases of deception, let not man exclaim as Jacob does in his,— What is
thou hast done unto me ?
—for 'tis his own doings, and he has nothing to lay his fault
0n> but the heat and poetic indiscretion of his own passions.—Sterne's Sermons, vol. iv.
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EXPERIENCE TEACHES FOOLS.
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LA EXPERIENCIA ES MADRE DE LA SCIENCIA.
(O OMETIMES I was the brood of Gold'n-haird lunne,
h^J More pure, more chaft, than Vefta's watchfull nunne,
Purer than Eafterne gemmes, than Saphirs bright,
Purer than Ophirs gold, than Rubies light,
Purer than Paclols gravell often try'd
In fire, and furnace feven times purify'd:
But fince the fates to greafe did me combine,
His filthy dregges are judged to be mine:
For why conjunction doth contagion make,
And from th' impure the pure infection take.
The foule once plung'd into the body darke,
Forgets it was a chaft and divine fparke.
Farlie's Emblems.
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"ON NON MOUVOIR, MOUVOIR ME FAIT.
Dum Trahimus, Trahimur.
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WHILE WE DRAW, WE ARE DRAWN.
J SEEK to move thee to my mind :
But in fo doing, this I find;—
That 'tis not I who give to thee
The fond emotion I would fee;
But thine immobility,
That moves me rather, more to thee.
Strange ! that the coldnefs of thine heart,.
Should thus to mine more warmth impart;
©^3- THINE IMMOBILITY MOVES ME. -=55^
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WHO IS GOD SAVE THE LORD? WHO IS A ROCK SAVE OUR GOD?
And thus, what I would draw, to fee
Draw me, who would the drawer be!
The more thou doft my pray'r deny,
Alas ! the more I burn and ligh,
Lamenting Love's perverfity.
Adtrahens, abftrahor.
The Puller is pulled,
T IFE'S high-rais'd landmark is the firm set rock,
Emblem of Him who moveth all around,
Himself quiescent, yet who gives the shock
Of Life and Motion which throughout abound.
Man, whose weak hand, and as it suits his will,
Would pull to him that rock, shall strive in vain,
And learn therein, his Destiny is still
Thereto but to be drawn, howe'er he strain.
Sure guide to those who unreluctant hale
Their bark thereon—their toil shall best avail;
And those who doubt, shall find it still prevail.
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Si nunquam Danaen habuisset ahenea turris,
Non esset Danae de Jove facta parens.—Ovid, Amor. Eleg. 19.
S^pe ego cum possem facilem exorare puellam,
Difficilis mentem ccepit habere meam.
Quod movet, quiefcit!
That which moves, is at reft!
f~* OD the Immoveable Rock, moves all.—Psalm xviii.
Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh down from the
Fatker of Lights, with whom is no variableness neither shadow of turning. —James i. 17.
cg^S^S^S^S*^ DIEU N'A RIEN FAIT G^UE DE BON. *^&'^g:^<Z'§*g:■ ■ ■■=?
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t£*S*S<S*S:<S*&*&'S*&-&*:&' GOD IS LOVE. ^^-::S*g-'=§>g;'1&*&*S>g;'TS^
Omne mot urn non in moto movetur,Jed in quiefcente, et id quod movet, quiefcit.
Herm. Pamand. cap. xi.
TMMUTABLE, yet changing all
On high, around, below;
Immoveable, yet moving all
The way that all should go :—
Fount of all Life and Light,
All Good, all Love, all Grace;
______■                                          Encompassing with thought and sight,
CD                                                           Eternity and space :—
^                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                               I
q                                                    All Peace, all sweet repose and rest,                                                      -1
Yet ever moving still
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                                                  Earth, Sea, and Sky, as He knows best,
I                                                        His purpose to fulfil:—                                                                        T
m                                                    Changeless, where endless change we see,
Cr.                                                            Unmov'd—the Mover moves                                                                     q
All else in changeful harmony,                                                                 <t
Q                                                        And though unmov'd—He Loves.
o                                                                                                                                                o
WHAT is God- The s°ui °f the worid- what is God? Ai1 that we see'and h
that we do not see. The grandeur of God is infinite; alone He is all; for He          |_
Wills and directs His work.—Seneca.                                                                                                 
*                                                                                                                                                                                                                         I
Q               An Eternal God moves this mortal world; an Incorruptible Spirit breathes life into
0ur frail organs.—Cicero.                                                                                                                    ^
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CC               We cannot understand God other than as a simple, free Being, divested of all          ffl
Perishable admixture : knowing all things, impressing motion upon all, and enjoying in
of Himself an eternal activity.
How do the Heavens speak to us % In what language doth it instruct us 1 The
Masons run their course; all is reborn, all things are renewed. It is with this eloquent
Slence that they discourse to us the great Secret Principle by which all is moved.—
Confucius.
Mon Dieu conduisse moy, par la voie ordonne'e,
Je suivray volontiers, de peur qu'un fort lien
Ne m'entraine mechant, oil en homme de bien
Je pourrois arriver, suivant la destinee.
The Prayer of Epictetus. Le Sieur du Vair. (Manuel a" Epict\
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BLESSED IS THE MAN THAT FEARETH THE LORD.
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y light from whence it came, mounts ftill on high
Unto the fource of light that's never dry.
Like as the Rivers to the Ocean runne.
From whence their fecret fountaines, firft begun ;
Like as the ftone doth to the center fway ;
So to the Spheres my light ftill makes his way.
No joyes, delights, and greateft weights of gold,
Nor pampering pleafure faft our foule can hold.
The panting foule refts not, untill it fee
His maker God, a Tri-une Deitie.
Farlie's Emblems.
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REJOICE IN THE LORD ALWAY; AND AGAIN I SAY REJOICE.
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I_A PEUR EST GRAND INVENTEUR.
Inverte, et Avertes.
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BOTH SIDES SHOULD BE SEEN.
gf MASK, feen firft in front, by children's eyes,
Strikes them with terror and with wild furprife
But would'ft reftore to calm the urchin mind,
Avert the face, and let them fee behind.
With men no lefs, how oft doth it appear,
The worft interpreter of things is Fear!
FEAR IS A GREATINVENTOR.
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FOOLISH FEAR DOUBLES DANGER.
How oft the crowds of men and women grown,
Quailing like children at fome form unknown—
Or when fome found unufual ftrikes their ear,
Fly, to meet ills far worfe than thofe they fear !
And yet how frequent, would they but reftrain
The fudden terror of their fever'd brain,
And calmer wait t' examine and to fee
The how, or end of what the thing may be ;
Puerile as that which fill'd the child with dread,
(jT                            They'd find the fancied peril which they fled;
W                            And fcann'd with coolnefs, learn more probably,
Z                            That what in front is terrible to fee,
q                            Seen from behind provokes hilarity '
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Timiditas est corruptio judicii.
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0                                                                                                                        Seneca.
Z         HTHE Imagination (says Seneca) appals us usually more than the thing itself; in like
manner as the mere whizzing sound of a sling frightens birds, and makes them take
wing, so are we alarmed more by the noise than by the act. As the forms of bodies
appear increased in size in misty weather, so are all things magnified to us by Fear : in
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         so much that many through fear of coming into danger, fall, daily, into the most
extreme peril. Men have been known, in peril of shipwreck, to throw themselves
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         overboard through fear of being drowned ] drowning themselves, therefore, in order not
y         to be drowned, and dying to avoid death. What folly so great (says Seneca) as to
<         become troubled at approaching difficulties, to spare ourselves no anguish, but rather
call an increase of sufferings to those that threaten 1
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TDERII, interii, occidi—quo curram 1 quo non curram 1
Tene, tene—quem 1 quis 1 nescio—nihil video.
I'm lost, undone, I'm kill'd, oh whither shall I flee ]
Whither shall I not flee?
Hold ! hold ! whom 1 what ? who 1 I know not—I do nothing see.
The novelty of the danger is not unfrequently its chief and only terror.
^Equam memento rebus in arduis servare mentem.
In peril, still preserve an unmov'd mind,
And oft no peril in the thing you'll find.
APPEARANCES ARE DECEITFUL.
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FEAR ARGUES A DEGENERATE MIND.
A DHIBE rationem difficultatibus, possunt et dura molliri, et angusta laxari, et gravia
scite ferentes minus premere.—Seneca.
Terror absentium rerum ipsa novitate falso augetur; consuetudo autem et ratio
efficit, ut ea, etiam quae horrenda sunt natura, terrendi vim amittant.—Plutarch in Mor.
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Mors larvae similis: tremor hinc, nihil inde mali?ni
i Corinth, xv. 55.                                                                 |j 0
Death, where is thy Sting 2
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T^'EN as the mask, in front seen, only, fills                                                 ^
The mind of children with a panic fear,
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So Death by men is feared : yet least of ills,
                                                   2
Alike of both the terrors disappear                                                                     <
When seen by Reason's light on every side.                                                 [_
And why fear Death, ere we its nature know 1                                                 5
'Tis but a livid mask, which, seen behind,                                                        Q.
Hath terrors none, but balm for every woe,
Hope, peace, and comfort to the righteous mind ;                                           W
Opening to realms more bright, the portals wide.                                         I_
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TDUERI larvas timent, ignem non timent; sic nos timemus mortem quae est larva,         ^
contemptu digna, peccatum non timemus.—Chrysostom, Horn. 5 ad Pop.                        ,_
Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of Death, I will fear no evil:       j j
for thou art with me ; thy rod and thy staff comfort rat.—Psalm xxiii. 4-                               J ffl
The Lord is my light and my salvation; whom shall I fear? The Lord is the       j ^
length of my life; of whom shall I be afraid%-^Ibid. xxvii. 1.                                                 Q
Why are ye fearful, O ye of little faith?—Matthew viii. 26.                                i <
Sic nos in Luce timemus.—Lucret. /. 2.                                                 j UJ
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Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his saints.—Psalm cxvi. 15-                 <
.                     CC
For I am in a strait betwixt two, having a desire to depart, and to be with Christ:         g
which is far better.— Philippians i. 23.                                                                                              0
Present fear begetteth Eternal security : Fear God, which is above all, and no
need to fear man at all—S. August, super Psal.
■S^S^ EXFERIENTIA DOCET. -^S-s^
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:XPERIENTIA STULTORUM MAGI3TER. -s>«
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O glory could I fhew, wer't not the night
In fable clouds did mantle up heavens light,
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When ftarres are vail'd, and Phceb' her homes doth hide,
Laying her creflet and attire afide.
The more nights fogge doth mafke the fpangled fpheare,
The more in darkeneffe doth my Light appeare;
Nights foggy cold doth make my flame more ftrong,
And light's more glorious pitchy clouds among.
If you together contraries parallel,
By contrary opposition they excell.
Vertue compare with Vice; and you ftiall fee,
This mew his glory, that his infamie.
Far lie's Emblems.
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EXPERIENCE IS THE INSTRUCTOR OF FOOLS.
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HE IS A GREAT FOOL WHO FORGETS HIMSELF.
Sibi nequam, cui bonus.
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WHO IS HURTFUL TO HIMSELF,
BENEFITS NO ONE.
F
AKE Love with cheerful heart,
Of what ufe thoughts of fadnefs ?
Do as the Partridge doth,*
That fattens on Love's gladnefs:
couvrir la-femelle —Plutarch.
La perdrix s'engraisse a
HELP THYSELF, AND GOD WILL HELP THEE
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SELF-PRESERVATION IS THE FIRST LAW OF NATURE.
Do as doth the pretty bird *
Which on the banks of Nile,
The while he feafts his fill, no lefs
Doth fervice to the Crocodile.
Nay ne'er repine, fweet youth,
Tis fenfelefs, downright Folly,
To let thine ardent flame
Give caufe for Melancholy:
He that loves and ferves a maid
In truth, achieves two ends;
For while her wilh he pleafes molt,
So he no lefs himfelf befriends.
Et puer es, nee te, quidquam nisi ludere oportet.
Lude, decent annos niollia regna tuos.
Cur aliquis rigido fodiat sua pectora ferro?
Invidiam caedis pacis amator habes.
Ovid, lib. i. de Remed. Amor, ad Cupidinem.
Amor immoderatus ipsi amori novissime inutiles sic facit: nam quum fruendi cupiditate
insatiabili quis flagrat, tempora suspicionibus, lachrimis, querelis perdit, otium sui facit
et novissime sibi est odio.—Hieron.
Les violences qu'on se fait pour s'empecher d'aimer sont souvent plus cruelles que
les rigueurs de ce qu'on aime.—La Rochefoucauld.
Non id agis, quod agis.
Publica prastexuntur, privata curantur.
Quelque personage que l'homme joue, il joue toujours le sien parmy.—Mich, de
Montaigne.
"VI 7TTH Public men, great fault the Public find,
That while the business of the State they do,
They shew themselves the while somewhat inclin'd
To look to self, and mend their own state too.
In this withal, we see not much to blame;
And those who most the impulse oft condemn,
* On the subject of this bird, the Trochilus of Pliny, see Plin. lib. 8, cap. 25. De Trochilo sive avium
rege, crocodilo dentes scalpente et se saginante.
IT IS EASY TO HELP HIM WHO IS WILLING TO BE HELPED.
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WHO IS OVER NICE, LOSES MANY A SLICE.
Would—ten to one—in office do the same,
Or even worse than those whom they contemn.
In this as in all else 'tis the excess
That constitutes the fault, and those alone
Who steer the middle course, the best express :
" Serve well the Public ends, but serve thine own."
The wisest Statesman of a surety,
Is he who lab'ring for the Public weal,
His own alike with the same glance can see,
And feel for that for which none else would feel.
On this world's stage, whate'er the Part man plays,
In act and speech however seeming fair;
He always something of his own betrays,
And in the Part—the Man himself is there.
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A la cour du Roy, chacun pour soy.
Sois serviteur, sans crevecceur.
Onder Vrientschaps schyn, besorght hy't syn.
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O -prodiga rerum luxuries !
~VX THEN gorged with food, the greedy Crocodile
Extended lies upon the sands of Nile;
The pretty King bird with an appetite
Gross as the Vulture, or the bird of Night;
Hies to the monster's wide extended jaws
To cleanse his fetid teeth with beak and claws.
That bird so pretty should a taste display
For food so filthy, doth too well pourtray
And symbolise the grosser appetites
Which some men shew for sensual delights;
And who while doing service as they seem,
The service of their bellies most esteem.
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Whose end is destruction, whose God is their belly; and whose glory is in their
sham
e> who mind earthly things.—Philip, iii. 19.
Stolen waters are sweet, and bread eaten in secret is pleasant.—Prov. ix. 17.
'T IS GOOD TO HAVE FRIENDS IN ALL. PARTS.
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WHO WOULD TAKE MUST GIVE.
HILST ftormy winds about the Lanterne rage,
The light ought to have lurked in his cage;
Untimely love undoes him, while he lends
His Light, loe how his harmelefTe life he fpends.
When troops of enemies befiege the wall,
For feare of hurt, fhut gates, though friends doe call.
It that a friend accompanyed with a foe
Doth come, feare neighbour danger, let him goe.
If thou lov'ft to be charitable, doe
So good to others, that it hurt not you.
Farlie's Emblems.
G^UIEN G^UIERE TOMAR CONVIENELE DAR.
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KNOW, ONE FALSE STEP IS NE'ER RETRIEVED.
De Kanne gaet soo lang te water, totse eens hreeckt.
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THE POT GOETH SO LONG TO THE WATER, TIL AT
LAST IT COMMETH BROKEN HOME.
fLAS! Alas! What have I done?
Oh! Woe is me this day:
My Pitcher's broke!—all from this fun,—
This filly, romping play.
Oh! fad! what will my Mother fay?
Her words have come too true!
M-DONNA CHE PRENDE, TOSTO SE^RENDE^
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NEGLIGENCE AMENE DECHEANCE
On me alone the blame fhe'll lay,
Whatever mail I do?
And yet full many a time and oft,
In this fame Pitcher too,
I've water drawn both hard and foft,
Nor had mifhap to rue:
Pumpt water in and thrown it out,
And pumpt it full again,
Nor e'en fo much as chipp'd the fpout,
>                                            For Mother to complain.
U                                        Alas ! that I could ever be
H                                            So heedlefs of her fay—
H                                        The warning fhe would give to me,
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And, almoft ev'ry day !
But here about young fellows are
£                                            So rollicking and free ;
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q.                                        Pull girls about fo much, nor care ;
g                                            And moft of all p'rhaps me.
^                                        That Hans there of our Village, he's
W                                            So rough and wild alway;
0                                        If I wont fpeak, he'll fulk, or teafe
(0                                             Whene'er I pafs his way.
And I'm good natur'd too I know,
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                                            And where is then the blame,
q                                        I love a laugh fometimes, and who
At heart but does the fame ?
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                                        And I and other girls when we
Perchance together meet,
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                                        Some lads are always fure to be
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At games about the ftreet:
And fo it was juft now, although
I did all I could do,
For Water firfh my way to go,
When Hans he joined us too.
Then there began a game all round
Of running—jibe and joke,
When down we came upon the ground,
And I my pitcher broke !
IDLE MEN TEMPT THE DEVIL.
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AS YOU SOW, SO MUST YOU REAP.
And thus I've found the faying true,
I've many times heard fpoken,
" The Pot that goes too oft unto
The Well, at laft gets broken."
HP ANT va la cruche a l'eau, que le manche y demeure.
Der Krug gienge so lang zur buch
Bis er zu lest zerbruch.
Der Krug gehet so lang zum brunnen, bis das er bricht.
Tanto va la secchia al pozzo, che vi lascia il manico.
Consumitur peccando ssepius pudor.
Tanto va la capra al cavolo, che vi lascia la pelle.
Het geytjen loopt soo dickwils in de koolen, tot het eens de vacht laet.
De mug die om de keerse sweeft,
't Is wonder soo die lange leeft.
Wie veel wil mallen,
Moet eenmael vallen.
KaicoTj dfiiXuiv avros eKJSi^ari kcikoq.
Id est,
Malos frequentans ipse et evades malus.
Une folie est tost faite.
Let ! vrysters! wie ontrent u gaen
Een malle greep is haest gedaen.
Be cautious, maidens, how ye run;
A foolish thing is speedy done.
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Avoid too much Familiarity.
JT is unwise both to use and to permit too great Familiarity. Who become
familiar, soon lose the superiority which their previous reserve gave to them ; and
c°nsequently, their credit. We should be familiar with none—never with our superiors,
because it is dangerous; nor with our inferiors, because it is derogatory; and still
less with the vulgar, whose ignorance renders them insolent, and, unable to perceive
the honour that is done them, they presume that it is their due. Familiarity is one
the tendencies of a weak mind.—Gracian.
The purest treasure mortal times afford
Is—spotless reputation ; that away,
Men are but gilded loam, or painted clay.—Shakespeare, Rich. III.
L'OISIVETE EST MERE DE TOUT VICE.
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L.E MECHANT EST COMME l_E CHARBON.
fit ^^ loth'ft thou me, my Soule, loving to goe
J ^ Elfewhere, I pray thee whither, let me know ?
Was thou not all this while my deereft mate,
My gueft, my convoy, confort in eftate ;
While I did florifh, thou didft conftant prove,
My times are darkened now, fo is thy love ?
Soule. Here as a captive to a keeper, fo
I tyed was with thee, at lift, to goe,
Banifht from home: loe now my bonds are loofe,
Thou dy'ft, I glad runne to my father's houfe.
Soules bond with body hardly maketh breach,
Yet this doth dye, and that Heav'ns dwelling reach.
Farlie's Emblems.
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S'll_ NE VOUS BRULE, II- VOUS NOIRCIT.
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BE MERRY AND WISE
Ludite, sed Cafte.
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PLAY, BUT CHASTELY.
THE cunning Hedgehog, with inftin&ive art,
In ball-like fhape, rolled up, upon the ground,
With open hole-like mouth, knows well his part,
T'entrap the giddy mice that fport around.
And lo ! when one, more prying than the reft,
Draws near, to peep within a hole fo nice,
RIRE SANS MAL-ENGIN.
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GIVE A SPRAT TO CATCH A MACKREL.
The Hedgehog fnaps him up with eager zeft,
And moufey pays for peeping, in a, trice!
Let caution guide your fport, be what it may;
For where expected leaft, fome fnare may lay :
And Venus' boy was painted blind of yore.
For that in darknefs he worked mifchief more.
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Plutarch.
Amor latebricolarum hominum corruptor.—Plaut. Trin.
Detur aliquid astati, sit adolescentia liberior, non omnia voluptatibus denegentur.
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         Dummodb ilia in hoc genere prsescriptioque moderatioque teneatur, parcat juventus
0         pudicitise suas, ne spoliet alienam, ne probrum castis, labem integris, infamiam bonis
m inferat.—Cic. pro Mar. Calio.
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Parva Patitur ut Magnis Potiatur.
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UJ               Niuno piu facilmente inganna gli altri, die chi e solito, e ha fama, di non gli
~!         ingannare.—Giucciardin.
CC               No one so easily deceives others as he who is expert in deceit, and has a repute
[^         for Integrity.
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111                               He is not the greateft cheat who begins with cheating,
*                                         HPO gain his ends, the Hedgehog first permits
I-                                                   Each sportive freedom that the mouse would take ;
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More sure is he, his prey of him to make.
So is't with those who most to wrong intend;
They first assume the semblance of a friend ;—
And e'en sometimes to make the cheat more sure,
Some favour offer, or some loss endure :
Till having gain'd the vantage ground they sought,
And lull'd suspicion with most fair pretence,
Their too reliant dupe at length is caught,
And rues too late his ill plac'd confidence.
SOPPORTER PEU, POUR EMPORTER TOUT.
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-~.___ <£*&■ GIVING IS FISHING. '©^
Vigor ingentibus negotiis par, eo acrior, quo somnum et inertiam magis ostentat.
Tacitus.
Pelliculam veterem retines, et fronte politus,
Abstruso rapidam gestas sub pectore vulpem.—Pers. Satyr. 5.
Fratjs in parvis fidem sibi prastruit, ut, cum opera? pretium est, cum mercede
magna fallat—Livy.
Objeffia movent.
A SILENT MAN.
Be sober, be vigilant; because your adversary the devil, as a roaring lion, walketh
about, seeking whom he may devour.—1 Peter v. 8.
r~PHE Hedgehog knows the mouse's wanton ways,
And knowing this, know's well to profit by it:
He shows the mouse a hole, nor aught betrays
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With just such baits as these, Man's mortal foe
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Lure's man to ill, and fills this world with woe :
He knows our hearts, he knows our love of sin,
And by that knowledge strives our souls to win,
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The heart of each, and thus his prey secures.
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your minds should be corrupted from the simplicity that is in Christ.—2 Corinth, xi. 3.
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It is the Devil's part to suggest: Ours, not to consent As oft as we resist him.
0 often we overcome him : As often as we overcome him, so often we bring joy to
e Angels, and glory to God, who opposeth us, that we may contend, and assisteth
' that we may conquer.—S. Bernard in Ser.
--—-__ DONAR SI CH1AMA PESCAR.
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UNLOOKED-FOR, OFTEN COMES.
TpOURE Elements in this my body are
All yockt in one, yet ever ftill at warre;
As all agree to nourifh this my light,
So to my ruine they combine their might:
Aire maketh way for flame, Earth builds a pyre,
My moifture feeds the ftill confuming fire.
Still as I fhine by light, by light I dy,
As caufe of life, fo of mortality,
It was Prometheus fault who ftole away
Heav'ns fire, and joyn'd it to his mortall clay.
Moifture doth heat, and heat doth moifture quale,
That dryes our body, this makes it dampe and fraile,
That which doth give, doth likewife fpend our breath ;
The firft of being, is firft houre of death.
Farlie's Emblems.
UNDER FAIR WORDS, BEWARE OF A FRAUD.
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ONE SWALLOW DOES NOT MAKE A SUMMER.
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HASTEN AT LEISURE.
THE Peach-tree with too eager hafte
To fhew its bloffoms to the fun,
Gives oft its pretty bloom to wafte,
Before the frofts of Spring are done.
Much wifer is the Mulberry,
Which only thinks its leaves to fhew,
S^S^ UNA HIRUNDO NON FACIT VER. ^e>*s*£>
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cg^SO^S*^ HASTE MAKES WASTE. -s>S'=§*g5-^S
When leaves are green on ev'ry tree,
And rofes have begun to blow.
They moft enfure Succefs and Pralfe,
Who, guided by the Rule of Reafon,
Do fitting things on fitting days.
And drefs as moft becomes the feafon.
"DLUTOST meurier,
Qu'amandrier.
D'Amandel bloeyt vroeg, de Moerbesy laet;
Maer let eens wie het beter gaet!
Sat citb, si sat bene.
Assez tost, si bien.
Haest genoeg,
Is't wel genoeg.
Soon enough begun,
That which is well done.
Dress drains our Cellar dry,
And keeps our Larder lean.—Cowper.
Fond pride of Dress is sure a very curse.
Ere fancy you consult, consult your purse.—Benjamin Franklin.
The most violent Passions will sometimes allow us a respite, but Vanity leaves us
no repose.—La Rochefoucauld.
T3R0IN quidquid est, da tempus ac spatium tibi:
Quid ratio nequit saepe sanavit mora.—Seneca, Again.
Si quid bene factum velis, tempori trade.—Ibid.
Da spatium tenuemque moram, male cuncta ministrat
Impetus.—Statius.
Differ, habent parvse commoda magna mors.—Ovid.
The mean, is the point nearest to Wisdom : it is better not to reach it at all,
than to over-run it.—Chinese Proverb.
Let Reason guide you at all times, even in the most unimportant things.
Pythagoras.
HASTY SPEED DON'T OFTEN SUCCEED.
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HASTE TRIPS UP ITS OWN HEELS.
Avoid doing that which may draw down upon you the reproaches and the envy of
your neighbours.—Pythagoras.
Know your opportunity, and do not speak before-hand of that which you will
do. Should your project fail, you will furnish subject for ridicule to those who are
jealous of you.—Thales.
Esto Cultu modicus.
\A/"E are told by Jewellers that there is no Diamond of so fine a water, but it
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                      requires some aid to improve its lustre. This observation has been also
<{         aPplied to young women.
£               No objection can be made thereto, provided it be understood in a fitting and
healthy sense. For it is indisputable that Virtue and Modesty are the greatest
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         ornaments or auxiliaries to the Beauty of Woman.                                                                          q
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2                                                      La chastete est la premiere beaute.                                                       <
2                                                                                                                               h
y I j            External Show and costliness of Dress are pernicious in their effects upon the | ^
g | female mind, and tend to sap the principles of Virtue and Modesty. As regards her          Q.
lU j attire, the motto of a virtuous young Woman should be:
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lU I                                                                     Nitide, non delicate.                                                                                0
IE                                                                                                                                                                       i
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En niet te breet.                                                                         h
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Clean in Dress,                                                                           Z
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2 '                                                                          Without Excess,
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Ny Perroquet en ton parler,
Ny Cicogne en ton manger,
Ny Oye aussi en ton marcher.
Suspecta semper ornamenta ementibus.
Veel vlaggen, luttel boters.
Whose adorning let it not be that outward adorning of plaiting the hair, and of
bearing of gold, or of putting on of apparel—i Peter Hi. 3.
S*&* MORE HASTE, WORSE SPEED. "S*S
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WHO LOSES, SINS.
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#1* HE Crafts-man did me of pure tallow frame,
^ And made me fit to nourifh heav'ns flame;
One thing remain'd, that I fhould take with fire,
When feafon due, and fit houre doth require :
Loe how the rats catching me all alone,
With envious teeth my body ceaie upon;
I dye before my day, they life prevent;
Before I live, my liveleffe body's fpent:
I dying could with teares my death bemoane,
But this untimely death doth yeeld me none.
The infant fo oft doth it felfe entombe,
Before it fee the day, in mothers wombe.
So by untimely death youths hopes decayes,
Which might have well deferved many daies.
Farlie's Emblems.
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THE LORD IS MY LIGHT AND MY SALVATION. -S*S.-8xS5
Luceat Lux Veftra coram Hominibus.
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LET YOUR LIGHT SHINE BEFORE MEN.
q NXIOUS, tempeft toff'd and weary,
* To the feaman's gladden'd fight,
'Mid the night-ftorm, what fo cheery
As the gleaming beacon's light ?
Though the wild waves wilder threaten,
Calmer now, he fleers his way
SHEW ME THY WAYS, O LORD; TEACH ME THY PATHS.
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ARE NOT BORN FOR OURSELVES ALONE. *S*e>
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To the long defir'd haven,
Guided by its friendly ray.
Like unto that beacon, truly,
He of upright heart and mind,
Holding high his light mould mew the
Heav'nward way to all mankind.
Chriftian! lift your light on high then,
Let it mine o'er all, and mew,
In this darkfome world to all men,
How and where that men mould go.
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T ET your Light so shine that men seeing your good works may glorify your Father
which is in Heaven.—Matthew v. 16.
We labour in the boisterous sea: Thou standest upon the shore and seest our
dangers: give us grace to hold a middle course betwixt Scylla and Charybdis, that
both dangers escaped, we may arrive at our Port secure.—S. August. Soliloq. cap. 35.
O Light inaccessible, in respect of which my Light is utter darkness; so reflect
upon my weakness, that all the world may behold thy strength: O Majesty incompre-
hensible, in respect of which my glory is mere shame; so shine upon my misery that
all the world may behold thy glory.—Hugo, Pia Desid.
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TV /TY God, my light is dark enough at lightest,
Increase its flame, and give it strength to shine :
'Tis frail at best: 'Tis dim enough at brightest,
But 'tis its glory to be foil'd by thine.
Let others lurk : my light shall be
Propos'd to all men; and by them to Thee.
Quarles, Hieroglyph viii.
He does wickedly, that does not shew the right to one who is in the wrong.
V1RTUTIS ENIM LAUS OMNIS IN ACTIONE CONSISTIT.
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GOD IS A LIGHT THAT IS NEVER DARKENED.
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EAVEN doth with us, as we with torches do,
Not light them for ourselves; For if our virtues
Did not go forth of us, 'twere all alike
As if we had them not. Spirits are not finely touched,
But to fine issues; nor Nature never lends
The smallest scruple of her excellence;
But, like a thrifty goddess, she determines
Herself the glory of a creditor,
2                                    Both thanks and use.—Shakespeare.
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So far the little candle throws its beams,
^ j                                          So far shines a good deed in a naughty world !
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■t          f~\UI in occulto bene vivit, sed alieno profectui minime proficit, carbo est. Qui verb
q           w in imitatione sanctitatis positus, lumen rectitudinis ex sese multis demonstrat,
I larnpas est: quia sibi ardet, et aliis lucet.—Greg. Sicfier Ezech. homil. 5.
Numquam est mutila opera civis bonis.—Seneca.
Utile etiam exemplum quiescentis.
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         aPprobant, quaj pra?cipiunt, fieri posse.—Plinius, Paneg.
Doctus sine opere est ut nubes sine pluvia.—Adag. Arab.
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3;               Sic luceat lux vestra coram hominibus ; id vero ex hoc fit, cum apparet miseri-
^ ' cordia in affectu, benignitas in vultu, humilitas in habitu, modestia in cohabitatione,
|^ patientia in tribulatione.—Hugo, De Claustro Animtz, lib. 3.
Sic agitur censura, et sic exempla parantur,
Q                                         Cum judex, alios quod manet, ipse facit.—Ovid.
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O Lord ; who art the Light, the Way, the Truth, the Life; in whom there is no
darkness, error, vanity, nor Death : the Light, without which there is darkness; the
Way, without which there is wandering; the Truth, without which there is error; the
Life, without which there is Death: say, Lord, let there be Light, and I shall see Light,
and eschew darkness; I shall see the Way, and avoid wandering; I shall see the Truth,
and shun error; I shall see Life, and escape Death: Illuminate, O illuminate my blind
Soul, which sitteth in darkness, and the shadow of Death; and direct my feet in the way
°f Peace.—S. August. Soliloq. cap. 4.
YET A LITTLE WHILE IS THE LIGHT WITH YOU.
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HE THAT DOETH GOOD IS BETTER THAN THE GOOD HE DOETH-
HEN ftormie Boreas puts the feas in rage,
And fwelling waves intefting warre do wage;
When fun is darken'd, when night doth heav'n confound,
And foaming billowes give a difcord found:
My light then leads the way through reeling ftrands,
Guiding by Scyllas rocks, Charybdis fands.
Here we are tolled in a maine of feares;
But Chrift our admirall the lanterne beares ;
Leaft we fhould suffer fhipwracke in the night,
He leads us through all dangers by his light.
Who then wouldft come to Heav'ns long wifht-for bay,
Follow thy Saviour, who's Truth, Light, and Way.
Fa rlie's Etnbletns.
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LOVERS LIVE BY LOVE, AS LARKS BY LEEKS.
Fumo pas cunt ur amantes.
SMOKE IS THE FOOD OF LOVERS.
'HEN Cupid open'd Shop, the Trade he chofe
Was juft the very one you might fuppofe.
Love keep a mop?—his trade, Oh! quickly name!
A Dealer in tobacco—Fie for fhame !
No lefs than true, and fet afide all joke,
From oldeft time he ever dealt in Smoke;
AMANT, TON BONHEUR N'EST G*UE VAPEUR.
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AS JET DRAWS A STRAW,
Than Smoke, no other thing he fold, or made;
Smoke all the fubftance of his ftock in trade ;
His Capital all Smoke, Smoke all his ftore,
'Twas nothing elfe ; but Lovers afk no more —
And thoufands enter daily at his door!
Hence it was ever, and it e'er will be
The trade moll fuited to his faculty:—
Fed by the vapours of their heart's defire,
No other food his Votaries require;
For, that they feek—the Favour of the Fair,
Z                                Is unfubftantial as the Smoke and air.
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q                   A MORES et delicias mature, et celeriter deflorescunt.—Cicero pro M. Ccd.
|-r                                         Omnia speramus, promissaque vana fovemus
~                                             Molliter: et faciles ad nova vota sumus.
Interea totum paupertas possidet sevum,
(j)                                             Cfecaque volvendo somnia, vita perit.—Daniel Heyns.
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Love.
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-The cherish'd Fire,
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Which blindly creeps through every vein and dries
(!)                                              The fluent blood, whence grosser vapours rise,
-^.                                              Sadding the soul with fearful phantasies.
0                                              It is to be all made of fantasy,
All made of Passion, and all made of wishes;
0
                                              All adoration, beauty, and observance;
..j                                              All humbleness, all patience, and impatience;
Z                                              All purity, all trial, all obedience.—Shakespeare.
Love reigns a very tyrant in my heart,
Attended on his throne by all his guards
Of furious wishes, fears and nice suspicions.—Otway.
O mighty Love! from thy unbounded power,
How shall the human bosom rest secure 1
How shall our thoughts avoid the various snares?
Or Wisdom to our cautioned soul declare
The different shapes thou pleasest to employ,
When bent to hurt, and certain to destroy!—Solomon.
There's nothing half so sweet in Life as Love's young Dream.—Moore.
SO DOES BEAUTY LOVE.
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AS TOUCHWOOD TAKES FIRE
Love and Hope.
I have heard many say :
Love lives on Hope; they knew not what they said.
Hope is Love's Happiness, but not its Life.
How many hearts have nourished a vain flame—
In silence and in secret, though they knew
They fed the scorching fire that would consume them.—L. E. L.
Lighter than air, Hope's summer visions die :
If but a fleeting cloud obscure the sky,
If but a beam of sober reason play;
Lo ! fancy's fairy frost-work melts away.—Rogers.
Sir Kenelm Digby, in his Private Memoirs, makes a lover say, " I will go to the
ther world to preach to damned souls that their pains are but imaginary ones, in
Aspect of them that live in the hell of love."—P. 38.
6                                                                       Z
Love is a species of Melancholy.—Burton.                                              : D
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Cure for hove.                                                               q
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and the next morning she took a dose of algebra fasting, which she says
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e«tirely cured her.—Memoirs, vol. 1. pp. 36-7.                                                                                 0
------------------------                                                                                                                   UJ
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Love and Legislation.                                                  I j ^
gTRANGE, and passing strange, that the relation between the two Sexes, the Passion
of Love, in short, should not be taken into deeper consideration by our Teachers
ar»d our Legislators."
People educate and legislate as if there was no such thing in the World : but ask
1_le Priest, ask the Physician—let them reveal the amount of Moral and Physical
results from this one cause.
Must Love be always discussed in blank v<jrse, as if it were a thing to be played
111 Tragedies or sung in Songs—a subject for pretty Poems and wicked Novels, and
hacl nothing to do with the prosaic current of our every day existence, our Moral
. elfare and Eternal Salvation? Must Love be ever treated with profaneness, as a mere
"lusion 1 or with coarseness, as a mere impulse 1 or with fear, as a mere disease 1 or
w'th shame, as a mere weakness ? or with levity, as a mere accident 1 Whereas it is
a great Mystery, and a great Necessity, lying at the foundation of Human Existence,
Morality, and Happiness—mysterious, universal, inevitable as Death. Why, then, should
J-ove be treated less seriously than Death? It is as serious a thing.—Mrs. Jameson.
SO DOES AN IDLE PERSON LOVE.
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THE COURSE OF TRUE LOVE
HO fearft outragious Vulcans damned ire,
And wouldft be fafe from night-furprifing fire;
Put out the flame, the fmoking fnufFe fuppreffe,
Leaft from the fmoake the fire it felfe redreffe;
For fire is next to fmoake, and oft its feene,
That reaking fnufFe a blazing fire hath beene.
Who feares the damned fire of inward luft,
And Cupids flames,, obferve this rule he muft.
Hearts concupifcence, 'fore it's vehement,
Looke that in words he fuffer't not to vent;
For words are fmoake of burning hearts defire ;
Smother his words, he needs not feare the fire :
But otherwayes a wanton complement,
Doth blow his fire, and makes him give confent.
Farlie's Emblems.
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CONTENT IS HAPPINESS.
Sua quemque Fortuna pxnitet.
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EACH DEPLORES HIS OWN LOT.
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HE Fifh that in the Weel are taken,
When they find no iiTue more,
Feel the ftronger wifh awaken
To be where they were before:
But the Fifh that fee them in it,
Think it far more pleafant there;
And they ftrive their beft to win it,
Swimming round it ev'rywhere.
THOU SHALT NOT COVET.
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COVETOUSNESS BRINGS NOTHING HOME.
Thus it is that men, like Fiihes,
Ne'er contented with their lot,
Ever reftlefs in their wifhes,
Craving more than what they've got;—
In their greed of wealth and ftation,
Coveting yet more and more,
Oft in change of fituation,
Find it worfe than 'twas before.
TDISCIS cum modo ingrediendi nassam videat, egrediendi non videat, et nihilominus
I
                    ingrediatur, piscatoribus fit prasda: non est ergo suscipiendum negotium, nisi
prius perspecta ratione qua te possis inde rursus explicare : nee enim labyrinthi
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         ingrediendi sunt sine filo, quo securus possis redire.
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Nemo est, quin ubivis, quam ibi, ubi est, esse malit: nam suam quisque conditionem
miserrimam putat; dim tamen contentum suis rebus esse, maximas sunt certissimseque
divitise.—Cicero.
Non esse cupidum, pecunia est.
LU
Si vis gaudere per unum diem, radas barbam, si per septimanam, vade ad nuptias;
^ ; si per mensem, eme pulchrum equum; si per semestre, erne pulchram domum : si per
^ ; annum, ducas pulchram uxorem; si per biennium, fias sacerdos; si semper vis esse
tetus et gaudens, vives tua sorte contentus.—Thesaurus ridendi.
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The quiet lyfe doth most abounde,
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D                                                     There is no riches may be founde. — Songs and Sonnetes.
q                                                 Let not what I cannot have
My cheer of mind destroy.—Colley Cibber.
A LL men have their trials and afflictions, but a contented mind accommodates itself
to every vicissitude of life; neither poverty nor distress, neither losses nor
disappointments, neither sickness nor sorrow, can affect its equanimity.—Dr. Brewer.
A contented mind is free from the distressing passions of ambition, covetousness,
jealousy, envy and the like, which prey like Vultures upon the peace of the
discontented.—Ibid.
S^ir^w AVARICE BURSTS THE BAG. -^S-^S
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^^ OUT OF DEBT, OUT OF DANGER, -s*©
Men always desire more than they possess, yet scarcity has been the ruin of fewer
People than abundance and repletion.—Theognis.
I am richer than you, if I do not want things, which you cannot do without.
Socrates.
There is a jewel which no Indian mine can buy,
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                                        No chemic art can counterfeit;
(3                                        It makes men rich in greatest poverty,
Makes water wine, turns wooden cups to gold,                                                111
Q                                        The homely whistle, to sweet music's strain;                                                    Z
Q                                        Seldom it comes, to few from heaven sent,                                                       >
That much in little—all in nought—Content.
Wilbye's Madrigals.
HI
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<t If there be any happiness to be found upon earth, it is in that which we call        ; <
2          Contentation : this is a flower that grows not in every garden: the great Doctor of the           q
(0          Gentiles tells us that he had it; I have learned (saith he) in what estate soever I          111
111          am, therewith to be content.—Bp. Hall. Of Contentation.                                                                    2
I                                                                                                                               <
R                                                                                                         I
u                                                    -----------                                                    0
CD                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      ft:
y                                                If solid happiness we prize,                                                                         q-
£                                                Within our breast the jewel lies;
J;                                                    And they are fools who roam :
£                                                The wrorld has nothing to bestow;                                                              q
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And that dear place our home.
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Cotton.                                                ^
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Vain is alike the joy we seek,                                                                    0
And vain what we possess,
Unless harmonious reason tunes
The Passions into peace.
To temper'd wishes, just desires,
Is happiness confin'd;
And, deaf to folly's call, attends
The music of the mind.
Carter.
HE THAT IS WARM THINKS ALL AFRE^SO.
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BE CONTENT WITH -^.-=S
?LL living things with others lolTe maintaine
Their life, not fo my harmleiTe light I gaine.
The plant doth feede upon the fertile foile;
And brutifh beafts the pleafant plants doe fpoile ;
So harmleiTe beaft, and bird, and fifh irnift dy,
To pamper mans too licorifh gluttony.
But of condition though I mortall be;
Yet this my Light is onely nurft by me.
The moll of men doe live by others lofle,
Whilft others goods they to themfelves engroffe :
So man proves wolfe to man, and robbery gives
Moft gaine to him, who moft unjustly lives.
Thrice happy's he, who's of his ftate content,
As if it were CarfTus or Crcefus rent.
Farlie's Emblems.
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SUCH THINGS AS YE HAVE.
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BEAUTY IS NO INHERITANCE. -e^-^S
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Ogni Fiore al fin perde I'odore.
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EVERY FLOWER LOSES ITS PERFUME AT LAST
yj'AIDEN"! will you never learn
All the leiTons Flowers teach,
And that each of them in turn
Hath its potent power of fpeech ?
In the early violet's bloom,
Modeft mien, and fweet perfume,
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EAUTY IS THE SUBJECT OF A BLEMISH.
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BEAUTY AND FOLLY ARE OFTEN COMPANIONS.
In the daify of the mead,
If you have the mind to read,
Simple though to you they feem,
Each affords its moral theme
Ev'ry Rofe that here you fee,
Ev'ry Flower that blooms a-field,
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                               Whatfoe'er their Beauty be,
q:                                    Muft alike that Beauty yield!
Aye! believe me, maiden fair,
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                                       Whatfoe'er the Gard'ner's care,
Whatfoe'er his (kill may be,
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That which is fo fair to-day
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                             Let there come a chilling rain,                                                         >
^ ;                                 Nipping wind, or flighteft froft,
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All their beauty would be loft!
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                                       Or, e'en let the Sun, whofe light
lJ-                                        Calls to life their colours bright,                                             >
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Wither'd by too great excefs
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                                        Of that very Sun's carefs!
l_                                Maidens! and Young Women all!
5                                    Learn then as you fhould from this,
UJ                                 All the ills that youth befall,
And how fleeting Beauty is !
Lips that with the coral vie,
Witching Beauty of the eye,
Ev'ry charm of form and face,
Whatfoe'er their winning grace,
Have their Emblem of decay
In the Rofe of yefterday!
BEAUTY IS BUT DROSS IF HONESTY BE LOST.
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BEAUTY IS A BLOSSOM.
Maiden, there is fomething too,
Womans Beauty ne'er defied,
Though as rich in charms as you,
And as full of youthful pride.
You have but to look at me,
And you may that fomething fee,
That can fteal away each grace,
And in little time deface,
Whatfoever be your care,—
All that makes you now fo fair.
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0                                   Time! it is, whofe ftealthy wing
^                                       Throws on all alike its ftiade,-
t                                   Fades the bloom of ev'ry thing,
£                                       Howfoever fair 'twas made!
0                                                Time! though it fo foftly treads,
Silent ruin round us fpreads;
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And as Age has done by me,
^                                           If you live, you'll furely fee-
Beauty's but an idle boaft,
Your's to-day; to-morrow loft !
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^                                    But, there is a Beauty yet,
1                                            Far more lafting in the wear;
ij: That which Virtue doth beget,
"•                                       Fadelefs—bright—beyond compare :
Make that Beauty your's, fair maid;
Time o'er that can caft no fhade;
And when wrinkled that fair brow,
'Twill be fairer far than now,—
With a Beauty that fhall gain
Lafting Love in God's domain.
As for Man, his days are as grass : as a flower of the field, so he flourisheth.
For the wind passeth over it, and it is gone: and the place thereof shall know it no
more.—Psalm ciii. 15, 16.
PRETTINESS DIES QUICKLY.
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VANITY HAS NO GREATER FOE THAN ITSELF.
J9 UCH is lights love to Heaven, that ftill above
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         It mounts, and cannot to the center move ;
Hold you it under, it will upward reach,
And through its ruinous body make a breach.
Our foule doth bend our bodies ftraight and even,
As with it felfe, it would them raife to Heaven ;
But all in vaine it undergoes fuch toyle,
The body will not leave its native foyle:
Age puis it downe, and makes it ftoope full low,
Till death doth give his fatall overthrow.
Then through the bodies breach the Soule doth rife,
And like a conquerour, mount to the fkyes.
Farlie's Emblems.
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:n amour, en cour, et a la chasse,
Inter manum et menium.
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MANY A SLIP 'TWIXT THE CUP AND THE LIP.
0 WIFT, through the flood, cheer'd by his mafter's praife,
jK With vig'rous ftroke the Spaniel cleaves his way,
And lo ! already with his ardent gaze,
He marks the wounded wild-fowl as his prey.
Near and more near upon the bird he gains,
And as the fpace that parts them fmaller grows,
With fpeed increafed, he plies the foot and (trains
Towards the game, now clofe before his nofe.
CHACUN NE PREND CE G^U'IL. POURCHASSE.
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HOPES AND FEARS CHEQUER HUMAN LIFE.
Then bounding high at once from out the wave
With fudden rufh to feize the certain prize:
That which he thought no means of flight could fave,
Dives 'neath the flood, before his wond'ring eyes.
In Love affairs, as in intrigues at court,
^                        It oft occurs as in the field of fport;
Z                        Almoft before the chafe we have begun,
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A                        We deem the Fair, the place, and game are won;
^                        And when moft fure we've grafp'd the prize aright,
We fee it quickly vanifh from our fight.
j                        'Tis not alone in fleep that dreams arife;
HI                         Our hopes are oft but dreams with waking eyes ;—
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Z                        As vifionlefs and vain by day as night,
0                        We think them real, and they fade from fight,
0                        Leaving the heart to grieve and to complain,
0                        To find itfelf fo cheated by the brain.
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GUERRA, caca e amores
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—Potiundi tempore in ipso,
<t                                     Fluctuat incertis erroribus ardor amantum.—Lucret. lib. 4.
J
qj                                               Fallitur augurio spes bona saspe suo.—Ovid.
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j_                                              Multa cadunt inter calicem supremaque Iabra.
CC                                          Inter os atque escam multa interveniunt.
[r                                          Inter os atque offam multa intercident.
^                Non esse sapientis pragfidere constanter iis, quae aliter evenire nata sunt.—Polyb.
Fere libenter homines id quod volunt, credunt.—Caesar.
O fallacem hominum spem, fragilemque Fortunam! et inanes nostras contentiones !
quae in medio spatio saspe franguntur et corruunt; et ante in ipso portu obruuntur,
quam portum contingere potuerunt.—Cicero. 3. de Orat.
cg*s^c&s=^ SPEM PRETIO NON EMAM. "®**-'®^*S>S
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WHILE THERE'S LIFE THERE'S HOPE.
Plerumque hominum proprium est quod ratione difficile cognoscunt, id sibi
cupiditate et spe facile fmgere.—Fransc. Giucciard. Hist. lib. 4.
We readily believe what we wish. Our wishes are fathers to our thoughts. We
believe unwillingly that which we do not wish.
Fortune is fond of change; she allows herself to be possessed, and she escapes from
Us- Dost thou suffer from her fickleness 1 Learn to bear it with patience.—Pythagoras.
God's Providence, alike in the Smiles and Frowns of Fortune.
Ljj                                                     Ferendum et Sperandum.
2                                    T^HAT Fortune is so changeful in her moods,
Is scarcely to be blam'd in such degree
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                                    As we are wont to hear,
y                                    Did we but put the question to ourselves;
We, who do change each moment of our lives!—
In her so fickle nature we should see
ft                                    That which our changeful nature best befits.
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The only diff'rence lies therein; that we
jU                                     Find Fortune's changes more abrupt and loud
2                                    Than those which daily in ourselves take place :
^                                    Which like the Shadow of the Dial, mark
n.                                    Their silent progress—but a progress still,
0                                    Not the less certain that it seem to us
Ijj                                      Less evident, because insensible!
Yet, mutative in body as in mind,
<^ 1                                  With faculties that change with ev'ry day
I
Their pow'r t' enjoy, or estimate aright
The lights and shades which fall across our path;
We still repine ungrateful for the Light,
And deem the Shadows more than we can bear:
And this withal, forgetful of that Power
Who in His Wisdom, wiser far than we,
Knew best what our frail nature would befit,
To make us that He will'd that we should be.
With humble joy bear Fortune's transient smile,
Nor let her frown to discontent beguile :
With stedfast Hope, Columbus-like, at last
Thou'lt find the New World when the storm is pass'd.
RINCHE VI E FIATO VI ^SPERANZA-
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THOUGH THE BIRD'S IN THE NET,
HEN as my Light with beames did brightly fhine,
VW And ftarre-light was but equall unto mine ;
I was in great requeft and fet above,
Was deare to all, who favv me, did me love :
Now breathing fighes, and languifhing I grone:
I'm hatefull to my felfe, belov'd of none.
If once againe my light beginne to burne,
With it my light and honour fhall returne.
When Fortune Handing on her flippery ball,
Doth favour, then are we admir'd of all;
But if fhe frowne, then flatterers flye away,
No friends abide, if once your meanes decay :
O but if Fortune change, and fmile againe,
Then fawne thefe flatterers, and beare up your traine.
Much like the Sea thefe Clients flote and flow ;
And Fortune turnes her coat, at every fhow.
Fa rue's Emblems.
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S=^2r^- IT MAY GET AWAY YET.^'W
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2?^ LOVE IS THE LOADSTONE OF LOVE, -S>=5
Amor, ut Pila, vices exigit.
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LOVE, LIKE A BALL, REQUIRES TO BE
THROWN BACK.
_ „ AIDEN fair ! if you would learn
Iff! Well to play this pleafant game ;
You muft ftrike in quick return,
So that I may do the fame.
Should you fail to ftrike at all,
And that I make play alone,
Then the fhuttle's fure to fall,
And the game at once is done.
SWEET IS THE LOVE THAT MEETS RETURN.
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:5rO^<&:S^ LOVE SEES NO FAULTS. -SsS'Ss*'."*S*S.
Mark, fweet maiden, when I ftrike,
And attend to what I fay :
Tennis and Love's game alike
Need a quick return of play:
Who their pleafure moft would know,
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                                    And in equal mare partake,
^                                In both games alike muft mew
•~                                    Equal zeft to give and take.
<                                Love and Tennis both, play'd ill,
W                                    Soon upon the players pall,
jjj                               When one mews a want of will
To hit back the flying ball.
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                                Love, to Love is demonstrative ;
CC                                     Love, gives life and fhrength to Love,
And in being thus creative,
Z                                    Love doth moft its power prove.
Love of Love's at once the Price,
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>                                    And Reward that Love loves beft;
l_                                Nothing can to Love fuffice,
(!)
But the Love that gives it reft.
If from me to Love you'd learn,
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-I                                    Love; and be my Sweetheart true;
W                                But if you give no return,
UJ                                     Then I'll fay—good-bye to you.
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CO                                   JAMAIS 1'Amour ne se paye que par Amour re'ciproque.
Et Pretium, et Merces solus Amoris Amor.
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Beneficium non est aurum, sed Amor per quem datur.
Amor enim Beneficii anima.— Vid. Seneca de Benef.
Divinissimus est, quem redamare piget prius amantem.
August, de Amore divino.
LOVE WILL CREEP WHERE IT CANNOT GO.
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LOVE IS THE TOUCHSTONE OP VIRTUE.
Ama a chi t'ama,
Rispond a. chi ti chiama.
Antwoord dieje vraegt,
Min dieje Liefde draegt.
Answer him who calls unto you,
And love him who brings Love to you.
Una mano lava l'altra, e le due lavano il viso.
L'une main lave l'autre, et les deux le visage.
Als d'eene hant d'ander wast, soo wordense beyde reyn.
D'eene Min brengt d'ander in.
Manus manum fricat, gratia gratiam parit.                                             0
Ferro ferrum acuitur.
Fructus Amoris Amor.
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Amour au cceur me poind,                                                            ,
Quand bien aime" je suis;                                                              ..
Mais aimer je ne puis,                                                                   (t
Quand on ne m'aime point.                                                           j-'
Chacun soit adverti                                                               : UJ
De faire comme moi;                                                         
Car d'aimer sans party,                                                           Z
C'est un trop grand esmoy.—Marot.                                  r!
Excute mihi ignem, et allucebo tibi.—Proverbmm Arabicum ex Erpenio.                 
111
Id est, ut Jof- Scaligcr interpretatur,
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Esto mihi, ero tibi. Be mine, I will be thine.                                        q
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Ut ameris, amabilis esto.—Ovid.                                                   W
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Aimer sans Amour est amer.                                                         j
Vriendtschap van eener zijde en duert niet lang.
Friendship all on one side lasts not long.
Xelp Xe^Pa *'t7rrc'
Xapts \apiv cpepet.
---------Amare recuso,
Ilium quern fieri vix puto posse meum.—Ovid. Ep. Helen.
Amour est dAmour recompense,
Et celui est trop a blamer,
Qui pour le moins (s'il ne commence)
Ne veut pas, quand on l'aime, aimer.
LOVE AND HARDSHIP LIKE NO FELLOWSHIP.
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&<&, FOLLOW LOVE AND IT WILL FLEE:
wb/^HEN I this wifht-for light to tinne defire,
W        I proftrate crave it from this flaming fire ;
From whence if light come not in fitting time,
I am confum'd before the light be mine.
Whofe meanes are fmall, whom Fortune favours not,
They take their patrons mercy for their lot;
To them their {applications they direcb,
Attending ftill with homage and refpecl:;
Delay undo'th them, makes them fpend their oyle,
Their hopes grow lefle, and greater is their toyle ;
UnlefTe their Patrons timely fhew their love:
For gifts, by timely giving, double prove.
Fari.ie's Emblems.
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FLEE LOVE, AND IT WILL FOLLOW THEE.
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LOOK BEFORE YOU LEAP.
Qui Capiat, Capitur.
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THE BITER BITTEN.
' IGH up in air, the fea-mew fpies
III An oyfter lying on the ftrand,
Gaping with open shell t' inhale
The fummer breeze from off the
To feize the lufcious morfel quick—
With fudden fwoop and deadly pick,
The fea-bird darts his horny beak
Between the oyfter's fhell:
md.
HOLD-FAST IS A GOOD DOG.
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FORCE WITHOUT FORECAST IS OF LITTLE AVAIL.
But doling on it quick as thought,
The bird is by the oyfter caught!
And nipped fo tight and well;
That drive and ftruggle as he may,
To free his beak, and get away;
q                                        He keeps him captive, firmly bound,
W                                        Till with return of tide he's drowned.
q_                                Who to themfelves would all appropriate
z                                Of that they fee, deferve the fea-mew's fate;
0                                Nor doth he fail to meet it, foon or late,
^                                Whofe nofe is thruft in everybody's plate.
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0)                                     The Event is often different from the Intent.
W                                      f^EFEATING our intent and expectation,
In strange reverse of that we think to see ;
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When certain most,—we find ourselves mistaken,
L.
                                         And he is caught, who would the catcher be.
To curb the pride and malice of man's nature,
'Twas wise ordained, that he should sometimes see,—
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                                    In his own toils the hunter captive taken ;
lil                                         And he despoiled, who would the spoiler be;-
^                                     The evil doer, 'gainst his calculation,
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By his own mischief foiled and hurt, alone,
Q:                                     The slander of a neighbour's reputation,
W                                         Recoil with deeper wound upon his own.
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0                                                                   The fame in another fenfe.
0)                                                            Konst van bewarerl, gaet voor't vergaren.
"^                                                            How to retain, is more than how to gain.
m                                             ' I '"HE mew is in a fix, as we have seen
With beak well jamm'd the oyster's shells between
<<•                                               But what avails the shell-fish his success '!
1                                                  Strange case it is—yet nothing less than true,
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                                               His very fortune causes him distress,
W :
                                           Nor knows he with his capture what to do !
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A very load to him, a trouble quite,
The catcher would be well-rid of the caught,
'Tis almost 'gainst his grain to hold him tight—
Yet, to let go—were perhaps with peril fraught!
Just so in life, whom management doth fail,
Success nor riches to their good avail.
25^3^ A HASTY MAN NEVER WANTS WOE. -=<s>S>§>=©
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FORTUNAM CITIUS REPERIAS G^UAM RETINEAS.
TTARM seek, harm find.
Jjj
                                                           As you sow, so you must reap.
^                                               As you make your bed, so you must lie on it.
(I)
Qui mal cherche, mal trouve.
q                                               Ut sementem feceris, ita metes.—Cicero.
Comme on fait son lit on se couche.
^                                               Tute hoc introisti, tibi omne est exedendum.—Terence.
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r\           T*HE Power and the Riches acquired by a life of anxious toil, slip not unfrequently
...                    from their possessor's hands, from defective government, or mismanagement:
(5         because it is easier to acquire power and to gain wealth than to keep and use them
^          prudently when gotten. An especial virtue is needful to this, more than is required
Ll]        for the gradual heaping up of riches.
§
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Non labore, Jed munificentia Domini.
^                            Not by labour, but by the blessing of the Lord.
' I ""HE oyster without change of place, or toil,
ij1                                             Prospers in peace, and easy takes his spoil:
f"                                     The sea-mew, restless, sweeps the shore and main
^                                    In quest of food, and, little oft to gain:
®"                                    The oyster toils but little, yet he thrives;
0                                     The sea-mew, less from his great toil derives;
0                                     And so all labour is in vain, unless
2                                     God of his blessing doth our labour bless.
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5                                                       Ecclefiaftes ix. n.
T SAW under the sun, that the race is not to the swift, nor the battle to the strong,
III                  neither yet bread to the wise, nor yet riches to men of understanding, nor yet
m         favour to men of skill; but time and chance happeneth to them all.
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THE Righteousness of the upright shall deliver them; but transgressors shall be
q I
                 taken in their own naughtiness.—Proverbs xi. 6.
U. I               Go not forth hastily to strive, lest thou know not what to do in the end thereof,
2 I when thy neighbour hath put thee to shame.—Proverbs, xxv. 8.
^ I .
           Without counsel, purposes are disappointed.—Proverbs, xv. 22.
He that is greedy of gain, troubleth his own house.—Proverbs, xv. 27.
FORTUNE IS EASIER TO FIND THAN TO RETAIN.
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LNQ.UIRE NOT, WHAT IS IN ANOTHER'S POT.
T*HE glaffie gulfe joyn'd with Earth's globe in one
Gives waters to the rivers, loofeth none;
The Sunne that makes fo many glorious dayes,
Doth loofe no light, and ftill he waft's his rayes :
The Loadftone to the iron gives vertue rare,
And yet no wayes his owne he doth impaire;
So this my torch can give to others light,
And ftill, as is his wont, fhine perfect bright.
Thus Divine Wifdome doth communicate
Herfelfe, that others may participate.
The good more common, better is, and grace
Wifheth, all were partakers of her cafe.
Farlje's Emblems.
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s?^ EVERY MAY-BE HATH A MAY-BE-NOT. -S*^
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AS THE TWIG IS BENT, SO THE TREE'S INCLINED.
Rami correcti rectificantur; trabs minime.
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THE BRANCHES MAY BE TRAINED, BUT NOT
THE TRUNK.
(EJ?S I want wood to build a houfe,
»* I would cut down this tree:
'Tis a fine ftem, although in truth
It fomewhat crooked be.
I've funk this pole, in hopes to bend
It fomewhat ftraighter by;
YOUTH AND WHITE PAPER TAKE ANY IMPRESSION.
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TRAIN UP A CHILD IN THE WAY HE SHOULD GO.
Yet fear, though I the trunk e'en with
A hundred withies tie—
(It is fo ftiff in heart and growth,)
That it will never take
A better fhape, whatever be
The efforts I may make.
But while here on the ladder, I
Some perfon hear below!—
Some voice unknown that calls to me,
Holloa! up there! holloa!
And fomehow (why I know not) I
Leave off to hear what he
Has got to fay, and this is the
Difcourfe he holds to me:
Eh ! man, what art about ? wouldft bend
A full grown tree like this!
Doft take it for a fapling, eh ?—
Why what's with thee amifs!
There is no fenfe in what thou do'ft,
So fpare thy labour, friend;
'Tis only when the tree is young
That thou the ftem canft bend !
Go, get thee home, and rather let
Thy children have thy care:
The labour that thou here beftow'ft,
Were better given there.
Thofe are the trees whofe growth once {et
Will give thee molt concern;
And from th' experience of my years,
This leffon thou may'ft. learn:
In tender youth alone, the mind
To Virtue can be trained;
But that once pafs'd, its growth and bend
Are not to be reclaim'd.
'""PHE above adage is taken from the collection of Arabic sayings collected and
translated by the learned Polyglot D. Erpenius, who was Professor in the high
school of Leyden. This saying admonishes all parents and guardians that the years
S^SO-VIEIL ARBRE MAL AISE A REDRESSER. "§>St8*S
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______                CE G^U'ON TETTE AVEC l_E LAIT
of childhood only are fitted for instruction, and that therefore a special regard
should be had to them for that purpose. "Bend the neck of thy child whilst he
is yet young, so that he become not stiff-necked," saith the Lord. Many sayings of
our time, either in word or spirit, and frequently in both, correspond with that divine
admonition. In allusion hereto, Scaliger in his day, cited in his Collection of Proverbs
as coincident in meaning the French adage:
Vieil arbre mal aise a redresser.
Alte Baume sind bose zu biegen.
Alte Hunden boss bandig zu machen.
Old dogs are hard to train.
'T moet vroeg krommen dat een goede reep worden sal.
To make a good rope it must be bent early.
Men mag sijn oude schoenen verwerpen; maer niet sijn oude seden.
A man can throw away his old shoes, but not his old habits.
Gewoonte maeckt eelt.                                                                          £
(/)                                                            Custom makes things hard.                                                                        ID
ijj                                                  Wat heeft geleert de jonger man,
(J                                                 Dat hangt hem al sijn leven an.                                                                  §
"\                                 What the young has learnt sticks to him through life.
•J                                                                                                                                                                                               <
^                                                               Nutritura passa natura.                                                                 3
! y                                             Dalla matina si cognosce il buon giorno.                                                     £
^                                                                L'haver cura de putti
^                                                                Non e mestiere de tutti.
i                                                                                                                                                                          <
Tagyri adeth gaiet mischkhiuldur.—Turkish Proverb.
3                                                                                                             z
Id est,                                                                                        UJ
It is difficult to change customs.
Vipoi'ra c' opOovv, <p\avpov, os veos ickooi.
Aristoph. apud Suidam.
Id est,
Erigere durum est, qui cadit juvenis, senem.
Annosam arborem transplantare. Eodem sensu adagium refertur ab Erasmo.
Castigar vieja, y espulgar pellon, dos rivancos, son.
Tis Education forms the common mind;
Just as the twig is bent, the tree's inclin'd.
Train up a child in the way he should go: and when he is old, he will not depart
from it.—Prov. xxii. 6.
S*S» AU SUAIRE SE RESPOND. **&&>
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AS YOU SOW, YOU SHALL REAP.
HOU goeft about mifchiefe and ftill doft feare,
Leaft this my light 'gainft thee fhould witnefle beare;
So having put me out thou think'ft to worke
Thy will, and yet in fecret ftill to lurke.
Thou art deceiv'd, the darknefle of this cell
Containes a light, that fees the loweft hell.
But thou a Want, canft not perceive this light,
Neither difcerne Sun-fhine from cloudy night.
Then fhalt thou fee it, when the Deity
Shall kindle that fparke which in thy breaft doth ly.
What e're thou doft, looke to that Light which made
All Lights, and fhines as day in midnight fhade.
Farlie's Emblems.
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Sr^^S-S^St-S^-S?^ EXTREMES MEET. «s*S'S>s2'S*S'S*S'^#
Als morsige lieden Kuys warden, soo schuerense de Panne van achteren.
WHEN SLOVENLY SERVANTS GET TIDY, THEY POLISH
THE BOTTOMS OF THE SAUCEPANS.
&OOK at thefe Girls!—When they firft came to me,
They were fo fluttifh and untidy both,
I never had a faucepan fit to fee,
And fcarcely ever a clean kitchen cloth.
But now it is a pleafure to behold;
They are become fo wondrous clean and neat;
NEITHER A LOG, NOR A STORK, GOOD JUPITER.
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TOO MUCH IS STARK NAUGHT.
I never have to rate them, nor to fcold,
Nor ever now an order to repeat.
They're fcouring, fcrubbing things continually,
'Tis rare indeed fuch girls as them to meet;
Their kitchen's quite a palace, as you fee,
And look, their drefTer! ifn't it a treat ?
They never now require to be told
A fingle thing: and, what is even more,
I'm often now almofl obliged to fcold,
They've got fo over nice, 'tis quite a bore !
They're now what I call cleanly to excefs,
And make themfelves more work than need be made;
So much, that oft I'd rather fee a mefs,
That I might have fome reafon to upbraid.
X
                        There, look! 'tis quite ridiculous to fee
Thofe pans and kettles which they're fcrubbing fo;
=!                        Although I've faid it don't require to be,
q_                            They clean the very bottoms of them too!
'Tis juft the way with fooliih people all,
When once their old bad habits they forfake,
D                        In th' oppofite extreme too oft they fall,
And of a virtue then a folly make.
0
l_ The Spendthrift, when he takes to fave, a Mifer oft becomes,
And, where he fquander'd thoufands once, will make his meal of crumbs.
The niggardly, when he the part of liberal would play,
Is generous beyond his means, to give, to lend, or pay.
But both are in excefs, and act in opposition quite
To Senfe and Reafon's rules for doing e'en the thing that's right.
So be advifed by me, my friends, and keep within the mean;
The path of Light, the line of Right, lies all extremes between.
"DOR Medio y no caereys.
Allez par le Milieu, et vous ne tomberez.
---------Medio tutissimus ibis.
Il n'y a banquet que de chiches.
TOO MUCH BREAKS THE BAG.
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2P«&.2F<a, TOO TOO WILL. IN TWO. -s>*S'§*s>
Zu wenig und zu viel
Verderbet alle Spiel.
Zu viel ist ungesund.
Al zu scharff macht schartig.
Il molto e'l poco.
Rompe le giuoco.
Ni tan hermosa que mate,
Ni tan fea que espante.
Ni tant belle, qu'elle tue :
Ni tant laide, qu'elle espouvente.
Q                                                                Noch y ! noch fy.
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Ogno bel givoco vuol durar poco.
(I)                                                             Tien la Strada di mezzo.
Perge via media: medium tenuere beati.
Qui commence a etre liberal, devient prodigue.
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S                            Baullu curium etion vetra mensaran carnadu.— Turkish Adage.
lU                    Omnis intemperantia est a tota mente ac a recta ratione defectio.—Cicero.
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%                               Incidit in Scyllam cupiens vitare Charybdim.—Latin Proverb.
j- I                           Id arbitror adprime in vita esse utile "ne quid nimis."—Terence.
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0                                                    Avoid Extremes.
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'Tis all in vain to keep a constant pother
About one Vice, and fall into another;
Betwixt excess and famine lies a mean;
Plain, but not sordid; though not splendid, clean.—Pope.
Never exaggerate.
"PHE Wise never speak in the superlative, for that mode of speech always offends
either Truth or Prudence. Exaggerations are so many prostitutions of reputation,
inasmuch as they expose the shallowness of the understanding and the bad taste of
the speaker. Exaggeration is a species of lying; he who exaggerates shews himself to
be a man of bad taste, and, what is worse, a man of mean intellect.—Gracian.
TOO MUCH CORDIAL. WILL DESTROY.
89
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TOO MUCH COURTESY, TOO MUCH CRAFT.
"1 Jf'Y Light into a fnufFe is almoft turn'd,
J          And now the candle to fmoaking afh.es burn'd,
Behold another Light ftands ready by,
Which to enjoy my place will make me dye.
Yet not unpunifh'd it puts out my breath,
My very aihes doe revenge my death.
So doth the fonne his Father make away,
If not with fword, with griefe, before his day,
That he his Fathers goods and meanes may joy,
Which Nemefis revenging doth convoy.
For oft the fpendthrifts goods fo evill gotten
Are fpent before his Fathers bones are rotten.
Farlie's Emblems.
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DO BUSINESS, BUT BE NOT A SLAVE TO IT.
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PROSPERITY GAINS FRIENDS,
When the Wind >erves, all aid.
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GREASE THE FAT SOW!
HO claimeth kindred with the Poor ?"
So few ! that 'twas the reafon why
The queftion was firft put, no doubt,—-
And truly! it doth much imply.
Replete with meaning are thofe words,
Though few—to pi&ure and exprefs
In time of yore, as even now,
Man's all-abforbing felfifhnefs.
ADVERSITY TRIES THEM.
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CHANGE OF FORTUNE IS THE LOT OF LIFE.
The fage* who faid in antient days:
"When the ftrong-box contains no more,
And that the kitchen fire is out,
Both friends and flatt'rers fhun the door,"
Attefhed then, what even now
Is daily feen on every hand:
The profperous in life, alone
Have proffer'd fervice at command.
Let Fortune with propitious winds
Waft but the laden bark to fhore,
He finds a hoft of helping friends,
Who never had a friend before.
Beyond his need on ev'ry fide,
He fees unafk'd-for fympathy;
Officious zeal to help and aid
The tide of his profperity.
"Greafe the fat fowl all help! all aid!"
On ev'ry hand the harpies cry;
'Tis eafy rowing in the wake
Of others' toil and induftry!
Thus 'tis in life, we conftant fee
The Drones and Idlers of our kind,
Prey on the labours of the Bee,
And fatten on what others find:
The Foxes of the human race,
The Beavers of their own defpoil;
Craft, lord it in poor Merit's place,
And take the credit of his toil.
"T^ONEC eris felix, multus numerabis amicos :
Tempora si fuerint nubila, solus eris.
Aspicis ut veniant ad Candida tecta columbse,
Accipiat nullas sordida turris aves?
* Plutarch.
ALL IS LUCK OR ILL LUCK IN THIS WORLD.
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A' THINGS HAE AN END, AN' A PUDDING HAS TWA.
Horrea formica; tendunt ad inania nunquam:
Nullus ad amissas ibit amicus opes.
Utque comes radios per solis euntibus umbra est:
Ciim latet hie pressus nubibus, ilia fugit:
Mobile sic sequitur fortunse lumina vulgus :
)~                                         Quag simul inducta nube teguntur, abit.—Ovid, i. Trist. 8.
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!j-                                     Granaro vuoto formica non frequenta.—Italian Proverb.
m                                Op ledige solders en komen geen Kalanders.—Dutch Proverb.
Ill                                 Wer da liegt, iiber dem lauft alle Welt hin.—German Proverb.
2
L j                                                              Parente con parente
t                                                                Guai a. chi non ha niente.
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^                                     Vrienden sijn vrienden, maer wee diese van doen heeft.
0                                                          A bon vent chaque sainct aide.
In borsa serrata, amico non si trova.
2                                                            Vrienden in der noot
5                                                            Vier-en-twintigh m een loot.
lU                                                           Felicium omnes consanguinei.
Men kent geen vnent als m der noot;
t~                                                      Den riicken na den doot.
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m                          Dieweil die Henn' Eier legt, legt man ihr auch.—Old German Proverb.
4                                                While the Pot boils, Friendship blooms.
In Prosperity Friends are numerous and cheap.
Q                                                            Infelicium nulli sunt affines.
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J                     L'homme pauvre est toujours en pais etranger.—Juan Rufo, Apoph. 541.
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The Vulgar find Friends neither in Prosperity nor Adversity : because in the former
W j they know nobody, and that in Adversity nobody will know them.—Gracian.
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Interest makes all seem Reason that leads to it.—Dryden, Sec. Love.
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d                                                The noblest Friendship ever shown,
The Saviour's history makes known,
Though some have turned and turned it:
And whether being crazed or blind,
Or seeking with a biassed mind,
Have not, it seems, discerned it.—Cowper.
cg^iF^S^S*^ ALL BITE THE BITTEN DOG. ■^■C^SxS-'^&'^S-
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THE MORE SERVANTS, THE WORSE SERVICE.
HILST I did fhine fierce Boreas put me out,
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         Againe he kindles me at the fecond bout:
As fometimes did the clowne, now Boreas doth,
Both heat and cold he breatheth from his mouth,
The billow whom it carl into the maine,
Returning threw him in the Shippe againe;
Fortune throwes downe, then raifeth from the ground ;
Achilles fpeare doth cure whom it did wound.
LofTes prove good to fome; whom Greece condemnd,
The Perfian for his vallour could commend.
Be not caft downe, difpaire not at mifchance,
God who hath crofTed thee, will thee advance.
Farue's Emblems.
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.TOO MUCH FAMILIARITY BREEDS CONTEMPT.
Faites feste au chien, il te gastera ton habit.
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PLAY WITH THE DOG, AND HE'LL SPOIL YOUR
CLOTHES.
?S in the garden yefterday,
In full Court fuit, I coax'd our Tray,
And with each friendly pat and ftroke,
The ufual words of kindnefs fpoke;
He in return for my carefs,
Sprang up, unmindful of my drefs,
2*3- LA FAMILIARITE ENGENDRE LE MEPRIS. ^>=S
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CZ*^ PL-AY WITH AN ASS, AND HE -£*©
And with his dirty feet and nofe
Befmear'd my handfome cloak and hofe.
In ipite of all that I could fay,
To keep in bounds his ruthlefs play;—
Grown bolder ftill, the vexing brute,
As though intent to fpoil my fuit,
Jump'd up again—my moe-ties foil'd,
My fatin knee-bows fray'd and fpoil'd;
Till finding all my chiding vain,
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W                                    His wanton fondnefs to reftrain:
I-                                    In wrath I kick'd th' unmanner'd hound,
0                                   And laid him fprawling on the ground.
*~                                    As with the brute, with man no lefs,
fl-                                    The friendship of th' uncultur'd mind
HI !                                  Is irkfome oft, from fheer excefs
q                                   Of zeal to do the thing that's kind.
However friendly you may be
0                                   Difpos'd your ferving-man to treat,
Let not your partiality
2                                    Be fhewn beyond the bound that's meet:
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Lj_                                      When you your child or dog carefs;
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^                                   How far the friendship may tranfgrefs,
That ruffles felf-love through the Drefs.
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^                           T) URLAOS con el asno, daros ha en la barba con el rado.
Cria corvo, y sacar te hal el ojo.—Old Spanish Proverb.
Les enfans et serviteurs il ne les faut mignarder, si tu veux en jouir.
Faites feste au chat, il vous sautera au visage.
Nimia familiaritas parit contemptum.
II troppo conversar partorisce dispregio.
Nulli te facias nimis sodalem.
Gaudebis minus? Et minus dolebis.—Martial.
Jamais trop compagnon a. nul ne te feras :
Car bien que moins de joye, moins d'ennuy tu auras.
WILL. WHISK HIS TAIL. IN YOUR FACE
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J^2^S^;g*s,s>®, DO NOT SPUR A FREE HORSE. -i5>s;<s*S:-§*g:«S*S>®*S;
Chose accoustumee
N'est pas fort prise'e.
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A casa de tu tia,
Mas no cada dia:
A caso de tu hermano,
Non iras cada ferano.
A la maison de ta tante,
Mais pas tous les jours :
A la maison de ton frere;
Mais non tous les soirs.
Ale Iwporum catulos.
T N eos qui lasduntur ab iis, de quibus bene meriti sint, aut in ingratos. Nam plerunque
solet id usu venire illis, qui catulos luporum enutriunt.—Erasm. in Adagio.
Qui se fait brebis, le loup le mange :
Qui se fait porceau, se met dans la fange :
Amignotte ton enfant, et il te donnera maint effroy:
Joue-toi avec lui, et il te contristera.
Ne te joue point avec un homme mal appris.
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friend be sugar you must not eat him all up," i.e. that we must not require too
2         much of those who are willing to serve us; that we should never misuse any one's
0 i courtesy ; nor over-ride a willing horse :
CHOULD any ask the reason why
I use nor whip nor spurs to ply
n.
                                             The mare I ride 1—It is that she
2                                             Requires nor whip nor spur from me :
0                                             Because her mettle is so good,
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                                             And she's so willing in her mood,
LlJ                                               That since I've her bestrode, I ne'er
q                                             Found her dispos'd her legs to spare.
For whip or spur no use I see
Whene'er a horse goes willingly:
And this I hold :—From horse nor man
That willing gives, take all you can :
Nor is he wise who tries his friend
Beyond his will to give or lend.
Who overloads his ass, no less
T' obtain his wish the worst way chooses :
His ass stands still from sheer distress,
And greed of gain the market loses !
_|L NE FAUT PRENDRE DE SON AMI TOUT CE G^U'ON PEUT.
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VEEL WIEGEN.
MEN KAN'T KINT WEL TE
OW Boreas puffing in his boiftrous ire,
Blows as he were to kindle Vulcans fire:
He doth undoe me by. his churlifhnefle,
I am confumed more, and fhine the lefle:
He fpends his labour, fo I lofe mine oyle,
As no wayes fit to undergoe fuch toyle.
You beat the AfTe ling'ring under his load,
The generous Horfe deferveth not a goad :
The Mufes fonnes cannot away with lafhes,
Which are more fitting for Arcadian afTes.
Each ftrength within his limits, Nature bounds,
Which who fo pafleth, Nature he confounds.
Farlie's Emblems.
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S^S, DE ROSE FLETRIE NUL NE SOUCIE. ■«§>*;
Turpe Senilis Amor.
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BEES TOUCH NO FADING FLOWERS.
THE Rofe round which of late in fuch difport,
. So many came t' admire and to court;
With drooping head now mourns that fhe mould be
By all forfaken fhe was wont to fee.
No gentle Zephyr now as yefter-noon,
Comes near to revel in her fweet perfume;
THE FADED ROSE NO SUITOR KNOWS.
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WEALTH MAKES WORSHIP.
No Butterfly with wings of varied hue,
Now hovers near, and flays his flight to view
Her full-blown beauties—nor as hitherto,
To kifs from off her breaft the pearly dew:
No tuneful Bee* now hies on eager wing,
His admiration of her charms to fing,
Nor longer feeks to rifle and to fip
The honied treafures of her fragrant lip.
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                            And why is this ?—the reafon foon is told:
2                            Nor Butterflies nor Bees are grown more cold-
0                            But thou, poor Rofe !—'tis thou art growing old !
Thy beauties in their prime but yefterday ;-
l_
                            To-day, alas ! are fading faft away!
Yield thee to Love, fweet youth, while youth is thine;
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                        Seek thee a mate e'er yet thy youth decline,
W                        Nor make delay to love, to woo and wed,
LU                         Till Age has ftrewn its fnows upon thine head.
0                        Of Life's beft years wafte not the richeft bloom
In fruitlefs ufe, for Time is Beauty's tomb ;-
^
                        Youth, Strength, and Beauty have not long to flay,
<                        To-day they're thine—to-morrow pafs'd away !
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0-                                   A MARE juveni fructus, crimen seni.—Senec. in Proverb.
§                                                     Desine, dulcium
Z                                                     Mater saeva Cupidmum,
W                                                     Circa, lustra decern flectere mollibus
Tarn durum imperiis. Abi
J-                                                     Quo blandae juvenum te revocant preces.—Horace.
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In Caducum Parietem non inclinandum.
~VX THEN the fresh rose first opens to the day,
Tis wooed by all that love round flowers to play-
But when it droops and all its bloom is o'er,
No Bee then seeks it for its honey more.
'Apes a marcidis floribus abstinere solent: mortuis, ait Plinius, floribus ne quidem corporibus insidunt.
POVERTY TRIETH FRIENDS.
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PROSPERITY GAINS FRIENDS, ADVERSITY TRIES THEM.
So fares it ever with the rich and great
To poverty reduc'd by adverse Fate :
Few know them then, or their acquaintance boast;
Not even those who fawn'd on them the most,
Smil'd when they smil'd, and made without a cause
Each look and word their subject for applause ;
In sordid worship of that wealth and state
Which grov'lling minds then pay towards the great.
Then like the Rose deserted by the Bee,
When all its wealth of sweets has pass'd away,
Each shuns the fall'n, nor merit more can see
q"                                        In him whose call they truckl'd to obey.
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i          ~I\/F ^ l°vers and my fiends stand aloof from my sore ; and my kinsmen stand afar
off.—Psalm xxxviii. n.
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q               Many will entreat the favour of the prince, and every man is a friend to him that
q.         giveth gifts ; [But] all the brethren of the poor do hate him : how much more do his
tjj         friends go far from him?—Prov. xix. 6, 7.
111               Some friend is a companion at the table, and will not continue in the day of thy
^         affliction. In thy prosperity he will be as thyself, and will be bold over thy servants :
[But] if thou be brought low, he will be against thee, and will hide himself from thy
^         face.—Ecclesiastiais vi. 10—12.
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W :       adversity. In the prosperity of a man enemies will be grieved, but in his adversity
^ 1       even a friend will depart.—Ibid. xii. 8, 9.
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q_               Wealth maketh many friends; but the poor is separated from his neighbour.
Prov. xix. 4.
There is a companion which rejoiceth in the prosperity of a friend, but in the
time of trouble will be against him. There is a companion which helpeth his friend
for the belly, and taketh up the buckler against the enemy.—Ecclesiasticus xxxvii. 4, 5.
Where the carcase is, there the eagles will be gathered together.—Matt. xxiv. 28.
Cum Fortuna manet vultum servatis amici,
Cum cedit, turpi vertitis ora fuga.—Ovid.
RICH MEN HAVE NO FAULTS. _____________
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FLATTERERS HAUNT NOT COTTAOES.
HEN as my Light much like an ev'ning ftarre,
Did caft his glittering beames both neare and farre ;
Then light me glorious, flame me dreadfull made,
And none injurioufly durft me upbraide ;
But when my Light into a fnuffe did turne,
And cloth'd with darknefTe, I did ceafe to burne,
Loe how without defence I naked ftand,
Thus torne and rent by this devouring band.
Glory, as envy, fo it terrour lends
To Mortals: Majefty it felfe defends;
But after treacherous Fortune flies away,
To an unarmed dwarfe its made a prey.
Far lie's Emblems.
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MEN USE TO WORSHIP THE RISINQ SUN.
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S^-ONE ILL EXAMPLE SPOILS MANY GOOD.'M
Pomme pourrie gate sa compagnie.
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ONE ROTTEN APPLE INFECTS ALL IN THE BASKET.
FAIR Maid ! who comes fo oft this way,
Your fruit of me to buy!
In guerdon of your kindnefs, pray!
Before my fruit you try,—
Give ear to what I have to fay,
For I would fervice do
To fuch as buy of me to-day,
Good cuftomers like you!
SHEEP SPOILS A WHOLE FLOCK.
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BETTER BE ALONE THAN IN BAD COMPANY.
Full many years have I fold fruit,
And well its nature know ;
As that of ev'ry herb and root,
That in the garden grow;—•
And this I've found, and heard it too
From all who fruit have grown,—
" However fine and frefh to view,
The good, keep beft alone."
No rotten pear, however flight
The token of decay,
But foon as e'er it meets the fight,
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                                        It fhould be thrown away:
ID                                     For be the damage e'er fo fmall,
In little time, I've known
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                                    The taint will often fpread to all,
^                                        From that one pear alone.
>;                                    I've had of Jargonels a lot,
<                                        As found as fruit could be,
^                                    All from one apple take the rot,
0                                            And prove fad lofs to me.
Nor is there fruit that ever grew,
ID                                                                                                                         .
1                                            When fpoiled in any part,
But foon fpoils all that's near it too,
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So take thefe truths to heart:
A tainted grape the bunch may fpoil;
J                                        A mildew'd ear, the corn in fhock;
l_                                    A fcabby fheep, with rot and boil,
Infect and kill the fineft flock.
Hence, maiden, I would have you know
The ill that evil contact brings
To all the fineft fruits that grow,
And faireft maids, like other things.
Seek only all that's good to learn;
Thine ears from evil counfel turn;—
For all the more the fruit is fair,
The greater is its need of care.
BE CAUTIOUS IN CHOOSINQ THY COMPANIONS.
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5U| SE COUCHE AVEC LES CHIENS SE LEVE AVEC LES PUCES.
r^ UICCIARDINI, in his Book entitled " Hours of Recreation," says that it is a
singular and sure way to acquire a knowledge of the inner nature and
character of a person, if one diligently observes the kind of society he most
frequently keeps :
For two of a kind, whate'er they be,
Are forthwith certain to agree :
as Cicero said formerly when speaking of Cato : because Nature always inclines to its
like; and hence, specially applicable to the foregoing subject is the Spanish proverb:
Di me con quien iras
Dizir te he lo que haras.
Tell me, with whom thou goest,
And I'll tell thee what thou doest.
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To shun evil company is therefore one of the most important things to be
impressed on the mind of the youth of both sexes; and the extent of mischief
which it leads to, may be well inferred from the writings of David, a man after j! J
God's heart, and of Solomon, the wisest of kings; both of whom gave this subject ' li-
the first place in their writings. David in his first Psalm, and Solomon in the first
chapter of his Proverbs, coincide with the sense expressed in the Proverbs of all
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nations, as may herein be seen:
He that handles pitch shall foul his fingers.
Handelt gy't peck,
Gy krygt een vleck.
Brebis rogneuse
Fait l'autre tigneuse.
One rotten sheepe wille marre a whole flocke.
La mancana podrida
Pierde a su compannia.
Unica prava pecus inficit omne pecus.
Dum spectant lassos oculi, keduntur et ipsi.—Ovid.
---------- Grex totus in agris
Unius scabie cadit, et porrigene porci:
Uvaque conspecta livorem ducit ab uva.—Juvenal, Sat. 2.
Wer unter den Wolfen ist, muss mit ihnen heulen.
Ein reudig Schaf macht die ganze Heerde reudig.
Ein schurft schaep maeckt'er veel.
Die by de kreupelen woont, leert hincken.
Vuyle gronden bederven de Kabels.
Die met den goeden omme gaet,
En acht ick noyt myn leven quaet.
^■i^iKS-HE WHO KENNELS WITH WOLVES MUST HOWL. 'WS^'M
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KEEP YOURSELF FROM OPPORTUNITIES,
?sLAME goes to heav'n, from whence it once did come,
& Bids earth adue, and what it hath therefrom.
The fnufFe to afhes, fmoake turnes into ayre ;
Light's beauty's gone, which fometime was fo faire;
When Death had giv'n his laft and fatall blow,
Our foule to Heav'n, our Earth to earth doth goe ;
Riches and honours, which it once did love,
The Soule now lothes; and feekes to dwell above.
Learne, Mortals, all falfe pleafures to contemne,
And treafures, which the foule muft once condemne :
Seeke rather for the graces of the minde,
Which you your convoy to the Heaven will finde.
Farlie's Emblems.
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AND GOD WILL. KEEP YOU FROM SINS.
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EVERY SUITOR IS NOT A HEART-BREAKER.
Tangor, non Frangor, ab undis.
I AM TOUCHED, NOT BROKEN BY THE WAVES.
jOJfT ev'ry feftive board th' admir'd gueft,
At ev'ry Ball the partner in requeft;
'Mid Fafhion's throng wherever thou art feen,
Th' acknowledge faireft type of Beauty's Queen :
And yet-with all this tribute to thy grace,
This fervent homage of thy form and face;
Unmov'd, unchang'd, thou art in all the fame
As heretofore ;—nor Love, nor praife, nor blame,
"ALLE AANSPRECKERS, QEEN HERTE-BREKERS.
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BIEN TE BAIGNE, MAIS SANS MELANGE
To thee or pleafure or annoy impart—
Such is the icy coldnefs of thine heart!
That thou art thus, explains full well to me,
What I once deem'd mere fabulous to be:
That even 'midft the Ocean's rolling wave,
Where all earth's waters find a common grave;
There flow fome Rivers which no lefs maintain
Their course unbroken, and unmix'd retain
Their Water's fweetnefs 'mid the briny main!—*
W                                So thou, who kindleft in all hearts, defire,
h                                Mov'ft cold and ftill unfcath'd amid'ft the fire!
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It          /^~\UIS fornacem Regis Babylonii sine adustione ingressus est, inquit, cujus adolescentis
D          ^^ ./Egyptica Domina pallium non terruit? Inter illecebras voluptatum etiam ferreas
P         mentes libido domat. Difficile inter opulas servatur pudicitia.—Hieron. lib. iii. Epist. 5.
D               Periclitatur castiras in diliciis, humilitas in divitiis, pietas in negotiis, Veritas in
6         multiloquio, charitas in hoc mundo.—Bernard, in quod. Serm.
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II                                                        The hardest steel in tract of time doth tear;
And drizzling drops, that often do redound,
The firmest flint doth in continuance wear :
III                                                   Yet cannot I, with many a dropping tear
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                                              But, when I plead, she bids me play my part;
And, when I weep, she says; Tears are but water;
And, when I sigh, she says; I know the art;
And, when I wail, she turns herself to laughter.
So do I weep, and wail, and plead in vain,
While she as steel and flint doth still remain.—Edmund Spenser.
This was antiently affirmed and believed of the River Alpheus, in its course through the
Sicilian Sea.
S^PASS THROUGH, BUT MINGLE NOT.-M
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THE LAST COMERS ARE OFTEN THE MASTERS.
T PR'YTHEE send me back my heart,
Since I can not have thine;
For if from yours you will not part—
Why then shouldst thou have mine1?
Yet now I think on't, let it lie,
To find it were in vain;
For thou'st a thief in either eye
Would steal it back again.—Sir J. Suckling.
Oh ! who would love ? I woo'd a Woman once,
But she was sharper than an eastern wind,
And all my heart turn'd from her, as a thorn
Turns from the sea.—Tennyson.
The fair Lauretta's eyes, so blue and bright,
Look blank and cold when / am in her sight.
Paint her not thus, kind limner ! give her that
Sweet smile she wears when talking to her cat.
So shall I fondly think, whene'er I see
The beaming Portrait, that it smiles on me.—Alton.
Mediis immixtus in undis.
TO EADER ! from this our Emblem learn to be
Th' unmingling River flowing through the sea
Of this World's brackish waters. Thou too, keep
Thy course unbroken, 'mid the briny deep
Of all its lures, its lusts and vanity.
Though living in men's 'midst, yield not thine heart
To those who would their taint to it impart;
Lest soon commingling with the 'whelming tide
Of Passion's waves, which press on ev'ry side,
Thy Soul's sweet waters lose their purity.
Discite in hoc mundo, supra, mundum esse; et si corpus geritis, volitet in vobis
ales interior.—Ambros. de Virg.
That ye may be blameless and harmless, the sons of God, without rebuke, in
the midst of a crooked and perverse nation, among whom ye shine as lights in
the world.—Philip, ii. 15.
And they that use this world, as not abusing it: for the fashion of this world
passeth away.—1 Corinth, vii. 31.
HE WHO CAN WAIT OBTAINS WHAT HE WISHES.
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HE WHO DEMANDS DOES NOT COMMAND.
HEN thou in darkenefle of the night didft blaze,
* I could not without envy on thee gaze;
But when the Cyclop Titan comes in fight,
There is no ods twixt darkenefle and thy light:
I doe not envy thee, although thou ftiine;
No glor' I have, nor is the glory thine.
As lightfome bodyes doe a fhaddow give;
So glory without envy cannot live:
When greater glory doth the meane fupprefle,
It likewife takes the envy from the leffe.
Farlie's Emblems.
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LIKE TO LIKE, AND NAN TO NICHOLAS.
Vogelen van eener veeren vliegen geern ffamen.
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BIRDS OF A FEATHER FLOCK TOGETHER.
HAT! are you then in earneft, friend?
^         Oh, no !—it cannot be :
It's quite impoffible that you
Should think of courting me!
Indeed you'd better take your love
Elfewhere; for fure am I,
We are by no means fuited for
The Matrimonial tie.
cpO^S^S^S?-^ LIKE WILL TO LIKE. -S^J-'S^-^s
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CHACUN CHERCHE SON SEMBUABLE.
You! who by all are faid to be
A roving, ruffling blade—
And I, as ev'ry body knows,
A quiet, gentle maid.
From early youth accuftom'd to
The peaceful joys of home,
Amid the rude and buftling world
I have no wifh to roam:
In Houfewif'ry and its behefts,
The greateft charm I find,
And when from thefe I feek relief,
Why then with humble mind,
I read fome holy book, or fpin,
And often take delight.
To imitate in 'broidery
Some pofie's colours bright:
'Tis feldom I go out to walk,
And in the Street but rare,
Excepting to and fro from Church,
Or when I go to bear
Some comfort to the fick and poor;
For we are taught to give
Some fhare of what we have, to thofe
Who labour hard to live.
But you without reftraint give loofe
To paffion's wilder fway;
Love feafting, wine and riot,
And are giv'n much to play:
You know no reft, and to your mind
No moment hath fuch charms,
As when the drum or trumpet ihrill
Calls all the Camp to arms.
Methinks fome Trooper's daughter were
For you a fitter bride,
Who in the Soldier's ruder life
And habits takes a pride:
Whofe eye unmov'd could look upon
The blood-ftain'd battle-field,
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SE MARIER ET FAIRE COMPARAISON,
Can fwing a fword and trail a pike,
Nor to the beft one yield.
Who when me hears the cannon roar,
Would ftand unmov'd by fear,
And fay, what others terrifies
Is mufic to her ear.
Such is the Bride would fuit you beft,
The Wife whom you would find
Moft fuited to your habits,
And your rougher tone of mind.
Who without dread would pafs her hand
Upon your Rapier's blade,
And bid you fight until you fell,
And 'neath the turf were laid:
But I who am a timid thing,
Who even fear the fmoke
Of Petronel and Arquebus,
Much lefs the cannon's ftroke;
Who fee in you alone what would
Make me much mifery,
I am no ways a match for you,
Nor are you fit for me.
Look but around and you will fee
Where'er you turn your eye,
The Birds which on the water fwim,
And thofe which foar on high—
All chool'e their mates as moft befeems,
And concord every where;
Each woos his like, as it fhould be,
And like with like doth pair.
Nought can induce the Dove to take
The Eagle for her mate,
The Partridge to the Buzzard-hawk
Will never link her fate;
The Raven black weds not the Swan,
'Twas not by Nature meant,
For " Like with like" alone, my friend,
Can give the heart content.
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ENTRE GENS DE MEME NATURE
THIS waxen torch is able to endure
The winds, when iEolus puts them in ure ;
It leads the way in darkneffe of the night,
And, though the ferene fall, it fhewes his Light:
The candle ftill lurks at home, and there doth fhow
Its light, not caring how the winds doe blow,
This as the houfes joy at home doth ftay,
The other ftill abroad doth make his way.
The hardy hufband from his houfe goes forth,
Seeking to compaffe bufinefs of worth ;
He failes by rockes and fands, earely and late
He toiles, and feekes to purchafe an eftate :
The wife at home much like a fnaile fhe fits
On hous-wifry employing all her wits :
UlyfTes in his travels hard did fhift,
Penelope at home did ufe her thrift.
Farlie's Emblems.
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SEE FAIT ET DURE.
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a-s^ EVERYTHING IS GOOD IN ITS SEASON.'^
Mite Pyrum vel Spotste Fluit.
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THE RIPE PEAR FALLS READY
TO THE HAND.
If/*OULD'ST early be fuccefsful in thy fuit,
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        Nor languifti long in Love's confirming flame?-
In Beauty's garden, fhun the unripe fruit,
And breathe thy paffion to the riper dame.
The fruit that's green clings longeft to the tree,
WOO THE WIDOW WHILST SHE IS IN WEEDS.
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THERE IS A CRITICAL MINUTE FOR ALL THINGS.
Nor willing yields to leave the parent fpray;
While that which has attain'd maturity,
Warm'd to the core beneath the funny ray,
Yields to the touch—and quickly conies away.
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|- Jam te sequetur, jam proterva                                                                              U,
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Non mentem Venus ipsa dedit.                                                                                (0
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T IKE unto Man whose course is nearly run,
HI                                                          The Apple, ripen'd by the autumn sun,                                                  (!)
fy                                                                                                                                                                                                 I
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m                                             But not alone in this the semblance lies
Between the Man's and Apple's destinies:                                                       Ct
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W ;                                           The green, in Youth, are torn by force away.
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^                                                   Un homme, une pomme.                                                    &
X I                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                  LL
(0                 Nos corps, comme les fruits aux arbres attaches,                                                                      £
Ou meurent, tombent en terre, ou verds sont arrache's.—Du Vair's Epictetus.
LU •                                                                                                                                                     r                                  J
111                                                                                                                                                                                             k*
II me semble, que la dite comparaison est propre et vive, pour exprimer la facon          4
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de mourir, et d'un robuste jouvenceau, qui est encore en la fleur de son age, et d'un          "-
bon vieil homme, qui ja va penchant vers la terre.—Du Vair.                                                     J
h
It is said, by the Philosopher, " Omnia quae secundum naturam sunt, sunt habenda          ^
in bonis." But all that happens to us contrary to the usual course of nature, is gene-          D
rally considered lamentable. Cicero, who seems to share the sentiment of Epictetus,
and who borrowed from him in his book "De Senectute," expresses himself in yet
more elevated and impressive terms :
»<S.i?*.^DEATH MEETS US EVERYWH ERE. -&S*S^S
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5if^S>^ DEATH DEVOURS LAMBS AS WELL AS SHEEP. -^sT'SS^
Adolescentes mihi mori sic videntur, ut aquas multitudine flammae vis opprimitur.
Senex autem, sicut sua sponte nulla vi adhibita consumtus ignis extinguitur: et quasi
poma ex arboribus, cruda si sint, si velluntur; si matura et cocta, decidunt. Sicut vitam
adolescentibus vis aufert, sic senibus maturitas.
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Quod crudum, idem et pertinax.                                            q
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q                                         ' I "■ HE fruit that's ripe, parts willing from the tree ;
(D                                                    Unripe, 'tis not so willing to comply :                                                       ^
Who call'd by Death resists his destiny,                                                            r-
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Q-                                         Proves most that he is unprepar'd to die.                                                          -j-
^               It is sad to die before the time : idle speech! Before what time 1 Before that
prescribed by Nature 1 But Nature lent life to us only, without fixing the term of its          [L
q         withdrawal.—Cicero.
5                                                       ------------                                                       <
2                     Offeramus Deo pro munere, quod pro debito teneamur reddere.
\~                                                                                                                                                           CHRYSOS. Super Matth. 10.
•2                                                 TN the hope of a better award,                                                                !~
Forgetful that Life is a loan;                                                               (2
2                                                 We but offer to God, as reward,
The Life which is His—not our own.
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Our Life is taken from us but to give
Uj                                                   A better life wherewith in Heav'n to live;                                                 ffl
<«.                                                   Unquench'd our Spirit, by our body's death,                                              tt
It                                                  Rises refreshed to breathe with purer breath.                                             qj
<3                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       h
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The glories of our blood and state                                                            Z
Are shadows, not substantial things;
2                                                 There is no armour against fate,                                                                  q
^                                                     Death lays his icy hand on kings:                                                          Z
t                                                             S
I
Must tumble down,
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LU                                                       And
^ .                                                  With the poor crooked scythe and spade.—Shirley.
We spend our years as a tale that is told.—Psalm xc. 9.
The days of our years are threescore years and ten ; and if by reason of strength
they be fourscore years, yet is their strength labour and sorrow; for it is soon cut
off, and we fly away.—Ibid. 10.
DESTINY LEADS THE WILLING, BUT DRAGS THE UNWILLING.
II?                                                                      HH
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IS NO APPEAL FROM TIME PAST.
THERf
tY/ HEN firft my light did mine, you lik'd me well.
¥w Now that is gone; you hate my loathfome lmell;
You with prolongers made me live, and art
Preferv'd my life; but now Time a<5ts his part:
Triumphant Time, fhewes now my glaffe is runne,
(What way God knowes) I finde my threed is fpunne;
Envy hath playd its part, and I doe goe
To Coffin: as I doe, all muft doe fo.
Time breaths a fhrewd and life-bereaving blaft,
Yet upward flyes my light, where it fhall laft.
I'me glad to part from body, which I lov'd
So deere, that many wayes and arts I prov'd
The mudwall to maintaine, and body fave,
But yet in fpite of me 'twill go to grave.
This is my comfort, Body, that thy tombe
Which is thy grave, fhall be thy mothers wombe,
To bring thee once againe unto the light,
And life, which death fhall never know, or night:
Then be content, though you and I depart:
Yet Soule and Body ftill fhall have one heart.—Farlie's Emblems
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THERE IS NO MEDICINE AGAINST DEATH.
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LOVE IS THE LOADSTONE OF LOVE.
Quid non f'enfit amor ?
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WHO IS INSENSIBLE TO LOVE?
if| EHOLD the wond'rous lympathy between
jQl The firings of yonder lute, and this I play !
Is it not juft as though fome hand unfeen
Swept the fame chords, and tun'd the felf-fame lay ?
* The cause of this phenomenon is assigned by Cardanum in his 8th book De Subtilit.
Du Pleix, in his Corps de Philosophic, 1626, accounts for it also in nearly similar terms.—Note of Translati >k
■&-<&. AMOR REGGE SENZA LEGGE. "S>^
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cg*3*.0*&-^<s±,!&x?2* LOVE SEES NO FAULTS. •-S^S^s^S^^S
So lov'd one—though untouch'd by thee, I feel,
p!                                 Senfe of thy touch through all my being fteal;
Z                            Hear thy lov'd voice though filent thou may'ft be,
See thy lov'd form though far away from me,
And all the radiance of thy Beauty's light,
Undimm'd to me by diftance, ftiines no lefs
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                            To me effulgent in my dream of night,
W                            As doth by day its light of loveliness.
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Vetus verbum est, similitudinem amoris auctorem esse.—Plato, lib. 6, De Leg
I
®                Experientia notum est arcanam quandam et occultam inter homines esse natu-
<          rarum affinitatem aut odium, vel naturae quadam occulta vi, vel astrorum influentia,
W          vel, &c. Unde fit ut aliquis ab altero toto pectore abhorreat, in alterum verb pro-
pensus sit, nee rogatus causam dicere posset cur hunc amet, ilium oderit, juxta illud
Catulli
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                                             Non amo te, Volusi, nee possum dicere quare,
_J                                              Hoc tantiini possum dicere, non amo te.-
Cypr. Tract, de Spons. cap. 7.
i_                              Quid non cernit Amor ! quid non vestigat Amator !—Beroald.
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0                                             ' OVE looks not with the eyes, but with the mind,
m                                                    And therefore is wing'd Cupid painted blind;
Nor hath Love's mind of any judgment taste,
Wings and no eyes, figure unheedy haste ;
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                                          And therefore is Love said to be a child,
5                                          Because in choice he often is begmTd.—Shakespeare.
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h                                         Things base and vile, holding no quality,
|_                                          Love can transpose to form and dignity.—Ibid.
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Ah ! I remember,—and how can I
But evermore remember well,—when first
Our flame began; when scarce we knew what 'twas,
The flame we felt; when as we sat and sigh'd,
(!)
And 7ooked upon each other and conceived
UJ                                          Not what we ail'd, yet something we did ail;
0                                         And yet were well, and yet we were not well:
-I                                         And what was our disease we could not tell.—Old Poet.
O AMOR NAO TEM LEI.----LOVE KNOWS NO LAW.
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LOVE DEMANDS FAITH, AND FAITH FIRMNESS.
-Love refines
The thoughts and heart enlarges : hath its seat
In reason, and is judicious : is the scale
By which to Heavenly love thou mayest ascend ;—
Not sunk in carnal pleasure : for which cause
Among the beasts no mate for Love was found.—Milton.
Oh ! there are looks and tones that dart
An instant sunshine through the heart;
As if the soul that minute caught
Some treasure it through life had sought;
As if the very lips and eyes
Predestin'd to have all our sighs,
And never be forgot again,—
Sparkled and spoke before us then.—Moore.
Why should I blush to own I love?
Tis love that rules the realms above !
Why should I blush to say to all,
That virtue holds my heart in thrall?
Is it weakness thus to dwell
On passion that I dare not tell 1
Such weakness 1 would ever prove—
'Tis painful, but 'tis sweet to love.—Kirke White.
Gaudendum cum Gaudentibus.
Joying with the Joyful.
A S lute to lute in harmony attun'd,
Vibrates in glad response, as though it shar'd
The joy that thrills the other's waken'd strings ;
So let thine heart responsive share the joy
Thy neighbour feels; nor look with sullen eye
On eyes where gladness beams. Learn thou from this
To share in the delight which others feel,
And banish rankling envy from thy breast
When fortune smiles upon thy fellow man.—
Learn thou from this no less his grief to soothe
With brotherly response ; for just as joy
Gains increase more from that which it bestows,
So grief grows less, lull'd by the soothing tones
Of Pity's kind compassion for her woes.
Thou wilt shew me the path of life: in thy presence is fulness of joy; at thy
right hand there are pleasures for evermore.—Psalm xvi. u.
S^®<M^ LOVE KNOWS NOT LABOUR. *S-WSrJ
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LIEBESZORN 1ST NEUER LIEBES2UNDER.
I fERO who dwelt by Hellefponticke ftrand,
JOk Hang'd forth a Light, Leanders marke tor land,
Whither his helmelefle courfe he fteerd and mov'd,
Whilft he made hafte to fee his welbelov'd;
Which when fierce Boreas with his blufrring blaft
Put out, he in the floods away was caft :
So that his wedding light became a torch,
To convoy him to Proferpines blacke porch.
Almighty God who made all by his power,
Holds forth his Light from the Celeftiall Tower :
That when the ftormes our tofTed soules annoy,
It may direct us to our heav'nly joy.
No ftorme againft this Light can fo prevaile
But Saints unto their wifht-for Haven may faile.
Where for their Wedding torch this Light they have,
Which never fhall convoy them to their grave.
Farlie's Emblems.
LOVE'S ANGER IS FRESH FUEL TO LOVE.
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^<S,^<^ e^^^Z?^- RUIN FOLLOWS PRIDE. '®^JS>s:-^>iJ-®*e~^S
Ut lapju graviore ruant.
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THE HIGHER THE RISE THE GREATER
THE FALL.
f TORTOISE of ambitious mind,
Such as in Men we fometimes find,
PufF'd up with an egregious fenfe
Of his fuperior excellence,
Much wifh'd to change his lot on earth
For one more fitted to his worth;
PRIDE IS THE BEGINNING OF ALL DESTRUCTION.
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PRIDE AND POVERTY ARE li_L_ MET,
Which in his felf-conceit he deem'd
Too little by his friends efteem'd—
Who neither would allow nor fee
That he poffefs'd a quality
Of form or of intelligence,
Beyond their Tortoife common fenfe.
Refolved ne'erlefs that they mould be
Convinc'd of his ability,
To mine where they could never hope
With his fuperior mind to cope;
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                                   Seeing one day the bird of Jove
Alighting from the clouds above,
W
                                   He urged him with addrefs polite
<                                   To bear him upward in his flight;
q                                   That he might prove to all his race
W                                    How qualified he was to grace
A ftation more exalted than
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                                    Their weak intelligence could fcan:
>                                    Whence he at once might grafp and fee
|!j                                   The glories of the land and fea,
.                                    And like the eagle gaze upon
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The full effulgence of the fun,
=!                                   High up above the puny ken
3                                    Of grov'lling Tortoifes and men.
®                                    The Eagle, quick as thought to fee
P                                    The filly reptile's vanity,
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Exprefs'd himfelf but too content
To do what from the firft he meant:
And feizing him right quickly too,
He upward with the Tortoife flew,
So high into the realms of light,
That almoft lofing fenfe and fight,
The Tortoife wifhed himfelf again
Below upon the humble plain.
But upward ftill the Eagle rofe,
As though pretending to difclofe
^S^YET OFTEN TOGETHER.^-M
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IN MEDIO STAT VIRTUS.
A range of view as high and wide
As moft would fatisfy his pride.
Like filver threads the rivers flow.
And wind fome thoufand feet below:
Like mole-hills are the mountains high—
In vaft expanfe, Earth, fea and iky
Lit up and flooded with a light
Too glorious for the reptile's fight.
Anon, the Eagle aiks him how
He liked the change from things below ?
If higher yet he'd like to rife ?
And felt at home ? and how the flues
Agreed with his abilities ?
3
                                   When lo! the Tortoife, all difmay,
Q                                   Had not a fingle word to fay !
With fcornful and derifive ihriek,
lU                                   Unloofing then both claws and beak,                                                  (t
1                                                                                   .                                                                     (-
K                                   The Eagle lets the Tortoife go;                                                          X
Which, dalh'd upon the rocks below,
I* j                                 Became his prey, and learnt—too late—                                             I
!y j                                 The ills that on ambition wait.
^ |                                 E'en fo at Courts, when men of low degree,                                    W
£                                   And menial minds, are raifed to rank and place;                            >
S                                   How oft are they uplifted but to be
Call; down with greater force and more difgrace!
T7ORTUNA vitrea est j turn, cum splendet, frangitur.—P. Syrus.
Magna ruunt, inflata crepant, tumefacta premuntur.—Lucan. i. ver. 17.
-----------Summisque negatum
Stare diu, nimioque graves sub pondere lapsus.—Syrach. iii. 12.
Seekest thou great things for thyself t seek them not: for, behold, I will bring evil
upon all flesh, saith the Lord.—Jer. xlv. 5.
God hath a special indignation at Pride, above all sins.—Bishop Hall.
VERTU OIT AU MILIEU.
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IT'S HARD FOR AN
NE chinke there was and not another way
^ For Boreas, his fury to eflay ;
So Hectors fatall gift Ajax confounded,
And ftob'd him where he onely could be wounded;
Apollo so directed Paris dart
To wound Achilles foote, and kill his heart.
Death lies in ambufh like an enemy,
And brafheth where our fconces weakeft be.
Whether an icecle or drop of water,
Or gnat, or Londons Scholler-killing letter.
A thoufand trickes we fee of cunning death,
He makes or finds a way to ftop our breath.
Farlie's Emblems.
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S*a<S^ TO STAND UPRIGHT. 'S^S-®-^
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REPROVE OTHERS, BUT CORRECT THYSELF.
El corcobado ne vee su corcoba, y vee la de su compahon.
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THE HUNCHBACK SEES NOT HIS OWN HUMP, BUT HE
SEES HIS NEIGHBOUR'S.
ITH rare exception, almoft ev'ry one
        Is wondrous apt his Neighbour's faults to fee;
And yet, however evident his own,
To them he's blind—or thinks that only he
From imperfection and from fault is free.
EVERY MAN HATH A FOOL IN HIS SLEEVE.
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AUNS^UE NEGROS, SOMOS GENTE.
A Hunchback here, brimfull of felf-conceit,
Derides a fellow-Hunchback paffing by;
And points to him, that ev'ry one they meet
May ridicule the man's deformity.
Yet he himfelf; the Jeerer, what is he?—
A crooked Dwarf, mis-fhap'd from head to toe,
With bofs behind of fuch enormity,
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^                                As though a mountain on his back did grow!
LU                             And what is man, that he would cenfor be
q                                Of that which Nature gave his fellow-man!
Z                            In what deriving from ourfelves, are we
In aught entitled other men to fcan ?
~                            Shall we afTume in figures of our own
0                                To reckon up another man's account!
W                            And carp at him for flaws and faults alone,
q                                When our own ledger fliews no fmall amount!
®                            To ev'ry man, we know to indicate
-j                                Wherein he fails—and—ftrange fagacity !
<                            To make the moft unerring eftimate
lJ-                                Of what he is—and what he ought to be !
0                                           .                               .          °
But on himfelf, who turns his eye ? not one!
0-                                And though fo keen our neighbour's humps to fee,
0                            We're blind to that upon our back alone,
E'en though that hump by far the greater be!
It was not thus, my friends, chat we were taught
*~                                That practice fweet of Love and Charity,
-                            By which the Man-God our Redemption bought,
>"                                In pity for our mortal frailty !
£                            Look not in fcorn upon thy brother's ftiape,
S                                If nature chofe to vary it from thine;
0                            For though it may refemble more the Ape,
It may have Light within far more divine!
Turn thine eyes inward on thine heart, and fee
What flaws are there, what feething germs of ill
That need thy care, left their malignity
Shall render thee one day more hideous ftill.
THOUGH BLACK, WE ARE HUMAN BEINGS.
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WHERE VAIN-GLORY REIGNS,
Who ridicules his neighbour's frailty,
Scoffs at his own in more or lefs degree
Much wifer he who others' lets alone,
And tries his talent to correct his own.
A ND why beholdest thou the mote that is in thy brother's eye, but considerest
not the beam that is in thine own eye ?
Thou Hypocrite, first cast out the beam out of thine own eye; and then shalt thou
see clearly to cast out the mote out of thy brother's eye.—Matt. vii. 3, 5.
Qui d' autruy parler voudra,
Regarde soy; et il taira.
No ay quien sus foltas entienda,
Como las de su vecino.
II n'y a personne qui reconnoit ses fautes,
Comme celles de son voisin.
Dal biasima altrui, che se stesso condanna.
Ziehe Dich selber bei der Nase.
Een ander heeft altyt de schult,
Geen mensch en siet syn eygen bult.
Crimina qui cernunt aliorum, nee sua cernunt,
Hi sapiunt aliis, desipiuntque sibi.—Owenus.
There are those who can see the faults of others, but who cannot discern their
own.—These people are wise for others, and fools to themselves.
Est proprium stultitise, aliorum vitia cernere; oblivisci suorum.—Cicero.
Nihil turpius est convitio quod in auctorem recidit.—Plutarch.
Of all the causes which conspire to blind
Man's erring judgment, and misguided mind,
What the weak head with strongest bias rules
Is Pride, the never-failing Vice of Fools.
Pope.
FOLLY IS PRIME COUNSELLOR.
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WHERE YOU ARE JACK, THERE I AM JILL.
IN vaine thou mantles up this light of mine,
Thinking that no man fhall perceive it mine
But all in vaine, flame will it selfe bewray,
And through thy coat, by burning, make his way.
Who in his lower heart doth hurt conceale,
Hoping that nothing fhall the fame reveale,
He hides the torches of the hellifh rout,
Which will at length with violence burft out:
Who doth conceive Oreftes' impious thought,
It will ere long to furious fact be brought.
Difiemble what thou can'ft, that inward fparke
Will burft forth into Light, though now its darke.
Farlie's Emblems.
SELF-CONCEIT PRECLUDES IMPROVEMENT.
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NOTHING IS IMPOSSIBLE TO A WILLING MIND.
Non intrandum, aut fenetrandum.
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ENTER NOT, OR PASS THROUGH.
jCT S with the Web fpun by the Spider's care,
J T' entrap the flies and gnats which fill the air,
So with th' entangling nets by Venus laid
T' enfnare the hearts of heedlefs youth and maid :—
For in the Love net, as the Spider's too,
The gnat is taken, but the Bee breaks through.
cs-^S^ VOLONTE REND TOUT POSSIBLE. -W&S
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WHERE THERE'S A WILL. THERE'S A WAY.
Hence, young folks, learn thro' Venus' nets to break,
Nor let their flimfy mefhes captive take
Both heart and mind: Take pattern by the Bee:—
Like him refill: the lofs of liberty;
Break boldly through; but if the ftrength you lack,
Take my advice, and cleverly turn back.
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^                                            Qui trop embrasse, feu estreint.
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'HE Spider which too widely spreads his net
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£"                                             Incurs more risk his livelihood to get
j                                             Than one which chooses a more humble place.
■j                                             A Horse-fly now, and now a bird breaks through,
0                                             Making vast rents, through which the flies make way;
And he, poor fool, has little else to do
|-~                                             Than mend his net, and fast throughout the day.
ff                                              He who from failure would secure disgrace,
(I)                                              Must never all at once too much embrace:
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r;                                         Who seek to compass least, and least aspire,
0.                                         Achieve most oft the things which they desire.
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Ul                                         Hoc unum moneo, si quid modo creditur arti,
\-                                         Aut nunquam tentes, aut perficc.—Ovid, de Art. i.
Le vice est de n'en pas sortir; non pas d'y entrer.
Mich. Montaigne, Essais, lib. iii. cap. 5.
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                                         In vulnus majora patent.
Forti et fideli nihil difficile.
Possunt, quia posse videntur.—Virgil.
Audaces fortuna juvat.
Camelus desiderans cornua etiam aures perdidit.
Qui totum vult, totum perdit.—Publ. Syrus.
Intra fortunam quisque debet manere suam.—Ovid.
Mieux reculer que mal assaillir.
S*&-2r<&- MAKE A VIRTUE OF NECESSITY. ■<s*2.'rs>e;
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S^S, GRASP ALU, LOSE ALL.'S^
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Pervia virtuti, sed vilibus invia.
A ND that they may recover themselves out of the snare of the Devil, who are
taken captive by him at his will.—2 Timothy ii. 26.
As in the mesh spread by the Spider's skill,
The weaker flies and gnats alone are caught,
While insects more robust of wing and will,
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Break boldly through, nor heed his toils in aught:
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Since this World's snares are but as frail a stay,
And as the Spider's easily withstood,
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When heart and mind with one accord unite
To force through ev'ry stop the road to Right.
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MEANS.
Hold on thy course to Virtue, nor refrain;
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The wind the chaff disperses, not the grain.
•EOT OF HIS
YOUR
His own iniquities shall take the wicked himself, and he shall be holden with the
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cords of his sins.—Proverbs v. 22.
RCHIT
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Diabolus non invalesceret contra nos, nisi viros ex vitiis nostris prasberemus, et
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locum ei dominandi nobis peccato faceremus: unde nolite locum dare diabolo.
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August. Horn. 3.
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Vermint de smert.
Beter is't te rug gegaen
Als een quaden sprong gedaen.
He that begins without reason, hath reason enough to leave oft", by perceiving he
had no reason to begin.—J. Taylor, vol. xii. p. 28.
G^UI TOUT CONVOITE, TOUT PERD.
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THE MORE YOU HAVE THE MORE YOU DESIRE.
fSHINED brightly whilft I flood upright,
And firmely feated gave a perfect light;
But after that mifchance did me furprife,
I am caft downe and know not how to rife.
Helpe, helpe, who fees my cafe, now fuccour me,
So, as before, my Light fhall glorious be.
A man may fall, this brittle life of ours
Is fubjecT to more chances than to houres:
Or fortune falfe, or errours flippery fall,
Suffers us not, conftant to proove at all:
Happy is he who falling findes a man,
Much like a God, fupporting what he can.
By hurt he learning gaines, he wifer growes,
And with the weary Oxe more warily goes.
Farlie's Emblems.
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LIGHT GAYNES MAKE HEAVYE PURSES.
Ein klein Henn leget die Tag, da ein Strauss im Jahr nur eins.
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A HEN LAYS EVERY DAY,
BUT AN OSTRICH ONLY ONCE A YEAR.
JO EAR now what has befallen me ; I'm nicely taken in !
* * All through my Wife ! who thought at once a mine of wealth to win
A Dealer fhew'd this Oftrich and its egg to her one day,
And making her believe 'twas fuch a wondrous bird to lay ;
I bought it at her bidding—brought it home, and, like her, thought
A Bird that lay fuch eggs as that, could not be dearly bought.
A PASSO A PASSO SE VA LONTANA.
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LITTLE BY LITTLE THE BIRD BUILDS ITS NEST.
Hens' eggs (thought I), however good, were at the beft but fmall,
And, as compar'd to Oftrich eggs, were of no fize at all.
Off fuch an egg as that, why, two could make a dinner quite,
'Twas big enough to fatisfy a ploughman's appetite.
Such was my mind: but very foon I'd reafon to regret
I'd parted with my money, or an Ostrich ever met.
It eat! Oh! fuch a bird to eat as that I never faw!
No end of food and things could fatisfy its hungry maw;
But Eggs! not one it laid! though all the while I did my beft
With hay and ftraw and feathers foft to make the bird a neft.
When, after waiting long,—'twas juft about the month of May—
^                I found one egg! Eh! now, thought I, it has begun to lay!
j*                But all my joy was very fhort, for from that time till now,
Uj                It hafn't laid another egg, nor will it any how.
W                Yet all this while our Hens, as is with Hens the ufual way,
0                They've always laid at intervals, and often ev'ry day
UJ                At length, all patience lofing, and my temper put about,
0                I went up to the Oftrich, and I call'd to him; Turn out!
UJ                Away with you, you rav'nous brute, you fhall no longer ftay !
I_                You're big enough, and eat enough, and yet no eggs you lay.
t '              I fee how 'tis with you, you're all appearance, nothing more;
In buying you I've learnt what I ought well t' have known before:
CO                The biggeft things are not the beft, the brighteft often drofs;
HI                And when we grafp at profit mod, we oft get greater lofs.
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A PIUMA a piuma se pela Foca.
A gotta a gotta il mar si secherebbe.
Von kleinen Fischlein werden die Hechte gross.
Peu a peu file la vieille sa quenouille.
Qui s'agite, s'enrichit.
Little pot, soon hot.
Il bue s'e fatto grande, e la stalla piccola.
The ox fattens in a little stall.
En petite maison Dieu a grand part.
®<<&-S^ LITTLE BROOKS MAKE GREAT RIVERS. ^s^'^S:
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GREAT PROMISERS, BAD PAYMASTERS.
Fortunam qui avide vorare pergit,
Hanc tandem male concoquat necesse est.
Celui qui meprise les petites choses, tombera petit a. petit.—Syrach. xxix. i.
Le peu est sufHsant a. l'homme bien appris.—lb. xxx. 21.
Kleyn visje, soet visie.
Majora perdes, parva ni servaveris.
Who neglects the little, loses the greater.
Adde parum parvo, tandem fit magnus acervus.
Gutta cavat lapidem.-—Ovid.
Wer keinen Pfennig achtet,
Der auch nimmer eines Gulden Herre.
Albaxanse los adarves,
Y alcanse los muladeres.
Met veel slagen wort- de Stockvisch murw.
Grano £ grano hinche la gallina el papo.
Grain a grain
Amasse la fourmy son pain.
Doet by een kleyntje dikmaels wat,
Soo wort'et noch een groote schat.
Dus proximus est, quicunque eget paucissimus.
Tandem fit Surculus Arbor.
TTOW small soe'er your Profit be,
Despise it not, but learn to know,
That almost ev'ry thing you see
From small at first to large did grow:
Do but a little oft, and you
Will find that little grow apace;
The Penny to the Pound accrue,
And " slow and sure oft win the race."
^GREAT BOASTER, LITTLE DOER.^
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A LITTLE STREAM DRIVES A LIGHT MILL.
;HE Smith, the fteele fo tempers in the fire,
As that it may indure flints ftroke and ire;
The flint and fteele, 'gainft other while they ftrive,
Give fparkles, which the tinder keeps alive,
Untill the fulphure to the match gives flame,
Which keeps, and to the candle doth give the fame ;
The candle thus lighted proper ufe hath none:
Thus all ordained is for man alone.
Dame Nature fo commandeth ev'ry thing
In his owne kind to ferve his Lord and King;
Things of meere being, and which doe not live,
As Elements, food to the living give;
The living herbs doe beafts with fenfe mainetaine
And thefe, to feede us, ev'ry houre are flaine:
So every thing is for the ufe of man,
To God fhould he not doe then, what he can ?
Farlie's Emblems.
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WHO WINS THE EYES WINS ALU.
Verwonnen Oog, begonnen Min.
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WHEN THE EYES ARE WON, LOVE IS BEGUN.
I^WAS faid of Old,—and, like moft fayings too,
It hath been proven by experience true,
That e'en defpite his fierce majeftic might,
" Who wins the Lion's eyes, subdues him " quite.
Herein is well explain'd and typified
Another truth that cannot be denied :
The eye of Man once taken by the grace
And 'witching beauty of a Maiden's face,
cS=<&. CEIL GAGNE, CORPS PERDU. -S*©
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[|_ CARACOL, PER G^UITAR DE ENOJOS,
However ftern his nature hitherto,
Afiumes a foftnefs it before ne'er knew.
Ah! then how chang'd the cold imperious look
That scarce the gaze of other eyes could brook!
How pliant then the fternly moulded mind
Of Sage and Soldier, as of rugged hind!
Each then alike, as though himfelf defpite,
Submits his ruder to the gentler might;
And, Strength to Softnefs through the eyes betray'd,
The Lion, gentle as the Lamb is made.
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"XTON bene conveniunt, nee in una sede morantur
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                                                      Majestas et Amor.—Ovid, Metam. 3.
Quisquis amat, servit; sequitur captivus amatam,
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                                              Fert domita cervice jugum, fert dulcia tergo
qj                                              Verbera, fert stimulos, trahit et bovis instar aratrum.—Mantuan.
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p;                                                        Dards d'Amour deviennent maistres.
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Primi, in omnibus prceliis, oculi vincuntur.—Tacit, de Morib. Germ.
Clamor repentinus aliquis, aut imago, aut aspectus fuga saepe exercitum implevit:
et hsec talia magis, quam gladius, consternant hostem, videbisque militem vanis et
inanibus magis, quam justis formidinis causis moveri,—Lips. Doct. Civil, lib. v. cap. 16.
Nihil tarn leve est, quod non magnas interdlim rei momentum faciat.
Les Femmes peuvent tout, parce qu'elles gouvernent les personnes qui gouvernent
tous.
-------------1 have mark'd
A thousand blushing apparitions
To start into her face, a thousand innocent shames,
In Angel whiteness, bear away those blushes ;
And in her eye there hath appear'd a fire
To burn the errors that these princes hold
Against her maiden truth.—Shakespeare.
Beauty with a bloodless conquest finds
A welcome sov'raignty in rudest minds.—Waller.
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POR LOS GUERNOS TROCO LOS OJOS.
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the; eyes believe themselves.
-Whose radiant look strikes every gazing eye
Stark blind, and keeps th' amaz'd beholder under
The stupid tyranny of Love and wonder.—Old Poet.
Then only hear her Eyes;
Tho' they are mute, they plead, nay, more, command :
For beauteous Eyes have arbitrary power.—Dryden.
Who knows how eloquent these Eyes may prove,
Begging in Floods of Tears and Flames of Love.—Roch.
The Bloom of op'ning Flowers, unsully'd Beauty,
Softest and sweetest Innocence she wears;
|_T                                        And looks like Nature in the World's first spring.—Rowe.
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Nequitia Duces, Oculi.                                                   3
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0) body also is full of light; but when thine eye is evil, thy body also is full of dark-        j 2
2 ness. Take heed therefore that the Light which is in thee be not darkness.—Luke          j*j
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<t But if thine Eye be evil, thy whole Body shall be full of Darkness. If therefore          <
■J the Light that is in thee be Darkness, how great is that Darkness !—Matt. vi. 23.                   2
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m                                                                                                                                                        0
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Mov'd on the Waters, chac'd away the Night
From the rude Chaos, and bestow'd new Grace
On Things dispos'd of to their proper Place;
Some to rest here, and some to shine Above :
Earth, Sea, and Heav'n were all th' Effects of Love.—Wall.
Love is that Passion, which refines the Soul;
First made Men Heroes, and those Heroes Gods :
Its genial fires inform the sluggish Mass;
The rugged soften, and the tim'rous warm.
Give Wit to Fools, and Manners to the Clown:
The rest of Life is an ignoble Calm;
The Soul, unmov'd by Love's inspiring breath,
Like lazy Waters, stagnates and corrupts.—Hig. Gen. Con.
&*&, THE EARS, OTHER PEOPLE. -§>s;
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WHAT THE EYE SEES NOT,
[[Y fplendor with his bright and Sun-like ray,
Doth cheere the houfe, and darkeneffe chafe away :
To thee wh' art blind, I'm dark as fable night,
It's thy default, not mine, thou lak'ft thy fight.
The Moule cannot Hyperions glory fee;
Who want their eyes, no comfort have by me.
Chrift is the glory of that light from hie,
Which can the darken1 Chaos full defcry;
And yet we fee him not untill our eyes
He open, which thickeft darkeneffe doth furprife;
Then doth his light unto himfelfe reflect
From us as mirrours, with a new afpedl.
Farlie's Emblems.
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IT IS NOT LAWFUL TO DO EVIL.
men /tin Neus a/, men icheut fijn Aenftcht.
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WHO CUTS OFF HIS NOSE SPITES HIS OWN FACE.
JHIOME here, all Friends, who know, and would
w Advife me for the beft;—
I've got a Nofe, the fight and thought
Of which deftroys my reft.
A Nofe, alas! with wens and wheals
Surcharged and cover'd o'er;
A huge unfightly Nofe, fuch as
No man e'er had before.
S^THAT GOOD MAY COME.*3
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C2=^^®*S*S-S*S^^S- AVOID EXTREMES. 'M^S^g'^S^S
It looks juft like a bald-coot's nofe,
It's fcarlet-red and blue,
And juft as if a younger lot
Of Nofes on it grew.
Oh, fuch a Nofe! a fnout fo ftrange!
That when I'm in the ftreet,
Each looks at it furpris'd, and all
The children that I meet
Point after me and fay, " Oh! what
A Nofe that man has got!
Who ever faw the like of that ?
'Tis like a Porter's knot!"
And in forfooth, my Nofe is like
An Oftrich-egg in fize,
'Tis like a huge black-pudding that
Stands out between my eyes.
At fight of it, myfelf, fometimes
I'm terrified, nor know
What with it I'm to do, or if
Yet larger it may grow.
A Nofe!—but there, I've faid enough;
I cannot longer bear
So hideous a thing as this
Upon my face to wear.
I often think I'll cut it off! —
And why not?—why delay
To do what one hears fpeak of in
The Proverb ev'ry day ?
But hold ! are Nofes after all
No ufe upon the face ?
Although their fhape and fize be not
Confiftent quite with grace ?
If cut it off I do—Why what
An awful gap there'll be!
Without a Nofe, my face will then
Be horrible to fee!
Eh! friend, put by thy knife, nor lift
A fuicidal hand
Againft thyfelf! for as thou art,
'Tis meet to underftand,
Lies neither in thy will nor right
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ANGER AND HASTE HINDER GOOD COUNSEL.
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3m*&<±, TO ERR IS HUMAN, TO FORGIVE DIVINE. <g<&^P<&-
To mar, nor to upbraid ;
Bow meekly rather to His Will
Who thine affliction laid !
Seek not with violence to do
What patience may effect;
By gentle means 'tis eafier oft
To heal and to correct.
Try thefe, my friend, they may avail,
But mould they not fucceed,
Spare thine own flefh, nor mar thy face
By fuch ungodly deed.
Wouldft further know, my friends, fome rule
Of conduct to deduce
From this my theme? Read on—my aim
Is but to be of ufe.
Herefrom learn alfo to refpect
The failings of thy friend,—
To him who to thy blood belongs,
Thine helping hand extend:
When hufband or the wife have left
Their duty's path awhile—
A mother, brother, filter err'd,
Strive thou to reconcile.
Forfake thy kindred not that they
Have fall'n their crofs beneath;
The ftrength has not been giv'n to all
To gain the Victor's wreath:
Though thou their errors mayeft hate,
Let judgment be deferr'd ;
Hate thou not them, but pity more
That they fhould fo have err'd.
Drag not their faults into the light,
But kindly draw the veil,
As teaches Love, that other eyes
May fee not where they fail.
Be the Phyfician thou, and ftrive
All that thou canft to cure;
Canft thou not heal, then learn, and teach
How others may endure.
The fufF'ring limb by force is not made whole,
Nor heals Reproof the gangrene of the foul.
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CHARITY SHALL. COVER THE MULTITUDE OF SINS.
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FORG.IVE, AND YE SHALL BE FORGIVEN.
IIY Light is pleafant, when the night doth gloome,
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          And pitchy darkeneffe lines the mourning roome;
Whither thou lifts Cleanthes fmoake to blow,
Or if the Matron like to twift her tow.
When Phoebus fetteth, I watch centenall
Untill he from my ftation doth me call.
Spare me, lend not my light to Titans ray ;
So fhalt th' enjoy me when there is no day.
If thy eftate be meane, hufband it well,
And it Attalick wealth mall parallell.
Farlie's Emblems.
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DRINK LITTLE THAT YE MAY DRINK LANG.
Noch vinnigh Slaen, noch harden Dwanck,
En brengt den Esel tot den Drank.
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THOUGH TAKEN TO THE WATERS BRINK,
NO BLOWS CAN FORCE THE HORSE TO DRINK.
JPN vain with cheering words I've tried,
J! And ev'ry means that I can think
Of oaths, and blows, and kicks befide
To get this plaguey bean: to drink!
I've led him by the bridle thrice,
And coax'd and pull'd, and coax'd again,
WHEN THE WINE IS IN, THE WIT IS OUT.
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WHEN WINE ENTERS, MODESTY DEPARTS.
But he won't drink at any price,
And blows and words alike are vain.
Yet when I turn the matter o'er,
I really think, myfelf defpite,
That I in fenfe am wanting more,
And of the two the Horfe is right!
Why, after all, ftiould I feel fore
And lofe my temper in this way ?
The beaft p'rhaps drank enough before,
And feldom drinks three times a day;
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                                   That's why he had no will thereto,
Nor would approach the water's brink:
But how could I expe<5t him to ?
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                                       If he'd nor thirft nor need of drink!
And if the brute himfelf but had
The pow'r of fpeech, afluredly,
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                                   Brute as he is, he'd call me mad,
1                                        And much the greater fool than he!
2                                   Hence it is plain that even Man,
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                                    So bent each beaft with fcorn to treat,
May learn from them more wifdom than
W                                    In his own fellow oft he'll meet
0                                For lo! no force can bring the beaft
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To drink, if not his thirft to flake,
While Man, creation's lord at leaft,
Will drink all day for drinking's fake !
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                                The faying is well known and true,
I                                    That when a beaft has drank his need,
>                                E'en though a King himfelf might fue,
He'll drink no more, not he, indeed!
Fie ! Man !—fie ! you, the lord of Mind !
Who, fway'd by fenfelefs appetite,
In needlefs drink enjoyment find,
'Gainft nature, reafon, and 'gainft right!
Your thirft once quench'd, defift, nor let
The taunts of fools, nor warmth of friends
Prevail to make you once forget
The bound where Reafon's empire ends.
DRUNKENNESS IS VOLUNTARY MADNESS.
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DIE WIJN DRINK.EN SONDER SMAECK,
Are you your Senfes', Paffions' ilave,
More than the humble brute a-field ?
Or in the pow'r of Mind you have,
Muft it before his InftincT: yield !
What would the people fay to fee
Good wine into the Kennel caft ?
And yet, the Drunkard, is not he
A human Kennel to the laft?
Why good drink down the Sewers throw ?
Worfe than the brute art thou, Man-fool!
Wouldft thou a nobler duty know,
Betake thee to the Horfe to fchool.
If't's more than Horfes' work to think;
In one thing yet the Horfe ftands firit,
It's more than Horfes* work to drink
Without the need or fenfe of thirft.
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T L n'est manger, qu'a bonne faim.
A couLONS souls cerises ameres.
Jamais homme sage on vit
Buveur de vin sans appetit.
Vin dentro, sermo fuori.
Wen Wein eingehet, da gehet wiss auss.
Ne monstre pas ta vaillance a bien boire : car le vin a faict perir plusieurs.
Syrach. xxxi. 29.
Wine measurably drunk, and in reason, bringeth gladness of heart and cheerfulness
of the mind j but wine drunken with excess maketh bitterness of the mind—diminishes
strength, and maketh wounds.—Ecclesiasticus xxxi. 28, 30.
The first glass for thirst, the second for nourishment, the third for pleasure, and
the fourth for madness.—Anacharsis.
As surfeit is the father of much fast,
So every scope by the immoderate use
Turns to restraint : our natures do pursue
(Like rats that raven down their proper bane)
A thirsty evil, and when we drink we die.
Shakesp. Measure for Measure.
M.DOEN EEN ONBESUYSDE SAECK..S*-
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S^LAET U DRANCK EN ETEN GEVEN,'fer
' HEN Phcebus fets in the Hefperian ftreames,
$f And Wefterne fhores blufh with his drowned beames;
Then I as Phcebus fecond muft give Light,
And act my part in darkeneffe of the night:
But now my Light complaines that I decay,
And into greafie teares doe melt away;
So I am forft to yeeld. O turne thy teame
Phcebus, and Phofpher fhew thy morning beame.
When Chrift the Sonne of righteoufneffe did goe
Vnto his Heavenly manfions from below,
Then he his holy fervants did command,
Confpicuous to the world, like lights, to ftand ;
But when they faile with watching, toile, and age,
And now are ready to goe off the ftage,
Then up they yeeld the light of life and cry;
O come thou Sonne of righteoufneffe, we die.
Farlie's Emblems.
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NIET UYT LUST, MAER OM TE LEVEN.
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WHO RUNS FAST CANNOT RUN LONG.
Nimia libertas fit ervitus.
EXCESS OF LIBERTY LEADS TO SERVITUDE.
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NTIL this haplefs moment I was tree,
W And went where'er my will or fancy led;
But now oh ! where—where is that liberty
So long my boaft ? alas ! for ever fled.
Ah! woe is me that ever I was lur'd
By aught fo poor and taftelefs as this rind,
To enter here, before I was aflur'd
Some means of exit and efcape to find.
^%?®.J*EXTREMES ARE EVIL. '^S'5>S^S
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NA LANGE LOOPEN, MOET MEN'T BEKOOPEN.
Till now without reftraint I ran about,
Each place alike, a houfe fecure for me;
I'd holes in plenty to go in and out,
Nor fear'd our race's direft enemy.
Now here, now there, the barn, the granary,
The kitchen, larder, parlour, and the ftore
Were mine to roam in full fecurity,
And feaft my fill;—what could I wifh for more ?
Fool that I was, thus to be captive made!
1 tremble at the doom that waits me now;
Yet whom have I to blame or to upbraid ?
Myfelf alone; and to my fate I bow,
Convinc'd too late, that he is caught at laft,
h                            Who runs about too much and lives too faft.
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3"                                         T MBERBIS juvenis, tandem custode remote-;
UJ                                                  Gaudet equis, canibusque, et aprici gramme campi,
0                                         Cereus in vitium flecti, monitoribus asper,
Utilium tardus provisor, prodigus ajris,
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                                       Sublimis, cupidusque, et amata relinquere pernix.
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LU ,                    Minimum debet libere, cui nimium licet.—Plutarch, de Educat. lib. in fin.
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Who most would act according to bis will,
W I                                                 Requires most to be restrain'd from ill.
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Fit fpolians fpolium.
The Spoiler is made Spoil.
/^\NE summer eve, beneath the greenwood shade,
I found young Phillis sitting fast asleep.
With noiseless step before th' unconscious maid,
Joying to catch her in that slumber deep,
I stood and gaz'd; as though to feast my sight
On ev'ry feature of her charming face :
And though her eye-lids veil'd from me their light,
Her rosy mouth, with such bewitching grace,
Seem'd as it were to proffer me the kiss
So oft denied me with a smart rebuke ;
LONG INDULGENCE IS ITS OWN PAYMASTER.
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2*-**5<&S^ THOU SHALT NOT COVET.'B*S>*^&E^£
That turning Thief at once, I stole the bliss ;
But in that theft, lost more than what I took.
So, gentle reader, in the Love-chase too,
As with the mouse entrapp'd for love of bacon ;
We're often made our very luck to rue,
Just when the thing most wished for has been taken.
I stole from her a kiss, but Phillis, she
At once stole heart and peace of mind from me ;
The mouse, poor thing, lost life with liberty;
But without Phillis, what were life to me?
Oh! Love, thy pow'r surpasses all belief—
That Phillis sleeping, thus should steal the Thief!
yj                                                        Who poaching goes on Love's domain,
<                                                         Oft loses where he thought to gain :
(q                                                         And when least thinking such may be,                                                       (!)
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-----• Carpitque et carpitur una,
P                                          Suppliciumque sui est.—Ovid.                                                                     jj"
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l!J                                                              Poena comes Sceleris.                                                             ^
It                                                                                                                                                         r-
t                                            Punifhment is the companion of Crime.                                           (0
0                                      TUST as the greedy rat has seiz'd the bacon,
2                                     J Down falls the trap, and lo ! the thief is taken
CO                                      The prey though seized, of what avail to him?                                            3
y                                     That blow struck terror into every limb!                                                     0
t                                     'Tis not enough to say: the evil deed
\,                                     Brings its requital as the doer's meed:
W                                     The culprit from the moment of his crime,
Stung by his conscience through each hour of time,
Though none pursue, in each a captor sees,'
Starts at each sound that's borne upon the breeze,
And where none other aught of terror deems,
Quails 'fore the hangman of his nightly dreams.
The wicked flee when no man pursueth.— Prov. xxviii. i
Oh coward conscience, how dost thou afflict me !
Cold fearful drops stand on my trembling flesh—
What do I fear?—Myself?—Shakespeare.
Which way I move is Hell; myself am hell.—Milton.
TREASURES OF WICKEDNESS PROFIT NOTHING.
153
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5**S»3*S*;g*S*g<§^*S, HONESTY IS THE BEST POLICY. -tS^"®^ -^5*§s^-®*^
HEN as the conqu'ring fleete return'd from Troy,
And Pallas ftormy wrath did them annoy ;
Then Nauplius fought revenge upon the Greekes,
And hang'd out Lanterns on the rocky creekes;
The Greekes deceived did the rockes miftake,
And dafhing gainft them did nights ftiipwracke make.
Whilft we unto our wiftit-for Country goe,
This lifes fierce billowes tolTe us to and fro ;
Honour and glory hang out lights fo faire,
And Siren-like doe feeke us to enfnare:
A joyfull, quiet haven they doe pretend;
But oft they drave us to a dolefull end:
If thou he wife fhunne honours lights fo hy,
And from fhipwracking Siren pleafure fly.
Farlte's EmLlems.
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LEARN TO RESTRAIN THINE HAND, AND TO CURB THINE ANGER-
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3-3^ HE WHO IS BORN A FOOL IS NEVER CURED. -n>S-
A Barbe de Fol apprent a raire.
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WHO WOULD LEARN TO SHAVE WELL, SHOULD
FIRST PRACTISE ON A FOOL'S BEARD.
'HE Proverb is of antient date,
That he who well would learn to (have,
His fulleft wifh to confummate,
Should on a Fool's beard practice have.
As with each phrale of antient lore,
The fenfe implied hath ta'en its rife
A WISE LOOK MAY SECURE A FOOL IF HE TALK NOT.
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WITH A FOOL AND A KNAVE
From long experience gone before,
That Fools to deal with maketh wife.
For Fools, of all men moft precife
In things of import leaft, e'er gave
The wideft fcope for practice nice
Of Patience and of Virtues grave.
In fhaving Fools the barber'll find
Thofe Virtues to the utmoft tried,
And howfoe'er to pleafe inclined,
Both fkill and patience mifapplied.
Of head and beard each fep'rate hair
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                                Muft be arranged with niceft care,                                                   5
^                                    And juft as Fool will have it laid:                                             Q
(U                                 At ev'ry clip he fays, " Take heed!"                                              j
F                                    And in the looking-glafs muft view                                            q
,                                  If all is done as he decreed,                                                           U-
<                                    And what the Barber next muft do:                                           !j!
h                                This lock is now fomewhat too long,                                             h
J                                    And this too fhort—now here, now there,
0                                   There fomething ails, a curl lies wrong
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                                    In beard or whifker, or fomewhere.                                              4
■j- On this fide now there needs anew
                                                 y
•" Juft—juft a leetle fnipp'd away,—
                                               111
£ "So! let me look! yes! that will do—
But here ! this turn !—looks well ? nay ! nay !                          ^
No mouftache ever look'd well fo,                                                  ®
1                                        Like that indeed it cannot ftay!"
And all the Barber ftrives to do
Is vain as all he tries to fay:
Yet! juft this place behind the ear?
Aye! Fool! that's juft the place that ail'd thee!
From what we've feen 'tis very clear
It was the brains from firft that failed thee !
Who wants now this, now that, nor knows
What 'tis he needs, doth clearly Ihow it:
For lacking brains, he feels and fhows
He wants within the means to know it.
THERE IS NO CONCLUSION.
156
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A FOOL'S HEAD NEVER WHITENS.
TD Y moeyelicke heeren
Is veel te leeren.
'T moet een wijse hant sijn, die een sotten Kop wel scheren sal.
It must be a wise hand to cut the hair of a Fool's head.
Wat let, dat leert.
Quas nocent, docent.
Tladrifiara, /xaO-qjiaTa.
Vexatio dat intellectum.
Homine imperito nil quidquam est injustius, qui, nisi quod ipse facit nihil rectum
putat.—Terent. Adelph.
<{                                                    Men heeft groote kunst van doen
Om de narren te voldoen.
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All those who appear Fools, are so, and no less, half of those who do not appear to be so.
m         TROLLY has a wide dominion in the World; and if there be some little Wisdom,
Ul                  it is pure Folly compared with the Wisdom of the Most High. But the greatest
y         Pool is he, who does not believe that he is so, and who imputes Foolishness to every
^         body else. To be Wise, it is not sufficient to appear so to one's self. He is Wisest
">•         who does not think that he is Wise; and he who does not perceive that others see,
j         does not see himself. How full soever the World be of Fools, there is no person who
0         thinks himself one, nor even, who suspects himself of folly.—Gracian.
There are People (in every class of Society) who entertain a high opinion of them-
2
         selves, but those more particularly, who are the least worthy. Each considers himself
|_         the centre of the Universe, and destined for an exalted position. Hope undertakes
S         rashly, and Experience renders it no assistance. Vain imagination finds an executioner
in Reality, who undeceives it. Every one should know his proper sphere of action,
and his fittest condition. Reality would then be the regulator of Self-Opinion.—Idem.
Fortune takes care that Fools should still be seen :
She places 'em aloft, o' th' topmost spoke
Of all her wheel. Fools are the daily work
Of nature, her Vocation: If she form
A Man, she loses by't: 'tis too expensive;
'Twould make ten Fools: A Man's a Prodigy.
Dryden, CEdip.
Un Sot n'a pas assez d'etoffe pour etre bon.-—La Rochefoucauld.
A WAGER IS A FOOL'S ARGUMENT.
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HE THAT TEACHES HIMSELF
■a UCH like as wine the nurfe of Poets veine,
When prifon-like the cafke doth it conteine;
Farre from the bottome while you draw the wine,
You will it find more plenteous and more fine;
But when you come to dreg, no wine abounds,
Both leafl; and worft remaineth in the grounds:
Such like the finning of a candle we fee,
Which kindled once burnes not ftill equally ;
At firft it giv's greater and clearer light,
And is more pleafant both to fmell and fight;
But when it comes to fnuffe and even lpent,
It fhineth lefTe, and gives a filthy fent.
The candle and wine's our life, which, in its prime,
Doth flourifti more, and hath more hope of time ;
But when with muftie age our life decayes,
Then many forrowes have we, and few dayes.
Far lie's Emblems.
HAS A FOOL FOR HIS MASTER.
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ONE DOTH THE SCATH, ANOTHER HATH THE HARM.
Wat de seuge doet, moeten de biggen ontgelden.
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WHAT THE SOW DOES, THE LITTLE PIGS MUST
PAY FOR.
HEN the old Sow has play'd her pranks,
And upfet tubs and pails around her,
Out comes the Mafter in a rage.
With broom in hand, refolv'd to pound her:
^S-j^^MNNOCENCE IS NO PROTECTION. '^S's^-i^s
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THE CROW GETS PARDONED, AND
But me, well vers'd in all his oaths,
And in their meaning full confiding,
Runs off and leaves her pigs behind
To bear the blame and get the hiding.
And they, poor pigs, though innocent
Of all the harm, defpite their fqueaking,
Get beat all round and made to fmart
For all the big Sow has been breaking.
'Tis thus we often fee in life,
The great mifdoers fave their bacon,
While blame and punifhment alike
Fall on the fmaller folks when taken:
How Kings and Statefmen for their faults
Get fcathelefs off", nor fear vexation,
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                                    While all the ills which they have wrought
<;                                        Are felt and paid for by the nation.
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Quidquid delirant Reges, plectuntur Achivi.—Horace i. Epist. 2.
Dat veniam Corvis, vexat censura Columbas.—Juven. Sat. 2.
TloWaKt teal £uyU7ra<7a 7ro\is kchcov avdpog i7ravpct.
Id est,
SiEPE universa civitas viri mali scelera luit.
Il peccato del Signore souvente fa piangere il vassallo.
Un fa il peccato, l'altro la penitenza.
Der Herrn siind, der bauren biiss.
Wanneer een Prins springt uyt den bant,
Daerom lijdt dickmael al het lant.
Mancher muss entgelten des er nie genossen hat.
Quid agimus hoc casu? feramus. Nam quemadmodum sterilitatem, aut nimios
imbres, aut caetera naturae mala; ita luxum, ambitionem et avaritiam dominantium
habeamus.
THE DOVE HAS THE BLAME.'
160
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:n ploeg die werckt, blinckt.
SiCHEk rapuit, et agricola plectitur.—Arabian Adage. Vid. Richt. Axiom. (Econ. 24, 25.
same in another sense.~\
IT'S GOOD FISHING IN TROUBLED WATERS.
The Reader will imagine a picture, representing a Fisher disturbing the water with a
long pole, and driving the fish towards the net.
A/"OU wish to know what I'm about ?
My bus'ness is soon told :
I'm going to fish upon a plan
Advis'd from time of old.
In waters that are most disturb'd,
Most fish are caught, they say;
But when the water's calm and clear
The fish all swim away :
For then too cautiously they scan
The meshes of the net,
Or be your bait however good,
No bite from them you get.
But quite another sport it is
If you disturb the stream;
The troubled water then gets thick,
And roach, perch, eels and bream
Are taken then alike at once,
Large fish as well as small,
All caught together in the net;—
That's what I fishing call!
Need I say more? He who knows not
To make a stir in this World's stream,
Will but a sorry Fisher prove,
Nor minnows catch, much less a bream.
Stir, Fisher, stir ! Stillness does harm ;
It little profits when the water's calm.
—■------Et multis utile bellum.—Lucan. i. v. 182.
Opportuni magnis conatibus transitus rerum.—Tacitus.
Multi honores quos quieta republica desperant, perturbata se consequi posse
arbitrantur.—Livy.
Eau trouble gain de pecheur.
fO-NAER STILLE WATER STINCKT. -S*25
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sa*S*g*s,S5-®- DE SCAVOIR, VIENT AVOIR. -s^'s^-SkS
|F CARRY about with me, my frugall ftore,
«* With which I am content, and feeke no more;
If it be meane, I can with it agree,
What ftate foever, welcome comes to me:
I never begge, alive, what is diftrelTe,
I know not; but once dead, I care for 't leffe.
Some live on others trenchers, and doe eate
The bread of floth, for which they never fweat:
They're greedy ravens of mankind, kitching drones,
Rich tables harpyes, rats, Chamelions.
The wifeman howfoever he doth finde
Fortune, to it he fits and frames his mind,
He doth proferre his courfe and country faire,
Unto his Patrons dole and dimes rare.
Farlie's Emblems.
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STIRRING MASTERS MAKE A RICH HOUSEHOLD.
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EXAMPLE IS STRONGER THAN PRECEPT.
Een Schip op een Zant, een Baken in Zee.
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A SHIP AGROUND IS A BEACON AT SEA.
?ORT! hard a-port! ftarboard your helm! look out
See what our neighbour in the Schuyt's about!
Upon a fand-fpit there as fure as day,
He's hard and faft; right in the courfe we lay !
Give her a good wide berth, my mate, that we
Clear well the fand-tail where thofe breakers be.
They'll never pole her off—to ftrive is vain;
With ebbing-tide as now, there fhe'll remain :
WISE MEN LEARN BY OTHERS' HARM.
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IT IS EASIEST LEARNING AT ANOTHER'S COST.
And mould the wind chop round and blow to fhore,
She'll break her rudder, or get damage more.
Reader! look well to this, and let it be
A caution in Life's voyage unto thee.
The Skipper who defcries a iriip aground,
No beacon needs to guide, nor lead to found:
And truly prudent is that man alone,
Who by another's fault can mend his own.
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Jj                                Many who have themfelves but little fkill                                                (0
To fhape their courfe where peril may accrue,                                   j
X                            Avert full oft the greater ihare of ill,                                                ^
~n                                 Who take example from what others do.                                        5
q_                             For Youth, than this, there is no better fchool                                  CC
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W                            The acts of others from the fruit they bear.
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Felix quem faciunt aliena pericula cautum.                                                        I ^
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Longum iter est per prjecepta, breve et efficax per exempla.—Ibid.                 [il
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We do not want precepts, but patterns, for example is the gentlest and least         0
invidious way of commanding.—Pliny.
Example is a living rule that teaches without trouble to the learner, and lets him
see his faults without open reproof and upbraiding.—Serj. Palmer's Aphorisms.
Example works more than precept; for words without practice are but counsels
without effect.—Ibid.
I have given you an example, that ye should do as I have done to you.—
John xiii. 15.
Christ suffered for us, leaving us an example that we should follow his steps.—
1 Pet. ii. 2i.
S<3^P<&- PRECEPTS LEAD, EXAMPLES DRAW. -5*2>§s«S:
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2?^ BETWEEN NEIGHBOURS' GARDENS, Ǥ*g:
Chi ha mal vicin, ha mal matin.
"~TIS well that ev'ry one should know
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5                                                What are his hours of to and fro?-
Habits of life, and trade or labour \
ijJ :                                               For, whate'er our love of quiet,
i j                                                  And our care to keep aloof,
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|j_ \                                                  Mischief soon may reach our roof.
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.                                                Peaceful neighbours are a treasure
D                                                     To be wish'd for in this life;
^j j                                              But distressing beyond measure,
CC !                                                     Neighbours prone to noise and strife :
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^ j                                                      All such people much require
Watch and ward on all they do;
Lest if their house should take fire,
lU                                                        It perchance may spread to you.
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f j                     Tunc tua res agitur paries cum proximus ardet.—Horace, i. Epist. 18.
[^ I                                 Ne mala vicini pecoris contagia lsedant.—Virgil, Ed. i.
Ul                                 Hinc bene commendavit Philosophus domum a bonis vicinis,
5                                 Aliquid mali propter vicinum malum.—Plautus, Merc.
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j                                             Mieux vaut etre seul, que mal accompagne.
..                                             Beter alleen, als qualick verselt.
Of bad neighbours have a care.
q                                             Quade gebueren moet men besueren.
>. j                                                          Die ontrent den molen woont,
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>. j                                               Zwischen Nachbars Garten ist ein Zaun gut.
I
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2                                                            Porta l'acqua a casa tua.
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In the house of the righteous is much treasure: but in the revenues of the wicked
is  trouble.—Proverbs xv. 6.
IT IS GOOD TO HAVE A HEDGE.
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IT IS BETTER TO LEAVE THAN TO LACK.
[ «IGHTS ftarre-like fplendor doth allure this flye,
-Mi Not knowing that ftie may be burnt thereby:
Thus whilft fhe kindled with a great defire
Of Light, loe now ftiee dies in flaming fire.
Glory in purple robes is fet on hie,
Envious to many, lovely to the eye :
But many times glory doth fooles undoe,
Whilft, without wit and reafon, they it wooe:
It raifeth them that with the greater fall,
It may them overthrow and cruftt withall.
Whilft Icarus foares to Hyperions beames,
He headlong fals into th' Icarian ftreames ;
And Pha'ton daring for to rule the day,
Was thunder-beate, and burnt with Phcebus ray.
We nearer to the Sunne more glorious are,
If of the fcorching rayes we be aware.
Farlie's Emblems.
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SP^i?^ GREAT TALKERS LITTLE DOERS
. *^*^^S^£
De gar.s blaeft wel, maer
it met.
THE GOOSE HISSES WELL, BUT IT DON'T BITE.
9 HEN firft thefe Geefe I faw, and heard
WW         Them hifs fo fierce at me;
With fear o'erwhelm'd, I fled the bird,
And thought therein to fee
Some winged beaft, or dragon fell,
Whofe peftilential breath •
WORDS ARE BUT WIND, BUT BLOWS UNKIND.
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®<S-S<&- LE PAROLE NON BASTANO. -ss^'S*©
Alone fufficed, as I'd heard tell,
To fpread difmay and death.
At length their fnappifh noife defpite,
I felt within my breaft
A ftrange refolve to ftay my flight,
And meet them at my beft.
So looking round as fiercely too,
I was about to draw,
And pierce the hiiTing monfters through;
When all at once I faw—
K                                    And faid, as plain as I could fpeak:
^                                       Why I'm a fool outright!
0                                   The beaft's a flat and toothlefs beak!
0_                                        With that he cannot bite;
No claws upon his feet has he
^                                       That I had need to fear,
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U                                    No crooked talons that I fee
With which my flefti to tear.
'Tis all mere empty wind, e'en though
<  I                                      So dread to th' ear and fight;
CD Fear not, my mates !—who hifs and blow
Uj                                         Are feldom fierce to bite.
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                                             A A 71JT gapen, en bijt niet:
<                                                             Veel blasen en smijt niet.
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K Sy en bijten niet al, die haer tanden laten sien.
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Chat mioleur ne fut jamais bon chasseur, non plus qu'homme sage caquetteur
Een Kat die veel maeuwt, vangt weinigh muisen.
A mucha parola, obra poco.
Can ch' abbaja, non vuol nocer.
Huhner die viel schwatzen, legen wenig Eier.
Dov' e manca cor, quivi e piu lingua.
De grands vanteurs
Petits faiseurs.
Wenn die Worte Leute schlugen, so war er ein tapferer Mann.
WORDS ARE QOOD NA/HEN WORKS FOLLOW.
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BEWARE OF A MAN THAT DOES NOT TALK,
Vasa inania plurimum tinniunt.
-------------An tibi Mavors
Ventosa in lingua, pedibusque fugacibus istis,
Semper erit?—Virg. /£n. n.
Jam senectus mundi est, quae est garrula
Magis metuendi taciturni et lenes, quam feroces et clamatores.
-------Vana est sine viribus ira.
Minarum strepitus,
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                                                        Asinorum crepitus.
~                                                Validior vox operis, quam oris.
i                 Ignavissimus quisque et in periculo minimum ausurus nimii verbis, lingua feroces.
(0                                                                                                                                                 Tacitus,
q                                         Ut quisque ignavus animo, procax ore.—Ibid.
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j                                         Parturiunt montes, nascetur ridiculus mus.—Horace.
m                                         Mons parturibat gemitus immanes ciens,
J                                         Eratque in terris maxima exspectatio.
At ille murem peperit. Hoc scriptum est tibi,
V.
                                         Qui magna cum minaris, extricas nihil.
y                                                                                                  Ph^edrus, Fabul. lxxix.
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Canis timidus vehementius latrat, quam mordet.—Curtius.
—Quid verbis opus est? spectemur agendo.—Ovid. xiii. Metam.
CD
^                                     Multa verba, modica fides.—Richter, Axiom. (Econ. 221.
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Die Kiihe die sehr briillen, geben wenig Milch.
~                                             Hunde die sehr bellen, beissen nicht.
Bj                                                         'T is een wijse van het lant.
t"                                                        Lange tonge kort van hant.
Tel menace, qui est battu.
Tel menace, qui a grand' peur.
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                                                         De grand menaceur peu de fait.
h-
----------Who knows himself a braggart
Let him fear this; for it shall come to pass
That every braggart shall be found an ass.
Shakespeare, All's Well that Ends Well.
Braggarts must needs be factious, for all bravery stands upon comparisons.
They must be violent to make good their vaunts. Neither can they be secret, and
therefore not effectual.—Lord Bacon.
AND OF A DOG THAT DOES NOT BARK.
169
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MANY WORDS DON'T FILL THE SACK.
TW'/ HEN as the waxen light and candle did mine,
As was the taper, fo the candle was fine :
When light is gone, this gives an odious fnuffe,
That fmels of Hyblas fweete nectarian ftufFe.
So when the wicked fits in honours chaire,
Unto the good man all doe him compare;
But when Death fparing none, his mafke puis off",
And changing Fortune fets him for a fcoffe :
Then to the frittle people he doth ftinke,
His name fmels like a common-ftiore or finke:
The good againe, even in adverfity,
Cares not for Fortunes falfe inconftancy ;
And when againft him death hath done her beft,
His name fmels like the Phenix fpicy neft.
Farlie's Emblems.
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TOUT PAR AMOUR, RIEN PAR FORCE.
Met onwillige honden is't quaet hakn vangen.
WITH UNWILLING HOUNDS IT'S HARD TO
CATCH HARES.
Si
OT far from here there lives a Maid,
N
m          Who, as I've heard by many faid,
Will bring a good dow'r of gold and land
To him on whom me bellows her hand.
A buxom, cheerful, buftling lafs,
She leads her father's kine to grafs,
NO STRIVING AGAINST THE STREAM.
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HAPPY IS THE WOOING THAT IS NOT LONG IN DOING.
She bakes and she brews, she spins and sews,
And all a good housewife's duty knows.
Nimble and neat of limb is she,
Good temper'd too as a lass can be;
With pouting lips, and a cheek that glows
With all the hues of the opening rose :
No burgher maid in Leyden town
Can match her eyes of lustrous brown;
And were I now in my youthful prime,
To woo and win her I'd lose no time.
I wish our Claes, that son of mine,
Would but to my advice incline,
And court her close like a sens'ble lad,
While she and her dow'r may yet be had:
For oft I've heard her father say:
Whoe'er she choose, he'll not say nay;
But give her a well stock'd farm and land,
And a well fill'd purse besides in hand.
But my son Claes, he is so slow,
To her he will not courting go :
He only fancies the town-bred grace
Of a Courtly dame, and painted face.
Yet what's your Court or burgher dame,
With pride of birth and empty name,
To village lass with a purse well lin'd,
And wholesome both in body and mind?
But, oh! this boy! 'tis vexing quite
At bait so fair he will not bite;
And all I can do, or think, or say,
Alike on the lad are thrown away.
How oft have I not brought him to
The lass, in hopes that he would woo :
But there he'd stand—like a tongue-tied lout!
Nor open his mouth—but stare about!
In vain to cheer him on I strive,
And wink to make him more alive;
But not e'en once will he take her hand,
Nor speak one word she can understand.
E'en though 'tis Fair-time now, yet he
Buys her no Cakes nor Christmas tree;
No girdle, nor ring, nor handsome coif
To set the young damsel's head-dress off.
He writes no Sonnets in her praise,
As is the custom now-a-days,
But cold as a stone, no word will say,
That hints at all at a Wedding-day.
But, setting all such gifts aside—
Though gifts are proper to a Bride—
Even from her he'll not take a thing,
Neither new neck-ruff, nor handsome ring !
S^- WHO SO BLIND AS HE THAT WILL NOT SEE? -ss*s;
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FAIR IS NOT FAIR, BUT THAT WHICH PLEASETH.
Yet lovers mostly have the sense
To look on gifts as no offence;
And if a young man will aught receive,
'Tis a sign—at least, so girls believe—
That he next day may come again.
And then p'rhaps speak his mind more plain;
For Love doth ever more hopeful burn,
When the receiver doth make return
But oh! this Claes ! he will not woo
At all as other people do!                                                                                    (f)
E'en when she herself asks him to dance,                                                           f:
He says that he can't, and looks askance!                                                    q
q-' ' For her he has no pleasing talk;                                                                3
^ He never takes her out to walk,—                                                              S
^                                             And when she kindly asks him to stay,                                                           
0)
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jr                                                 Now isn't my Claes a downright clod?                                                       0
But now I find my wife was right,                                                              Q
When she said to me t'other night:                                                            0
rf                                                                                                       °                                                                  0
j I                                               Do hold thy tongue, now, Father, do!                                                        m
h :                                               'Tis plain our Claes don't care to woo.
[n ;                                               Thou'lt never bring the match to pass,
0) j                                               He has no taking to the lass
~J                                                  He's p'rhaps some other girl in view,                                                            h
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<*                                                 Is not a lover, after all,                                                                                £
Best judge on whom his choice should fall?                                               CC
U. I                                                                                                                    .                                                                                                                                                                                                            <f
<r                                                   Is courting not an impulse free,
2
Ul j                                               That knows no force nor law's decree?
0 |                                                Do, Father, let the boy alone;—                                                                   HI
0 ;                                                     Compulsion never yet was known                                                                         ^
® :                                                    To rule th' affections of the heart,
111                                                      Nor guide the course of Cupid's dart.                                                               W
~                                                       Let him be free to choose his mate                                                                  ^
2 ;                                                    According to his heart's dictate :
" No Well so bad as that, we think,                                                                 ^
Whose water we're compelled to drink."                                                           U]
Is not the Love-chase just the same                                                                 I
As hunting any other game ?
What though the sportsman even see
The hare, so tame as not to flee,
Squat here and there at distance short,
As though the very dogs to court;—
Yet none the more the hare is won
If that his dogs refuse to run :
For hounds which hunt against their will,
Were seldom known the game to kill.
THERE IS NO DISPUTING OF TASTES AND FANCIES.
Y Y
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LET EVERY TUB STAND ON ITS OWN BOTTOM.
AM confumed with devouring fire,
Whilft Vulcane gainft me doubles thus his ire:
The hand, much like an Ifthme, doth feparate
The flames, and doth it felfe prascipitate
Into open danger, fhewing fo its love,
The fcorching flames compels it to remove.
A thriftlefTe hufband if he fpend his ftate,
And fo the wife loving to goe too neat;
Their ftocke and meanes quickely goes to decay.
And late repentance comes, when all's away.
But if a friend their ruine would prevent,
And ftay their fall; be fure he ftiall be ftient:
He lofing labour fcarce ftiall harmlefle goe,
They both againft him turne their malice fo.
Oft times who parteth quarrels and debate,
Againft himfelfe doth turne the parties hate.
Farlie's Emblems.
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GREAT DESIGNS REQUIRE GREAT CONSIDERATION.
Om weynigh Graens een gansche Moo/e.
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A WHOLE MILL TO GRIND A PECK OF CORN.
1|PH ! Mafter, what is all this work,
I=| This hamm'ring, fawing, clatter ?
Each morning that I wake of late
I wonder what's the matter!
What is't that you are building here ?
A mill, forfooth! but furely
So large a Mill as this will be
A lofs of money purely;
cSPO- GREAT FOOLS MUST HAVE GREAT BELLS.^
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CUT YOUR COAT ACCORDING TO YOUR CLOTH.
For in this fack of yours I feel
So little corn for grinding,
That when you've made it into meal
'Twill fcarce be worth your minding.
A Hand-mill would be large enough
To grind this corn, good neighbour!
And if you'd be advifed by me
You'd ceafe your ufelefs labour.
You may rely, this Mill of yours
Will yield you little profit,
'Twill foon ftand ftill, or, what is worfe,
You'll be obliged to let it:
Don't fpend your money thus, my friend,
'Tis hard enough to find it;
Who only hath a peck of corn
Need build no Mill to grind it.
T^RUDITUR dies die,
Novseque pergunt interire lunae.
Tu secanda marmora
Locas sub ipsum funus, et sepulcri
Immemor struis domos.—Horat. ii. Od. 18.
Q
Senes, inquit Amisceus, spolia opima marines Detz suspendere debent, cum hac
inscriptione.(De Jur. Connub.)
Vixi puellis nuper idoneus,
Et militavi non sine gloria,
Nunc arma defimctumque bello
Hunc gladium paries habebit.
Horat. iii. Od. 26.
——Desine dulcium
Mater sasva Cupidinum.—Idem iv. Od. 1.
DON'T FLY TILL YOUR WINGS ARE FEATHERED.
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GOT WITH THE FIFE,
Circa lustra decern flectere mollibus
Jam durum imperiis : abi
Quo blandse juvenum te revocant preces.
Een oudt man met een jonge vrou,
Wat kan het wesen als berou?
C'est chose aussi follastre de voir le gendarme qui va au baston, que l'amoureux
qui ne peut marcher sans aide.
Veel geschreeus en luttel wolle.
Veel vlagen luttel boter.
Qj                                                 La piu guasta rota del carro
^                                               Fa sempre maggior strepito.
Viel geschrey, wenig wollen.                                                                I_!
0                                                Grosse word und nichts da hinder.                                                    D
h                                                                                                                                                        0
0
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CO                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              I-
0                                            Ne'er put the Plough afore the Owsen.                                            [j]
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In every undertaking, that which is Essential should have the first place; and the
Accessory, if there is occasion for it, should be considered afterwards. Many men
|}J j commence with that which is of least moment to them, and defer the consideration of
<; ; those things which would be useful and profitable, to a period when it is too late to         <
-1-         reap the advantages which would accrue from them. We thus frequently see men who
>-         have no sooner begun to prosper in life, than they become eclipsed as it were in their > J
£ ' very success, and emerge in poverty. Method is as necessary to the art to Live, as to
< j the acquirement of Knowledge.
                                                                                                0
2                                                                                                             \-
0                                                                                                             0
>-                                                                                                                                                         -J
Selon le pain il faut le couteau.                                                         UJ
rj                                                Selon ta bourse gouverne ta bouche.                                                 ll
0                                                Fou est qui plus depense que sa rente ne vaut.
U.
111 I                         Stretch out your legs according to the length of your blanket.
One ounce of discretion is worth a pound of wit.
Chi tutto abraccia, nulla stringa.
Ce qui vient au son de la flute s'en va au son du tambour.
Make no more haste than good speed.
Cavendum est, ne in festinationibus suspiciamus nimias celeritates.—Cicero.
Qui unumquodque mature transegit, is properat; qui multa simul incipit neque
perficit, festinat.—Cato.
SPENT WITH THE DRUM.
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BELONGS TO RIDING THAN A PAIR OF BOOTS.
MORE
!ITANS day burning lamp is fet on high,
The more to light'n the Earth from faphir fky ;
His beames more glorious and confpicuous mine
From Eaft to Weft, from South to midnight line:
My light you muft not under buftiell put,
Nor in a chinky corners prifon ftiut;
That lights may cleare the chambers all throughout,
They muft aloft be hanged round about.
You holy Priefts, to whom the word ot light
Is truft, advance your torches in the fight
Of mortals, fhew them who in darkenefle dwell,
The narrow way that leads to Heaven, from Hell.
Farlie's Emblems.
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DO NOTHING HASTILY, BUT CATCHING OF FLEAS.
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i^&^^S^ TAKE HOLD OF A GOOD MINUTE. 'S^'Sxg:'®^
Two Dogges strive for a Bone, and the third taketh it away.
THE DOGS AND THE BONE.
f* LL ye who would a Moral learn,
Your eyes upon this Emblem turn:
Two dogs in combat fierce you fee,
For Dogs, like Men, will difagree.
The caufe of quarrel was a bone,
With dogs a very frequent one;
But while the two in deadly fight,
Half blind with rage, bark, tear and bite,
WHEN FORTUNE SMILES, TAKE THE ADVANTAGE.
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IT'S AN ILL WIND BLOWS NOBODY GOOD.
More bent each other's fleih to wound
Than heed the bone upon the ground;
Up comes a third, attracted by
The brawl and, quick the caufe t' efpy,
Snaps up the bone without ado,
And with it difappears from view.
The combatants, whofe kindled bile
Had fomewhat fettled down the while,
Exhausted almoft with the fight,
At once both mifs the bone from fight!
And quick as thought, with one confent,
They ceafe the fray, and both intent
To find the prize for which they fought,
With eager hafte the bone is fought:
But all in vain, no bone is there,—
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^                                    But foam and bloodftains everywhere,
^                                    Mingled with clotted flakes of hair.
&                                   At length away the dogs depart,
(!)                                     In pain and difcontent of heart,
W
3                                    That they, who fought the prize to gain,
q                                    Should doubly lofers thus remain ;
K                                        While fome one, who no rifk had run,
2j                                        The " bone of their contention" won.
I                                        Such things and like refults are seen
T' occur full oft young folks between;
Among the People oft'ner ftill,
And Princes, where there's want of {kill.
But while I'm on this subject now,
An inftance I'll relate to you,
Of which I've known before to-day
Full many end the felf-fame way.
Two fuitors woo'd a Burgher maid,
With dow'ry rich, and each afraid
Hir rival fhould with her prevail,
Bethought him all he could t' aflail
And prejudice the other's name,
That he might bell fecure the game.
WHAT FORCE CANNOT DO, INGENUITY MAY.
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WHILE THE DOGS YELP, THE HARE FLIES TO THE WOOD.
With feelings fuch on either fide,
Throughout the City, far and wide,
Reports were current foon of each,
Which did fo mutually impeach
Their name and fame, that fwords alone
Could for fuch calumnies atone.
They met—-they fought—the younger fell;
«.*'                                  His rival's blade prov'd all too well
W                                   The bitter rancour of the thruft
(-                                    That ftretch'd him proftrate in the duft.
Though victor, yet compell'd to fly,
q                                   T' efcape the Duel's penalty ;
*t !                                  The field at once of both made clear,
Another fuitor now drew near;
< j                                  Who, though before but little feen,
(3                                    Had ne'er the lefs, like them too, been
2 i                                  A Fifher in the felf-fame ftream,
Though not prefuming fuch to feem;
0                                   And boldly now he fets his fail,
(5                                    To profit by the fav'ring gale;
Uj                                    Declares in all its honeft truth
i                                   The love that had o'ercast his youth;
Subdues at once the damfel's pride,
0 !                                  And changes Sweetheart into Bride.
0
q                                   The Brawlers, when they both return'd
Ijj                                    To health and home, the tidings learn'd,
*                                   That one far more difcreet than they,
Advantage taking of their fray,
(0                                    Had won the Prize the proper way.
t
T^\UMOS concussi, sustulit alter aves.
Sic vos non vobis nidificatis aves.
Sic vos non vobis vellera fertis oves.
Sic vos non vobis mellificatis apes.
Sic vos non vobis fertis aratra boves.
Tel bat les buissons
Qui n'a pas les oisillons.
WAR IS SWEET TO HIM WHO DOES NOT GO FOR IT.
181                                                                      3 A
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&<&*■ WHEN THE FRIAR'S BEATEN, THEN COMES JAMES. -S*©
fW/ HAT e're my flat's my love proves conftant ftill,
To this my Soule, we part againfl our will;
Or when fierce Boreas with his hluflring gale,
Or fbme mifchance my lovely light doth quale:
Elfe I and Light my life, would never part,
Before to afhes fates did me convert.
Nature commands us to maintaine our breath
And being, fhunning life-deftroying death.
Yet man from Atropus oft takes the knife,
And cuts his fatall thred devouring life:
For why, he fearing death before his day,
Before th'allarum, makes himfelfe away.
Ah wretch! unworthy to behold the fkye,
Who will not live, and knowes not how to dye.
Farlie's Emblems.
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TWO SIR POSITIVES CAN'T MEET WITHOUT A SKIRMISH.
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BETWIXT TWA STOOLS THE DOUP FA'S DOUN.
Nemo potest Thetidem simul et Galatean amare.
NO ONE CAN LOVE THETIS AND GALATEA
AT THE SAME TIME.
| ISTEN, Mates! attend to me,
jL| I would fomething to you fay„
That may of fome fervice be—
Rather curious in its way 1
I've a fondnefs for the Fair,
Which, my reafon all defpite,,
Makes me ev'ry day defpair
Where to fix my heart aright.
<^S*S*&^<$*i?<S^ GRASP ALL, LOSE ALL. '&=£'§>=£■^&*s*S>
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S<s,^&< CHI DUE UEPRI CACCIA, 'S^S'S^
Ev'ry pretty girl I meet,
Sets my heart in fuch a ftir,
That, without the leaft deceit,
I would make ftrong love to her.
Thus fo wav'ring in my mind,
Two girls now at once I woo;
But I've long begun to find
'Tis much more than I can do.
One is Galatea nam'd,
And the other, as you know,
Thetis—for her beauty fam'd,
Spoken of where'er you go.
Thetis lives down by the Sea ;
Galatea on the Moor;
W
N                                    Thetis talks of fhips to me,
-)                                        And of things along the fhore.
Galatea, lively lafs!
Speaks of dairies, and of cows,
0                                    Of the meadows, and the grafs,
[q                                        And the crops her father grows ;
Of the tuneful woods and fields,
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U                                        Where the fheep in hundreds ftray,
>                                    What their fleece in profit yields,
And the joys of market-day:
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                                    Speaks of fhady lanes to me,
With their hedgerows green and gay,
And the Linden trees where we
Often chat an hour away.
Thetis too tells pleafing tales
In the Fifhers' homely talk;
How in Greenland they catch whales,—
Charming 'tis with her to walk!
Herring nets to make and mend
Then fhe tells me how, and I
Long a helping hand to lend,
When ftie fpreads them out to dry.
Plaice and flounders how they take,—
And how cure them on the fhore;
UNA NON PIGLIA E L'ALTRA LASCIA.
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HE WHO SERVES TWO MASTERS
How one man of fifh may make
Oft a catch of twenty fcore:
How they fifh with hook and net.
All fo pleafing like and true,
That by her bright eyes of jet,
I'm both hook'd and netted too.
Galatea fays that fhe
Likes no fifh, nor those who live
Or by fifhing, or the fea,
But the reafon fhe won't give.
Galatea's conftant theme
Is her butter and her cheefe;—■
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" What's your fijh compared to cream ?
Soles or plaice (fays fhe) to thefe!"
If I fpeak of fields and trees,
MAJADERO.
Or the leaft of farm-things fay,
Thetis' look's enough to freeze
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And fhe takes her hand away:
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If I wear a fifher's drefs,
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Galatea from me turns,
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Thetis all my wooing fpurns.
When my fifher's cap I've on,
Flufhings loofe and jacket rough,
Galatea fays, Begone!
But her look is quite enough!
If in fhepherd's flouch I go,
Thetis, if fhe chance to fee,
Calls me Boor ! and jeers me fo,
That all eyes are turn'd on me!
Thus for two long years have I
Chafed this game, and nothing caught ;—-
Just as one " who hunts two hares,
Lofes both, and catches naught."
So, Mates, when you wooing go,
Fool is he who my way choofes;
Who at once courts fweethearts two,
Pleafes neither, and both lofes!
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MUST LIE TO ONE OF THEM.
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S<*fe--j<&<a<S<2:<&' THE FOX IS CUNNING, -SsS^Q^'S^-'S.-^
BEHOLD the Bridegroome comes, he takes his way,
] Nor Man, nor Angell knowes the houre or day;
He faies, he'le come, much like a theefe in night,
To judge the world with equity and right;
Angels mall charge with trumpets founding cleare,
And Chrift as Judge mail in the clouds appeare ;
The righteous and the wicked mail arife,
Bodies and Soules, to paffe upon that 'fize.
He who the oyle of preparation hath,
Whom Chrift mall find furnish'd with faving faith ;
Shall with the Hefted Bridegroome mount on hie,
Mongft Seraphimes triumphing glorioufly ;
But he who hath no oyle, nor faith at all,
Heavens dreadfull Judge Ihall that man curfed call,
And banim him into the pit of hell,
Where with the fiends for ever he muft dwell.
Farue's Emblems.
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BUT MORE CUNNING HE WHO CATCHES HIM.
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FAIR TO THE EYE, THAT'S ALL.
In Recessu Nihil.
WITHIN IS EMPTINESS.
OU fay that Ifabella is of fuch furpaffing grace,
So beautiful in form, and ev'ry feature of her face ;
That you're furpris'd I do not afk her hand at once, as you
Affirm, if you were in my place, you would without ado.
But, Friend, you are miftaken, and you eftimate too high
The beauty of a figure, and the luftre of an eye:
Thefe I admit fhe has, but fomething ftill I wanting find—
Though beautiful in face,—fhe wants the beauty of the mind.
BELLE CAGE, SANS OISEAU.
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TWO EYES ARE NOT SUFFICIENT
She's like the handfome Monument, to which the fculptor's art
Has given grace and fymmetry to every outward part;
Externally adorn'd with all that molt, the eye can win,
All outward fhew like that is frie, but empty all within.
Pay lefs regard to Form and Face, when you felecT: a wife;
The Beauty of the Mind alone is that which lafts for life.
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STAKEN Nature here has join'd
(0                                                 x' "*" A beauteous face and ugly mind;
Z                                                 In vain the faultless features strike,
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—                                                      Pity that snowy breast should hide
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                                               Deceit and avarice and pride.—Pope.
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                                            Nam divinitus interdum, Venerisque sagittis,
j                                             Deteriore fit ut forma muliercula ametur;
^                                             Nam facit ipsa suis interdum fcemina factis,
jj_                                             Morigerisque modis, et mundo corpore culta,
Ut facile insuescat vir secum ducere vitam.—Lucret.
Plus aliquid forma est, plus est oculisque genisque;
Plus aliquid toto corpore, quidquid amo.—Dan. Heynsius.
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                                        Sit procul omne nefas, ut ameris amabilis esto ;
q !                                           Quod tibi non facies, solaque forma dabit.—Ovid.
Temerariis judiciis plena sunt omnia, de quo desperamus subito convertitur, et fit
optimus; de quo multum prsesumpseramus, deficit et fit pessimus, nee timor noster
a:
q_         certus est, nee amor.—August, de Past.
Judge not according to the Appearance, but judge righteous judgment.
John vii. 24.
The Lord seeth not as man seeth; for man looketh on the outward appearance,
but the Lord looketh on the heart.—1 Sam. xvi. 7.
Favour is deceitful, and Beauty is vain; but a woman that feareth the Lord, she
shall be praised.—Proverbs xxxi. 30.
Tel semble sage en apparence,
Qui fol est en quintessence.
S<§,2*a, TO CHOOSE A WIFE. ■^■^'^S:
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JUDGE NOT OF MEN OR THINGS AT FIRST SIGHT.
Fronti nulla Fides.
"VX THEN travellers first the Pyramids behold,
Lifting their sun-lit tops in contrast bold
Against the splendour of th' Egyptian sky;
Their grand dimensions to the fancy brings
The semblance of the Palaces of Kings;
So great is their external majesty!
But what are they within 3—No Halls are there,
No Royal Courts, nor Princely Chambers fair,
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                                                The imaged scenes of Eastern pageantry.
0                                            What then ? mere dust! the Ashes of the Dead !
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Around, within, on every side outspread
In one drear, dread Sepulchral mockery!
'Tis thus we are instructed to beware
Of judging from Appearances alone ;
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Q.                                                Are not more empty—when the truth is known.
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Plus on a de fonds, et plus on est homme.
q         HPHE Inside ought always to be worth as much again as the outward appearance.
I I                 There are people who have exterior only; resembling houses which have not
been finished for want of funds; the entry is palatial, the inside a hovel. This kind
of Persons presents nothing to fix the attention, or rather, all within them is fixed;
for after the first salutation the conversation is ended. They make their introductory
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         bow, after the fashion of the Sicilian horses, which after one or two caracoles become
0 i suddenly metamorphosed into motionless taciturnity. For words are soon exhausted
when the mind is barren. It is easy for them to deceive others who like themselves
have nothing but appearance, but they are objects of pity to persons of discernment,
UJ ; who soon discover that they are empty within.—Gracian's Maxims.
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|_                                             T T'S empty : hark, it sounds : 'tis vain and void,
What's here to be enjoy'd
But grief and sickness, and large bills of sorrow,
Drawn now, and cross'd to-morrow?
Or what are men, but puffs of dying breath,
Reviv'd with living death?
Fond youth, oh, build thy hopes on surer grounds
Than what dull flesh propounds :
Trust not this hollow world, 'tis empty : hark, it sounds.
Quarles' Emblems.
A FOOLISH WOMAN IS KNOWN BY HER FINERY.
189
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ALL FLOWERS ARE NOT IN ONE GARLAND.
\Wjt~ HO fo beholds this fmoaky fnuffe of mine,
*» He muft needs thinke that fometime I did mine;
But now my Light is gone, my glory's darke,
Onely of light I have the brand and marke.
Who for his Country hath with valour flood,
His wounds doe fhew, that he hath fpent his blood :
In Venus training who hath beene pradtifed,
Some token he beares of what he exercifed.
The Schollars badge, are fallow lookes and blanch,
The gluttons is the fatneffe of his panch,
Vertue and vice doth leave fome token behind,
Which of themfelves doe put us ftill in minde.
Farlie's Emblems.
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OGNI DONNA A QUALCHE TACCA. ^£
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UNION GIVES STRENGTH.
Vechtende Koeyen voegen haar te samen, ah de Wolf komt.
WHEN THE WOLF COMES, THE OXEN LEAVE OFF
FIGHTING TO UNITE IN SELF-DEFENCE.
IK TOT long ago, fome oxen of our herds upon the moor,
J^S In furious fight among themfelves, as oft I've feen before,
Were fuddenly furpris'd to fee fome Wolves, which, crouching low,
Were ftealing on the herd to ftrike an unexpected blow.
Like magic, all at once, th' inteftine feuds and bloodfhed ceafe,
As though the common danger had fubdued them all to peace:
And quick,—as if imprefs'd with all the folly of their ftrife ;
Made fenfible that Union alone could fave the life
L'UNION FAIT L.A FORCE.
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Of each and all,—to face the foe they hafte a ring to form,
And croup to croup clofe prefs'd make front to meet th' impending ftorm.s
'Twas juft in time! fof fcarcely were they marihall'd back to back,
When down upon the herd already burfts the rav'ning pack:
But all in vain the Wolves affail; for everywhere they meet
A phalanx of oppofing horns, their onfet fierce to greet;
And high in air uptofs'd, or difembowell'd on the plain,—
The few remaining take to flight, nor dare th' aflault again.
So fhould confed'rate States and Peoples hufh all inward ftrife,
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q            All difcords then out-trodden—'tis by Unity alone
£            The Free fhall fave their Freedom, and the Brave preferve their own.
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Twist verquist.
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U.                                                          Eenigkeyt vercnag veel.
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(0                                                   Verdeilt vyer brandt qualick.
p.                                                      Scatter'd fire burns badly.
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Sacrum est Pacis nomen, et quod vix terram sapiat: nee alio nomine Hebrsei To
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         tv^fjv, ipsam adeb perfectionem, innuebant: nee quid aliud humano generi lubentius
Q | vel gratulati sunt Angeli, vel legavit Christus, vel Apostoli prseceperunt, &c.
Joseph Hall, Rom. Irreconciliab,
Krijg van buiten
Doet vrientschap sluiten.
Commune periculum dissidentes conjungit. Instante communi periculo, conciliari
solent dissidentium animi.—Dionys. Halicam. lib. 8.
* The instinctive resort of horned cattle to this mode of defence against the wolf, is more especially
remarkable, and of very frequent occurrence, among the herds of half wild horses in the Bukowina, and
on the Pusztas of Hungary, with the difference that these form the "Karika" or ring, with their heels
outwards, in order to give the wolves the full advantage of that characteristic and efficient mode of
defence of the horse.—Note of Translator.
DIVERSITY OF HUMOURS ENGENDERS TUMOURS.
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S^^^S^S^ SCATTERED FIRE BURNS BADLY. -s«S-S>=a^>^-S>S
Ne point montrer le doigt malade.
Shew not where your finger ails.
For every one will strike you there. Beware also to complain of it, for in as much
as Malice always attacks the weakest point, the show of resentment and suffering only
serves to gratify and to divert it. The malice of mankind always endeavours to unhinge;
it gives utterance to cutting words, and resorts to every expedient, until it has dis-
covered the sore, where it can pierce to the quick. The man of sense and tact
never exposes his weak point, whether personal or hereditary; because Fortune herself
takes delight sometimes in wounding the place where she knows the pain will be felt
most acutely. She always mortifies to the quick. Consequently it is requisite to
conceal from mankind all knowledge both of that which mortifies, and of that which
gives satisfaction ; in order to bring the former to the speediest termination, and to
make the latter endure the longer.—Gracian.
Strength is increased by Concord.
The fast faggot is not easily broken.
L'Union fait la Force.
Auxilia humilia firma consensus facit.
Unius dissensione totus consensionis globus disjectus sit.—Nepos.
Adversity tries friends.
In angustis amici boni apparent.
God helps those who help themselves.
Fortes Fortuna juvat.
Timidi nunquam statuere tropseum.—Suidas ex Eupolide.
Il n'y a que les honteux qui perdent.
Audaces Fortuna juvat, timidosque repellit.
Qui ipsi sibi sapiens prodesse nequis, ne quidquam sapit.
Cicero, Ep. lib. vii.
In circumstances of difficulty, there is no better company than a resolute heart;
and if that should happen to fail, it should be aided by the Mind. Difficulties grow
less for them who know how to help themselves. Submit not to the strokes of
adversity without an effort to overcome them, lest they become less endurable. Some
persons help themselves so little in their troubles, that they increase them, for want of
knowing how to meet and bear them with courage. He who knows himself well, finds
assistance to his weakness in reflection. The man of judgment comes out of every
dilemma with credit and advantage to himself.
WHERE THE KNOT IS LOOSE, THE STRING SLIPPETH.
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WHERE NECESSITY PINCHES,
HILST I give light to others, I decay ;
I lofe my felfe, whilft I to others play:
I watch all night with an unfleepy eye, .
And oft, before the day doth dawne, I dye :
How oft am I by bluftering Boreas mockt,
And lighting others, I my felfe am chokt;
If tumult, of a night afTailing be,
I am employ'd, no reft, no peace for me:
What moft of men neglect, that I obferve,
To fuccour others, though my felfe ftiould ftarve:
A Law but not of nature, which directs
All of themfelves to have the prime refpects.
Codrus the King, his Country to defend,
Much like a Prodigall his life did fpend ;
The Pelican to feede her plumelefTe brood,
Doth lance her breaft, and ftraine her pureft blood,
The watchfull fheepherd feldome feeing fleepe,
Directs, and keepes from wolves his ftraying ftieepe:
Even Chrift himfelfe, the Sonne of the moft Hie,
Did fuffer death, left mortall man mould die.
Farlie's Emblems.
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SEMPER OB INSIDIIS CYNTHIA FUERE SOLET.
Dum plorat, vorat.
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WHILE SHE WEEPS, SHE DEVOURS.
dALLING a tew days fince to pay
A vifit to my fweetheart fair,
Her face quite fill'd me with difmay,
She look'd fo pale and wan with care.
That fhe, fo full of life and fong,
As was her wont, thus fad mould be,
Made me conclude, that fomething wrong
Had her befall'n—or p'rhaps that fhe
Had got fome filly doubts of me.
VRIENT, LET'ER OP; MEN VINT'ER NOCH.
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BEAUTE ET FOLIE SONT SOUVENT
Well, dearest love !—but what is this i
What ails ? what has occurr'd to thee ?
Why then so cold 1—not e'en one kiss !—
Art ill—or discontent with me 1
Nay, nay, thou'rt ill I'm sure—I see,
I know it by thy drooping eye,
Thou lookst not as thou'rt wont on me,
Come let me know,—why then that sigh 1
Speak, speak, did I yet aught deny ?
But long she made me no reply,
Though still she sigh'd, and I could see,
The more I said, the more her eye
Was fill'd with tears, and turn'd from me;
Until at length quite griev'd, I said,
Come cease this weeping—speak then, do—
Tell me thy grief, nor be afraid;
If silent thus, how can I know
In what to aid or comfort you?
On this upon my arm she laid
Her pretty hand, and murm'ring low—
Alas ! 'tis this—(she sighing said)
My cause of grief, since you will know;
A sad misfortune I have had!
That e'er so luckless I could be !
I've lost—I'm sure I shall go mad—
That handsome ring you gave to me !
Which all admir'd who us'd to see.
And then—Oh ! woe is me !—to-day,
While walking in the Park, I felt
The Bracelet on my arm give way,—■
I really thought my heart would melt:
I look'd, and lo ! the diamond clasp
Which held the string of pearls I wear,
Had broken somehow at the hasp!—
You know what splendid pearls they were i
Well! eight are lost, I do declare!
Oh ! how shall I this loss repair 1
All thy best presents thus to lose ;—
I've scarce a jewel now to wear!'
And fifty pounds won't replace those !
^<2±S <&,&<§* EN COMPAGNIE. •-s^'s^-^*^
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S=>^- Q.UI FEMME CROIT, ET ANE MENE -S^S
When she had ended this lament,
Her sobs and tears came fast anew,
And I, upon her grief intent,
Knew neither what to say or do,
And truth to say, 'twas vexing too.
When just as I was deep in thought,
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And to my lady, something new!
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She, (so it seem'd) her grief appeas'd
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At once, at sight of all his ware,
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A costly diamond ring first seiz'd,
The finest, largest he had there;
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And said :—Ah! this is just the kind
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Of ring that I have wish'd for so!
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And, as she spoke, she kiss'd me too.
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'Twas her own diamond ring that I
Had bought and paid for o'er anew!
So when you see your Sweetheart cry,
Take heed, my Friends, what 'tis you do.
But laugh or weep 'tis much the same,
They're both the sex's Winning Game.
SON CORPS NE SERA JAMAIS SANS PEINE.
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I_A FEMME FOLLE EES"
BRUANTi
fffHEN that my clammy fubftance was entire,
         I was an earthly nurfe of heav'n-bred fire;
Now envious time doth me in allies turne,
And to a tedious fnuffe my light doth burne:
Loe I have done, take thou this light of mine ;
I yeeld, doe what thou canft, the turne is thine.
So the Comedian having plaid his ftiare,
Gives place to others, who then actors are :
A King his weighty office having done,
Dying transfers his Scepter to his fonne:
When that the crafie Souldiers ftrength doth faile,
The younger muft the enemy aflaile.
Happy is he the evening of whofe daies
Doth crowne his death with ever-living bayes.
Farlie's Emblems.
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A FOOLISH WOMAN IS CLAMOROUS.
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BETTER BEND THAN BREAK.
Cedendo Victor abibis.
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BY YIELDING THOU MAY'ST CONQUER.
^HAT the flender Reed you fee,
HI Chat'd and driven by the blaft,
Should not foon uprooted be,
Or upon the waters caft ;—■
That fo frail a thing in form
Is not quickly borne away,
Rent to tatters by the ftorm,
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HE THAT ENDURETH, IS NOT OVERCOME.
Since fo oft the ftately Oak,
Tow'ring upward to the ikies,
Is uprooted by the ftroke,
E'en defpite its flrength and fize!
Strange as this may feem to thee,
'Tis with wife inftruction rife,
And imports how men may be
Victors in the ftorms of Life.
Things of lowly growth and height
Have but little weight to bear;
And, whate'er the tempeft's might,
Feel it in diminifh'd fhare:
Lefs expos'd to every wind
Than the lofty foreft trees,
Humbler plants a quiet find
That is feldom known to thefe.
Fragile though the Reed appear
To refill fo fierce a blaft,
Yet it hath no need to fear;
For when once the gale is paft,
Lifting then its head anew,
Still unharm'd, o'er fen and lake,
Proves the antient maxim true,
" That which bends, doth feldom break. "
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A UREAM quisquis mediocritatem
Diligit, tutus caret obsoleti
Sordibus tecti, caret invidendi
Sobrius aula.
Horace, lib. ii. Od. 10.
Felix, media? quisquis turbse
Parte quietus, aura stringit
Littora tuta, timidusque mari
Credere cymbam, remo terras
Propriore legit.—Seneca, Agamem.
Crede mihi, bene qui latuit, bene vixit, et intra
Fortunam debet quisque manere suam.—Ovid.
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Rebus in adversis facile est contemnere vitam,
Fortiter ille facit qui miser esse potest.
In adverse times, 'tis easy of life's burdens to complain;
But nobler far, with fortitude to suffer, and sustain.
The gods take pleasure oft when haughty mortals
On their own Pride erect a mighty fabric,
By slightest means to lay their towering schemes
Low in the dust, and teach them they are nothing.
Thomson.
Though plung'd in ills, and exercis'd in care,
Yet never let the noble mind despair :
When press'd by dangers, and beset by foes,
The gods their timely succour interpose;
And when our Virtue sinks, o'erwhelm'd with grief,
By unforeseen expedients bring relief.—Philips.
Storms often fell the stately oak,
High mountains feel the thunder's stroke;
And lofty tow'rs, when winds assail,
In their resistance less prevail
Than doth the reed upon the shore,
Which rises when the storm is o'er.
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Confido, conquiesco.
/^~\H! Source of every good, and every joy,
Meek resignation felt without alloy;
Jehovah! from whose ever bounteous store,
Mercy, and joy, untainted blessings pour;
Who bid st us ask, and asking not amiss,
Convey'st an heavenly, in an earthly bliss;
Whose hand protects us, and whose eye pervades,
Whose promise cheers us, and whose grace persuades :
Though thron'd on high, where blessed spirits bow,
And blissful saints sublimest raptures know;
Yet stooping low as earth, our prayers are heard,
Our wants reliev'd, and all our sorrows cheer'd:
Alike thy fondness to thy creatures shew'd
In what's withholden as in what's bestow'd.
Then let me pause—and if presumptuous thought
My humble state bewails, or grieves at aught;
O soothe with calm content, that I may share
Thy gifts with grateful heart, whate'er they are.—Anon.
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HIG.H BIRTH IS A POOR DISH ON THE TABLE.
JF thus my light nights fable filence glads,
Making a cheerefull roome in midnight fhads;
If Gold'n-like Phcebus and his filver fifter,
He in the day, fhee in the night doth glitter;
What thought-furpaffing light then fhall that be,
When we in Heaven Empyrean God fhall fee ?
Sooner thou canft the world hold in thy hand,
Or in a fhell containe the glaffie ftrand;
Than tell how glorious is the light of Heaven,
That dark'ns the Sunne, Moone, Stars, and Planets feven
This onely tell: it is not Phcebus light,
Nor Phcebus, nor the fpangles of the night.
That light which tongue cannot, nor mind defcry,
Once fhalt thou fee, a fupreame Deity.
Farlie's Emblems.
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*8* WHO BEGINS AMISS ENDS AMISS. ■%*&
Assdi rumori, e poca lana.
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GREAT CRY AND LITTLE WOOL.
EREIN we fee a fomewhat novel Sight,
To which the Reader's notice we invite:
One man doth fliear a Sheep, and ftrange to fee,
Another fhears a Pig in company.
Let us confider what this thing may mean;
Perchance therefrom fome leftbn we may glean.
He, who the Pig doth fhear, the fenfelefs lout,
Believes he knows full well what he's about;
VEEL GESCHREEUWS, EN LUTTEL WOL.
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MUCH WOULD HAVE MORE
And that when done, to him there will accrue
By far the greater profit of the two.
The Pig's the heavieft beaft he thinks, no doubt.
Has thickeft fat, and much the longeft fnout;
But the unruly brute, like all his kind,
Is hard to manage, nor at all inclin'd
To yield fubmiflive to his treatment new,
And gives his Shearer roughifh work to do.
Rending the air with fhrillest, piercing fhrieks,
He kicks and ftruggles, twifts about and fqueaks
With fuch untiring ftrength and energy,
That all the neighbours round look out to fee,
<                            Or gather near to afcertain aright
The real meaning of fo ftrange a fight.
Amid much trouble, and the jeers of all,
He fhortly finds his profit very fmall,
For in the place of Wool, what is't he gains ?
Mere hair and fcrubby briftles for his pains.
Now turn we to our friend who ftiears the Sheep
Unlike the Pig, he lies as though afleep ;
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hi                            He wreftles not, he neither kicks nor fhrieks,
0                            In gentle tones the Shearer to him fpeaks,
And moves at will the fhears o'er every part,
q                            Nor fears a motion that his will may thwart.
W                            To all men's eyes who watch the procefs here,
UJ                             The labour's eafy and the gain is clear
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Not fcrubby briftles, but of fineft wool
His lap not only, but his bafket full,
Atteft which Shearer hath the better gains,
Both as to profit and to gift of brains.
'Tis thus in life we not unfrequent fee,
How fome Men labour long and wearily,
T' achieve a purpofe which they have in view,
Yet lofe their labour and the object too;
The while that others eafily attain
A kindred purpofe, with completeft gain.
In all men do, fo much on tad: depends,
That where that fails, fuccefs but rare attends;
AND OFT MEETS WITH LESS.
204
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DO THE LIKELIEST AND HOPE THE BEST.
That which is well confidered beft fucceeds;
That which is well conducted fureft fpeeds :
Hence who in Shearing would no profit lack.
Should choofe a beaft with wool upon its back;
Confider well all he would take in hand,
Nor mix with matters he don't understand :
What one Man
does, another fails to do ;
What's fit for me, may not be fit for you.
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A L te wijs kan niet beginnen,
Al te geek kan niet versinnen;
Tusschen mal, en tusschen vroet,
Wint men wel het meeste goet.
Hy moet wagen
Die wil bejagen.
Die dit en gint geduerig schroomen,
Hoe konnen die tot rijekdom komen?
Gato guantato non prese mai sorci.
'T Mach wayen, stil zijn, vloeyen, of ebben,
Die niet en waegt en sal niet hebben.
Sumptum faciat oportet is qui lucrum quserit.
Rien ne s'acquiert sans aventure, et rien se conserve sans industrie.
Chi guerda a ogni piuma, non fa mai letto.
Sonder wagen niet vergaren,
Sonder wijsheyt niet bewaren.
Die elcke veer wil sien en raken,
Hoe kan die oyt een bedde maken!
Qui n'a guere,
N'a guerre.
Neringh en is geen erf.
Qui perd le sien, perd le sens.
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WHO DOES TOO MUCH OFTEN DOES LITTLE.
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WHO PROVES TOO MUCH PROVES NOTHING.
\Y Light up to Heav'ns Manfions ftill doth move,
Seeking his native place of reft above;
But being ty'd in bondage to this frame,
It ftoopes to feeke his food, and feed his flame :
So ftill it finkes downeward, untill it turne
Into a fnufFe, and afties ceafe to burne.
My mind, I know not how, longeth to flye,
Unto the Heavenly Courts and Saphire fky,
But ftill its plung'd, fo to the body bound,
That its compel'd to grovell on the ground :
Thus cralling for its food my foule can fret,
And tafting Lote, his Country doth forget.
Farlie's Emblems.
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DRIVE THE NAIL. THAT WIL.L. GO. ^i^^a^
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A FULE'S UEAD IS NAE SPEED.
Krepel wil altijdt voor danjen.
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CRIPPLE WILL ALWAYS LEAD THE DANCE.
OROSSING o'er a Village green,
Once I faw a pleafant fcene ;
Country lads and lafles gay,
Dancing on the firft of May,
Singing, fhouting, full of glee;
'Twas a pleafant fight to fee
How they danc'd the May-pole round,
To the Bagpipe's merry found.
*"»* THE WORST WHEEL CREAKS MOST. -=S>^
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S*^:3<S*g-<&< AN UNPLEASANT GUEST ^>S =s*S>SsS;
When the Piper fhrilleft play'd,
Greater was the noife they made;
And not one but feem'd to be
Almoft mad with jollity.
But among them all was one
Who in noife the reft outdone,
He, the leader of the game,
Was both bandy-legg'd and lame,
With a club-foot of fuch fize,
As quite fill'd me with furprife,
That fo clumfy fhaped a thing
Should be leader of the ring.
^                                    So it was ne'erlefs, and he
<                                    Firft in everything would be:
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Whatfoe'er was piped or fung,
Cripple's voice the loudeft rung.
0                                    Nimble though young Hans might be,
Great though Claes' agility,
0 !                                  And though Jordan knew the way
q:                                    Smarteft things to Tryn to fay,
m                                    Whether jump, joke, fing or bawl,
p                                    Cripple will eclipfe them all.
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CD                                                                                                            .                                        .
For in Town-life much the fame,
Cripple oft will lead the game:
Though to limp is all he can,
Cripple is a clever man,
And whatever may befall,
Cripple muft be firft of all.
Is it not a curious thing,
When thereto our thoughts we bring,
That a fhallow-pated fool
Juft efcaped from boarding fchool,
Wanting mereft common fenfe,
Full of prate and vain pretence,
IS AS WELCOME AS SALT TO A SORE EYE.
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S«.S*«rS^ MORE FRIENDLY THAN WELCOME. '®S^r'Ws>S
Is the firft to have his fay,
And, unaik'd, will lead the way
With opinions and conceits,
Where the world-wife hefitates ?
Would you know whence this derives ?
'Tis that wifdom flower drives:
Wife men ever cautious weigh
That which they may have to fay;
Give opinions ne'er by guefs,
Nor unafk'd their thoughts exprefs;
But a Fool, all hafte that he
Something may be thought to be,
Do or fay, be what it may,
Will in all things lead the way.
Hence the faying doth derive,
" Fools are they who fafteft drive,"
And its well known proverb twin,
* Cripple will the dance begin."
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"TJ"ATALIS imperitise pedissequa est Impudentia, et inanis jactatio.
At initium Sapientiag, imperitiae suse agnitio.
Spes est melior de stulto, quam de sapiente in oculis suis.—Arab. Adag.
Qui plus balbutiunt, plus loquuntur.
L'abbatu veut toujours lutter.
Godt bewaere my voor jemant die maer een boeckxken gelesen heeft.
Hoe slimmer timmer-man, hoe meerder spaenders.
Veel roemen melt een dommen geest :
Een ydel vat bomt aldermeest.
Hoe slimmer wiel, hoe meer het raest.
Een penning in den spaer-pot maeckt meer geraes dans als hy vol is.
C'est la plus meschante roiie du chariot, qui mene le plus grand bruit.
In another sense.
Quando la cornemusa e piena, commincia a sonare.
When.the bag-pipe's full it begins to sound.
Stultum, quam semi-stultum ferre, facilius est.—Ben-Syra.
A FOOL WHO HOLDS HIS TONGUE PASSES FOR WISE.
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A FULL SACK PRICKS UP ITS EARS.
Ok H wretch unworthy of thy infamous name,
J Burne not this facred Church, to raife thy fame:
For though twas built by Heath'ns impiety,
Yet ought it not be thus deftroy'd by thee :
Truft me impiety every where is nought,
And Heath'ns their heathen profanenefle dearly bought:
Let Tolofe gold, and Delphus robbery,
And Hammons fandy ire this teftifie:
It's thine, not my default, for I was made
For facrifice, and to make Creatures glad.
Nothing fo harmlefTe and fo good can be,
Which may not hurt, by mans impiety.
Farlie's Emblems.
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&<$* A FOOL WILL HAVE HIS FLING. -B*a;
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GL.I DENARI SONO SPIRITI FOLLETTI.
Feu, Toux, Amour, et Argent ne se cachent longuement.
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FIRE, COUGH, LOVE, AND MONEY, ARE NOT LONG
CONCEALED.
HIS Candle I would carry Co
That neighbours cannot fee
A gleam of Light that may in aught
Reveal a glimpfe of me;
For if I can, no one will watch
Me then, and I may go
G^UIS ENIM BENE CELET AMOREM *?
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DAER DE SCHAT IS, IS HET HERTE,
Where'er I lift, without the fear
That any one will know.
But ftill, in fpite of all I do,
I fear the light is feen;
Its rays ftill ftream thro' all the holes
And Lanthorn's chinks between;
Whatever care I take, howe'er
I ftrive to fhade it o'er,
Some gleams pierce thro' behind, or at
The fide, or thro' the door.
My neighbour's very old, and as
Old people often are,
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                                    He's very much afflicted with
A cough, and bad catarrhe;
-J                                    But ne'erthelefs, ftrange though it feem,
As ev'ry one muft own,
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y                                        To lie at night alone.
jjF                                     He's courting a young maiden now,
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0                                    He ftrives his beft to flop the cough,—•
0                                        But 'twill not be aftuag'd:
j_                                    And while he fits and looks his beft,
!{J                                          To make his courtfhip fure,
The fprightly lafs, tho' ftriving all
Ui                                          She can to look demure,
Says, that is not the Mufic a
Young Maiden's heart to gain,
And bids him reft content to fleep
Alone, and not complain:
But if a Wife he's bent to have,
The beft thing he can do,
Is one of his own age to choofe,
Who has a bad cough too.
A fellow who to gain his bread,
Runs errands here and there,
Found recently, a purfe well fill'd
With ducats, in the Square:
EN DE HANDT IS BY DE SMERTE.
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<&&. HOE DATJE GELT OR L.IEFDE SLUYT, -^S
With joy elate he took, it home,
And to his Wife he faid:
Look here! dear Trijn! I've found a prize!
Our fortune now is made!
But you ! you muft not breathe a word;
So mind you what you do!
No one, Trijn, fave yourfelf, muft aught
Of this good Wind-fall know!
No longer now with meflkges
Will I run here and there;
But like a Burgher live at eafe
And have the beft of cheer!
Therefore ftitch thou this purfe infide
Thy fleeve, or elfe fomewhere.
Trijn fwore ftie would, and with an oath
To take the beft of care.
But, mark! e'en from that very time,
The Wife began to fpend;
Drefs fine, prate large, and treat or this
Or that dear-goflip-friend ;
The Man, too, he will go no more
With meflages—not he ;
Such paltry jobs he fays are quite
Beneath his dignity.
The Daughter, fhe is drefs'd as fine —
The babe put out to nurfe,
'Tis wondrous ftrange! but money ne'er
Will ftop within the purfe!
At length the truth gets wind, and lo!
The man is prifoner made,
And mourns within a cell, that he
Had left an honeft trade.
The fprightiy Trijn in forrow blames
Her foolifti fpendthrift-riot;
And all becaufe the money would
Not reft in peace and quiet.
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HET WIL, HET SAL, HET MOET'ER UYT.
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THERE IS NOTHING SO SECRET
!Y Light is gone, yet hope doth ftill remaine,
That Light revived mall quick'n me againe.
I gaine by death, for fo I longer laft,
Life mall returne, after fome houres are paft.
All of us dye, when this our threed is fpunne,
And cut, deaths droufie lleepe is then begunne.
After the ghueft is gone, the Innes decay,
Our body's turn'd to rubbifh and to clay ;
Untill the foule returning doe pofTefTe
Our bodies in Eternall happinefTe.
Farlie's Emblems.
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EVERY ONE SPEAKS AS HE IS.
Elck Vogeltje singt soo't gebeckt is.
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EVERY BIRD SINGS ACCORDING TO HIS BEAK.
IS an old Saying and a true,
That ev'ry bird rings its own note ;
Nor can it any other do
But as permits its beak and throat,
Whene'er you rove thro' field or wood,
And well attend with ears and eyes,
You'll find the Proverb juft and good,
Whate'er the bird in fhape or fize.
[VERY MAN TO HIS TRADE.
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•VERY ONE TO HIS OWN CALLING,
Thofe which a hook'd fharp beak have got,
Are for the moft part Birds of Prey,
And bent alone on War, they wot
No note of fong or minflxelfy.
Whene'er near rivers, lake or flood,
You chance a flat-beak'd bird to meet,
From grcping in the flufh and mud,
Be fure his voice is never fweet.
The birds with longer flute-like beak,
Might more be thought to fong inclin'd,
But in their thrumming note and fhriek,
No turn for melody you'll find.
I therefore fay,—as far as fize
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                                    And fhape of beak,—nor fear proteft,
CO                                 That of all birds beneath the fkies,
Q                                    The little beaks they fing the beft.
E'en thus among mankind, we fee,
God gives the little now and then,
A talent rare and quality
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q                                Of little beaks, what bird like he
Z                                    Which night-thro' fings in wood and dale ?
J                                That feathered Soul of Harmony,
>                                    That little beak, the Nightingale !
W                                And would you feek a tuneful throat,
W                                    You'll find throughout the feather'd throng,
The greater beak the hardier note,
The fmaller beak the fweeter fong.
As with the Fowls of earth and air,
Not fo with Man—he hath no beak,
But in his mouth beyond compare
The nobler Godlike power to fpeak!
And when he fpeaks in fpirit kind,
What note of bird more foftly fweet
To breathe the mufic of the mind,
When kindred hearts and fpirits meet!
But when the mouth of Man outpours
The blaft of Paflion's wrathful breath,
AND THE OX TO THE PLOUGH.
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EVERY ONE SNEEZES AS GOD PLEASES.
The Lion not more fiercely roars
His angry note of blood and death!
Hence what befalls mankind between,
Comes from a deeper fource exprefs'd,
Where fits, by ev'ry eye unfeen
But God's, the impulfe of the breaft.
The Mouth commands, implores, decries,
As moves the Heart, and gives thereto
The tone which moft its will implies,
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Au chant cognoit on l'oiseau,
Et au parler le bon cerveau.
Al suono si cognosce la saldezza del vaso.
Was der Man kan,
Zeiget seine rede an.
Nabal nabala idaber.—Turkish Adage.
Id est,
Stultus stulta loquitur.
Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh.—Matthew xii. 34.
•.SO^S*®^^ EVERY MAN IN HIS WAY. <^S>^^'^S>
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25^ EVERY MAN IN HIS HUMOUR. -?& ~
N
ATURE propounds a dilemme, chufe I muft,
Either to dye by light, or rot by ruft:
If I feeke eafe and reft, then lafinefte
Doth me confume with mouldy hoarinefle;
But if I love to fhine with glorious ray,
Then by my flames in teares I melt away.
Patience doth light'n this evill : I wiftt to live
In glorious light, and light to others give.
This life is worne out with laborious toile,
And flothfull reft doth minde and body fpoile;
But yet it's better for to dye a fparke,
Than like a laizie moule to live in darke.
Farlie's Emblems.
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EVERY MAN AS HIS BUSINESS LIES.
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A STILL TONGUE MAKES A WISE HEAD.
On ne prend Lievre au 'Tabourin, n'y Oiseau a la Tartevelle.
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HARES ARE NOT CAUGHT WITH BEAT OF DRUM,
NOR BIRDS WITH TARTLETS.
fE who by beat of drum would catch a hare,
Took the beft means his purpofe to defeat;
For foon as Pufs the noife began to hear,
With ears erect fhe quickly left her feat,
2r<^ A MUCHA PAROLA OBRA POCA. "$>&
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BIRDS ARE ENTANGLED BY THEIR FEET,
And making nimbly for the neareft wood,
Within its leafy cover got away.
Leaving our friend and dogs, however good.
But little chance their fleetnefs to difplay:
So that at eve, returning from his fport,
With empty game-bags and dejected look,
He found but little reafon to report
His ftrange device—for not a hare he took!
y                            He who in Council fits, or would attain
tj> •                                Knowledge of aught, or fee his plans fucceed,
Of all things firft his tongue ftiould well reftrain,
<r                                 Nor fpeak a word beyond the matter's need :
For he who lets his tongue his wits outrun,
Q                                                                                             &                                         '
Or                                And blabs his bufinefs into all men's ears,
q_                            Will find it fpoil'd e'er yet it hath begun,
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                                And reap no other harveft than their jeers.
In Love affairs as in State Government,
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                                The Lover and the Prince fucceeds the beft,
0                            Who Silence keeps upon his mind's intent,
}Jj                                 Nor e'en permits his purpofe to be guefs'd.
q                            Nothing by chatter ever yet was done,
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                                Conqueft achiev'd, nor battle ever won ;
^                            But who with " ftill tongue" doth his aim purfue,
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                                Wins beft as Lover, and as Warrior too.
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IlaXai to (Tiyay fupfiaicov /3A.a'/3r/c £XW-—^ESCHYL. Agam.
Id est,
Silere pridem remedium damnis puto.
Eximia est Virtus, praestare silentia rebus :
At contra gravis est culpa, tacenda loqui.—Ovid, 2 Art.
Weise Leut' haben ihren Mund em Herzen.
Alle vogels schouwen d'openbare netten.
Chi dice tutto quel ch'egli sa, fa tutto quel ch'egli pub, e mangia cib ch'egli ha;
non gli resta niente.
Sfo^^ AND MEN BY THEIR TONGUES. ~s*s-®^
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GOSSIPS AND TALEBEARERS SET ON FIRE
Sag' nicht Alles das Du weist,
Glaub' nicht Alles das Du horest,
Thue nicht Alles das Du kannst.
Wisse nicht Alles das Du lisest.
Multorum conscii pauca loquuntur.
In ira nihil decentius quam cum adest silentium.—Plutarch, de Cohib. Iri.
Vestigatoribus et venatoribus diurni nocturnique labores essent irriti, si non
silentio priusquam venabulis et impetu, feras interciperent.
Carol. Paschal. Virt. et Vit cap. 32.
[j-                                             Qui veut prendre oiseau, ne faut l'effaroucher.
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Silence is the Sanctuary of Prudence.
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^           A RESOLVE loudly expressed was never yet much esteemed. He who declares his
0                   intentions, exposes himself to censure, and if he does not succeed he is doubly
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                 A man is always in time to speak, but not to refrain from speaking. We should
Q         speak as we make a Will j the fewer the words the less ground for law-suits. We
^         should accustom ourselves thereto in matters of little moment, so that we may not fail
to do so in affairs of importance. Whosoever is prompt to speak, is always upon the
®
         point of being conquered and convinced.
0.                 A heart without a secret is an open letter. Where there is depth, the secrets lie
0         deep : for there must be great space, and a great vacuum, which will hold all that is
0         thrown into it. Reserve derives from the great controul a man has over himself, and
0         that is a real triumph. We pay tribute to all to whom we disclose our affairs. The
security of Prudence consists in interior moderation. The things we would do should
be kept to ourselves, and those which may be told may not be good to do.*
We should hear and see, but thereby be silent.—Gracian's Maxims.
S'il y a beaucoup d'art a parler, il n'y en a pas moins a se taire.
La Rochefoucauld.
* It was said of Pope Alexander VI. and of his Son the Due de Valentinois, that the father
never did what he said, and the son never said what he did.
S*S*-2?<&- ALL THE HOUSES THEY ENTER. ■^s:^^S>
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SAY NOT ALL. THOU KNOWEST.
#jr HE carefull Matrone in her cell below,
Let fall a groat, yet where fhe did not know:
Forthwith fhe tinnes a Light, then with her broome
She neatly fweepes the corners of the roome :
Thus from the duft and darkenefTe when fhe finds it,
More than the Phrygian Midas wealth fhe mindes it.
Our foule a divine fparke fince that it fell
Into Cimmerian darkenefTe of this cell,
The foules true knowledge doth appeare no more
Which goeth beyond Pygmalions richeft ftore.
Then muft we light Cleanthes Lamp and find
By ftudy, the loft -treafure of our mind.
Farlie's Emblems.
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BELIEVE NOT ALL THOU HEAREST.
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LITTLE CHIPS KINDLE A LARGE FIRE
Culex fodit oculum Leon is.
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THE GNAT STINGS THE EYES OF THE LION.
FRIENDS! come here and lift to me!
Something ftrange I would relate;
Should it prove of ufe to thee,
That will me well compenfate.
Though fo ftrong the Lion be,
Though fo full of Majefty,
LITTLE BROOKS MAKE GREAT RIVERS.
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LITTLE BODIES HAVE GREAT SOULS.
Though his eyes fo fiercely gleam
And fo terrible he feem;
That no man, whoe'er he be,
Can unmov'd his anger fee;
Yet the gnat, though he's fo fmall,
And fo flight of limb withal,
Is fo wond'rous brave and keen,
That the Lion oft is feen
Fill'd with dread as foon as he
Gnats perceives but two or three!
ju                                         Yet the gnat doth not attack.
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Slyly, or behind his back;
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Scorning all advantage low,
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                                        When the Lion comes in fight,
Sounds his challenge to the fight;
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                                        And forthwith bids him prepare
All his fierceft wrath to bear.
Nor doth he affault his foe
0                                        Where the leaft defence can fhow;
5                                        Though fo fmall, yet keenly bold,
0)                                         Like a Paladin of old,
t                                        He the Lion fcorns t' affail,
q                                        On the flank or on the tail.
^                                        Front to front in open fight,
,                                        Heedlefs of the Lion's might,
-j                                        Headlong at his face he flies,
^                                        And attacks his rage-lit eyes.
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Where the Lion befr. can fee
All his foe's hoftility,
There the gnat, his rage defpite,
Rufhing 'mid their flaming light,
Deeply flings the fount of fight;
Till" half blind and mad with pain,
The Lion flees acrofs the plain.
Let Arrogance by this be taught,
That whatfoe'er its Strength and Size,
S<^ LITTLE MISCHIEF, TOO MUCH. <y&&
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SMALL GAINS BRING GREAT WEALTH.
There's nothing with more danger fraught
Than what is little, to defpife;
There's neither man nor brute fo great
But, like the Lion pictur'd here,
May learn to rue the wrath and hate
Of that which feem'd too fmall to fear.
T NIMICUM quamvis humilem docti est metuere
A cane non magno saspe tenetur aper.—Ovid. Art.
Leo etiam minimarum avium fit pabulum.—Curtius.
0 i                                              Un petit homme abat bien grand' chesne.
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Een kleyn man, met een kleyn geweer,
Velt wel een grooten boom ter neer.
Inest et formicse sua bilis.
Habet et musca splenem.
Et pueri nasum rhinocerotis habent.—Martial, i. Ep. 4.
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A mouse in tyme maye bite in two a cable.— Old English Proverb.
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3                                 Tread a worm on the tayle, and it wil turne againe.—Ibid.
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                                           'Twas the mouse that set the Lion free.—Ibid.
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Wen der feind ist wie ein omeiss,
(0                                                      So halt ihn doch fur ein elephant.
£                                           Un petit moucheron pique bien un grand cheval.
pr                                                      Een Kat siet wel op ein Koning.
A cat maye looke at a Kinge.—Old English Proverb.
Il n'y a si grand, ni si sage,
Qui de petit n'ait bien dommage.
Il est bien petit qui ne peut nuire.
Gesellen, wilt uw wel beraden,
Hy is wel klein die niet kan schaden.
Il n'est pas sage qui n'a peur d'un fol.
Es ist nicht an der grosse gelegen,
Sonst erlieff eine kuh einen hasen.
Grande Ville rien dedans ;
Petite chose nuist souvent.
Anche la moscha ha la sua collera.
SMALL. RAIN LAYS A GREAT WIND.
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DON'T DIVIDE THE SPOIL BEFORE THE VICTORY IS WON.
PI NE candle difpels the darkeneffe of the night,
And many doe refemble Phcebus light:
One Sunne illight'ns the round globe every where,
What way th' horizon bounds the hemifphere :
If you ten thoufand thoufand Sunnes mould fee
At once, O what a daylight would that be!
When Chrift amidft the clouds our doome mall plead,
When Earth and Sea mail render up their dead,
Saints more then ftarres at once mail mount on hye,
As glorious Sunnes, to meete Chrift in the Ikye.
That day fhall drive away the darkenelTe fo,
That after that, no day mail darkenelTe know.
Farlie's Emblems.
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' LITTLE BIRDS MAY PICK A DEAD LION.
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TRY YOUR FRIEND ERE YOU TRUST HIM.
Amis sont comme le Melon; De dix souvent fas un de bon.
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LIKE MELONS, FRIENDS ARE TO BE FOUND IN PLENTY,
OF WHICH NOT EVEN ONE IS GOOD IN TWENTY.
i N choofing Friends, it's requifite to ufe
JJL The felf-fame care as when we Melons choofe
No one in hafte a Melon ever buys,
Nor makes his choice till three or four he tries ;
And oft indeed when purchafing this fruit,
Before the buyer can find one to fuit,
ICE BEFORE YOU VENTURE ON IT.
TRY THE
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TRUST NOT A NEW FRIEND,
He's e'en obliged t' examine half a fcore,
And p'rhaps not find one when his fearch is o'er.
Be cautious how you choofe a friend;
For Friendfhips that are lightly made,
Have feldom any other end
Than grief to fee one's truft betray'd!
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"DEPROEF uw vrient,
Beproef uw sweert,
Dat is uw groote schatten weert.
Who from mishap himself would guard,
Must prove his Friend as he'd prove his sword.
Les amis sont comme le melon,
II faut essayer plusieurs, pour rencontrer un bon.
Le compagnon ou 1'ami qui se tourne a inimitie, n'est-il pas une tristesse qui
demeure jusque a. la mort?—Syrach. xxxvii. 2.
Esprouve tes amis selon ton pouvoir.—Ibid. ix. 21.
Si tu acquiers un ami, acquiers-le en l'esprouvant et, ne te fie point en luy
legerement.—Ibid. vi. 7.
Kpivei tpiXovQ b tempos, <is xpvrjov to irvp.—MENANDER.
Id est,
Aurum probatur igne, amicus tempore.
As Fire, of Gold is e'er the surest test,
So Time doth prove the worth of Friendship best.
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There is nothing better or more advantageous to mankind than prudent Diffidence;
'tis the guard and preservation of our lives and fortunes, our own security obliges us
to it; without it there would be no caution, without which no safety.....For
who can secure himself of Man's heart, hid in the privatest corner of the breast,
whose secrets the tongue dissembles, the eyes and all the motions of the body
contradict 1—Astry's Saavedra Faxardo.
The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked: Who can
know it 1-Jeremiah xvii. 9.
S^ NOR AN OLD ENEMY. -^S
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TRUST NOT STILL. WATER,
False Judgment of the Many.
----------Fortune now
To my heart's hope!—gold, silver and base lead.
"Who chooseth me, must give and hazard all he hath."
You shall look fairer, ere I give or hazard.
What says the golden chest 1 ha ! let me see:—
"Who chooseth me, shall gain what many men desire."
What many men desire!—That many may be meant
Of the fool multitude, that choose by Show,
Not learning more than the fond eye doth teach :
Which pries not to the interior, but, like the martlet,
Builds in the weather on the outward wall,
Even in the force and road of casualty.
I will not choose what many men desire,
Because I will not jump with common spirits,
And rank me with the barbarous multitudes.
Shakespeare, Merchant of Venice.
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Be not in haste to make new friends, nor to abandon those thou hast.—Solon.
The friendship of one wise man is better than that of a host of fools.—Democritus.
Contract no friendships with persons of less worth than yourself; you will derive
more harm than benefit from them.—Confucius.
If you desire to know a man's sentiments towards you, consult him upon something
which interests you; his reply will reveal to you his whole heart, and whether he is
your friend or your enemy.—Plato.
Take not your friends at hazard; attach yourself only to men worthy of your
friendship.—Isocrates.
The friendship of the wicked has no duration ; but Time worketh no change in
the friendship of the good.—Ibid.
Amicum ita habeas, posse ut fieri hunc inimicum scias.—Laberius.
Be on such terms with your friend as if you knew that he may one day become
your enemy.
It is better to untie, than to break a friendship.—Cato.
Our friends sometimes exhibit vices which have long been concealed. The best
thing then to be done is to abate your intercourse gradually. You should unstitch, but
not tear.—Cicero.
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S^NOR A SILENT MAN.'S^
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TRUST MAKES WAY FOR TREACHERY. - .            ..
C?-:-i*iy-"'.....
fN fecret filence of the night what's done
Is truft to me, concealed from the Sunne,
Phcebus did Mars and Venus' love betray,
And turning backe did greater crimes bewray:
What I doe fee when witnefTe is afleepe,
That like Harpocrates I clofely keepe.
Let mortals learne to rule their tongue by me,
What lawfull fecret they doe heare or fee.
Farlie's Emblems.
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TRUST NOT A GREAT WEIGHT TO A SLENDER THREAD.
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EVERY ONE FOR HIMSELF AND GOD FOR US ALL.
Ogni Gallo ruspa a se.
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EVERY COCK SCRATCHES TOWARDS HIMSELF.
ENTLE Reader, would you fee—
Would you fomewhat wini to know
Life, depicted truthfully,
And how things in this World go ?
Simple though this Emblem be,
In thefe bufy Fowls you'll find,
Symbolifed moft faithfully,
Type moft true of Human Kind.
S<&- EVERY MAN FOR HIMSEL', QUO' THE MARTIN. «§>©
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S^SELF DO, SELF HAVE. -^
Well obferve how ev'ry one.
Picking, fcratching here and there,
Looks to felf, and felf alone,
Recklefs how his neighbours fare.
Not a bird among them all
Shews another bird a grain,
Tells him where he faw one fall,
Nor affifts, that he may gain :
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Each, on his fole profit bent,
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Lofe their chance, or mifs the place!
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Have been found 'mong Young and Old,
Ever fince the World began.
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Hence, young friends, if you would get
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Keep a fharp look-out, nor let
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T3ROXIMUS sum egomet mihi.—Terent. And. iv. i.
Wie brengt'er water tot sijn buer-mans huys, als sijn eygen huys brant %
Elck wil de boter op sijn koeck hebben.
Elck voor hem selven, en Godt voor ons alien.
Chacun tire 1'eau a. son moulin.
Chacun estudie pour soy.
Chacun tire a son profit.
Quisque suas casse.
A la Cour du Roy
Chacun pour soy.
AIDE TOI, DIEU T'AIDERAS.
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A' WA'D HAE A'.
Es denckt ein yeder in seinen Sack.
Ogxi grillo grilla a. se.
Ognun tira Facqua al suo mulino.
Tutti vogano alia galiota.
Tirano a se.
Ogniuno caccia con la rete al suo fratello.
Les vertus se perdent dans l'interet comme les fleuves se perdent dans la mer.
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A KING of England being at table in the house of one of his Courtiers, and finding
the dwelling spacious and full of costly furniture and plate, although the owner
had been in but very narrow circumstances previous to his appointment to the office
he then held, the King became very desirous to learn from him how he amassed so
much valuable property in so short a period: assuring him at the same time that no
4;          mischief should come to him if he told the truth. Whereupon the Courtier, thus
pressed, said incontinently, that he had always been a man of exceeding diligence
          and industry : that he had constantly made it a rule to rise early in the morning, and
0          always looked after his own concerns first; having completed which, he then attended
to the King's business. Upon this the King made answer that he should have just
w          done the very reverse; that he should have first minded the King's business, and then
0          his own. The Courtier forthwith assured the King that he had thereby never done
"■ j the least prejudice to his Majesty's affairs ; for that he had only appropriated the time
>"          passed by others in sleep to the care of his own personal concerns ; having effected
qj          which, he still got to the duties of his Office before those who, having indulged in long
J*.          sleep, had got to theirs, and had neglected their own affairs.
Coluge, non omni tempore messis erit.
Vergader graen in uwe schuren,
De Oegst en sal niet eeuwigh dueren.
Es ist alle tage Jagen-tag,
Aber nit alle tage fange-tag.
Provision faite en saison,
Fait de bien a la maison.
SELF'S THE MAN.
233
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EVERY ONE
RAKES THE FIRE UNDER HIS OWN POT.
HILST theeves doe digge at middle of the night,
Working the works of darkenefle, not of Light;
No fooner through the window they me fpy
But they affrighted turne their backes and fly.
This Light ill-doers no wayes can abide,
Simply revealing, what they falfely hide.
There was a time when all in darkenefle lay,
When mortals had a naturall night, no day ;
Then Satan that arch-theefe did range abroad,
Seeking in hearts and houfes his aboad ;
But fince that Chrifts bright Starre had fhewne his Light,
Great Pan is dead, the Devill is put to flight.
Farlie's Emblems.
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SHEW THE BEST SIDE TO LONDON.
Schoon voor-doen is half verkocht.
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WELL SET OFF IS HALF SOLD.
1W/ HO would learn the art of wooing,
W         And enfure the moft fuccefs :
Or acquire the art of doing
Winning things with moft addrefs ;
Need not learned volumes open,
Writers old, in foreign fpeech,
But may fee it plainly fpoken
In the lelTon I now teach.
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WELL DONE OUTLIVES DEATH.
In your manner unpretentious,
Yet, be diligent to (how,
Without being too fenti ntious,
All the pleasing things you know.
While you ftrive to pleafe and ferve all
To attain the end in view,
Well examine, and obferve all
Without feeming fo to do.
If in them you faults difcover,
Shew not you thofe faults perceive ;
But if difficult to fmother,
That they're flight, let them believe.
By this rule abide in all things,
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<j;                                     Nothing more fuccefs in life brings
Than to hide your neighbour's fore.
Or in wooing, or when married,
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0                                    Seldom Wedded Life mifcarried
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^                                        Where both fides were fomewhat blind.
\U                                     Shew your brighter fide to all men,
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And fliew them that you fee theirs,
Friends more readily you'll find then
To advance your own affairs.
Who moft tafte and judgment ufes
To difplay his wares to view,
Beft the Buyers eye feduces,
And moft quickly fells them too.
T qvacunque potes dote placere, place.—Ovid.
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-Occule mendas,
Quaque potes, vitium corporis abde tui.—Idem.
WEEL IS THAT WEEL DOES.
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A GOOD BEGINNING
Multa viros nescire decet. Pars maxima rerum
Offendit, si non interiora tegas.
Cui gravis oris odor, nunquam jejuna loquatur :
Et semper spacio distet ab ore viri.
Si niger, aut ingens, aut non sit inordine natus
Deus tibi, ridendo maxima damna feres.—Ovib.
Ante omnia tamen.
"DRIMA sit in nobis morum tutela, puellse:
Ingenio fades conciliante placet.
Brengt alles by, o frissche Jeught,
Daer ghy uw lief door maken meugt.
Mettre en evidence et faire valoir les bonnes parties.
Scipio and other great men of antient and later times excelled in this useful art;
one which Ovid especially recommends to the attention of young persons as a
fundamental rule of conduct.
C'est la raison pourquoy les gens d'Estat conseillent aux Princes de monstrer leurs
bonnes parties et de dissimuler leurs imperfections; imitant le bon Architecte, qui loge
(comme ils disent) ses plus beaux materiaux au frontispice de son bastiment.
Jean Marnix aux Rers. Polit. Res. 5.
Aensien doet Vryen.
Het oogh is leydtsman van de min,
En vreught voor eerst de lusten in.
Wat het ooge niet en siet,
Dat begeert het herte niet.
Ex aspectu nascitur amor.
Aseyta un cepo
Parecera mancebo.
Accoustre un tronq, il semblera un jeune adolescent.
------Oculi sunt in amore duces.—Propert. 2. El. 12.
Ce qui plaist
Est a demy faict.
Was das aug nicht siht,
Beschwehrt das hertz nit.
'Ek tov eiaopijv yap yivvrai avdpwirotg epav.
Id est,
Ex intuendo nascitur hominibus amor.
Ut vidi, ut perii!—Virgil.
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MAKES A GOOD ENDING.
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POLICY GOES BEYOND STRENGTH.
£| T lengthe my Store of Light hath reach'd its ende,
J Nor have I wherewithal more light to lende;
Greafe fpente, wick burned and fmoake all palled away,
Of Light berefte, what bootes it here to ftay ?
Yet while I am permitted to remaine,
It is to fhewe that I may ferve againe :
In patient Hope I therefore byde my time,
Until in me frefhe Light the Fates do trim me ;
And if the greafe and wick be equale goode
To holde fuch Light, I reft of willinge moode.
For while to ferve, the means to us is given;
Who willinge ferve, fhall have their faults forgiven.
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PERSEVERANCE ACHIEVES SUCCESS.
Geen Boom en valt ten eersten Slag.
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ONE STROKE FELLS NOT AN OAK.
jjPH ! friend, why then fo fad, I pray?—
&4 Thy woeful mien and looks betray
Some deep distrefs, fome poignant grief,
To which I fain would bring relief.
Methinks fome crofs-grain'd, haughty maid
Hath thine affe<5Hon ill repaid,
FAINT HEART NEVER WON FAIR LADY.
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NINETEEN NAY-SAYS O' A MAIDEN
Treated thy fuit with cold difdain,
And bade thee from all hope refrain ?—
Yes, yes! Young man, I fee—I know
'Tis that which thus dejects thee fo;
But never be like this caft down!
Full many other men have known
A like repulfe, when firft they ftrove
To win a wav'ring woman's love.
Come, come ! aroufe thee from this mood;
It ill befits thee thus to brood,
And fret, and fume fo woebegone
(!)                                  For lofs of what may yet be won !
?                                Caft but thine eye upon this tree,
And therefrom thou fhalt quickly be
0                                Inftrucled in the art to gain,
^                                The fair one who hath caufed thy pain.
(!)
This tree, which now fo lowly lies,
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Its lofty crown; and though in fize,
Z                                And girth, and grain fo fair and found,
Its pride is proftrate on the ground !
Z                                Thou feem'ft to wonder how 'twas done;
0                                How that alone the arm of one
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0                                Lift then to me, nor longer grieve:
>                                For as that oak was fell'd, fo thou
Thine haughty fair one's heart may'st bow.
Arm'd with an axe of trenchant fteel,
I faw yon fturdy Woodman deal,
In long repeat, ftroke after ftroke
Againft this maflive heart of oak;
Till with the oft repeated blow
He brought the foreft monarch low.
Learn thou from this, young man, no lefs,
How truthful from all time was held
The pithy Maxim for Succefs :
" At the firft ftroke no tree is fell'd."
S<&-2F*S* ARE HA'F A GRAUT. 'S^S-^sg;
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HE WHO WOULD REST, MUST WORK.
Would'ft thou, my friend, as Lover fo fucceed,
Do thou the like, nor one repulfe bemoan,
Succefs, of Perfeverance is the meed;
" The conftant drop will wear the hardeft ftone.:
Non uno ictu dejicitur quercus.
Omnia conando docilis solertia vincit.
Mit viel Streichen wird der Stockfisch lind.
Veel slagen maken den Stock-vis murw.
i.                                             TiSv ■KOVtov irioXovai fifiiv irdvra rdydff ol dsoi.—EPICT.
Dn suas labore dotes esse venales volunt.
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                                                                      Nul bien sans peine.
I_                                                            Omnia diligentise subjiciuntur.
Diligence passe Science.
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£                                                 By daring to attempt them : sloth and folly
Shiver and shrink at sight of toil and hazard,
(!)                                                                                                                        .
|_ !                                               And make th' impossibility they fear.—Rowe.
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P-erJeverance achieves Succefs.
TV /TANY are the sayings of the Wise,
In ancient and in modern books enroll'd,
Extolling Patience as the truest fortitude ;
And to the bearing well of all calamities,
All chances incident to Man's frail life,
Consolatories writ
With studied argument, and much persuasion fraught,
Lenient of grief and anxious thought;
But with th' afflicted, in his pangs, their sound
Little prevails, or rather seems a tune
Harsh, and of dissonant mood from his complaint;
Unless he feel within
Some source of consolation from above,
Secret refreshings, that repair his strength,
And fainting spirits uphold.—Milton.
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FIRST DESERVE, AND THEN DESIRE.
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S*&<gx&j2*S*s<&. OUR THEME RELATES TO MAN. ■^*£*$>gy^g>^x&>
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BEING ADMONISHED LET US FOLLOW BETTER THINGS.