Maxims. A RIGHT INDIFFERENCE. Reason should have ability To hold these worldly things in such proportion, Sir Philip Sydney. MAN'S PREROGATIVE. Books are part of man's prerogative, In formal ink they thought and voices hold, THE ARMOUR WORN BY PATIENCE. Patience doth bear a never pierced shield, Whose brightness hath enforc'd more monsters yield, Than that of ugly Gorgon's head was made. Sylvester. OUR SUNSET. No man before his end is truly blest. Decker. THE EFFECT OF CULTIVATION. Use makes things nothing huge, and huge things nothing. Chapman. THE BALANCE OF DIVINE ATTRIBUTES. God's mercy gently weighs his justice down. Achelly. BALM. God hath made a salve for every sore, If men would learn the same for to apply. Sir John Harrington. THE INALIENABLE KINGDOM. No banishment can be to him assign'd, Drayton. COURAGE LIGHTENS ILL. Good heart in ill, doth th' evil much amend. Spenser. SOME FREEDOM TURNED TO BANISHMENT. To roam Giddily, and be everywhere but at home, Donne. THE UNSOUGHT REMEDY. Ofttimes we see that sorrows of the mind Spenser. FAITH. Let soberness be still thy wisdom's end, Sylvester. THE FILM OF BEAUTY. All men do err, because that men they be, Peele. HEAVEN. Heaven is not given for our good works here; Herrick GOOD INCLINATIONS. God never accepts a good inclination instead of a good action, where that action may be done; nay, so much the contrary, that if a good inclination be not seconded by a good action, the want of that action is thereby made so much the more criminal and inexcusable. A good inclination is but the first rude draught of virtue; but the finishing strokes are from the will: which, if well disposed, will by degrees perfect; if ill disposed, will, by the superinduction of ill habits, quickly deface it. South. THE WILL THE CAUSE OF WO. When man is punish'd, he is plagued still, A COMPARISON. Our life is but a step in dusty way. Herrick. Sir Philip Sydney. THE CAR OF FAITH. Repentance, hope, and soft humility, Sylvester. Is like a sacred book that's never read, I' himself he lives, and to all else seems dead: Than of a threadbare saint in wisdom's school. Decker. * REVOLUTIONS. * The ever-changing course of things Run a perpetual circle, ever turning. Change lives not long, time fainteth, and time mourns: Solace and sorrow have their certain turns. A JACOB'S LADDER. Humility, to heaven, the step, the stair MISCHIEVOUS IGNORANCE. Daniel. Drayton. We, ignorant of ourselves, Beg often our own harms, which the wise powers Deny us for our good; some find profit By losing of our prayers. Shakspere. |