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bies insana_, love is madness, a hell, an incurable disease; _inpotentem et insanam libidinem_ [741]Seneca calls it, an impotent and raging lust. I shall dilate this subject apart; in the meantime let lovers sigh out the rest. [742]Nevisanus the lawyer holds it for an axiom, "most women are fools," [743]_consilium foeminis invalidum_; Seneca, men, be they young or old; who doubts it, youth is mad as Elius in Tully, _Stulti adolescentuli_, old age little better, _deleri senes_, &c. Theophrastes, in the 107th year of his age, [744]said he then began to be to wise, _tum sapere coepit_, and therefore lamented his departure. If wisdom come so late, where shall we find a wise man? Our old ones dote at threescore-and-ten. I would cite more proofs, and a better author, but for the present, let one fool point at another. [745]Nevisanus hath as hard an opinion of [746]rich men, "wealth and wisdom cannot dwell together," _stultitiam patiuntur opes_, [747]and they do commonly [748]_infatuare cor hominis_, besot men; and as we see it, "fools have fortune:" [749]_Sapientia non invenitur in terra suaviter viventium_. For beside a natural contempt of learning, which accompanies such kind of men, innate idleness (for they will take no pains), and which [750]Aristotle observes, _ubi mens plurima, ibi minima fortuna, ubi plurima fortuna, ibi mens perexigua_, great wealth and little wit go commonly together: they have as much brains some of them in their heads as in their heels; besides this inbred neglect of liberal sciences, and all arts, which should _excolere mentem_, polish the mind, they have most part some gullish humour or other, by which they are led; one is an Epicure, an Atheist, a second a gamester, a third a whoremaster (fit subjects all for a satirist to work upon); [751] "Hic nuptarum insanit amoribus, hic puerorum." "One burns to madness for the wedded dame; Unnatural lusts another's heart inflame." [752]one is mad of hawking, hunting, cocking; another of carousing, horse-riding, spending; a fourth of building, fighting, &c., _Insanit veteres statuas Damasippus emendo_, Damasippus hath an humour of his own, to be talked of: [753]Heliodorus the Carthaginian another. In a word, as Scaliger concludes of them all, they are _Statuae erectae stultitiae_, the very statutes or pillars of folly. Choose out of all stories him that hath been most admired, you shall still find, _multa ad laudem, multa ad vitupera
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