Early English Meals and Manners - LightNovelsOnl.com
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And malyce thee moue to reuenge thy cause, 784 Dread euer G.o.d, and daunger of the lawes.
[Sidenote: Take no revenge, but forgive.]
Do not reuenge, though in thy power it be, 788 Forgeue the offender being thine enemie.
He is perfectely pacient, we may repute plaine, 792
[Sidenote: Plato.]
[That] From wrath and furye himselfe can refrayne.
[Sidenote: Envy no one.]
[Sidenote: [sign. C. v.]]
Disdayne nor enuie The state of thy brother, 796
[Sidenote: Seneca.]
In worde nor dede not hurtyng one an other.
[Sidenote: An ill body breeds debate.]
Debate and disceate, contencion and enuie, 800 Are the chiefe frutes of an euyll bodie.
[Sidenote: Salomon.]
And Salomon saithe "The harte full of enuie, 804 Of him selfe hath no pleasure nor commoditie."
[Sidenote: _The Fruits of Charity, &c._]
-- The fruites of charitie, loue, and pacience.
Cap. x.
[Sidenote: Charity seeketh not her own, but bears patiently.]
++Charitie seketh not that to her doth belonge, 808 But paciently a-bydinge, sustainynge rather wronge;
[Sidenote: Charity seeketh not her own, but bears patiently.]
Not enuiynge, but bearinge with loue and pacience,-- 812
[Sidenote: [sign. C. v.b.]]
So n.o.ble is her nature,-- forgeuing all ofence.
[Sidenote: Love incites to Mercy.]
And loue doth moue the mynde to mercie, 816 But malice againe doth worke the contrarie.
whiche in the wicked wyll euer beare stroke, 820
[Sidenote: Patience teaches forbearance.]
Pacience thee teacheth therof to beare the yoke.
where pacience and loue to-gether do dwell 824 All hate and debate, with malice, they expell.
[Sidenote: Pithagoras.]
Loue constant and faithfull, Pithagoras doth call 828 To be a vertue most princ.i.p.all.
[Sidenote: Plato.]
Plato doth speake almoste in effecte 832 'where loue is not, no vertue is perfecte.'
[Sidenote: [sign. C. vi.]]
[Sidenote: Pray G.o.d to give thee Charity and Patience, to lead thee to Virtue's School, and thence to Eternal Bliss.]
Desire then G.o.d to a.s.siste thee with his grace 836 Charitie to vse and pacience to imbrace; These three folowinge will thee instructe, 840 That to vertues schoole they wyll thee conducte, And from vertues schoole to eternall blisse 844 where incessaunt ioie continually is.
[Headnote: AGAINST SWEARING.]
[Sidenote: _Against Swearing._]
-- A-gainge (_so_) the horrible vice of swearynge.
Cap. xi.
[Sidenote: Take not G.o.d's name in vain, or He will plague thee.]
++In vaine take not the name of G.o.d; 848 Swere not at all for feare of his rod.
The house with plagues he threteneth to visit 852
[Sidenote: [sign. C. vi.b.]]
where othes are vsed: they shall not escape it.
Iuste are his iudgementes, and true is his worde, 856 And sharper then is a two edged sworde;
[Sidenote: Beware of His wrath, and live well in thy vocation.]
wherfore beware thou his heauy indignacion, 860 And learne to lyue well in thy vocacion wherin that G.o.d shall thee set or call; 864 Rysinge againe-- if it fortune to fall-- By prayer and repentance, whiche is the onely waie. 868 Christ wolde not the death of a sinner, I saye, But rather he turne From his wickednesse, 872 And so to lyue in vertue and goodnesse.
[Sidenote: [sign. C. vii.]]
[Sidenote: What is the good of swearing?]
what better art thou for this thy swearyng 876 Blasfamouslye, the name of G.o.d tearyng?