5365. Eclog. 1. “No rest, no business
pleased my lovesick breast, my
faculties became
dormant, my mind torpid, and I lost my taste for
poetry and song.”
5366. Edyl. 14.
5367. Mant. Eclog.
5368. Ter. Eunuch.
5369. Ov. Met. de Polyphemo: uritur
oblitus pecorum, antrorumque suorum;
jamque tibi formae,
&c.
5370. Qui quaeso? Amo.
5371. Ter. Eunuch.
5372. Qui olim cogitabat quae vellet, et pulcherrimis
philosophiae
praeceptis operam
insumpsit, qui universi circuitiones coelique
naturam, &c.
Hanc unam intendit operam, de sola cogitat, noctes
et
dies se componit
ad hanc, et ad acerbam servitutem redactus animus,
&c.
5373. Pars epitaphii ejus.
5374. Epist. prima.
5375. Boethius l. 3 Met. ult.
5376. Epist. lib. 6. Valeat pudor, valeat honestas, valeat honor.
5377. Theodor. prodromus, lib. 3. Amor Mystili
genibus ovolutis, ubertemque
lachrimas, &c.
Nihil ex tota praeda praeter Rhodanthem virginem
accipiam.
5378. Lib. 2. Certe vix credam, et bona
fide fateare Aratine, te no amasse
adeo vehementer;
si enim vere amasses, nihil prius aut potius
optasses, quam
amatae mulieri placere. Ea enim amoris lex est
idem
velle et nolle.
5379. Stroza, sil. Epig.
5380. Quippe haec omnia ex atra bile et amore proveniunt. Jason Pratensis.
5381. Immense amor ipse stultitia est. Carda, lib. 1. de sapientia.
5382. Mantuan. “Whoever is in love
is in slavery, he follows his sweetheart
as a captive his
captor, and wears a yoke on his sumbissibe neck.”
5383. Virg. Aen. 4. “She began
to speak but stopped in the middle of her
discourse.”
5384. Seneca, Hippol. “What reason requires, raging love forbids.”
5385. Met. 10.
5386. Buchanan. “Oh fraud, and love,
and distraction of mind, whither have
you led me?”
5387. An immodest woman is like a bear.
5388. Feram induit cum rosas comedat, idem ad se redeat.
5389. Alciatus de upupa Embl. Animal immundum
upupa stercora amans; ave hac
nihil foedius,
nihil libidinosius. Sabin in Ovid. Met.
5390. is like a false glass, which represents everything fairer than it is.
5391. Hor. ser. lib. sat. l. 3. “These
very things please him, as the wen
of Agna did Balbinus.”
5392. The daughter and heir of Carolus Pugnax.
5393. Seneca in Octavia. “Her beauty
excels the Tyndarian Helen’s, which
caused such dreadful
wars.”
5394. Loecheus.
5395. Mantuan, Egl 1.
5396. Angerianus.
5397. Faerie Queene, Cant. lyr. 4.
5398. Epist. 12. Quis unquam formas vidit
orientis, quis occidentis,
veniant undique
omnes, et dicant veraces an tam insignem viderint
formam.


