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A03411 The arraignement of the vvhole creature, at the barre of religion, reason, and experience Occasioned vpon an inditement preferred by the soule of man against the prodigals vanity and vaine prodigality. Explained, applyed, and tryed in the historie and misterie of that parable. From whence is drawne this doome orthodoxicall, and iudgement divine. That no earthly vanity can satisfie mans heavenly soule. ... Jerome, Stephen, fl. 1604-1650.; Hobson, Robert.; Henderson, Robert, 17th cent.; Harris, Robert, 1581-1658.; Droeshout, Martin, b. 1601, engraver. 1632 (1632) STC 13538.5; ESTC S103944 228,566 364

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custome once too if we beleeve our Superstitious Irish to try their Wives at that great Stone which may be seene as you ride to Waterford called St Loures d Camden mentioneth it in his Britannia Stone now cleft a sunder since it lost his Vertue out of which the Divell if ought as at Delphos once gave answer 11. Others have tryed the honesties both of Wives and Maides at other places as Feronias e Halicarn lib. 3. Temple Memnons Statue Pans f Tabitus h. ● 6 Cave were used to that purpose as also Dianaes g ●amathius ● 8 W●ll Augustine relates h De Civit. Dei l. 10. c. 16. some so tryed all by the delusion of the Divell sayth i De spectris P●rt 1. p. 19 Lavater if any effect were produced 12. Others causing them to goe over hot coales for their Tryall as Nicephorus of Cuneganda the wife of Henry Bavarus Emperour who was put to this Tryall Sigonius of k An. 887. Richarda Wife to CHARLES the third and PIVS the l Descriptione Europa c. 46. second and others 13. Other iealous Husbands strangely tyranizing over them whom they suspected of which there be innumerable examples in Greece Spaine Italy Turky Affricke Asia and in all the hot Countries where hotspurre Zelotipists have resided 14. Some raving so farre in this mad frenzie of iealousie chiefly Women in whom according to m Poe● l. 3. Scaliger and n In his Essayes Montaigne by reason of the weaknesse of their Sexe this Passion or perturbation most raignes that they have lost their health beene distempered in their bodies and braines as Physitians in some o Skenkius Observ l. 4. c. de vter exemplifie 15. Others as Tygers and inraged Lyonesses arm'd with fury and frenzie setting upon those whom they have suspected to have wrong'd them in their Mates as a Merchant killing his Wife in his humour q Apud Fulgosum et Poggium afterwards precipitating himselfe a Doctor of the Law cutting off his mans nose chiefly Women that like all p K. James his Observation on the 5. Petition of the Lords Prayer Cowards are most cruell where they prevaile have exceeded That Queene IOAN of Spaine that tyrannized over a poore Wench with whom shee suspected her Husband cutting off her haire and dragging her about yea our English Queene Elianor as a second Medea poysoning and tyranizing over that faire r In t● strit Chronicis Rosamond her husbands Paramour but especially the Wife of great Zerxes as a Megera or infernall Fury falling upon the Wife of Masista cutting off her Paps eares lips tongue throwing them to the Dogs fleaing off her skin slitting besides the Nose of her Daughter ſ Heroditus l. 9. in Calliope de Amestri Artaynta are sufficient proofes how milde and moderate jealous Women be where they may revenge 16 Lastly to Epitomize many Histories in one when I read the Tragicall examples recollected in this t By Democritus Junio● part 3. Memb. 3. kinde both new and old of Alexander u Tullius Of. l. 2. sic Ovid. in Ibem inque tuo Thalamo jugaleris more Pheraei Phereus of Anthonius * Lucilla● vxorem veneno petijt Volaeter Verus of Demetrius the sonne of Antigonus of Nicanor Pherus of Egypt Toreus Atrens Thiestes * Virg Aen●id l. 11. Juvenal S●tyra 6. Seneca in Agamemnone Agamemnon with many moe chiefly Hercules poysoned by * Officina Text. lib. 2. pag. 204. Dianira Cilpericus made away by Ferdigund his Wife the French y Pau●us Aemilius hist Franciae l. 1. Queene and other Husbands poysoned massacred and murthered by their z As Ninus by his wife Semiramis the sonne of Aegistus by the Daughters of Danaus Antiochus by Laodice Claudius by Agrip. Apud Iustinum Senecam Palerium Maximum Plin. l. 32. cap. 22. Wives out of Iealousies chiefly or some other discontents loathing whom they should love and loving those lustfull men whom they should loath as Clytemnestra did Aegistus Wives againe and other suspected persons beeing as cruelly cut off by Husbands for the same causes as was Iustina a Roman Lady and Cecinna murthered by Vespatian with many moe examples of both Sexes which both a Aug. lib. 7 de civ Dei Divines b Camer horarum Iubis cap. 53. cent 2. Historians c Faelix Platerus Observ l. 1. Physitians and d Ariosto l. 31. Staffe 1. Poets have Coacervated and gathered as in a Bundle and yet neverthelesse when I consider that notwithstanding all these eyes and spyes in the head and bloudy Knives in the hands of Iealousie wicked and wily men but especially subtle and Serpentine Women have had Mercuries to charme this Argus meanes to hoodwincke this Lyncaeus to muzzle this Cerberus to delude this wakefull Dragon Iealousie by one meanes or other venting their stolne waters by the Milne which the Milnar knowes not of e Jn Horto h. l. 2. c. 24. as Garcias reports of Women in the East Indies about Goa that will by a certaine Hearbe make their Husbands sleepe for 24. houres like Dormise till they abuse them at their pleasure with a thousand such pranckes if we beleeve the witty f Ariosto l. 28. Staff 7. Italian that knew them best when I ponder that hard Dilemma knottier than Sampsons and Sphinx Riddles to some to unclose which the Pagan long since propounded he that marries a foule one shall have a Clog and burthen as deformed g Filia Henrici Lanagraviae Hessiae Cromerus hist l. 2. Aleida was to Casmirus if a faire one perhaps a common and a wanton want-out as Messalina was to Claudius there being moe such than Lucretiaes Penelopees h Vxor Tigridis apud Zenephōtem in Cyroped l. 3. Armenaes the i Rara est cōcordia forma atque pudi citiae Ovid. fairest not ever being the chastest unlesse Gods Grace feare make thē as the Kings Daughter all beauteous k Psal 45. 13 within as were the Matrons of the Patriarkes besides all the Crosses from Children which here might be enumerated many having no more comfort of them than NOAH of his accursed l Gē 19.25 CHAM DAVID of his m 2. Sā 18.33 ABSOLAM MAVRITIVS the n Nieeph h. lib. 18. c. 58. Emperour and o Ier. 51.10 ZEDECHIAH of others whom they saw murthered before their eyes but a great deale of sorrow and discontent as ISAAC and REBECCHA had of their prophane p Gē 26.34 ESAV that was a heart-breake unto them many living to see them take ill-courses like the q Lu. 15.13 Prodigall or to come to untimely ends as Elies r 1. Sā 4.17 sonnes and ſ 2. Sam 13 29. Ammon I say all these things poysed and pondered speake to my Iudgement and worke upon my affections that even Marriage it selfe the nearest and dearest Vnion with the Creaturs beeing to all prophane persons but even
Pliny to Lampseta the Ltcedimonean Lady that was Daughter wife and mother to a King as our illustrious Queene Ann deceased was sister wife vnto a King and Mother to two royall Princes let him be in the opinion of the world Iovis Pullus Gallinae filius alboe stristotlles vndique e Lib. 1. Aethic quadratus the worlds Iewell Comet blazing starr luld in ffortunes Lap let him be called as Tully said of Octouianus Augustus Matris Partus vere aurelibus a golden branch from a galden Tree Iunonius puer Iunoes owne white boy a Os oculosque Iovi pares let all mens b Volumine 1 eyes be upon him all mens tongues speake all good of f Omnes omnia bona dicere him and let him be as he is g Esto quod audis apud Horatium reported let every man obserue him more then that Volvon in the sportfull Comaedy bring Presents to him as the Persians to their Kings applaud him as the Sidonians did h Acts 12. non vox hominis sonat Herod rise to him as to Themistocles in the Olimpicks run to see him as Shebaes Queene to see i 1. Reg. 10. Solomon the Barbarian k Paterculus volumin poster Prince to see Cesav Gaze on him as the l Filiae decurrunt pro Murum ad fenestras Glossa ordinaria Egiptians once on honored Ioseph the Citizens of Cullen on Matilda the Empresse the Sultan of Sanas wife in Arabia on faire m Navigat Vertom l. 3. cap. 5. Vertomanus let songs be made in his praise as the daughters in Israel on o 1 Sā 18.7 Dauid let him haue all the praises that Tully giues p Oratione pro rege Deiotar alib Caesar Plato to Socrates and Chramides q Suspect lect lib. 1. cap. 2. Scoppius to Scaliger r In Colloq et Epistolis Erasmus to Sir Thomas Moore or ſ Jn Cyrop Zenephon to Cylus in all morall endowments besides let him haue all the good the world can afford him let him dwell in such a house as t Numeratur cum Dianae templo phidiae simulachro solis Colosso inter Memorabilia mundi Cyrus his house Nabuchadnezzars Babell the Pallace of Escuriall in Spaine Fontenblew in France our English Tibbalds None-such let there be vnited such Gardens as that of Adonis the Turks gardens in his Seraglio the Popes Belvedere in Rome the Lord Chantelowes in France or the Earle of * Quem honoris Causa nomino ille enim nulli semp Magnus Apollo vix Mator mihi non Melior Alter Corkes at yoghall in Ireland let his Orchards be like these of the Aespide let his eare be dayly delighted u Daniell 4.27 with such Musicke as Alexander had from Timolaus the Thebans from Amphion the Mariners from Orpheus let him heare dayly such Playes as the Romans in their Theaters and Amphitheaters see such sports and Pageants dayly as the Greekes had in theyr Olympian Pythean Istmian Athenian and Corinthean Games let him moreover Feast dayly and deliciously as that Epicure in the x Luk. 16.19 Gospell and Lucullus in his owne House or let him be feasted with moe rarieties thā AESTHER u Esth 7. entertained ASSVERVS DIDO the a Apud Virg. Trojan AENEAS or CLEOPATRA MARK ANTHONY let him bee cloathed in Tyrian purple as royally as b Acts 12. HEROD in as many varieties of Sutes as c Suetonius in Nerone NERO let him be attended and guarded with moe men than SALOMON or the French King yea and with Women too as LILLIVS GERALDVS reports of an Aegyptian Prince and d Who had 150 Maides waiting at his Table CTESIAS of a Persian King yea let him wallow amongst his Concubines as e De q●n Orosius Lampridius et Herodotus HELIOGABVLVS or f De quo Iustinus lib. 1. Vellejus l. 1. Atheneus l. 12. cap. 12 Orosius lib. 1 c. 19. et Angust de Civ 2.20 SARDANAPALVS give himselfe over to all pleasures as that Pope g Ioh. 22. IOHN Hunt more than LEO the h Jovius in ejus vita tenth or ADRIAN the Emperour Hawke more than the Muscovian Emperours and Persian i See Sherleyes Relations Kings were wont Dance more than that k Matchiavel in ejus ●vita CASTRVCANVS the Italian Generall Card Dice Chesse more than once the Thebans the Muscovites now and these of Fessa in l Leo Afer ● 3. de Africa Affrick let him in all these be as merry as hee may rejoyce with Salomons young m Eccl. 11.9 man laugh more than the Sardinians sacrifice as once the Lacedaemonians Deae Risui to the Goddesse of Laughter or as the old Greekes ad Libidinosam Deam to the Goddesse of Pleasure yea to conclude in every thing Secura naviget aura Let him hoyst up Sailes set up top and top-gallant launch forth into an Ocean of Delights deny his soule no content the Creature can afford yet if all these could be incident to one man and meet in one subject as lines in one Center that he should enjoy euen here a Turkish n Bohemus Lonclavus Bredenbachus et Purchasius noster in suis Turcicis Historijs passim Heaven for Wine Women Musicke Feasts Festivals Houses Orchards Gardens Granaries Arbours Walkes Cards Dice Hawking Hunting Fishing Fowling Bulls Beares Players Fidlers Fooles Rimers Buffons Iesters Spices Perfumes Masking Mumming in touching every string of Vanity that he might sup as the phrase is even in o A rich decked Chamber so called apud Plutarchum in Lucullo Apollo yet all these could not affoord him strong because not long Content since there is no hold of any one of these nor of all of them to bee taken more then of a slipperie Eele for those things that are the ground of this content are as rot as our Irish bogs or English Quagmires there is no certainty in them they flie as shadowes from us when we would be most cooled and refressed by them they sometimes but salute us and are gone as if in a Dumbe shew they did but present the Stage and went presently off againe yea they are to us usually as the p Apud gillium Paladian Horse to the Troians traines and lures to our bane and destruction their short glimmering Sunne ends in a long raine for even those that had I will not say injoyed the best of these contents specified were not h●ppy in them nor free from discontents for wee all know not what was the end of q In decem voti compos apud Plinium lib. 7. tamen ab Octavio in pugn● apud Actium devictus Sabel l. b. 3. Lōcer in Theat p●g 373. Metellus r Inscitia regionis loci perit in bello contra Parthes Patrit l. 3. de regno tit 14 pag. 213. Crassus ſ Jn site auri Cruci affixus est per Or●t●m apud Heroditum lib. 3. p. 100
These Huskish Vanities are never so fully and freely injoyed but there is alwayes something wanting to the Concupiscible or rationall appetite AS a Tree ●oted in the Earth is hardly removed by the strength of many men so the conceit● and opinion that 's radicated and rooted in the hearts of most man of the plenary Contentation tha●'s to be found in these Huskish Vanities is as hard to be r●o●ll●d as Hercules Club to be wrung out of his a Jovi Fulmen Herculi Clavam Homero Versū subtrahere tria hac olim ●redita Jmpossibilia Authore Macrobio lib. 5. Sat●rnalium fist which is the Reason that I still adde ●e Reasons Demonstrations Arguments Inductions to remove that false imagination to expell these Conceites these indeed deceites and delusions as Mists and Cloudes by the Sunne of this one Truth that all sufficiency and satisfaction is to be found in God the Creator and not in these sublunary Creatures I have shot many arrowes out of a full b Pulchrum ex magno tollere acervo Quiver to wound the worlds false Paradoxes I will venture on one more perhaps as DAVIDS stinged stone c 1. Sam. 17 49. it may lay GOLIAH groveling convince and convict Vanities chiefest Champions at least it shall make up the full and Grand Iury of foure and twenty to Ratio 24 give in the Verdict of Verity against Vanity and that breefly in this maine Consideration that these Outward things are never so fully and freely injoyed in their largest extent but there is something still a wanting Desiderantur nonnulla In something the Shoe still wrings the Desire is unsatisfied eyther Covetousnesse Curiosity Lust or Necessity desires something that 's not to bee had or hard to be had Improbable and impossible to be accomplished or it be wailes and bemoanes something that 's lost gone praetermitted and not to be recovered The want of which doth more fret vexe torture and torment an unmortified man an unsanctified soule yea and too much oft disturbes and disquiets even the godly man too by reason of humaine passions stir'd up and wrought upon by Temptations then the fruition of all the rest and best of these externals gives no Contentaion nor satisfaction even as the paine of one tooth the Crampe in one joynt is more felt in pinching paine than the health of the whole body as for instance in some particulars Haman hath more honours in the Cour● of Assuerus than he did deserve yet not more than he did desire for he wants the Cap and Knee and the observance of d Est 3.5 Chap. 5.11.12.13 Mardocheus the Iew which as Mercury pot into a greene wound did so sting and nettle him that as he told his Wife Zeresh and his friends all did him no good which he enjoyed neither Honours from the King nor respect from the Queene nor glory of his Riches nor muliitude of his Children nor high places of Promotion in all which he boasts and tryumphs gives any content to that accursed Amalakite So long as the Knee of the Religious Iew is so stiffe that it will not bow to him so Ahab was a King had Lands Livings Riches Revenewes Orchards Gardens Fields Vineyards no doubt of it in aboundance proportionable to the Estate of a King of Israel yet so long as he wants the Vineyard of e 1. Kin. 21.6.7 Naboth at which his teeth watered and over which his nose dropt as lying so fit and so p●t for him just in his mouth so long he is sicke in the suds and diseas'd in the sullens res●esse in his thoughts he turnes him in his Bed as the Wheele on the Axeltree and the doore on the Hindges and had not Iezabel that good Bird made him a Potion and Caudell of the bloud of the Vinetor and Grapes of the Vineyard as a froward Vixan he had tooke the Pet or the Pip and dyed so Ammon notwistanding hee was the Kings Sonne and might have matcht himselfe with some of the Daughters of the greatest Princes and Peeres of the Realme or with some forraigne Princesse yet he is so vexed and perplexed that he falls sicke for the love of his owne Sister THAMAR f 2. Sā 13.2 as PVTIPHARS Wife though of great place and means matcht to a gre●t Officer under PHARAOH yet hath small content so long as beanteous IOSEPH answers not her longing g Gen. 39.9 80. Lust the like I may instance in all others who are cross'd or curb'd in some one thing or other they inordinately desire the want of which more afflicts them than the injoyment of all they have contents them like Children in their minoritie that pelt it and pule and cry for one toy they want of which they are more sensible than of all the present good or future hope they have from their Parents thus Themistocles is more fretted at the glory of Miltiades and Aristides his amulated h Patritius l. 4. de regno tit 20. p. 291 Corrivals than at all the Honours hee receives from the Athenians Instance in others to begin with the ambitious man Is he not ever swelling like the Frog in the Fable till at last he breake and burst As did the Israelitish i 2. Sam. 18 14.15 Absolom the Roman k Dion in vita Tiberij et Gerl. in axiom pollit p. 67. pag. 409. his Tragedy is also penned to the life in English Seianus the French l Preper Galica Chronica extat tragedia Angl. Byron and thousands moe Did not the denyall of one office make the great Spirit Byron breake out into treasonable words if not complots against his King as they were construed from whom he had received so many honourable favours can such men when they are at their height like strings of an instrument conteine themselves but they must stretch higher till they breake Besides if any stand in their way eyther to hinder their rising by opposition or to eclipse them by their worth oh how are they madded and enraged What content have they more than a Fellon in his Executioner How doe they busie their braines and heads night and day to put them downe by disgracing whom they emulate by flanders Calumnies aspersions or by poysons Matchavillian Tricks Proiects Conspiracies open or secret murthers one way or another to rid them out of the way being ever restlesse so long as they are eye-sores and heart-sores and unto them as may appeare in the passages betwixt Saul and m 1. Sam. 20 21.22.24 ad 28. David who was hunted as a Haire and pursued as a Partridge by that Tyrant because the Virgins of Israel ascribed more to David than to him the like I might instance in Domitian towards Agricola in Phalaris Dionisius Busiris Periander the Turkish Tyrants successively in Herod of Iury Iohn Basilius the Muscovian Tyrant and millions moe who in their ambitions and jealous furies and frenzies ever made quicke riddance of such as they eyther
and as sowre sawce to his sweet meats distasts his Pallat yea as Colloquintida spoyles his Pottage or as a suddaine dampe eyther quite puts out the light of his chiefe delights at some times or other or at least Clouds and shrowds it that it is scarce seene The largenesse of the matter already discuss'd will not suffer me to run through every particular or most as I have done in other Arguments I le onely instance in one and that 's Marriage Instituted of h Gen. 2.18 God honoured of i Iohn 2. Christ was borne of a Virgin yet a Virgin married so he honors both estates by his birth Marriage single-life God Men and Angels yea honourable among all men sayth the Apostle not onely Christians but Iewes Turkes and Pagans k Heb. 13.4 as Hystories tell us and why not amongst Fryers and Iesuites too l Dant de vxore dunenda dere Oeconomina interceter ipse Plato l. 3. de legib as well as Iewes if they be men in praise of which Ordinance of God as the Pens of the learned ancient and moderne m Bellarm. de sacram matr Antō et Gerson ●n opere morali Papists themselves that will needs coine it a Sacrament have beene exercised so I will not now expatiate into this Field of matter but onely offer to your consideration how few carnall men which like the n Luk. 17 27 Sodomites and old worldlings marry in the Flesh onely to satisfie Carnality and sensuality without ever having an eye to marry in the Lord have Contentation in their matches for of Gods Children who make the Lord their delight who marry in the o i. Cor. 7.39 Lord and are blest in their choyce as was p Gen. 12. Abraham and q Gen. 24. Isaac and who vsing Marrriage as though they used it r 1. Cor. 7.27 not with moderation and mortification having patience to beare and overcome the crosses incident to marriage of such I speake not though these also sometimes find this estate a yoake heavy r Est vita illa humuis quidem ut seulpsit Melancton ad Camerarum de Matrimonio Lutheri inter consilia Theol. extat pag. 37. enough as did Elkanah and t 1. Sam. 1.8 Anna Elizabeth and u Luk. 1.13 Zachary Rachel and * Gen. 30.1 Sarah in their barrennesse Abraham in the Turmoiles with x Gē 21.11 Hagar and Ismael David in the with-holding of his Wife y 2. Sā 3.14 Michol the untimely death of three z 2. Sā 12.17 Children the deflouring of a faire a Thamar Daughter Gesuer and Cardan though great Schollers in their poore meanes to maintaine a Family Beza in his second match with a brawling Zantippe to omit Moses his bickerings about his Aethiopian b Numb 12 1.2 Wife Iobs just anger against his blasphemous c Iob. 2.10 Wife Iacobs anger at Rachel his faire yet impatient d Gen. 30.2 Wife his greater anger at the deflouring of e Gen. 34.5 6.7 Dinah the bloody cruelty of Simeon and f Vers 30. Levi the Incest of his eldest g Gen. 49.3 Ruben the conceited murther of his beloved h Gē 37.34 Ioseph the departing of his youngest i Gē 42.36 Beniamin to omit all others that have found the best contents in wife children but comfortable Crosses but I speake of such Carnalists and sensualists especially who as cursed of God in whatever they set their hearts on and their hands too have God against thē in this busines not sending any good Angel with thē as with Abrahams k Gē 24.40 servāt to prospe● them but rather as the Angel did with l Nū 22.12 Balaam to oppose and resist them such either find Crosses if not curses in their matches or make their Crosses by their lewd luxurious filthy foolish churlish jealous indiscreet unconscionable carriage towards their Yoke-fellowes like the Mice or Rats in the Walls or as the Conyes in the Rockes if they finde no hole make holes making and taking faults themselves if they find none or as an Ape with his clawes in a cut Taffety gowne making little holes greater veniall faults mortall mole-hils Mountaines by their unequall aggravation to their no small vexation yea opposition as two strange snarling Dogs in a paire of couples if not divorce and sequistration from the Bond and m A Vinculo et a T●oro Bed of marriage wit beauty all externall internall gifts when they come once to be sicke and to surfeit one of another giving no more content than a guilded painted poyson than that faire yet straite shoe which so pincht that Roman that he could not be quiet till he put it off To verifie this that is affirmed let us but open our eyes and looke into the world and we shall see such plenty of inductions that plenty will make us n Jnop● me copia reddit penurious not knowing which first to take for my part when I read and consider how soone and on how sleight an occasion Assuerus repudiates his beauteous o Esth 2. Vasti Mark Anthony the Daughter of Caesar inamoured on the gorgeous p Appianus l. 1. Cleopatra the cause of his Tragedy how Philip the French King is weary of the Daughter of Denmarke in one night and sends her backe q Nubrigensis l. 4. c. 24. againe because shee had a smelling-breath as Selenchus King of Syria never more affected his faire Stratonices because by chance he saw her bald pate how Herod upon false suspitions beheads his r Josephus Antiq. Marian and after finding her cleare had well nigh hanged himselfe how Nero divorced his faire painted ſ Suetonius et Dian in Nero●e Tacitus lib. 16. Poppea though she washt her selfe every day in Goates-milke after the fashion of some Court-painted Iezabels to give him or some else content how soone Iustina the Roman Lady was made away by her jealous t Camerarius Cent. 2. c. 54. oper succ sic discite patres ne nubat fatuo filta vstra viro Jnstat autem Aurelius in Cōstantino V●lateranus in Chilperico Plin. l. 14. l. 27. Husband how cruelly the faire Irene the Constantinopolitan Captive was butchered by the grand Turke at the very time which she expected to be Empresse 2. When I read again how many great worthies have beene wronged by the Luxury and Incontinency of their Wives as Agamemnon by his Clytemnestra Menelaus of Greece by his Helena Phylip of Macedon by his Olympia Artax●xes of Persia by his u Abused by Apollonious Chous a young Physitian Empresse Pertinax * His Wife prostitute by a Fidler the Emperour Arthur x Defiled by Mordred one of his Knights of England by his Gynthera or Helena Alba as also how many goatish and luxurious great men have wronged their Wives as besides these newly recyted that great Caesar who like many great