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Chapter 5 —OF CONSCIENCE

Word Count: 1550    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

ugh I did not know so much, for he pretended otherwise: and the mischief on't is, that in this sort of war the cards are so shuffled, your enemy not being distinguished f

care and affection, was miserably slain, in whom a youth of great promise and expectation was extinguished. But the gentleman my brother and I met had so desperate, half-dead a fear upon him at meeting with any horse, or passing by any of the towns that held for the King, that I at last discovered it to be alarms of conscience. It se

iens animo tor

soul brandishing a s

al, ii

y to accuse him of the murder of his father. This parricide had till then been concealed and unknown, but the revenging fury of conscience caused it to be discovered by him himself, who was to suffer for it. Hesiod corrects the sayin

lium consult

are worst to t

. Gellium

but most of all itself, for it there

in vulne

eir own lives

Geo., i

poison. In like manner, at the same time that men take delight in vice, there springs in the co

ulti, per somnia

irantes, prot

in medium pe

often talking in thei

have betrayed themsel

es long concealed."

ered these words "I am the cause of all these mischiefs that have befallen thee." Epicurus said that no hiding-hole could co

haec ulti

o nocens a

ment of sin that no ma

revenge, that by its

"-Juvenal

nce; and I can truly say that I have gone through several hazards with a more steady pace in

cuique sua est, i

acto spemque

e is, so within hope o

n."-Ovid, Fa

of the money that had passed through his hands in the province of Antioch, Scipio being come into the senate to that purpose, produced a book from under his robe, wherein he told them was an exact account of his receipts and disbursements; but being required to deliver it to the prothonotary to be examined, he refused, saying, he would not do himself so great a disgrace; and in the presence of the whole senate tore the book with his own hands to pieces. I do not believe that the most seared conscience could have counterfeited so great an assurance. He had naturally too high a spirit and was accustomed to too high a fortune, says Titius Livius, to know how to be criminal, and to lower himself to the meanness of defending his innocence. The putting men to the rack is a dangerous invention, and seems to be rather a trial of patience than o

ntes cogit me

the innocent lie."-Pub

charged their own heads by false confessions, amongst whom I place Philotas, considering the circumstances of the trial Alexander put upon him and the progress of h

nation, more painful than execution itself; and that oft-times by its extremity anticipates execution, and perform it. I know not where I had this story, but it exactly matches the conscience of our justice in this particular. A country-woman, to a general of a very severe discipline, accused one of his soldiers that he had taken from her children the little soup meat she had left to nourish them witha

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Contents

Chapter 1 —OF THE INCONSTANCY OF OUR ACTIONS Chapter 2 —OF DRUNKENNESS Chapter 3 —A CUSTOM OF THE ISLE OF CEA Chapter 4 —TO-MORROW’S A NEW DAY Chapter 5 —OF CONSCIENCE Chapter 6 —USE MAKES PERFECT Chapter 7 —OF RECOMPENSES OF HONOUR Chapter 8 —OF THE AFFECTION OF FATHERS TO THEIR CHILDREN Chapter 9 —OF THE ARMS OF THE PARTHIANS Chapter 10 —OF BOOKS Chapter 11 —OF CRUELTY
Chapter 12 — APOLOGY FOR RAIMOND SEBOND.
Chapter 13 —OF JUDGING OF THE DEATH OF ANOTHER
Chapter 14 —THAT OUR MIND HINDERS ITSELF
Chapter 15 —THAT OUR DESIRES ARE AUGMENTED BY DIFFICULTY
Chapter 16 —OF GLORY
Chapter 17 —OF PRESUMPTION
Chapter 18 —OF GIVING THE LIE
Chapter 19 —OF LIBERTY OF CONSCIENCE
Chapter 20 —THAT WE TASTE NOTHING PURE
Chapter 21 —AGAINST IDLENESS
Chapter 22 —OF POSTING
Chapter 23 —OF ILL MEANS EMPLOYED TO A GOOD END
Chapter 24 —OF THE ROMAN GRANDEUR
Chapter 25 —NOT TO COUNTERFEIT BEING SICK
Chapter 26 —OF THUMBS
Chapter 27 —COWARDICE THE MOTHER OF CRUELTY
Chapter 28 —ALL THINGS HAVE THEIR SEASON
Chapter 29 —OF VIRTUE
Chapter 30 —OF A MONSTROUS CHILD
Chapter 31 —OF ANGER
Chapter 32 —DEFENCE OF SENECA AND PLUTARCH
Chapter 33 —THE STORY OF SPURINA
Chapter 34 —OBSERVATION ON THE MEANS TO CARRY ON A WAR ACCORDING TO JULIUS CAESAR
Chapter 35 —OF THREE GOOD WOMEN
Chapter 36 —OF THE MOST EXCELLENT MEN
Chapter 37 —OF PROFIT AND HONESTY
Chapter 38 —OF REPENTANCE
Chapter 39 —OF THREE COMMERCES
Chapter 40 —OF DIVERSION
Chapter 41 —UPON SOME VERSES OF VIRGIL
Chapter 42 —OF COACHES
Chapter 43 —OF THE INCONVENIENCE OF GREATNESS
Chapter 44 —OF THE ART OF CONFERENCE
Chapter 45 —OF VANITY
Chapter 46 —OF MANAGING THE WILL
Chapter 47 —OF CRIPPLES
Chapter 48 —OF PHYSIOGNOMY
Chapter 49 —OF EXPERIENCE
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