eate, would neither suffer hym to ryse, for if he
had but ones moued he shuld haue been quashed al in
peeses with the fall thereof. SPVDE. You haue
shewed a very mery fable HEDON. But nowe heare
that thing, which you wil not laugh at: the commune
people seeke too haue a pleasaunt life in outwarde
thynges, where as noothyng can yeoue that, but onely
a constant and a quiet mind: for surely a far
heuier stone hangeth ouer these that grudge with them
selues, then hanged ouer Tantalus: it
only hangeth not ouer them, but greueth and || oppresseth
the mynde, ne the mind is not troubled wyth any vayn
hoope, but looketh euery houre to bee caste in too
the paynes of hell, I praye you what can bee so pleasaunt
emongist all thinges that bee yeouen vnto man, that
coulde reioyse the mynde, whyche were oppressed wyth
suche a stoone? SPVDE. Truely there is nothyng
but madnes, or elles incredulitie. HEDO. Yf
younge menne woulde weygh these thynges, that bee
quyckly prouoked and entised with pleasure as it were
wyth the cuppe of Circes, whiche in steade of
theyr greatest pleasures receiue poysone myxte with
honye. Howe circumspecte would they bee too doo
anye thynge ||F.iiii|| vnaduisedly that shoulde grudge
their mindes afterward? What thinge is it that
thei would not doo too haue suche a godly treasure
in store against their latter daies? that is a minde
knowyng it selfe cleane & honest and a name that hath
not been defiled at any time. But what thyng
now is more miserable then is agee? Whan it beholdeth,
and loketh backward on thinges that be past seeth plainly
with great grudg of conscience howe fayre thynges he
hathe despiced and sette lyght by, (that is, howe
farre he hath discented and gone astray from the promyses
made vnto God in baptime) & agayn, how foule & noughty
thiges he hath clipped and enbraced, and wha || hee
looketh forwarde, hee seeth then the daye of iudgemente
drawe neere, and shortely after the eternall punyshemente
of of hell. SPVDE. I esteme theim most happie
whych haue neuer defyled theyr youthe, but euer haue
increased in vertu, til thei haue coomne vnto the
last puincte of age. HEDO. Next them thei ar
too bee commended that haue wythdrawne theim selues
from the folie of youth in tyme. SPVDE. But
what councel wil you yeoue agee that is in suche great
myserie. HEDO. No man shoulde dispayre so long
as life endureth, I wyl exhorte him to flee for helpe
vnto the infinitie mercye & gentilnes of God. SP.
But the longer that he hath liued || the heape of his
synnes hath euer waxen greate and greater, so that
nowe it passeth the nomber of the sandes in the sea,
HE But the mercies of our lord far excede those
sades, for although the sande can not bee numbred
of manne, yet hit hath an ende, but the mercie of
God neither knoweth ende, ne measure. SP. Yea
but he hath no space that shall dye by and by, HEDONI.
The lesse tyme he hath the more feruetly he should